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Wednesday, July 15, 2026

An Imaginary Dialogue with St. Mary Magdalene by Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP


 “This is an imaginative conversation inspired by the Gospel witness of Mary Magdalene and the continuing call of women to proclaim the Good News.”

A Prayerful Invitation

One of my favorite ways to pray is through the gift of imagination. For centuries, Christians have discovered that God often speaks to the heart through our imagination as well as through our minds. St. Ignatius of Loyola encouraged this form of prayer by inviting us to enter the Gospel stories, to see the faces, hear the voices, and allow ourselves to become participants in God’s unfolding story of love.

I have found imaginative prayer to be a grace-filled way of growing in faith and spiritual consciousness. As I pray, I sometimes imagine conversations with biblical figures whose witness continues to inspire us today. These encounters are not intended to be historical accounts, but prayerful reflections that help us listen more deeply for the voice of the Holy Spirit.

The dialogue that follows is offered in that spirit.

As I prayed before dawn, I imagined sitting with Mary Magdalene—the apostle to the apostles and the first witness to the Resurrection. I wondered what she might say to women who continue to answer God’s call to ministry in our own time. What wisdom would she share with Roman Catholic Women Priests and all who long for a Church where every baptized person is welcomed, valued, and free to serve according to their God-given gifts?

I invite you to enter this conversation prayerfully. Perhaps, as you read, you will hear not only Mary Magdalene’s voice, but also the gentle whisper of the Spirit inviting each of us to proclaim the Good News with courage, compassion, and joy.

I sat quietly in prayer before dawn.

The world was still.

The birds had not yet begun their morning song.

I carried into prayer the hopes and struggles of so many women called to ministry—women whose voices have been ignored, whose gifts have been questioned, and whose love for the Church remains steadfast despite rejection.

In the silence, I whispered:

“Mary Magdalene, apostle to the apostles, what would you say to us today?”

Slowly, as though emerging from the morning mist of Easter, she stood before me—not as a distant saint carved in marble, but as a living disciple whose eyes sparkled with wisdom, compassion, and unmistakable joy.

She smiled.

Mary Magdalene:

“Bridget Mary, why do you ask as though you do not already know?”

I laughed softly.

“Because there are days when the resistance feels overwhelming.”

She nodded knowingly.

“Oh yes. I remember resistance.”

“I remember the whispers.”

“I remember the disbelief.”

“I remember the men who could not imagine that the Risen Christ would entrust the first proclamation of Resurrection to a woman.”

She paused.

“Yet Jesus did.”

“He called my name.”

“And everything changed.”

I asked,

“Did you know then that your witness would inspire generations?”

Mary smiled.

“I knew only that Love had conquered death.”

“When Love calls your name, you cannot remain silent.”

“You simply go.”

“You tell the story.”

“You proclaim what you have seen.”

“That is what apostles do.”

I hesitated.

“But today many still say women cannot preach, cannot preside, cannot be ordained.”

Mary laughed—a joyful, liberating laugh that echoed through the garden.

“My dear sister...”

“Did anyone give me permission to proclaim the Resurrection?”

“The Risen Christ commissioned me.”

“That was enough.”

She stepped closer.

“Remember this.”

“Authority born of love is always stronger than authority rooted in fear.”

I reflected on the thousands of women throughout history whose ministries had remained hidden.

“The Church has forgotten so many of its daughters.”

Mary gently touched my shoulder.

“No.”

“Some have forgotten.”

“The Spirit never forgets.”

“The Spirit continues to awaken women in every generation.”

“The same Breath that filled me on Easter morning is breathing through women today.”

“Through mothers.”

“Teachers.”

“Theologians.”

“Pastors.”

“Chaplains.”

“Prophets.”

“And yes...”

She looked directly into my eyes.

“...through women priests.”

Tears filled my eyes.

“You mean...”

“I mean exactly what you think I mean.”

“You are not replacing my ministry.”

“You are continuing it.”

“Whenever you proclaim the Gospel...”

“Whenever you celebrate the Eucharist around an open table...”

“Whenever you anoint the sick...”

“Whenever you bless a child...”

