July 2026
July 1, 2026
Amos calls us to seek good, not evil — to make justice visible in our communities, not merely in our worship. When Jesus heals the two possessed men, the townspeople react with fear rather than joy. How often do we fear the transformation that true encounter with Christ brings? May we, unlike the Gadarenes, welcome Jesus into every corner of our lives — even those parts we have long kept locked away. Bl. Junipero Serra reminds us that the Gospel crosses every frontier, including the frontiers of our own hearts.
Lord God, you call us to seek good in every moment of every day. As we begin this month of July, drive from our hearts whatever keeps us from you. Give us the courage to welcome your transforming power without fear. May justice and righteousness flow through our words and deeds today and always. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.
July 2, 2026
Amos was not a trained prophet — he was a shepherd whom God called. God’s voice comes to us not because we are qualified, but because we are willing. Jesus, seeing the faith of those who carried the paralytic, heals both body and soul. Notice that Jesus heals the deeper wound first: forgiveness before physical cure. When we bring our broken friends to God, we participate in healing we cannot fully imagine. Whose faith might God be using to bring you to his mercy today?
Merciful Lord Jesus, you see through our paralysis — our fear, our sin, our helplessness — and you say: Courage, your sins are forgiven. Heal us today in body and in soul. Help us carry others to you by our prayer and our witness. May we never grow tired of bringing the broken to your feet. Amen.
July 3, 2026
Thomas is often called “the doubter,” but what a gift his honesty is to us. He did not pretend to believe when he did not. And Jesus came to Thomas exactly where he was — in his doubt — and offered him evidence. Jesus does not reject the honest doubter. He walks toward us in our confusion and says: Here I am. Touch my wounds. Believe. The great profession of faith, “My Lord and my God,” came from the mouth of the one who needed most to see. Your honest searching is not shameful. It is the very path to encounter.
Lord Jesus, like Thomas we sometimes struggle to believe what we cannot see. Come to us in our doubt as you came to him. Show us your wounds — the proof of your love poured out for us. May we, too, cry out with all our hearts: My Lord and my God! Strengthen our faith today. Amen.
July 4, 2026
Amos closes his book with a vision of restoration — the fallen hut of David will rise again. God’s promise is always forward-looking, always hopeful. Jesus takes this further: he is the Bridegroom, and his presence makes everything new. Old wineskins cannot hold new wine. On this day of national celebration, may we ask: are there old patterns in our lives — our parishes, our families, our society — that need to be made new by the power of the Gospel? True freedom is not merely political. It is the freedom of the children of God.
Lord of all nations, you desire freedom for every soul. On this day we pray for our nation and all peoples, that the freedom we celebrate may be rooted in truth, justice, and love. Make us new wineskins, ready to receive the new wine of your Spirit. Through Mary’s intercession, may our hearts be open. Amen.
July 5, 2026
The King who comes does not arrive on a war horse but on a donkey — meek, peaceful, approachable. And in the Gospel, this same King calls to the weary: Come to me. These are perhaps the most comforting words in all of Scripture. Jesus does not ask us to be strong before we come. He meets us in our exhaustion. The yoke he offers is shared — he carries it with us. This Sunday, let us surrender what is heavy, and accept his rest. Simplicity, not sophistication, opens the heart to God.
Lord Jesus, meek and humble of heart, we come to you today weighed down by our burdens — our anxieties, our failures, our grief. You promise us rest. Help us to lay everything at your feet. Form in us the simplicity of a child, open to your truth. May your Spirit breathe new life into our weary souls this Sunday. Amen.
July 6, 2026
Hosea’s God speaks not in thunder but in tenderness — leading Israel into the desert to whisper words of love. Jesus embodies this same tenderness: he stops for the woman who reaches out in desperate faith, and he takes the dead girl by the hand. Death itself cannot withstand his touch. St. Maria Goretti, who died protecting her purity, is now alive in glory. In God’s hands, no death — of body, of hope, of relationship — is final.
Tender Lord, you speak to our hearts in the quiet desert of prayer. Help us to reach out and touch the hem of your garment. Raise up in us whatever has grown cold or dead. Through St. Maria Goretti’s intercession, protect the vulnerable and strengthen the pure of heart. Amen.
