• Sermon - Year C

    25th Sunday in Ordinary time

    The papal visit to the UK, finishing today down in London, was preceded by several controversies: from theological to social ones. One of the most popular was the high cost of the pilgrimage, paid by the state. Some people said that the pope or the Catholic Church in the UK should pay for it. The Sunday Times, a magazine hardly…

  • Sermon - Year C

    24th Sunday in Ordinary time

    Let me look around for a while… I’m looking for sinners… Are there any sinners among us here? Of course, we all are sinners, but – actually – we are not. We want to think about ourselves as decent people. And, trust me or not, we are quite decent people. Of course none of us is perfect, but we are…

  • Sermon - Year C

    23rd Sunday in Ordinary time

    The gospel we’ve just listened to seems to be a perfect recipe for a suicide bomber or a sectarian (or both in the same person). Such a radical appeal automatically lights a warning light in every head. Or it should do. But many examples of the killing innocent people by terrorists provides sufficient evidence that’s not always obvious. I really…

  • Sermon - Year C

    22nd Sunday in Ordinary time

    I’ve been thinking for some years about a rather surprising custom of many mass attenders: taking the seats in the last pews. This is particularly noticeable when I say mass for Polish congregations. At the theatre or the opera it is the price that decides where you sit. But we don’t have tickets for mass. So, in this case it…

  • Sermon - Year C

    21st Sunday in Ordinary time

    According to the Old Testament, the dispersed tribes of Israel became a nation when they left Egypt and were given the Ten Commandments by Moses. God chose this particular nation as his own. God did this for a purpose: Israel would show God’s wisdom and love to the other nations; Israel would have brought the light of true faith in…