Great Catholic Homilies

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Archive for May, 2010

Why the world must become Catholic

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Most Holy Trinity, May 30, 2010
Fr. Anthony Brankin
Gospel: John 16:12-15. “When the Spirit of truth comes”

Click for audio MP3 Audio 16 min. Full text

Summary: The Church is the same one that Christ began two thousand years ago. Truth is not relative. Because we believe in something doesn’t make it true. If I believe there are dinosaurs in my bedroom, that does not make it true.

We only partly understand God and his universe. We accept and believe God because He has revealed his truths. If those teachings are true, we must structure our lives around them. Continue Reading…

Pentecost — Birthday of the Church and rebirth of family life

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

Pentecost Sunday, May 23, 2010
Fr. Anthony Brankin
Gospel: John 20:19-23. “Receive the Holy Spirit”

Click for audio MP3 Audio 12 min.

Summary: Today, Pentecost, is the birthday of the Church. God established a Church because we need a way to encounter Jesus in our lives. The Church begins with the family, in the home. The family is our first experience of Jesus, and this makes the family the first Church. Families are not just people related to one another who live together, who give rides to each other to the mall. They are connected to God, and to each other.

Living a Catholic family life means at the minimum prayers together. Say grace before meals, and eat meals together. Families that do not pray are most at risk for tragedy and heartache.

Concerning the sacraments, Baptize your baby weeks after birth, not months or years. We don’t know what happens to children who die without Baptism. They are in Limbo or heaven. Don’t delay the baby’s baptism until the party.

The sacraments of Confession and Holy Communion should be received when the child is old enough to know right from wrong, when they appreciate the need for spiritual nourishment. Confirmation allows us to receive the extra graces to survive the assaults of the modern world.

Concerning matrimony, not many couples get married in the Church, unfortunately. A young woman should know that the man she chooses should promise to God to take care of them both and the children for the rest of their lives. Common law marriages are shakey.

Catholic homes are also little churches from which vocations come. Today, Pentecost, is not only the birthday of the Church but a special day of a rebirth of our families.

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New video explains our mission

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Our founder Kevin J. Banet has just made a short video on this website explaining the mission of Great Catholic Homilies.

We have also begun a blog on this website that carries our new Facebook page for Great Catholic Homilies. Join the discussion!

Christ ascended, but He is with us, in his Church

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Seventh Sunday of Easter/Ascension (in U.S.), May 16, 2010
Fr. Anthony Brankin
Gospel: Luke 24:46-53. Promise of Holy Spirit and AscensionClick for audio

MP3 Audio 12 min. Full text

Summary: Although Jesus Christ ascends to heaven, the Church becomes his hands working in the world. Christ’s human body, now glorified, is in heaven.  The Catholic Church is the mystical body of Christ on earth, not the Presbyterians, Methodists, or other denominations. Although there are good, holy and kind Protestants. Imagine a good Presbyterian grandmother who will get to heaven before some Catholic bishops and priests. Protestants are a spin-off of our Church. They do not have most of the sacraments or the Blessed Virgin Mary. What a joy experienced by Protestants who become Catholic.

We are in trouble because there are not enough Catholics in the world. Everyone — Muslims, Jews, atheists, and Protestants, are called to be members of the full body of Christ. If the Church were only a structure, it would not have lasted two thousand years. Its existence is proof positive that the Church comes from God and is his presence in the world.

This homily is brought to you by Great Catholic Websites. There are 56 million Catholics in the U.S. surfing the net. Are you reaching them?

Mother’s Day — Love and Life Are Inseparable

Monday, May 10th, 2010

Sixth Sunday of Easter, May 9, 2010
Fr. Anthony Brankin
Gospel: John 14:23-29. “The Holy Spirit will teach you”
MP3 Audio 10 min. Full homily text

Summary: A salute to mothers on Mothers’ Day. Why Fr. Brankin made a statue of a pregnant Virgin Mary. Love and life are inseparable. When abortion was legalized in the U.S., death became the new life. We have the culture of pornography, not life. Love is understood to be about physical pleasure, not life. If we separate love from life, we destroy them both. Old customs preserved marriage and courtship. They were all done to protect the mother of the village.

A couple is to trust God and accept whatever children He sends them. We are not to prevent children by means of pills, chemicals or devices. “Gay marriage” is a dead end, sterile, because it cannot give life.

All creation is fertile, fecund, including mothers and fathers. Our children also come from love, and now they can have life to the full, because Jesus has come to them in Holy Communion.

This homily is brought to you by Great Catholic Websites. There are 56 million Catholics in the U.S. surfing the net. Are you reaching them?