“Whenever you accompany someone through grief...”

“Whenever you welcome those whom others exclude...”

“You are doing what I did.”

“You are announcing that Christ is alive.”

I thought of the Roman Catholic Women Priests movement and the many inclusive Catholic communities around the world.

“We are still considered outsiders.”

Mary nodded.

“So were the first disciples.”

“The Gospel has always grown from the margins.”

“The Resurrection began in a garden before sunrise—not in the Temple.”

“The Spirit delights in surprising those who believe they control God.”

We both laughed.

I asked,

“What would you say to women who feel called to priesthood but are afraid?”

Mary’s voice became wonderfully tender.

“I would tell them what the angels told us at the empty tomb.”

“’Do not be afraid.’”

“Do not wait for everyone to approve your calling.”

“Listen instead for the voice that speaks your name.”

“The One who called me still calls women today.”

“No decree can silence the Spirit.”

“No institution can imprison Resurrection.”

“No closed door can keep Divine Love from entering.”

She continued,

“Remember what your communities have discovered.”

“The Church is born whenever two or three gather in Christ’s name.”

“The Eucharist is celebrated wherever love welcomes all.”

“The priesthood exists to serve—not to dominate.”

“The Gospel belongs to everyone.”

I asked one final question.

“What gives you hope for the Church?”

Mary’s face shone with quiet confidence.

“I have already seen what Love can do.”

“I watched despair become joy.”

“I watched fear become courage.”

“I watched death become new life.”

“Why would I doubt the Spirit now?”

She looked toward the horizon where dawn was breaking.

“The Church is still awakening.”

“Slowly.”

“Painfully.”

“But surely.”

“The day will come when women and men minister together as equals.”

“When leadership will be measured by compassion rather than privilege.”

“When every baptized person will know that they are called, gifted, and sent.”

“And when that day comes...”

She smiled again.

“...people will wonder why it took so long.”

The morning light filled the room.

Mary’s presence gently faded, but her final words remained with me like a blessing carried on the wind.

“Bridget Mary, keep telling the story.”

“Keep breaking the bread.”

“Keep welcoming everyone.”

“Keep announcing Resurrection.”

“The garden is still blooming.”

As I rose from prayer, I realized this conversation was not mine alone.

It belongs to every woman who has heard Christ call her name.

It belongs to every person who believes that the Holy Spirit continues to pour out gifts without discrimination.

It belongs to every inclusive Catholic community where the Gospel is proclaimed with joy, where the Eucharist is celebrated around an open table, and where love is stronger than exclusion.

Mary Magdalene’s ministry did not end on Easter morning.

It lives wherever the Good News is proclaimed with courage.

It lives wherever barriers are broken.

It lives wherever women answer God’s call with generous hearts.

And it lives today in women priests and the communities they serve—continuing the Resurrection story that began in a garden and continues to unfold wherever Divine Love is free to flourish.

“Go to my brothers and sisters and say to them...” (John 20:17)

The commission continues today!

Come to the table—not because you have everything figured out, but because you are loved. Come with your questions, your hopes, your wounds, your joys, and your dreams. There is a place prepared for you. Always.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Scattershot Sowing” Matthew 13:1-9 July 12, 2026 Rev. Annie Watson, Holy Family Catholic Church


 

There’s something wonderfully holy about the scattershot way the sower flings seed in Matthew 13. The word itself—scattershot—usually carries a negative tone: unfocused, random, lacking strategy. Its roots in shotgun terminology remind us of pellets spreading wide, touching more ground than a single bullet ever could. In business, such an approach is often criticized for being too broad, too careless, too inefficient.

But in the kingdom of God, inefficiency can be a kind of grace.

Jesus tells of a sower who seems almost carefree, scattering seed with a wide, generous sweep. Seed lands on the hard path, on rocky soil, among thorns, and finally on good earth. It’s not careful. It’s not calculated. It’s not optimized. It’s extravagant.

Why sow this way? Perhaps because the sower knows something we forget: the supply of seed is limitless. When you have an endless storehouse of grace, you don’t ration it. You don’t test the soil first. You don’t protect your resources. You simply give.

