Thursday, 3 April 2025

Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 2 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin and Aimee MacIver

Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike
Volume 2
Leaders Guide
ISBN 811661016695
Student Workbook
ISBN 9781950784424

Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 2 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin MacIver

I had Volume 1 on my wishlist for a long time. Originally it was a spiral bound volume with a DVD and everything you needed to work through it yourself or lead a group through it. Last year I found out it was available in a digital format, but you can also purchase the workbook digitally and have access to each lesson though an Ascension course online. When I found that out, I picked up both volumes to work through. About the authors we are informed:

“Fr. Mike Schmitz serves as director of youth and young adult ministry for the Diocese of Duluth and as chaplain for the Newman Catholic Campus Ministry at the University of Minnesota-Duluth. He is a presenter in Chosen, Altaration, and on Ascension Presents.”

And 

“Aimee and Colin MacIver are co-authors of Power and Grace, Theology of the Body for Teens: Middle School, The Parent and Sponsor Guides for Chosen: Your Journey Toward Confirmation, and Belonging: Baptism in the Family of God. They also co-wrote Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike. Both are graduates of the Franciscan University of Steubenville and teach at St. Scholastica Academy. They live in Covington, Louisiana with their two children, Leo and Zelie.”

The description of this volume is:

“TThe Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike: Vol. 2, Leader's Guide is a feature-packed teacher’s guide designed to accompany the extremely popular Ascension Presents YouTube videos from Fr. Mike Schmitz, presented here on a convenient DVD. You’ll get lessons built around Fr. Mike’s short videos on a wide variety of topics kids care about, from core questions about Catholicism to practical and tough issues in Christian discipleship. Teachers, catechists, and youth ministers can supplement USCCB curriculum, prompt small-group discussion, and answer students’ questions easily and powerfully with this teacher’s guide and DVD.

What You Get…

• Lessons built around fifteen of Fr. Mike’s videos on crucial topics
• Objectives for each lesson and discussion questions with in-depth leader commentary
• Opening and closing prayers with Scripture
• Outlines of Fr. Mike’s thoughts to accompany each video
• Activity ideas
• Reproducible student pages with prayers, Fr. Mike’s key points, and journal prompts
• DVD with fifteen Fr. Mike videos from Ascension Presents and a NEW leader video from Fr. Mike.”

The chapters and sections in this volume are:

Believe – Why Be Catholic 
Believe – Understanding the Church’s Teachings
Lesson 1 - Why God Gave Us Bodies 
Lesson 2 - Can I Get a Tattoo? 
Lesson 3 - Four Essentials for Catholics 

Love – Discerning God’s Will
Lesson 4 - What Does God Want Me to Do? 
Lesson 5 - Tips for Praying 
Lesson 6 - Do Catholics Worship Saints? 

Pray – Questions About Eternity
Lesson 7 - What You Should Know About Purgatory 
Lesson 8 - Will My Pet Be in Heaven? 
Lesson 9 - I Ain’t Afraid of No Ghosts! 

Grow – Help with Spiritual Hurdles
Lesson 10 - Confessing the Same Sins Over and Over Again 
Lesson 11 - Why Is Taking the Lord’s Name in Vain Wrong? 
Lesson 12 - Why Does God Let Bad Things Happen? 

Think – Help with Tough Topics
Lesson 13 - The Church and Immigration 
Lesson 14 - Catholic Teaching on Contraception Explained 
Lesson 15 - Catholics, Alcohol, and Drinking 

Each lesson follows these sections:

Opening Prayer
Video Lesson
Student Workbook Lesson
Quiz
Discussion Questions
Closing Prayer (starts with Scripture verses)


The discussion question sections has 2 sets of questions the first for the student to answer directly, and further questions for a discussion time if working through it as a group. This was an excellent resource to work through; even just working through it on my own for personal study and devotion. I am very thankful it is available and that I did the 15 lessons, and I really enjoyed the 15 lessons in Volume 1. My only regret is the digital access is only for a year. I would love to work through it again in 6-8 months but I would need to repurchase access to do so. 

Also this is a little dated, because in the video Fr. Mike talks about not having a tattoo, and he has since released videos about the tattoo of the Jerusalem Cross he received in Jerusalem.

This is another excellent resource from Father Mike, Colin and Aimee MacIver, and Ascension. I loved working through the lessons and wish I had dedicated the time to do 1 a week and get through it quicker. It is a great resource for personal use, a high school or college and careers group, or even an adult group at church. And if you are looking for something to work through next look into the Sunday Homilies Series from Ascension by Father Mike. I can easily recommend this course it was an excellent experience. 
 
Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 2 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin and Aimee MacIver Sample 1

Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 2 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin and Aimee MacIver Sample 2

Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 2 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin and Aimee MacIver Sample 3

Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 2 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin and Aimee MacIver Web Sample 1

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan

Books By Father Mike Schmitz:
Made for Love: Same-Sex Attraction and the Catholic Church


Contributed to:
Pray, Decide, and Don't Worry: Five Steps to Discerning God's Will
Don't Be Afraid to Say Yes to God! Pope Francis Speaks to Young People

Audio Talks by Father Mike Schmitz:
Living Life by Design, Not by Default
Love - Sacrifice - Trust He Showed Us the Way
From Love, By Love, For Love
True Worship
The Four Last Things
Jesus Is …
Changed Forever - The Sacrament of Baptism
We Must Go Out - The Sacrament of Confirmation


Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 1 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin MacIver

Quick Catholic Lessons with Fr. Mike Volume 2 - Fr. Mike Schmitz and Colin MacIver

Wednesday, 2 April 2025

Dilexit Nos - Pope Francis - Opus Dei

Dilexit Nos
Pope Francis
ISBN 9781784698331
CTS Booklet DO977

Dilexit Nos - Pope Francis - Opus Dei

I picked up this volume for it was the next volume in Father Mark Goring’s Saint Mark’s School of Reading. This is available on the Vatican website for free, but I prefer the CTS Booklet version, I also stumbled upon this version and used it for my second read through and the eBook is free. I just wish they could publish an eBook edition. I worked through two different versions of this book, this physical edition and the eBook edition available from Opus Dei. I used text-to-speech to listen to the eBook and read this version.

About this volume we are informed that:

“In his fourth encyclical, Pope Francis reflects on the Sacred Heart of Jesus: “The deepest part of us, created for love, will fulfil God’s plan only if we learn to love. And the heart is the symbol of that love.””

The description of this volume is:

“Dilexit Nos is Pope Francis’s encyclical on the love of Jesus’s Sacred Heart, exploring how this divine and human love meets the deepest needs of our world today. The Sacred Heart is not only a symbol but a living reality that invites us to unity, compassion, and transformation. Through Jesus’s actions, words, and sacrifice, we see His enduring closeness to us, His profound mercy, and His desire for our reconciliation with God and each other. This text calls Catholics to return to the heart, where true self-understanding and love for others begin, and to embrace a faith that inspires both personal and societal renewal.

"Love and the human heart do not always go together, since hatred, indifference and selfishness can also reign in our hearts. Yet we cannot attain our fulfillment as human beings unless we open our hearts to others; only through love do we become fully ourselves. The deepest part of us, created for love, will fulfil God’s plan only if we learn to love. And the heart is the symbol of that love." (Dilexit Nos, 59)”

The chapters and sections in this volume are:

THE IMPORTANCE OF THE HEART 
     What do we mean by "the heart"? 
     Returning to the heart 
     The heart unites the fragments 
     Fire 
     The world can change, beginning with the heart 

ACTIONS AND WORDS OF LOVE 
     Actions that reflect the heart 
     Jesus 's gaze 
     Jesus's words 

THIS IS THE HEART THAT HAS LOVED SO GREATLY 
     Worshipping Christ 
     Venerating his image 
     A love that is tangible 
     A threefold love 
     Trinitarian perspectives 
     Recent teachings of the Magisterium 
     Further reflections and relevance for our times 

A LOVE THAT GIVES ITSELF AS DRINK 
     A God who thirsts for love 
     Echoes of the Word in history 
     The spread of devotion to the heart of Christ 
     St Francis de Sales 
     A new declaration of love 
     St Claude de la Coiombiere 
     St Charles de Foucauld and St Therese of the Child Jesus 
     Resonances within the Society of Jesus 
     A broad current of the interior life 
     The devotion of consolation 

LOVE FOR LOVE 
     A lament and a request 
     Extending Christ's love to our bothers and sisters 
     Echoes in the history of spirituality 
     Reparation: building on the ruins 
     Reparation: an extension of the heart of Christ 
     Bringing love to the world 

Conclusion 

I highlighted a few passages while reading this volume, they are:

“The symbol of the heart has often been used to express the love of Jesus Christ. Some have questioned whether this symbol is still meaningful today. Yet living as we do in an age of superficiality, rushing frenetically from one thing to another without really knowing why, and ending up as insatiable consumers and slaves to the mechanisms of a market unconcerned about the deeper meaning of our lives, all of us need to rediscover the importance of the heart.”

“It could be said, then, that I am my heart, for my heart is what sets me apart, shapes my spiritual identity and puts me in communion with other people.”

“We see, then, that in the heart of each person there is a mysterious connection between self-knowledge and openness to others, between the encounter with one’s personal uniqueness and the willingness to give oneself to others. We become ourselves only to the extent that we acquire the ability to acknowledge others, while only those who can acknowledge and accept themselves are then able to encounter others.”

“At that point, we realize that in God’s eyes we are a “Thou,” and for that very reason we can be an “I.” Indeed, only the Lord offers to treat each one of us as a “Thou,” always and forever. Accepting his friendship is a matter of the heart; it is what constitutes us as persons in the fullest sense of that word.”

“The heart of Christ, as the symbol of the deepest and most personal source of his love for us, is the very core of the initial preaching of the Gospel. It stands at the origin of our faith, as the wellspring that refreshes and enlivens our Christian beliefs.”

“In his humanity, Jesus learned this from Mary, his mother. Our Lady carefully pondered the things she had experienced; she “treasured them… in her heart” (Lk 2: 19, 51) and, with Saint Joseph, she taught Jesus from his earliest years to be attentive in this same way.”

“Since the heart continues to be seen in the popular mind as the affective centre of each human being, it remains the best means of signifying the divine love of Christ, united forever and inseparably to his wholly human love.”

“Finally, Saint John Damascene viewed the genuine affections shown by Christ in his humanity as proof that he assumed our nature in its entirety in order to redeem and transform it in its entirety: Christ, then, assumed all that is part of human nature, so that all might be sanctified.”