July 7, 2026
Hosea warns that idolatry produces emptiness — we reap what we sow. When we place anything above God, we find not security but anxiety, not rest but restlessness. Jesus, looking at the crowds, does not see burdens — he sees a harvest ready to be gathered. His heart aches with compassion. Today, let us pray for laborers for God’s harvest — and ask ourselves: am I willing to be one?
Lord Jesus, your heart is moved with pity for every lost soul. Open our eyes to see the harvest around us. Send us as laborers into your fields — in our homes, workplaces, and communities. Free us from every idol that distracts us from you, and fill us with your compassion. Amen.
July 8, 2026
Hosea calls the people to break new ground — to seek God fresh, as if for the first time. And Jesus sends the Twelve with authority and a mission: go to the lost. Every baptized Christian shares in this mission. We do not wait for the lost to find their way to us. We go to them, bringing peace, healing, and the proclamation that God’s kingdom is near. Is there someone in your life who is lost? You are sent.
Lord Jesus, you send us as you sent the Twelve — not in our own power but in yours. Give us authority born of deep prayer and trust. Help us to seek out those who are lost and bring them the good news that your kingdom is near. Break new ground in our own hearts today. Amen.
July 9, 2026
Hosea gives us one of Scripture’s most beautiful images of God: a parent teaching a child to walk, lifting them in arms, bending down to feed them. And even when Israel strays, God’s heart is overwhelmed with love, not rage. The Chinese martyrs — Sts. Augustine Zhao Rong and companions — gave their lives for this God of merciful love. We are sent to give freely what we have freely received: healing, peace, presence. Generosity is the mark of God’s mission.
God of mercy, your heart overflows with love even when we turn away. Draw us back to you with the cords of your compassion. May the witness of the martyrs inspire us to give our lives generously in your service. Help us to give freely, as we have freely received. Amen.
July 10, 2026
Hosea ends his book with a message of breathtaking mercy: Return. I will love you freely. My wrath is turned away. This is the God who sends us out. Knowing that rejection may come, Jesus counsels both prudence and simplicity — wisdom without cunning, gentleness without naivety. The disciple who endures does so not by being tough, but by being rooted in the God who heals freely. Return is always possible. Endurance is always enabled by grace.
Lord, your mercy always calls us back. When we are scattered and afraid, remind us that you love us freely. Make us shrewd and simple as we witness to your kingdom. Give us the endurance to stand firm in your name, trusting that you are always with us. Amen.
July 11, 2026
Isaiah’s vision of God’s holiness leads immediately to a call: Whom shall I send? And Isaiah, though overwhelmed, answers: Here I am. St. Benedict heard this same call and responded by building communities of prayer, work, and hospitality that preserved Western civilization. He found God in the ordinary — in the chanting of psalms, the breaking of bread, the welcoming of strangers. Jesus assures us: we are known, counted, and precious. Do not be afraid. Say with Isaiah and Benedict: Here I am.
Holy God, before whose majesty the angels cry Holy, Holy, Holy — purify our lips and our hearts. Like Isaiah, let us answer your call without hesitation. Through St. Benedict’s intercession, help us to sanctify our daily work with prayer and to make every place we live a dwelling place of your peace. Amen.
July 12, 2026
God’s word does not return empty. Like rain watering parched earth, it accomplishes something — even when we cannot see it. The parable of the sower does not ask us to judge which soil others are. It asks: what kind of soil am I? The rich soil is not perfect soil — it is simply open soil. The question today is not whether God is sowing. He is. The question is whether our hearts are receptive, deep, and free from thorns of worry and the stones of shallow commitment. Creation itself groans for redemption. So do we.
Lord, your word accomplishes what you will. Prepare our hearts to be rich, deep soil. Remove the stones of hardness, the thorns of worldly anxiety, and the shallow roots of half-hearted commitment. Let your word take root in us and bear fruit that lasts. With all creation, we long for the glory of your children. Come, Lord Jesus. Amen.
July 13, 2026
Isaiah strips away religious formality: God does not want more worship rituals if our hands still carry injustice. Genuine faith must transform our deeds — defend the widow, hear the orphan. Jesus is even more demanding: he comes before every other love. This is not harshness but clarity. When Christ is truly first, all other loves find their right place and are made more beautiful. The cross is not the end of love — it is love perfected. St. Henry reminds us that holiness is possible in every state of life.
