October 19, 2025 -- 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Episode 46 October 17, 2025 00:09:53
October 19, 2025 -- 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Sundays with Bishop Ken
October 19, 2025 -- 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Oct 17 2025 | 00:09:53

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Hosted By

Little Books of the Diocese of Saginaw

Show Notes

This Gospel is about prayer. It can be helpful to realize that we don't pray to flatter God, or try to talk God into something, or because God needs to have people praising him. We pray because it affects us.

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Episode Transcript

[00:00:06] Speaker A: This is Sundays with Bishop Ken. Thanks for sharing some quiet time with the Lord today. We welcome guest reader Deacon Eric Bissette. Deacon Eric is a beloved spiritual leader in his home parishes of the Diocese of Rochester, New York. Little Book's listeners will recognize Deacon Eric as a regular narrator for our daily reflections. And now, here is today's gospel and homily. [00:00:46] Speaker B: A Reading from the Holy Gospel According to Luke Jesus told his disciples a parable about the necessity for them to pray always without becoming weary. He said, there was a judge in a certain town who neither feared God nor respected any human being. And a widow in that town used to come to him and say, render a just decision for me against my adversary. For a long time the judge was unwilling, but eventually he thought, while it's true that I neither fear God nor respect any human being because this widow keeps bothering me, I shall deliver a just decision for her, lest she finally come and strike me. The Lord said, pay attention to what the dishonest judge says. Will not God then secure the rights of his chosen ones who call out to him day and night? Will he be slow to answer them? I tell you, he will see to it that justice is done for them speedily. But when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth? The Gospel of the Lord this gospel is about prayer. It can be helpful to realize that we don't pray to flatter God or to talk God into something or because God needs to have people praising him. We pray because it affects us. It sets us in the right direction toward God. Praying helps us to realize there is a God, that God loves us, that we need God, and that the gifts God gives us are far, far beyond us. Existence, life, eternal life, the forgiveness of sin. These are not things we can do for ourselves. They're beyond us and they're gifts from God. When we pray, we realize that we teach a little child to say thank you to his mother and on Mother's Day to take crayons and make a card for her. The mother doesn't need that, but the child does. The child realizes how much his mother does for him, how much his mother loves him. It sets the child in the right direction. Recently I played golf with a fellow who was honored as one of the best golfers in Michigan. He shot 4 under par. He was a fine person, and we simply enjoyed the round of golf. He didn't try to correct my swing or anything like that. But afterward, as we were having a sandwich, I said to him, I noticed that as you stood over the ball ready to make your swing, you would always look down the fairway for four or five seconds. You'd stare at something out there. Then you'd look down at the ball and start your swing. What is it you were doing? He said, what I do is look at exactly where I want the ball to go. You see, your body is something like a computer. You decide where you want the ball to go, and then your body makes it go there. I told him, you've got a different kind of body than I've got. He said, no, you have to work on your golf swing on the driving range, learn how to make the ball fade or draw and develop a good swing. But when you're out on the golf course playing, you can't think of all those mechanics. I try not to think of anything except where I want the ball to go and then let my body do it. This doesn't mean it will happen every time, but if you concentrate on where you want the ball to go, it sets everything in the right direction and a lot of good things happen. It struck me much later that this is why we pray. We turn ourselves toward God, and when we do that, it sets everything in the right direction and a lot of good things happen. It's not hard to pray. It's simple. And actually, we like to pray. That's not the problem. The problem is in the middle of our day, we forget to turn towards God. As a matter of fact, it doesn't seem that God belongs in the regular stuff of our day. God doesn't fit there when we're caught in traffic or in a meeting or doing the things we do all day. That's what's hard about prayer and what Jesus was talking about in today's being persistent in our prayer, sustaining our prayer. When we manage to do that, it sets us in the right direction and a lot of good things happen. Over the course of time, Christians have developed customs and traditions that try to help us do that, and we ought to take a good look at them. I've thought about these and asked a few people to brainstorm with me some of those customs. Here are a few I'll bet you've heard of and done most of them at one time or another. When you hear a siren, you say a prayer. It might be a fire engine or an ambulance or a police car, and you say a prayer for the people who are in some kind of trouble. We pray before a meal. We all know that one. It's one of the easiest prayers to say, and it's one of the easiest prayers to skip. When you hear a church bell, you say a prayer. That's why the church developed the custom of the Angelus to remind us to pray in the morning, at noon, and in the evening to pray in the middle of whatever we're doing. When you lose something, you pray to St. Anthony. These are fine customs and we ought not lose them. We can make up some of our own to help point us in the right direction during the day. Just as Moses needed help to hold his arms up in prayer, we need the help of customs like these to pray during the day. I close by reminding myself and you that we turn toward God, set ourselves in the right direction. Most of all during the Mass, when the bread and wine and gifts are brought forward to the altar, they represent us, food and drink and our living. We place them on the altar which represents Christ and together with Christ in the Eucharistic prayer, we give it all to God. Jesus did that on the cross and this is made present to us so that we can enter into it with Him. We give today, tomorrow, our whole life to God and commit ourselves to do what God wants us to do in our life. It's our greatest act of prayer. I invite you to be more conscious of that as we continue to celebrate the Eucharist today. And I invite all of us to develop customs in our lives that help turn us toward God during the day. When we turn toward God, then we're on the right track, were pointed in the right direction and a lot of good things happen. [00:08:42] Speaker A: Thanks for joining us today. If you like this week's Reflection, subscribe on your favorite podcast platform. Sundays with Bishop Ken is a free broadcast from Little Books to help support our ministry. Please consider clicking the Donate button. Sharing this podcast with a friend is another great way to help our ministry grow. Our Little Books app features our Little Books daily reflections during Advent, Christmas, Lent and Easter. Here you can read, listen and journal in a prayerful digital environment. Sundays with Bishop Ken is produced by Little Books of the Diocese of Saginaw. For more about Little Books and scripture based prayer resources for the whole family, visit littlebooks.org have a great week and pray with us again soon.

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