“Devotion to the heart of Jesus, as a direct contemplation of the Lord that draws us into union with him, is clearly Christological in nature.”

“While no one should feel obliged to spend an hour in adoration each Thursday, the practice ought surely to be recommended. When we carry it out with devotion, in union with many of our brothers and sisters and discover in the Eucharist the immense love of the heart of Christ, we “adore, together with the Church, the sign and manifestation of the divine love that went so far as to love, through the heart of the incarnate Word, the human race.””

“It could be argued that today, in place of Jansenism, we find ourselves before a powerful wave of secularization that seeks to build a world free of God. In our societies, we are also seeing a proliferation of varied forms of religiosity that have nothing to do with a personal relationship with the God of love, but are new manifestations of a disembodied spirituality.”

“One who is pierced, a flowing fountain, the outpouring of a spirit of compassion and supplication: the first Christians inevitably considered these promises fulfilled in the pierced side of Christ, the wellspring of new life. In the Gospel of John, we contemplate that fulfilment. From Jesus’ wounded side, the water of the Spirit poured forth: “One of the soldiers pierced his side with a spear, and at once blood and water flowed out” (Jn 19: 34). The evangelist then recalls the prophecy that had spoken of a fountain opened in Jerusalem and the pierced one (Jn 19: 37; cf. Zech 12: 10). The open fountain is the wounded side of Christ.”

“Saint Charles de Foucauld and Saint Therese of the Child Jesus, without intending to, reshaped certain aspects of devotion to the heart of Christ and thus helped us understand it in an even more evangelical spirit. Let us now examine how this devotion found expression in their lives.”

“In a world where everything is bought and sold, people’s sense of their worth appears increasingly to depend on what they can accumulate with the power of money. We are constantly being pushed to keep buying, consuming and distracting ourselves, held captive to a demeaning system that prevents us from looking beyond our immediate and petty needs. The love of Christ has no place in this perverse mechanism, yet only that love can set us free from a mad pursuit that no longer has room for a gratuitous love. Christ’s love can give a heart to our world and revive love wherever we think that the ability to love has been definitively lost.”

“I ask our Lord Jesus Christ to grant that his Sacred Heart may continue to pour forth the streams of living water that can heal the hurt we have caused, strengthen our ability to love and serve others, and inspire us to journey together towards a just, solidary and fraternal world.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for the content of this Apostolic Letter. I admit I was unsure of what to expect when I began reading this. I am thankful I gave it a read. One of the things I loved most about this volume was how much was drawn from the lives and writings of the saints. And many of the saints quoted are among my favourites of those I have studied a lot. In Some ways it was like visiting with many old friends. 

It is a longer than the other Encyclical letters from Pope Francis, it comes in at 144 pages for this edition, 94 for the eBook for this booklet edition and 55 pages if you print it off from the Vatican site. This is a great volume.  

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan! For other reviews of books from the Catholic Truth Society click here.

Note: Father Mark Goring used a few guest speakers while covering the material in this volume. He wanted a number of hearts to share on the Heart of Jesus. They were: Sister Elizabeth MarieFather Isaac Longworth, and Amber Rose. The reason for this comes right from the Encyclical the beginning of 148 “Devotion to the heart of Christ reappears in the spiritual journey of many saints, all quite different from each other; in every one of them, the devotion takes on new hues.” It really added to the experience of reading this and the School of Reading Lessons on the volume. 


Dilexit Nos - Pope Francis - CTS Books

Tuesday, 1 April 2025

Avgolemono Greek Lemon Chicken Soup

Avgolemono Greek Lemon Chicken Soup 

Avgolemono Greek Lemon Chicken Soup

Ingredients: 
For the soup: 
7 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs 
8 cups cold water 
1 large yellow onion, quartered an pealed
1 large  white onion, quartered and pealed
2 tablespoons whole peppercorns black or rainbow
1 tablespoon kosher salt 
1 cup dried orzo (or rice)
1 cup finely chopped carrots 
4 large eggs 
1 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice (from 2 large lemon) 
1 large pinch of saffron

For serving: 
1/2 medium lemon, thinly sliced 
Fresh oregano or cilantro
Freshly ground black pepper 
Optional Warm quartered pitas or naan for dipping and clean-up of the bowl 

Directions:

Place 6 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs, 8 cups cold water, both quartered onions, 2 tablespoons whole black peppercorns (I used rainbow red, green, white and black mix), and 1 tablespoon kosher salt in a 5-quart or larger Dutch oven. Cover and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat to maintain a simmer and simmer until the chicken is cooked through, about 30 to 45 minutes. 

Transfer the chicken to a cutting board. Strain the stock through a mesh strainer set over a large heatproof bowl and discard the solids. Return the remaining stock to the Dutch oven and keep warm over low heat. 

Bring other chicken stock to a boil over medium-high heat. Add dried orzo or rice (I always use rice, as does the local Greek restaurant where I fell in love with this soup) and cook until al dente, 7 to 9 minutes for the orzo. For rice bring to boil, and boil for 7 minutes then reduce to low hear for 16 minutes. Stir the carrots into the rick once almost read. 

When the chicken is cool enough to handle, discard the skin and bones and use your hands to shred or cube the meat into bite-sized pieces; set aside. 

