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4592m4ywd52007-11-29 15:44:19.697323http://ll.mycatholicvoice.com/f/8/2236_thumb.jpgThe New CreationFather Robert Barronfatherbarron2007-11-29http://www.mycatholicvoice.com/images/icons/default_profile.jpgIn John's Gospel, we often find parallels between the work of Jesus and the work of God described in the opening chapters of the book of Genesis. As God created the world; so Jesus recreates it. God said, "Let there be light;" and Jesus said, "I am the light of the world." In our Gospel for today, the risen Jesus is portrayed as the recreator of the world, the source of peace, the Lord of the Church.word,fire,father,robert,barron,christ,sermon,sermons,podcastHomilies250166e6763cf555867efee720acb853143@0|@0|@0|@0|@0yeshttp://ll.mycatholicvoice.com/f/ch/2m4ywd/276TheNewCreation.mp3

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326LzrCZMFourteenth Sunday in Ordinary TimeSummary to come…word,fire,father,robert,barron,christ,sermon,sermons,podcastHomiliesfatherbarron1050Father Robert Barron5http://ll.mycatholicvoice.com/f/8/2009_thumb.jpg2007-11-29 15:42:36.990724
507PG4gdoAll is LossIn our second reading for this Sunday, St. Paul lays out his resumé. In terms of the Judaism of his time, Paul was about as accomplished as one could hope to be: he was a defender of the tradition, steeped in the wisdom of his people, and blameless under the law. But after seeing Jesus risen from the dead, Paul said that he counted all of those achievements as loss and refuse. So we, he implies, should not base our lives on our accomplishments, degrees, social status--but rather on Christ crucified and risen.word,fire,father,robert,barron,christ,sermon,sermons,podcastHomiliesfatherbarron230Father Robert Barron5http://ll.mycatholicvoice.com/f/8/1960_thumb.jpg2007-11-29 15:44:56.402821
231DaawZaHate Your Mother and FatherWhen Jesus tells us to hate mother, father, brothers, sisters, friends, he is not demonstrating a disturbing misanthropy. Rather, he is telling us not to treat those around us as our possessions. The spiritual life consists, not in controlling others for the sake of the ego, but in giving others the space to be."word,fire,father,robert,barron,christ,sermon,sermons,podcastHomiliesfatherbarron600Father Robert Barron5http://ll.mycatholicvoice.com/f/8/2140_thumb.jpg2007-11-29 15:41:41.948747
509d2jyJbA New CreationEaster is the dawn of a new creation. St. John tells us that Mary Magdalene came to the tomb early on the morning of the first day of the week. This is meant to call to mind the first day of creation, when God said, "Let there be light" and brought order out of chaos. From the meaninglessness of death, God brings eternal life. This is the central and revolutionary message of Easter.word,fire,father,robert,barron,christ,sermon,sermons,podcastHomiliesfatherbarron250Father Robert Barron5http://ll.mycatholicvoice.com/f/8/2136_thumb.jpg2007-11-29 15:44:57.408231
210fhL36YVictory DayEaster is victory day. Jesus came, in C.S. Lewis’ words, as a warrior to do battle with all of the powers of darkness, from oppression and violence, to disease and death itself. On the cross, he struggled at close quarters with the enemy that most frightens us, and in the Resurrection, he won the victory on our behalf.word,fire,father,robert,barron,christ,sermon,sermons,podcastHomiliesfatherbarron1020Father Robert Barron5http://ll.mycatholicvoice.com/f/8/2092_thumb.jpg2007-11-29 15:41:31.466492
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