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The BreadCast


Daily Exposition of the Readings for Catholic Mass...

as well as Prayers to the Saints on the General Roman Calendar (for the U.S.).  

From the books Our Daily Bread and Prayers to the Saints by James H. Kurt - both with imprimatur.

Jun 4, 2016

(1Kgs.17:17-24;   Ps.30:2,4-6,11-12;   Gal.1:11-19;   Lk.7:11-17) 

“O Lord, you brought me up from the netherworld.”

“You preserved me from among those going down into the pit.”  For I was dead, but now I live.  These should be the words of us all, for the Lord indeed is our salvation – our life breath comes from Him, and He will preserve us from all death.  No longer in sin, we rise to new life.

The resurrecting power of God is clearly evident in our readings today.  We see both Jesus and Elijah raising the dead.  And perhaps the rising of Paul from the blind pit into which he’d fallen, which led him even to persecute and attempt to destroy the Church, is the most remarkable resurrection.

What we should take from today’s readings is the sure knowledge that God is life and that life has no origin other than Him.  Paul proclaims the Word he preaches comes only from God through the revelation of Jesus Christ – emphasizing that no man taught him the Word which burns in his soul (a Word which gives life to all who hear it) – and in both the gospel and the first reading those who witness the raising of the dead attribute rightly its source to the Lord.  In one they proclaim, “God has visited His people,” and in the other the widow of Sidon states of Elijah: “The word of the Lord comes truly from your mouth.”  This is the character of the Word, this is the quality of God – He gives life.  And so we know Him.

And we indeed are all as the widows in today’s readings; we are all bereft of our only sons, of the light of our eyes and our very life.  We mourn for the loss of our souls which is imminent because of our sin.  And we, too, weep.  Who shall save us?  Who shall speak a word to us to revive us, to return our life’s breath, to restore our souls?  Jesus comes to us.  He visits our city, He comes to our door.  His Word approaches our hearts and calls to us to arise – He breathes upon us the breath of new life.  His apostles go forth from the foundation set in Peter, and this true Gospel is that which shall save the world, which shall bring it from its mourning to joy.

But do we mourn the loss of our souls?  Do we bewail that which is taken from us by sin?  Do we see the death upon us?  We must come as widows calling upon the Lord to find His Word at work in our hearts, bringing us to life.  And we must share that Word with others.  Once raised from the dead, we must proclaim what the Word has done for us.  We must recognize His power at work in the world. 

May the Word go forth to the ends of the earth, speaking of the saving power of God.  May it raise all from death. 

Written, read and chanted, and produced by James Kurt.

Music: "Be Well" from Cleansing Human Frailty, fourth album of Songs for Children of Light, by James Kurt.

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O LORD, let the life breath return to your children;

by your grace let us rise from the dead to praise you.

YHWH, your Son looks with pity upon our poor condition, He sees that we are bereft of our only Child, of the light of our eyes – He sees our souls descend to the nether world and desires only to raise them from such darkness to the eternal light of your presence… and He prays for us… and He calls to us… and we rise and are held in our Mother’s arms.

To the Church Jesus entrusts our souls; our very lives are in the hands of our Mother on earth. Dearest God, let us never be separated from the life-giving Breath you give us through your apostles, through the magisterium, through the teaching of your Son which they guard so assiduously.  In your House let us remain all the days of our life.

What hope have we if you call attention to our guilt, to the sin upon our souls?  But in your compassion you preserve us from certain death, and for this we praise you.  Thank you, LORD, for visiting your people and changing our mourning into dancing before you.