Place 4 large eggs in a medium bowl and whisk until lightened in color and frothy, about 2 minutes. While whisking, slowly pour in the freshly squeezed lemon juice. While still whisking, temper in the eggs by slowly drizzling  2 to 4 cups of warm stock into the egg-lemon mixture. This warms the eggs just enough so that they do not curdle when added to the hot soup. 

Add the rice and carrot mixture, and the chicken back to the main pot. Slowly stir in the avgolemono back into the pot with the chicken and orzo and stir to combine. Cook until the soup thickens slightly, 3 to 5 minutes, but do not let it come to a boil. 

Pour the soup into serving bowls and serve with lemon slices, fresh chopped  oregano or cilantro, and freshly ground black pepper. 

Note: when reheating you might need to add more broth and lemon. You can also add a quick squeeze of lemon right before serving for some extra zip.

Avgolemono Greek Lemon Chicken Soup  In the Pot

What Is Avgolemono? 

Avgolemono refers to a Greek sauce made from eggs, lemon, and warm broth. Literally it translates egg-lemon αυγολέμονο or αβγολέμονο. Often used for thickening soups and also used to dress up everything from roasted vegetables to fish dishes. 

Variation of original recipe found here.  
You can see all the recipes I have created and collected here on OneNote.

Monday, 31 March 2025

Top Ten Fiction and Non-Fiction Books First Quarter 2025

Top Ten Fiction and Non-Fiction Books First Quarter 2024


It has been a great year for reading so far, not my best to date, but well up there. I averaged over a book a day. Faster than the last few years, but I had the first few weeks off work, and so many books and series I am working through. 

In April of 2023 I wrote a piece called How I Read So Much? Because I get asked the question so often, read the piece linked above if you are looking for some ideas on ways to read more. 

This quarter I read 132 books and I did not any to the ‘did not finish’ list, one of my highest quarters since I started keeping track, below is the comparison with the last 9 years:

     2025 - 132
     2024 - 119
     2023 – 160
     2022 – 145
     2021 – 97
     2020 – 96
     2019 – 123
     2018 – 91
     2017 – 100
     2016 – 52

As can be seen this is right about on par, with the last few years. One factor that impacts this year is Lent started much later, in fact the latest it can start, and during Lent I try and read and pray a Stations of the Cross each day which provides a bump during those 48 days. But back to this quarter by the numbers:

Books Read: 132
First Time Reads: 89
Fiction: 32
Non-Fiction: 100
5/5 Stars: 105

I was really surprised; when the year started I expected it to be another year with a dip. In fact I planned on it. I did not see hitting close to the high water mark again, so I am pretty surprised by these results.  

Here is my top ten fiction and non-fiction books of the fourth quarter of 2024.

Top Ten Non-Fiction Books:

 1. Books by Pope Benedict from the Catholic Truth Society
 2. Jesus and the Jubilee - John Bergsma - The Biblical Roots of the Year of God’s Favor   
 4. Books by Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua
 5. Led by the Immaculata - Joshua Mazrin
 6. Honor Thy Wife - Kevin Lowry - A 31-Day Spiritual Journey of Marital Renewal 
 7. CTS Children's books by Juliette Levelier
 8. Drawing Close to the Holy Spirit: Keys to a Transformed Life and Joyful Heart - Sr. Mary Ann Fatula, OP  
 9. Great Spiritual Teachers Series - Ave Maria Press
Come into the Silence 30 Days with Thomas Merton - John Kirvan
11. Catholic Truth Society Books associated with the new Lectionary
The Gospel of John - Fr John Hemer MHM
The Gospel of Luke - Fr John Hemer MHM
The Gospel of Mark - Fr Javier Ruiz-Ortiz
The Gospel of Matthew - Fr Javier Ruiz-Ortiz

Bonus Books:
Catholicism and Mental Health - Dr. Pravin Thevathasan - CTS Explanations
Deepening Prayer: Life Defined by Prayer - Mary David Totah - CTS Deeper Christianity
Devotion and Prayers to the Sacred Heart of Jesus - J. B. Midgley - CTS Devotions
Lectio Divina: Spiritual Reading of the Bible - Jean Khoury - CTS Deeper Christianity 
Louis Marie de Montfort - Alan J. Frost - CTS Great Saints  
Louis Marie de Montfort: His Life, Message and Teaching - Paul Allerton SMM - CTS Great Saints 
Spiritual Warfare Fighting the Good Fight - Vivian Boland - CTS Deeper Christianity  
Thérèse Teacher of Prayer - Craig Driscoll - CTS Spirituality 

Top Ten Fiction Books:

1. Honeymoon from Hell - Declan Finn
Fae'd To Black
2. The Second Skater of the Apocalypse - Fiorella De Maria - Skaters Book 2
3. Madness of Worlds - Karina Fabian
4. Joline - Jim Sano - Father Tom Book 5 
5. Incarnate - Antony Barone Kolenc - Incarnate Series Book 1 
6. In Plain Sight - Leslea Wahl - Finding Faith Book 3 
8. Pogue One - Edited by Spearman Burke - Raconteur Press Anthologies Book 44
9. The Case of the Mixed-up Marathon - Karen Kelly Boyce and Sue Anderson Gioulis - Sisters of the Last Straw Book 9
10. Jumping into Joy - Theresa Linden and Kelsey Doherty - Caitlyn and Peter's Rosary Adventures Book 1

Bonus Books:
Books by Gordon Korman:
The Zucchini Warriors - Macdonald Hall Book 5

My reading has been up and down over the last few years it is staying pretty consistent at about a book a day for the year. I attribute in part to Brandon Vogt’s course Read More Books Now, removing all games but 1 brain game from my devices. Working from home reading took a little more discipline, and we are now back to a hybrid model with 5 days a month in the office, so things have changing again.  