And isn’t that a tender picture of God?

We, with our limited patience and conditional kindness, would advise God to be more selective. “Only sow where it will grow.” “Don’t waste love on hardened hearts.” “Don’t bother with rocky lives or thornchoked souls.” “Focus on the sure thing.”

But if God had followed our advice, most of us wouldn’t be here today, standing in the harvest of mercy we never deserved.

The scattershot sower is the gospel’s quiet miracle. Grace flung wide. Love cast broadly. Hope landing in places no one expects.

This is why I love thinking of the kingdom as the Sod of God—holy ground springing up in surprising places, nurtured by seeds sown with divine abandon.

The beauty of scattershot sowing is that abundance creates possibility. A cautious sower limits the harvest before it even begins. But a generous sower trusts that God is doing more beneath the surface than any of us can see.

So let us preach, teach, and love with that same wide sweep. Let us sow among children, skeptics, the wounded, the distracted, and the spiritually curious. Let us scatter grace where we expect little return, because God delights in growing gardens where we see only dust.

And let us measure faithfulness not by the yield we can count, but by the love we are willing to cast freely into the world.

Healing Prayers for Peace, Comfort and Strength with Rev. Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan


 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emzNt-gUdqA

I'm Rev. Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan—author, spiritual teacher, and retreat and conference speaker.

Here you'll find brief healing prayers to bring peace, hope, comfort, and strength into everyday life.

Based on my new book, Healing Prayers and Blessings for Everyday Life, each Short is a gentle reminder that you are loved, you are not alone, and healing is already unfolding within you.

🙏 Subscribe for a daily moment of prayer, reflection, and blessing.

Be healed. Be loved. Be blessed.



                                                         https://youtu.be/FnikIi6imq4



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                                                        https://youtu.be/uypso42lcEE


                                                     https://youtu.be/oeoIAvyW6RA


                                                               https://youtu.be/roxt3R9XeLE


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                                                          https://youtu.be/ZLnku9KWLLc



                                                       https://youtu.be/LSbSQ5KE_0I



                                                          https://youtu.be/1vvNEqbfSnQ


                                                              https://youtu.be/fK4aY0ttf8g                                                                      



                                                                   

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Liturgy for the 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time: "Who Do You Say I Am?" A Celebration of Baptismal Equality and Shared Leadership


 

Welcome

Welcome, beloved companions on the journey.

Today Jesus asks each of us the most important question we will ever answer:

"Who do you say that I am?"

Our response is not merely spoken in words but lived through compassion, justice, inclusion, and love. Together we affirm that Christ continues to live among us whenever we gather around an open table where all are welcome and every person's gifts are honored.


Opening Song: 


Rite of Transformation

Leader:

Jesus entrusted Peter with the keys of God's reign.

Today, those same keys are placed into our hands.

All extend their hands.

Together:

Holy One,

Open our hearts
to welcome all.

Open our minds
to wisdom.

Open our hands
to serve.

Open our communities
to equality.

Open our lives
to the transforming presence of Christ.

May we unlock hope
where there is despair,

compassion
where there is suffering,

justice
where there is oppression,

and peace
where there is division.

May we become
living stones
building your beloved community.

Amen.


Gloria: 

All:

Glory to God in the highest,
and peace to all people,
all creatures,
and our beautiful Earth.

We praise you.
We bless you.
We honor you.
We rejoice in your boundless love.

Holy One,
Creator of the universe,
Source of all life,
we thank you
for the gift of each new day,
for the beauty of creation,
and for the sacred dignity
you have planted within every person.

Jesus,
Living Christ,
you reveal the face of Divine Love.
You welcome the forgotten,
heal the wounded,
lift up the poor,
and gather us at one inclusive table.

You call us
to be your Body in the world,
sharing compassion,
forgiveness,
justice,
and hope.

Holy Spirit,
Breath of Life,
you stir our hearts
and awaken our gifts.
You call women and men alike
to ministries of service,
wisdom,
and Gospel equality.

You gather us
into communities of welcome,
where all belong,
all are valued,
and all are invited
to share in Christ's mission.

