Skip to main content

Spiritual Earthquake: A Tsunami of Mercy for a Secular Age

The readings for this homily: https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/041326.cfm

In the midst of the 50-day Easter season, Marian Superior General Fr. Joe Roesch, MIC, invites us to reflect on the profound gift of the Holy Spirit and our society’s urgent need for a spiritual renewal. Drawing from the Acts of the Apostles, he reminds us that the early Church faced persecution just as Jesus did. After Sts. Peter and John were released, the community prayed, not for safety, but for boldness. Their prayer was answered with a physical shaking of the place where they were praying, a spiritual earthquake that signaled a fresh outpouring of divine power.

Father Joe drew from the Divine Mercy Sunday homily of the Most Rev. David L. Ricken, bishop of the diocese of Green Bay, who celebrated the Mass at the National Shrine of The Divine Mercy yesterday, to connect this ancient event to our modern reality, describing the rising tide of secularism as a tsunami threatening the faith. In response, we do not need a wall of defense, but a counter-tsunami of mercy. Just as an earthquake under the ocean creates a massive wave, a spiritual earthquake in our hearts can unleash an overwhelming flood of God’s grace. We must ask the Holy Spirit to renew the face of the earth, strengthening us to proclaim the Resurrection despite opposition.

Father Joe also explored the encounter between Jesus and Nicodemus. Though Nicodemus came to meet Jesus at night, afraid of the light of day and the scrutiny of his contemporaries, he still recognized Jesus as a teacher from God. Father Joe explains that Jesus came to repair the rupture caused by original sin, restoring the harmony between God and humanity that Adam and Eve had lost. Through the Sacrament of Baptism, we are born from above, receiving a second, spiritual birth. This new covenant is maintained through the Sacrament of Reconciliation, which Fr. Joe highlights as a powerful means of healing. He recounted the long lines of penitents awaiting their turn to go to Confession at Eden Hill during Divine Mercy Sunday, witnessing to the tangible joy of God as relationships are restored.
Added to Favorites!
Added to Watch Later!

You might also like...

Saint Bernadette was born into a loving family that lived at a mill until they fell on hard times. She was a small girl but was loved dearly and she was brought up in the faith. Learn more about her upbringing as we continue our virtual Marian pilgrimage with Fr. Joseph Roesch, MIC.The beautifully photographed book "France: A Pilgrimage with Mary" is now available at ShopMercy.org
Taking a page from Lucia, Fr. Joe shares a wonderful question we should continually ask God: "What do you want of me?"
The Eucharist is precious to us because we are given God Himself, Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. That is why it is so important to have reverence for the Eucharist: God is real and wants us to take Him seriously.