Note: I do not include books that have been read in previous years and were reread this year in my top ten lists, they are sometimes in the bonus section.
 
But if you want more options check out my favourite books year by year list.  



Statistics Books Read By Year:
132 - 2025 January-March
363 - 2024
455 - 2023 
438 - 2022
365 - 2021
317 - 2020 
392 - 2019
359 - 2018
380 - 2017 
272 - 2016 
177 - 2015 
130 - 2014 
88 -  2013
176 - 2012 
163 - 2011
302 - 2010
142 - 2009
98 - 2008
83 - 2007
191 - 2006
151 - 2005
60 - 2004
52 - 2003
97 - 2002
50 - 2001
41 - 2000
71 - 1999
73 - 1998
131 - 1997
101 - 1996


Relates Posts: 
Top 10 Fiction Books 1st Quarter 2010
Top 10 Fiction Books 2nd Quarter 2010
Top 10 Reading Goals for 2010
Top 10 Fiction Books 3rd Quarter 2010

Top 10 Fiction Books 4th Quarter 2010
Top Ten Reading Goals For 2010 - Recap

Top 10 Fiction Books 2010
Top 10 Picture Books of 2010
Top 10 Non-Fiction Books of 2010

Top 10 Graphic Novels for 2010
Top Ten Reading Goals For 2011
 

Top Ten Fiction Books 1st Quarter 2011
Top Ten Fiction Books 2nd Quarter 2011
Top Ten Reading Goals for 2011 Update
 
Top Ten Fiction Books 3rd Quarter 2011 
Top Ten Fictions Books 4th Quarter 2011
Top Ten Fiction Books 2011
Top Ten Reading Goals 2011 - Recap
Top Ten Reading Goals 2012
Top Ten Fiction Books 1st Quarter 2012
Top Ten Fiction Books 2nd Quarter 2012

Top Ten Fiction Books 3rd Quarter 2012
Top Ten Fiction Books  4th Quarter 2012
Top Ten Fiction Books 2012
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books 2012
Top Ten Reading Goals 2012 - Recap
Top Ten Reading Goals 2013
Top 10 Fiction Books 1st Quarter 2013
Top 10 Fiction Books 2nd Quarter 2013
Top 10 Books Second Half 2013
Top Ten Fiction Books 2013
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books 2013 
Top Ten Books First Quarter 2014
Top Ten Books Second Quarter 2014
Top Ten Books Third Quarter 2014
Top Ten Books Fourth Quarter 2014
Top Ten Fiction Books 2014
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books 2014
Top Ten Books First Quarter 2015
Top Ten Books Second Quarter 2015
Top Ten Books Third Quarter 2015
Top Ten Books Fourth Quarter 2015
Top Ten Fiction Books 2015
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books 2015
Top Ten Books First Quarter 2016
Top Ten Books Second Quarter 2016
Top Ten Books Third Quarter 2016
Top Ten Books Fourth Quarter 2016
Top Ten Non- Fiction Books 2016
Top Ten Fiction Books 2016
Top Ten Catholic Books
Top Ten Books First Quarter 2017
Top Ten Books Second Quarter 2017
Top Ten Books Third Quarter 2017
Top Ten Books Fourth Quarter 2017
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books 2017
Top Ten Fiction Books 2017
Top Ten Books First Quarter 2018
Top Ten Books Second Quarter 2018
Top Ten Books Third Quarter 2018
Top Ten Books Fourth Quarter 2018
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books 2018
Top Ten Fiction Books 2018
Top Ten Books First Quarter 2019
Top Ten Books Second Quarter 2019
Top Ten Books Third Quarter 2019
Top Ten Books Fourth Quarter 2019
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books 2019
Top Ten Fiction Books 2019
Top Ten Books First Quarter 2020
Top Ten Books Second Quarter 2020
Top Ten Books Third Quarter 2020
Top Ten Books Fourth Quarter 2020 
... 



Sunday, 30 March 2025

Jesus and the Jubilee - John Bergsma - The Biblical Roots of the Year of God’s Favor

Jesus and the Jubilee: 
The Biblical Roots of the Year of God’s Favor
John Bergsma
ISBN 9781645854050
eISBN 9781645854067
ASIN B0D5J3GVL7

Jesus and the Jubilee - John Bergsma - The Biblical Roots of the Year of God’s Favor

Wow this was an absolutely fascinating read. I have read a few volumes for the Jubilee of Hope in 2025 and this is an excellent offering. Once I started reading I could hardly put this book down. The description of this volume states:

“Jubilee means joy—a joy that’s not fleeting, a joy that lasts.

In biblical times, a jubilee was a time to rejoice. And this is still the case when the Church announces a jubilee.