For you are the Holy One,
the Wellspring of Love,
the Light that no darkness can overcome.

With all creation,
with saints and seekers,
with ancestors and generations yet to come,
we sing forever:

Glory to God in the highest!
Peace on Earth!
Alleluia! Amen.


Opening Prayer

Holy One,
You dwell among us,
not in places of privilege,
but wherever people gather in love.

Today you ask us anew,
"Who do you say that I am?"

May our answer be found
not only in our words,
but in our welcome,
our courage,
our commitment to justice,
and our willingness
to become living stones
building communities of compassion.

Strengthen us to recognize Christ
in every person,
especially those whose voices
have too often been silenced.

We pray in the Spirit of Jesus,
our brother and companion.

Amen.


First Reading

Isaiah 22:19-23

A reading from the prophet Isaiah.

Thus says the Holy One:

"I will remove those who cling to power for their own advantage,
and I will raise up leaders who serve with wisdom, compassion, and integrity.

I will clothe them with responsibility
and strengthen them for the work of justice.
They shall become a source of hope
for all who seek mercy and belonging.

I will place into their hands
the keys of faithful stewardship.
What they open for the flourishing of the people
shall remain open.
What they close to injustice and oppression
shall remain closed.

They shall stand firm,
like a strong peg set in a secure place,
becoming a source of strength
for their families,
their communities,
and all who seek shelter in God's love."

The Word of God.
Thanks be to God.



Responsorial Reflection

Response:

"Your love endures forever, O Holy One."

(Psalm 138)

Responsorial Psalm

Psalm 138 – An Inclusive Adaptation

Response:
Your love endures forever, O Holy One.

Reader:

With all my heart I thank you, O Holy One.
In the presence of all who seek truth,
I sing your praise.

Response:
Your love endures forever, O Holy One.

I bow before your holy presence
and give thanks for your unfailing love and faithfulness.
When I called, you answered me;
you filled my spirit with courage and hope.

Response:
Your love endures forever, O Holy One.

May all the peoples of the earth
recognize your justice and compassion.
May they sing of your ways,
for your glory is revealed
whenever mercy triumphs over fear
and love overcomes division.

Response:
Your love endures forever, O Holy One.

Though you are beyond all imagining,
you draw near to the humble
and accompany those who struggle.
When we walk through difficult times,
your Spirit strengthens us
and your faithful love surrounds us.

Response:
Your love endures forever, O Holy One.

Complete in us the work of love
that you have begun.
Guide us to become instruments
of peace, healing, and justice.
Never abandon the work of your hands,
for we belong to you,
and all creation rests in your embrace.

Final Response:
Your love endures forever, O Holy One. Amen.


Second Reading

Romans 11:33-36

Reader:

A reading from the Letter of Paul to the Romans.

How deep are the riches
of the wisdom and love of our God!

How unfathomable are the Holy One's ways,
and how far beyond our understanding
are the mysteries of Divine Love.

Who has fully known the mind of God?
Who has been God's advisor?
Who could ever place God in their debt?

Everything comes from God,
through God,
and finds its fulfillment in God.

To the Holy One—
Source of Life,
Living Wisdom,
and Everlasting Love—
be glory,
gratitude,
and praise,
now and forever.

The Word of God.

Thanks be to God.


Gospel

Matthew 16:13-20

Today we hear Peter's courageous profession of faith. We celebrate not the elevation of one person over others, but the revelation that the Spirit speaks through ordinary disciples. The "rock" upon which Christ builds the Church is the living faith of the whole community—a discipleship of equals in which every baptized person shares in Christ's mission of love, justice, and reconciliation.

Presider:
The Good News according to Matthew.

All:
Glory to you, O Christ.

When Jesus came to the region of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples,

"Who do people say that the Human One is?"

They replied,
"Some say John the Baptizer;
others say Elijah;
still others say Jeremiah
or one of the prophets."

Jesus then asked them,

"But who do you say that I am?"

Simon Peter answered,

"You are the Messiah,
the Son of the Living God."

Jesus replied,

"Blessed are you, Simon, child of Jonah!
For this insight has come to you
not through human wisdom,
but through my Abba God.

