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Giving Praise to God - Weekday Homily Video

Giving Praise to God - Weekday Homily Video

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I have a question for you: can you remember the last time that you gave praise to God like the psalmist that we have just heard? A time when you couldn’t help but praising God’s goodness and mercy, maybe even going beyond prayer with God and telling others….  

 

As I reflected on this question, I thought about what it takes to get us out of normal dialogue with God whether in our formal prayers or in times of exasperation or fear when we simply call out to God for help.  

 

It’s then that I remembered the Air India plane crash that tragically killed 241 souls but somehow one man not only survived but walked out of the plane. That man and everyone involved used the same word to describe his beating the odds: miraculous. 

 

Praising God in the Good and Bad

 

Quite often we need both the small and big turnarounds in life to help us praise God. Saint Paul does this in today’s reading that credits the grace of God at work in the lives of the churches in Macedonia. 

 

Even Paul, of great faith and many experiences, notes his surprise at how the people responded to severe affliction and profound poverty with a wealth of generosity in service to Paul and the others evangelizing and serving the needs of the people. 

 

Yesterday, Saint Paul’s letter encouraged us to remember how God has been at work in our lives and to not receive the grace of God in vain.  

 

Today’s Gospel once again gives us two great challenges. The first is to love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us. Jesus points out that God looks after the needs of both the good and the bad.  

 

Bringing Jesus to Others

 

Jesus then points out how we need to rise about the status quo of the secular and professional world to care for those who do not profess a faith in God and or have lost their moral compasses. 

 

To be a follower of Jesus is to embrace the call to strive to be perfect in how we live in imitation of our Heavenly Father.  

 

Part of that growth in virtue and holiness has to do with remembering how God has created us and given us life this day, how he helps us through our challenging moments, and offers us hope when things seem awfully bleak. 

 

Praising God 

 

My brothers and sisters, we all have things that can cause us to give praise and witness to God’s compassion and aid to us, times when He has fed us or freed us from some burden, times when He has helped us to see more clearly what direction we need to go…in relationships or in our journey of faith, and in so many other ways.  

 

We all have our ways of praising God whether at Mass or in our prayers, in private, but today’s readings can spur us on to share with our families and friends, our praise for God, the God who has brought us through many times and to this day and if we let Him will lead us to heaven. 

 

Let us all be able in our own ways and words to be able to say without hesitation: “Praise the Lord, my soul! 


 


  • Father David's inspirational homily was recorded live during Mass at the Father Peyton Center this morning. You can view the Mass (and the Rosary at the 30-minute mark) on the Family Rosary YouTube page. 
  • To join the Rosary and Mass Livestream, visit the Family Rosary YouTube or Facebook page at 11:30 a.m. Eastern, Monday–Friday. Consider inviting others to join, too! (*If you are not a member of Facebook and a signup window appears, select the X at the top of the pop-up message and continue to the livestream.)

About Father David Marcham

Reverend David S. Marcham is the Vice Postulator for the Cause of Venerable Patrick Peyton, and Director of the Father Peyton Guild, whose members pray for Father Peyton’s beatification and spread his message of the importance of Family Prayer. Prior to becoming a seminarian, Father David was a physical therapist and clinical instructor, serving hospital inpatients and outpatients throughout the greater Boston area for eleven years. In 1998 he heard the call to priesthood and was ordained in the Archdiocese of Boston in 2005. Father David grew up in Quincy, MA, and has fond memories of playing soccer, tennis and running track. You’re never without a friend when Father David is around, as he welcomes everyone into his circle with a smile on his face!