Lord, purify our worship and our lives. May our faith never remain locked in church buildings but flow into justice and care for the least. Give us the courage to place you above all else, and to take up our daily cross with love. Through St. Henry’s example, may we seek holiness in the ordinary circumstances of our lives. Amen.
July 14, 2026
Isaiah’s challenge is direct: If you will not believe, you shall not stand. Faith is not a luxury — it is our foundation. Bl. Kateri Tekakwitha, born into a culture that did not know Christ, found him and clung to him with extraordinary faith despite suffering, ridicule, and illness. She stood firm. Jesus weeps over towns that witnessed miracles and remained unmoved. Grace is not wasted — but it can be refused. Today, let us open our hearts wide to what God is doing around us.
Lord Jesus, you weep over hearts closed to grace. Soften our hearts. Through Bl. Kateri’s intercession, help us to receive the gifts you offer with openness and gratitude. Firm our faith when it is shaken. Let us not be found among those who witnessed your wonders and remained unmoved. Amen.
July 15, 2026
No power boasts before God — the axe does not boast over the woodcutter. St. Bonaventure was one of the great theological minds of the Church, yet he is remembered for his burning love of God and his humility. He reportedly said that a simple woman who loves God knows more of theology than the greatest scholar without love. Jesus confirms this: the Father reveals himself to the little ones. Intellectual humility is not ignorance — it is the posture of the truly wise. Let knowledge serve love.
Father, Lord of heaven and earth, reveal yourself to us in our smallness. Through St. Bonaventure’s intercession, teach us that love is the door to all true knowledge of you. Make us humble before the mystery of your grace. Let our learning serve our love, and our love inflame our knowing. Amen.
July 16, 2026
Isaiah promises that the dead shall live and shall sing. Even in the dust, resurrection is coming. Our Lady of Mount Carmel has long been honored as a sign of God’s tender care — like Elijah on Carmel who prayed for rain in a season of drought, Mary stands as the small cloud that brings life-giving water. Jesus’ words today are infinitely tender: Come. Rest. Learn from me. The greatest spiritual directors have always known that the soul finds rest not by striving harder, but by drawing near to the one who is meek.
Lord Jesus, meek and humble of heart, we come to you weary. We accept your yoke and ask you to teach us your way. Through Our Lady of Mount Carmel’s intercession, bring the refreshing rain of your Spirit upon our drought-stricken hearts. Let those who lie in the dust of despair rise and sing. Amen.
July 17, 2026
God sees Hezekiah’s tears and responds to them. This is not superstition — it is the deepest truth about prayer: God is moved by our need. Time itself bends in response to humble supplication. Jesus quotes Hosea — “I desire mercy, not sacrifice” — to expose the Pharisees’ misunderstanding of the Law. Rules exist to serve love. The Sabbath was made for humanity, not humanity for the Sabbath. Let us examine whether our religious practices are instruments of mercy or of judgment.
Lord, you hear our tears and you answer. Give us the confidence of Hezekiah to bring all our suffering to you in prayer. Fill us with mercy rather than judgment. Help us to see the spirit behind the law, and to serve people with the same compassion you show to us. You are Lord of the Sabbath — be Lord of every day of our lives. Amen.
July 18, 2026
A bruised reed he will not break; a smoldering wick he will not quench. This is one of the most tender descriptions of Jesus in all of Scripture. He does not come to crush the wounded or extinguish the barely-burning. St. Camillus de Lellis — once a gambler and a soldier — was a bruised reed who encountered God’s mercy and became a pioneer of hospital care for the sick and dying. No one is too far gone. No flame is too dim for Christ to tend.
Lord Jesus, you do not break the bruised reed or quench the smoldering wick. Come to those of us who are barely holding on. Fan into flame the ember of faith and hope within us. Through St. Camillus’s intercession, send us to the sick, the suffering, and the forgotten, that we might be instruments of your gentle, healing touch. Amen.
July 19, 2026
God’s power does not make God harsh — it makes God patient. The Almighty can afford to wait. The parable of the wheat and weeds is a parable of patience: God does not uproot too soon, because he knows that some weeds may yet become wheat. And even when we do not know how to pray — when words fail and grief is too deep for speech — the Spirit groans within us. The same Spirit who searches our hearts speaks for us before the Father. You are never alone in prayer, even when you feel speechless.