In Jesus and the Jubilee, biblical scholar John Bergsma gets to the roots of the jubilee, showing how this practice was established in order to preserve freedom, family, and the fullness of God’s blessing for the ancient Israelites.

But what the Israelites were promised by God—and experienced partially—was truly fulfilled by Jesus. As Jesus and the Jubilee reveals, the Catholic Church is the perpetual jubilee, offering redemption, release from spiritual bondage, return to our true home and family, and rest in God’s fullness.

Discover how the jubilee is the very center of Jesus’s mission and how we can fully participate in this ongoing “year of favor.””

The chapters in this book are:

Introduction Our Need for Jubilee
1 Back to the Garden: 
     Creation as the Model of the Jubilee
2 The First Jubilee: 
     Israel’s Exodus from Egypt
3 Laws of Liberation: 
     The Structure 7at Sustains Freedom
4 Liberty Lost and Regained (Forever): 
     The Calf and the Jubilee Laws
5 Jubilee in Theory . . . and Practice:
     Did the Israelites Actually Observe the Jubilee?
6 Miracle at Qumran: 
     Hard Evidence for the Jubilee
7 A Year of Favor: 
     The Coming of Christ, the New Melchizedek
8 Freedom from Sin: 
     The Liberating Power of Confession
9 Perpetual Jubilee: 
     A Spirit-Led Lifestyle of Liberty and Liturgy
Conclusion: 
     Conversion: The Heart of Jubilee
Epilogue
     The Jubilee and Me

I highlighted a number of passages while working through this book, some of them are:

“God never stops offering us the gift of grace and promises us a kind of freedom that can never be taken away.”

“In the wake of the golden calf debacle, God gave Moses a liturgy and a lifestyle to implement that would institutionalize freedom for his people. The sacrifices, laws, and especially the liturgical patterns—the cycle of Sabbaths and Sabbath years—culminated in the Sabbath of Sabbaths, the year of rest, where the sins of Israel were atoned for and forgiven, the family was fully restored, debt was erased, slaves were released, and ancestral land was returned to its rightful owners. Everything reverted back to its pristine beginning. Deliverance flowed from God, and this divine liberty was reflected in the natural liberties of his creation.”

“Through the coming of Jesus, all that had been promised is fulfilled. The purpose of the jubilee, and its celebration, can be fully realized now that the Spirit of jubilee is given to the Church. The power to proclaim forgiveness of spiritual debt and freedom from slavery live on through Christ’s bishops and priests and the sacraments they perform. At long last, the people of God—each of us—can enjoy the superabundance provided for us by our loving Creator.”

“Throughout this book, we will highlight the jubilee throughlines in Scripture and, if we open our hearts to the Spirit of jubilee, I believe God can and will speak powerful truths to each of us about the freedom he deems to bring about.”

“The cycles of sin, oppression, infidelity, and ambivalence that the Israelites found themselves entrenched in bear striking resemblance to the societal ills of today. We are in constant need of the jubilee and all that it brings.”

“Let’s go back and take a closer look at God’s grand finale, his masterpiece: man, created on the sixth day. When we look more closely at the creation of man, we recognize that God gave him five roles.
     The first role was sonship.
     The second role was kingship.
     The third role was priesthood.
     The fourth role was prophethood.
     The fifth and final role that God gave to man was that of a bridegroom.”

“Everybody remembers the Exodus as the great act of liberation in the Bible, but the Exodus has a backstory. As we saw in the last chapter, the patriarchs gave rise to a whole nation: Israel. The patriarchs sought the jubilee goods of forgiveness, freedom, family, and fullness, but only partially achieved these goals in their lifetimes.”

“We remember the Exodus as an event in which God delivered Israel from physical slavery to the Egyptians. But in reflecting on the ten plagues, we realize that God first freed Israel—and any Egyptians who were paying attention—from their spiritual slavery to the Egyptian gods. The plagues were a trouncing of the Egyptian deities, a kind of exorcism of the land of Egypt. This is so closely connected to the idea of jubilee, because we will later see that spiritual freedom always precedes physical freedom in jubilee thought. Indeed, in late Jewish thought, the jubilee becomes associated with the exorcistic power of the Messiah.”

“But God used the journey through the desert (the Exodus) to show Israel, over and over, that spiritual and natural freedom are attained only through him.”

“There is a paradox in the human condition: we feel like boundaries (laws) restrict our freedom, but if we fail to observe good boundaries (laws), we end up losing our freedom to sin and addiction—and this is true of both individuals and societies.”

“Every seven days, Israel observed the Sabbath to commemorate God’s completion of creation. Every seven years, they were to observe a Sabbath year, resting from their labor and enjoying God’s abundance. And, climactically, at the end of every seven weeks of years (seven times seven, a total of forty-nine years), they were to observe a jubilee year, a kind of super-Sabbath.”

“In the year of jubilee the Israelites shall rest, as in a Sabbath year, but the jubilee had many unique features that distinguished it even from other holy years. We can arrange these unique features around four major actions: redemption, release, return, and rest, and these actions are aimed at the four goods we have mentioned already in the introduction to this book: Forgiveness, freedom, family, and fullness. Let’s work through these four actions, step by step.”

“But the real jubilee began with the purging and driving out of sin and evil from Israel—including evil spirits, for the Day of Atonement was like a great general exorcism. The removal of sin and evil allowed reconciliation of God with his people and a restoration of the family bond of the covenant.”