You are Peter, the Rock,
and upon this living faith
I will continue building my community,
and the powers of death
will not overcome it.

I will entrust to you
the keys of the Kin-dom of Heaven.
Whatever you open on earth
will be opened in heaven,
and whatever you close on earth
will be closed in heaven."

Then Jesus instructed the disciples
not to tell anyone yet
that he was the Messiah.

The Gospel of Christ.

All:
Praise to you, Jesus Christ.


Homily Starter: Bridget Mary

Jesus asks two questions.

First:

"Who do people say that I am?"

The disciples repeat the opinions of others.

Then Jesus asks the deeper question:

"Who do you say that I am?"

Peter answers:

"You are the Christ, the Son of the Living God."

Jesus blesses Peter—not because Peter is perfect, but because Peter has listened to the Spirit.

The "rock" is not one individual elevated above everyone else. The rock is living faith inspired by God. Whenever women and men discern together, listen deeply, and act courageously, Christ continues building the Church.

Today we know that the Spirit has raised up faithful women and men across the world to serve inclusive Catholic communities. Their ministries arise not from privilege but from baptism.

The keys Jesus speaks about are not symbols of domination or exclusion.

They are the keys of:

  • compassion 
  • forgiveness 
  • reconciliation 
  • hospitality 
  • justice 
  • hope 

These keys belong to the whole People of God.

Each baptized person has received gifts for building God's reign.

When communities recognize these gifts, the Church becomes what Jesus intended—a circle of equals where leadership is shared in service rather than hierarchy.

Today Jesus asks each of us:

Who is Christ for you?

Perhaps Christ is:

the healer who restores hope,

the prophet who challenges injustice,

the companion who walks beside us,

the Wisdom who guides us,

the Love that never abandons us.

Our answer becomes visible in the lives we live.


Community Sharing

Invite everyone to share briefly:

Who is Jesus for you today?

or

How are you being called to use the "keys" God has entrusted to you for the healing of our world?


Profession of Faith

We believe in God,
the Holy Mystery,
whose love embraces the entire universe.

We believe in Jesus,
our brother,
who revealed God's unconditional love,
welcomed the excluded,
challenged injustice,
and showed us how to live fully human lives.

We believe in the Holy Spirit,
ever creating,
ever renewing,
calling women and men alike
to ministries of service,
compassion,
and justice.

We believe the Church
is the People of God,
called to be a community of equals,
where every baptized person
shares responsibility
for proclaiming the Gospel.

We believe
love is stronger than fear,
hope stronger than despair,
life stronger than death.

Amen.


Prayers of the Community

Response:

Holy One, hear our prayer.

For Pope Leo XIV, church leaders, women priests, deacons, and all baptized people, that together we may build communities rooted in equality and Gospel love...

For all who have been excluded from full participation in the Church, especially women, LGBTQ+ persons, divorced Catholics, and those who have felt unwelcome...

For peace throughout the world...

For healing of Earth, our common home...

For all who are sick, grieving, lonely, or discouraged...

For our own intentions...


Preparation of the Table

Blessed are you,
Holy One,
through your goodness
we have bread and wine,
the work of human hands
and gifts of Earth.

May they become for us
the sacred meal
that nourishes us
to become Christ's presence
in our world.


Inclusive Eucharistic Prayer

Eucharistic Preface

Presider:

God is with you.

All:
And also with you.

Presider:
Lift up your hearts.

All:
We lift them up to our Loving God.

Presider:
Let us give thanks to the Holy One, our God.

All:
It is right to give God thanks and praise.

Presider:

Ever-present God,
it is truly right and just,
our joy and our peace,
to give you thanks always and everywhere.

From the beginning of creation,
you have called ordinary people
to extraordinary acts of love.

You spoke through prophets,
sages, poets, and peacemakers.
You entrusted your dream
to women and men
whose hearts were open
to the movements of your Spirit.

In Jesus,
your Living Word,
you revealed
that true greatness is found
not in power,
but in service;
not in privilege,
but in compassion;
not in domination,
but in love.