God of patience and mercy, teach us to wait as you wait — with love rather than condemnation. When we cannot find words to pray, let your Spirit pray within us. Search our hearts and purify us, not with harsh judgment but with the tender fire of your love. Lord, you are good and forgiving, full of steadfast love to all who call on you. Amen.
July 20, 2026
What does God ask of us? Micah answers with breathtaking simplicity: do justice, love goodness, walk humbly with your God. Not elaborate sacrifice, not grand gestures — just faithful, merciful living. When the religious leaders demand miraculous signs, Jesus points them to the sign of Jonah — the pattern of death and resurrection already at work in the world. The greatest sign is already given: the risen Christ. Walk humbly before him today.
Lord God, you have told us what is good: to do justice, to love goodness, and to walk humbly with you. In our desire for spectacular signs, help us to see the greatest sign: your Son, risen from the dead. Guide our steps today in simple faithfulness and humble love. Amen.
July 21, 2026
Micah asks: Who is a God like you, who casts all our sins into the depths of the sea? This is the answer to every anxious conscience: your sins are not merely forgiven — they are drowned, gone, buried in the deep. Jesus offers us membership in his own family: whoever does God’s will is his mother and brother and sister. The greatest dignity is not bloodline or achievement — it is doing the Father’s will. You belong to God’s family. Your sins are in the sea.
God of mercy, you cast our sins into the depths of the sea. Let us never drag them back up with guilt and despair. Make us members of your holy family through faithful obedience to your will. Help us to delight in your clemency and to extend the same mercy to those who wrong us. Amen.
July 22, 2026
Before you were born, I knew you. God knew Mary Magdalene — in her brokenness, in her need, in her desperate love. And on Easter morning, the Risen Jesus speaks her name: Mary. In that single word, a whole universe of recognition and love. She becomes the first to announce the Resurrection — the Apostle to the Apostles. God forms us, knows us by name, and sends us. You are known. You are sent. Do not be afraid to go and tell.
Risen Lord, you call each of us by name. Like Mary Magdalene, may we recognize your voice through our tears and turn to you with our whole heart. Give us her courage to go and announce you to a world that does not yet know you are alive. You are our Rabbouni — our Teacher. We follow you. Amen.
July 23, 2026
How desperate our thirst must be, says Jeremiah, that we chip away at cracked stone cisterns rather than drink from the living spring God offers. St. Bridget of Sweden was a wife, mother, mystic, and prophetic voice in the Church — a woman who drank deeply from the living waters and called others to the same source. Jesus calls us blessed: blessed are the eyes that see, the ears that hear. Are we truly listening? The mysteries of the Kingdom are offered freely — are we drinking, or digging broken cisterns?
Lord, you are the source of living waters. Forgive us for seeking satisfaction in empty things. Open our eyes and ears to the mysteries of your Kingdom. Through St. Bridget’s intercession, make us mystics of daily life — people who find you at work in every moment. Let us drink deeply of you today. Amen.
July 24, 2026
St. Sharbel Makhluf was a Lebanese monk whose life was stripped down to prayer, silence, and God. The world thought him unproductive. God thought him fruitful — a hundredfold. Understanding the Word of God requires more than intellectual grasp; it requires a life that makes room. Jeremiah’s God calls rebellious children home — not with thunder, but with an invitation. Return. I am your master. Let us hear today with the depth of silence that Sharbel cultivated.
Lord, let your word fall on the rich soil of our hearts. Through St. Sharbel’s intercession, teach us the power of silence and deep listening. Turn us away from stubbornness and toward your gentle voice. May our lives bear fruit that lasts — thirty, sixty, a hundredfold. Amen.
July 25, 2026
James and John wanted seats of glory. Jesus asked if they could drink the cup — the cup of suffering, of service, of self-giving love. James, the first apostle to be martyred, drank that cup to the dregs. Paul’s earthen vessels passage captures it perfectly: the treasure we carry — the Gospel, the grace of God — shines more brilliantly precisely because the vessels are so cracked and ordinary. Your weakness is not an obstacle to God’s glory. It is the vessel through which it shines.
Lord Jesus, you came not to be served but to serve. Uproot from our hearts every desire for prestige and pride. Through St. James’s intercession, give us the courage to drink the cup of humble service. Let your power shine through our weakness, and turn our tears into a harvest of joy. Amen.