“I’ve spent several years of my life studying the jubilee laws, and I’m not that pessimistic. Although I can’t prove it, I suspect the jubilee was observed the first time it came around, after they had settled the land under Joshua—and maybe the second time it cycled around, as well. After that, it seems to have fallen into disuse, becoming a so-called blue law—still on the books, but ignored.”

“I scarcely need to mention that early Christian interpreters saw this as speaking of Jesus: he is the Prince Messiah who showed up at the end of the five hundred years, was cut off, and made a “strong covenant”—the New Covenant—with many. But it is important that we see that the whole chronology is based on the jubilee cycles. “Seventy weeks of years” is 490 years, or ten jubilee cycles, each lasting forty-nine years between jubilees. Ten was a perfect number. At the end of ten jubilees, the Messiah would arrive to proclaim the final jubilee of history—indeed, to open up a jubilee era.”

“Every feature of the jubilee, promised so long ago, was about to come to startling fruition. And as is so often the case when our heavenly Father makes good on his word, our expectations are exceeded by orders of magnitude.”

“Christ created the mystical body of his Church and appointed ministers with the power of the Holy Spirit to be prophets and priests of the order of Melchizedek: to proclaim liberty and free people from slavery to Satan and debt to sin. This was the order of Melchizedek, not the order of the Levites.”

“Through his Church, Christ established his sacraments for us and by them sin is vanquished. Death is conquered through the gift of eternal life. Jesus passed on his Melchizedekian, jubilean powers to the chosen Twelve. He worked through them, by the power and authority of the Holy Spirit. He gave them his authority and responsibility, which they passed down to their descendants—bishops and priests today.”

“In a way, he was saying, “As many times as God has forgiven Israel, so you should forgive others.” But there was also a sacramental, liturgical aspect to Jesus’s statement to Peter, because Peter was going to be the first pope. He was going to be the head of the Church and the head of those in Holy Orders. And those in Holy Orders—the priests and bishops—are God’s chief forgivers. One could almost say their chief duty is to forgive sins and to free people from slavery to Belial. Thus, when Peter asked Jesus how many times he should forgive, Jesus’s “seventy times seven” response meant: be generous as your Father in heaven was generous. Jesus commissioned Peter and his successors to be the living embodiment of jubilee, to perpetuate the age of the Messiah.”

“And as high priest, Jesus performed the greatest exorcism on the Cross, purging all of God’s people from the defilement of evil. He cried, “It is finished,” and gave up his spirit (John 19: 30). And God tore the curtain wall of the temple into two (cf. Matt 27: 51). The Old Covenant was shattered. The New Covenant was here. With those words, the chains of sin were broken, the power of Satan was destroyed.”

“So the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of freedom (2 Cor 3: 17), the Spirit of jubilee, flows from the Passion of Christ that John sees as blood and water, which are signs of the sacraments: the Eucharist and Baptism. And the sacraments are the usual way in which we experience jubilee, which flows from Christ through this body, the Church.”

“How much more liberating is Confession, since it is a direct path to reconciliation with God and freedom from slavery to sin? It is a sacrament of jubilee! Together let’s examine this tremendous gift of the new jubilee.”

“I’ll use an analogy. Most of us are probably familiar with the process of “accepting cookies” on our laptop, tablet, or phone. When we visit a new website, often a dialogue box will open that asks if we will accept “cookies” from the website or remote server—in other words, if we will consent to the remote site making modifications to our operating system and the software on our device. By clicking “Yes,” we consent to give this alien agent—this remote server—authority to act in our machines. Most servers and sites are legitimate and trustworthy and don’t take advantage of everything they could do to and with our local device. But not all are legitimate and trustworthy! Therefore, cybersecurity experts recommend that we periodically “flush the cookies” by going into our settings and denying all the permissions we have granted to remote servers. Confession works like this: when we make a good confession, we “flush the cookies” and revoke all the permissions we granted to Satan and his evil spirits. They are driven out through Reconciliation—and afterward, they might be able to harass us externally, but they cannot work inside us.”

“My experiences prepared me to think about the Sacrament of Confession very differently than most people, whether Catholic or Protestant. I never saw the confessional as a judgment chamber, or like walking into a court room. It never occurred to me to be afraid of it. Rather, I looked at Confession as a way to obey the Bible and as a means of spiritual warfare and deliverance from Satan and other evil spirits. This would end up playing an important role in my conversion to the Catholic Church.”

“St. Josemaría Escrivá also recommended and practiced weekly confession. His philosophy was “keep short books.” This is accounting terminology. Bookkeepers and accountants try not to let expenditures pile up before reconciling and balancing the books—and this is a great philosophy for reconciliation. We should go when our sins are fresh in our mind, so they don’t pile up and dull our senses (see Matt 13: 15–17). That way we will receive more grace from the sacrament, which will help break Satan’s grasp and strengthen us to stop committing any habitual sins permanently.”

“Confession is the most direct means to victory in spiritual warfare and the most direct path to spiritual freedom and jubilee. It helps break habitual sins and addictions; it helps us receive Our Lord worthily in the Eucharist—our daily bread, Communion of everlasting life. Why wouldn’t we want to confess often?”