When Jesus asked,
"Who do you say that I am?"
he invited every generation
to discover Christ anew
within their own lives
and within communities
that welcome all
and exclude no one.

Today your Spirit continues
to raise up disciples
whose faith becomes living stones
building your beloved community—
a Church rooted
in baptismal equality,
shared responsibility,
and Gospel justice.

Therefore,
with Mary of Nazareth,
Mary Magdalene,
Phoebe,
Peter,
the communion of saints,
and with all creation,
we join in their unending hymn of praise:


Holy, Holy 

All:

Holy,
Holy,
Holy One,
God of boundless love.

Heaven and Earth
are filled with your glory.

Hosanna in the highest!

Blessed are all
who come in the name
of our God.

Hosanna in the highest!

Hosanna in the highest!


Holy indeed are You,
Loving God,
present in every age,
calling your people
into relationships of justice and peace.

Throughout history
your Spirit has inspired
women and men,
prophets and mystics,
disciples and saints,
to reveal your compassionate love.

Jesus gathered all at table—
friends and strangers,
women and men,
saints and sinners—
revealing that no one
is excluded from your embrace.

Stretch out your Spirit upon us
and upon these gifts
of bread and wine.

May they become
the living presence of Christ among us.

As Jesus shared the meal
before his death,
he took bread,
blessed it,
broke it,
and shared it saying:

All: (Please extend hands and pray the words of Consecration together)

Take and eat.
This is my body.
Whenever you do this,
remember me.

He then shared the cup saying:

Take and drink.
This is the cup of the new covenant,
poured out in love for all.
Whenever you drink,
remember me.

Memorial Acclamation:

Together we proclaim:

Christ lives among us.
Christ is present within us.
Christ will continue transforming the world through us.


Community of Saints Remembrance

Presider:

Loving God,
we remember that we are surrounded
by a great cloud of witnesses
whose lives continue to inspire us
to live the Gospel with courage and joy.

We remember Mary, the mother of Jesus,
whose faithful "Yes"
opened the way for Christ's presence in our world.

We remember Mary Magdalene,
apostle to the apostles,
first witness to the Resurrection.

We remember Peter,
whose faith became a rock
not because he was perfect,
but because he trusted your Spirit.

We remember Phoebe, Prisca, Junia,
and all the women and men
who nurtured the first Christian communities
through leadership, hospitality, and faithful service.

We remember the saints of every generation,
known and unknown,
who chose compassion over fear,
justice over oppression,
and love over exclusion.

We remember especially
our beloved family members,
friends,
mentors,
and members of this community
who now live forever in your embrace.
(Pause to name those remembered.)

Together with them,
and with all who seek truth and peace,
may we become living stones
building your beloved community,
where every person is welcomed,
every gift is cherished,
and every table is open.

Through Christ,
with Christ,
and in Christ,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
all glory and honor are yours,
Loving God,
forever and ever.


Great Amen

All:

Amen!

Yes, we are the Body of Christ.

Amen!

Yes, we will live the Gospel.

Amen!

Yes, we will build communities
of justice,
compassion,
and peace.

Amen!

Today and always.
Amen.


Communion Rite


All: Prayer of Jesus (together)


Sign of Peace: (let us offer one another a sign of Peace:

Prayer for the Breaking of Bread

All:

Though we are many,
we are one body,
for we all share
the one Bread of Life.

Invitation to Communion

This is God's table.

Everyone is welcome.

Come,
for you are loved.

Prayer After Communion

Gracious God,

You have nourished us
with the Bread of Life
and strengthened us
to become living stones
building communities
of justice,
compassion,
and peace.

May our answer
to Jesus' question—
"Who do you say that I am?"—
be revealed
through lives of courageous love
and joyful service.

Amen.


Final Blessing

May the Holy One bless you
with Peter's courage,
Mary Magdalene's faithful witness,
Phoebe's servant leadership,
and the wisdom of countless women and men
whose lives continue building God's Church.

May Christ walk beside you.

May the Spirit guide you.

May you become living stones
in the beloved community
where all are welcomed,
all are valued,
and all are called.

Go in peace
to love and serve.

Thanks be to God.