July 26, 2026
Solomon, offered anything he wants, asks for a listening heart. This is the wisdom of the saints. What we truly need is not more information, more success, or more comfort — but the capacity to hear and understand. Paul assures us that all things work together for good in God’s plan. And the parables of the treasure and the pearl challenge us: have we truly found the Kingdom? If we have, we would give everything joyfully — not as sacrifice, but as delight. The pearl of great price is worth everything. Is it our greatest joy?
Lord, give us a listening heart, like Solomon. Help us to see the Kingdom of Heaven as the pearl of infinite worth — worth everything. Through Sts. Joachim and Anne, who raised the one who would bear the Savior, bless all grandparents and parents in faith. May we trust that in your hands, all things work together for good. Amen.
July 27, 2026
Pride and self-sufficiency cause us to rot, cut off from the life-giving connection with God. But the Kingdom grows in the opposite way — from the smallest thing. A mustard seed. A word of kindness. A faithful prayer. A quiet act of justice. The yeast hidden in dough. God’s Kingdom does not announce itself with fanfare; it works from within, transforming the whole. Never despise small beginnings. The greatest trees grow from the smallest seeds, and they become shelters for others.
Lord of the small and the hidden, plant in us today the mustard seed of your Kingdom. Let it grow in our families, our workplaces, our neighborhoods. Deliver us from the pride that rots and the self-sufficiency that isolates. May we become trees of shelter and places of welcome for all who need rest. Amen.
July 28, 2026
Jeremiah’s prayer is brutally honest: Have you abandoned us completely? Do not break your covenant. This is real prayer — not performance, but desperate pleading rooted in trust. And Jesus promises that at the end, the righteous will shine like the sun. Not like dim candles, but like the sun. The suffering of this age will give way to a glory we cannot yet imagine. Honest lament before God is not lack of faith — it is the deepest form of trust.
Lord, when we feel abandoned, let us pray as Jeremiah prayed — honestly, desperately, but with trust. Do not deal with us as our sins deserve. Uphold your covenant of love. And remind us of the promise: the righteous will shine like the sun. Help us to persevere until that day. Amen.
July 29, 2026
Martha often gets a bad reputation — the busy sister, the distracted one. But it is Martha who, in her grief, makes one of the greatest acts of faith in all of Scripture: I believe you are the Christ, the Son of God. She says this before Lazarus is raised — in the darkness of grief, before any sign. This is the faith we are called to: not faith that sees clearly, but faith that clings to Jesus even in the tomb. Jeremiah devoured God’s words and found joy in them. May we, in our grief and busyness, make Martha’s confession our own.
Lord Jesus, resurrection and life, we make Martha’s prayer our own: we believe you are the Christ. Even in our grief, our confusion, our waiting — we believe. Come to us in our tombs. Raise what is dead in us. Through the intercession of Martha, Mary and Lazarus, make us disciples who welcome you into our homes and our hearts. Amen.
July 30, 2026
The potter does not discard the clay when it goes wrong — he reworks it until it succeeds. This is how God works with us. No matter how misshapen we have become by sin or circumstance, we are still in his hands, still workable, still being formed. St. Peter Chrysologus preached compellingly that Christ became clay — human flesh — so that the Potter could be known from the inside. The new and the old: tradition and freshness, wisdom and openness. Bring from your storeroom both.
Lord, we are clay in your hands. Do not abandon the work you have begun in us. Rework what has gone wrong. Through St. Peter Chrysologus’s intercession, make us vessels fit for your use — shaped by your wisdom, filled with your love. Bring new life and ancient truth together in our hearts. Amen.
July 31, 2026
Jeremiah’s faithfulness to God’s word put his life at risk. Jesus himself was rejected by those who knew him best. St. Ignatius of Loyola — a soldier wounded in battle — was transformed by God into a different kind of warrior: one who fought spiritual battles with prayer, discernment, and the Spiritual Exercises. His prayer, the Suscipe, holds nothing back: Take, Lord, and receive all my liberty, my memory, my understanding and my entire will. Familiarity with Christ must never become contempt. We close July with this surrender of all things to God.
Take, Lord, and receive all my liberty, my memory, my understanding, and my entire will — all that I have and possess. You have given all to me; to you, O Lord, I return it. All is yours; dispose of it wholly according to your will. Give me only your love and your grace — that is enough for me. Through St. Ignatius’s intercession, may our July surrender bear great fruit in August and beyond. Amen.