“By all appearances, Confession is the dullest of the sacraments! To celebrate almost any other sacrament, people get dressed up, and the priest has magnificent vestments. In the other sacraments, we get the “smells” and “bells”: we get oil, we get water, we get the crucifix, we get readings, we get processions, we get hoopla. With a confession, what do we get? Twelve people standing in line on a Saturday afternoon for an hour, and the most exciting thing that happens is, every five minutes, we shuffle forward.”

“At any time, on any day of the week, we can be forgiven from our debt of sin and freed from slavery to the evil one. At any time, we can drink from the salvation flowing from his divine side. At any time we can receive his jubilean mercy, and we can live.”

“All the goals of the jubilee are fulfilled by the gift of the Spirit. The Spirit forgives our sins, grants us freedom from the tyranny of Satan, institutes us as children of God and members of his family, and initiates us into the fullness of God so that we become “partakers of the divine nature” (2 Peter 1: 4). For that reason, the Jubilee 2025 is a highly appropriate time for individuals and communities to enter more deeply into the life of the Holy Spirit.”

“Yet devotion to the Spirit, of course, is not limited to one group or movement within the Church. All baptized Catholics should seek to grow in their devotion to and experience of the Spirit in their lives during the jubilee year. I would urge both a return to and a renewed appreciation of traditional devotions as well as openness to contemporary ones.”

“I urge every Catholic to choose at least one book to read or one devotion to practice related to the Holy Spirit for this jubilee year, because life in the Spirit is the fulfillment of jubilee.”

“Now that we know what jubilee is, where it came from, and how it exists today, how can we enter into it? What are some practical steps to bring jubilee into our hearts? How do we embrace the Spirit of jubilee and not the letter of jubilee? How do we make good use of 2025 and the years following? How do we make jubilee a lifestyle? How do we sustain liberty?”

“The jubilee year is the opportune time for us to begin participating in the sacraments more frequently. The two sacraments that we can partake of regularly are Eucharist and Reconciliation.”

“Purgatory is merciful and necessary for a departed soul to become completely detached from sin and made pure; however, in a way, it is sad and entirely unnecessary, since Christ and his Church give us ample opportunities to rectify this payment on earth, if we sincerely make use of them. These opportunities are indulgences.”

“The Sacrament of Reconciliation is available on any given day. And all the sacraments help us overcome the evil one and become free. The spiritual battle rages on, but falling wounded is not the worst thing in battle. The worst thing is not being healed. It is not being restored and getting back into the fight.”

“The Sacrament of Reconciliation is available on any given day. And all the sacraments help us overcome the evil one and become free. The spiritual battle rages on, but falling wounded is not the worst thing in battle. The worst thing is not being healed. It is not being restored and getting back into the fight.”

“Throughout this book, we have seen the story of salvation in a new light and come to recognize that jubilee is and always has been at the heart of God’s plan.”

I pray those samples give you a feel for the poser of this slim volume. John  gives up a history of then Jubilee from the bible and from Jewish history. He clearly explains the fulfilment of prophecy and Jesus as the Jubilee of Jubilees. He walks us through the role of Melchizedek historically and continuing through history. His words on confession, the sacraments and purgatory are clear, concise and deeply moving. The conclusion of the book focuses on way we can experience the Jubilee in a deeper and fuller way. And in the epilogue John shares his own history with the Jubilee as a focus of research, the great Jubilee of the year 2000 and his own conversion to Catholicism. In which he is open, honest and transparent with us his readers.

This is an excellent volume. I have read 14 volumes related to the Jubilee of Hope so far. This is one of the best. If you are going to only pick up one book ok the Jubilee to read, make it this one, if you are willing to pick up 2 make it this and Hope An Anchor for the Soul 30 Daily Devotions by Amy Welborn.

This is an excellent volume that any Catholic would benefit from reading. It is a life changing volume. One certain to have a lasting impact. I challenge you to pick it up and read it. A wonderful volume to read on this Jubilee year of Hope! I highly recommend it.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan

Jubilee of Hope 2025 Book List:

Notes on Prayer Series:
1. Prayer Today: A Challenge to Overcome - Cardinal Angelo Comastri
2. Praying with the Psalms - Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi
3. The Prayer of Jesus – Juan Lopez Vergara
4. Praying with Saints and Sinners - Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP
5. The Parables of Prayer – Msgr Antonio Pitta
6. The Church in Prayer - Carthusian Monks
7. The Prayer of Mary and the Saints Who Met Her - Sr Catherine Aubin, OP

Books by John Bergsma:
Bible Basics
Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls: Revealing the Jewish Roots of Christianity
Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Priesthood
Jesus and the Old Testament Roots of the Priesthood
Love Basics for Catholics
Murmuring Against Moses
New Testament Basics for Catholics
Psalm Basics for Catholics
Stunned by Scripture: How the Bible Made Me Catholic
The Bible and Marriage
The Jubilee from Leviticus to Qumran
The Word of the Lord: Reflections on the Mass Readings for Solemnities and Feasts
The Word of the Lord: Reflections on the Sunday Mass Readings for Year A
The Word of the Lord: Reflections on the Sunday Mass Readings for Year B
The Word of the Lord: Reflections on the Sunday Mass Readings for Year C
Yes, There Is a God... and Other Answers to Life's Big Questions