16 March 2026

Lent Is the Time To Visit the Divine Physician

God cannot only heal physical ailments, but He can heal our souls as well. So, get thee to Confession and experience God's healing power.


From Aleteia

By Philip Kosloski

God wants to heal us but unfortunately, too often we don't go to him with our spiritual sickness in order to be healed. We stay instead in the darkness.

There exist numerous home remedies for the most common illnesses, but there is one sickness that can not be healed through our own efforts.

That sickness is the life of sin we are currently in and the many times we walk away from God.

No matter how hard we may try to achieve inner healing through our own mental experiments, only God can heal us and bring us lasting peace through the forgiveness of sins.

What we need to do is to fly to the Divine Physician and to show him all of our ailments.

Spiritual healing

Pope Benedict XVI reflected on this spiritual truth during an Angelus message on the Fourth Sunday of Lent in 2012.

St Augustine comments: “So far, then, as it lies with the physician, he has come to heal the sick. He that will not observe the orders of the physician destroys himself. He has come a Savior to the world... You will not be saved by him; you shall be judged of yourself”. 

In this quote, St. Augustine is explaining how Jesus, the Divine Physician, wants to heal us, but he can only heal us if we want healing.

Pope Benedict XVI continues his reflection by expanding on this reality, linking it to the sacrament of confession:

 Therefore, if the merciful love of God — who went so far as to give his only Son to redeem our life — is infinite, we have a great responsibility: each one of us, in fact, must recognize that he is sick in order to be healed. Each one must confess his sin so that God’s forgiveness, already granted on the Cross, may have an effect in his heart and in his life.

He further explains how, "it is only by opening oneself to the light and only by sincerely confessing one’s sins to God that one finds true peace and true joy. It is therefore important to receive the Sacrament of Penance regularly, especially during Lent, in order to receive the Lord’s forgiveness and to intensify our process of conversion."

Sometimes it can be more convenient to ignore our sins and to hide them from God, or even from ourselves. We bury them deep within our soul, not letting them be exposed to the light of Christ.

However, if we do that, we will never experience healing. This happens whenever we go to the doctor and don't tell him something that is ailing us.

Our doctor can't heal something that he doesn't know about. While its true that the Divine Physician knows everything, he wants us to recognize our spiritual sickness and to bring it to him of our own free will.

God wants to heal us and to bring us back to spiritual health. What we need to do is to let him and we can do that by going to confession and opening ourselves up to the healing power of mercy that Jesus grants through the ministry of the priest.

Unveil the Depth and Beauty of Lent, Holy Week & Easter Rituals of the Syro Malabar Church


The Syro-Malabar Church, an ancient Eastern Catholic tradition rooted in the mission of St. Thomas, follows a unique Lenten tradition, Holy Week rituals, 50-day fasting and more, preparing the faithful for the big festival of Easter. Watch the latest episode of Beauty of the Rites and get to know the rich tradition of the Syro-Malabar Church.

Men Need Men to Lead Them

A Men's Conference with a female keynote speaker? If "mansplaining" is justly condemned, why is "womansplaining" acceptable?


From Crisis

By Ann Burns

Women are incapable of teaching men how to be men.

Not long ago, I opened up an email detailing Catholic events in the area. There, in bright colors, was a men’s conference announcement. A good thing, right? But looking at the keynote speakers, I couldn’t help but wonder why a picture of a young woman graced my screen. Feeling as if I morphed into a nosy old lady, I zoomed in on the picture. Yup! My eyes had not deceived me. Presenting to a room full of men on what masculinity is, would be an ostensibly young lady. 

I tried to imagine the scene: men like my father, my husband, brothers, etc., all gathered at the skirts of a young girl as she lectures them on their masculinity. I wasn’t sure if I should laugh or be appalled. And before anyone accuses me of internalized misogyny, can we call to mind any of the innumerable instances of men explaining “women things.” 

You know, the weeping and gnashing of teeth when the odious and unthinkable mansplaining is on full display! Oh, the many headlines and apologies that memorialize such moments. Did we already forget the backlash Harrison Butker received for stating that many women, like his wife, desire motherhood? Yet, of course, a woman addressing men on how to be a man is totally fine.  

To clarify: this doesn’t mean that the aforementioned speaker prepared a bad talk. In fact, she could give an excellent talk, but that is not the point. Women are incapable of teaching men how to be men. There, I said it. It is not our job; and when we attempt to make it so, we usually create another problem: men are irritated, generally do the opposite, and begin to view women as nags. 

Women can inspire masculinity, but they cannot teach it.

The masculine journey is fundamentally different from the feminine one. We see this in every traditional story, be it Old Yeller, Narnia, Swiss Family Robinson, and yes, even in the book of Genesis. There is a father figure, a boy entering into manhood, and some rite of passage—for example, Aslan has Peter kill the wolf; God tells Adam to name the animals. A father character bequeaths the role of headship as the boy undergoes a quest or completes a task. 

Not so for women: Eve comes to Adam in total receptivity. She is ready to receive her name and his love so that she can be his helpmeet. Receptivity is the mark of femininity. Breaking out of that is where problems arise. 

No More Frog Farming

Author Alison Armstrong makes the amusing—but truthful—observation that most women are “frog farmers.” Meaning, instead of turning frogs into princes, à la inspiring the best in men, most women turn princes into frogs. We do this in many ways, but often by emasculating men. What we view as important input, men see as criticism and nagging. (And yes, I have frog farmed.)

I would love to challenge the women reading this to listen intently for a good week to how women speak about men. The results may shock you! The number of eye rolls, hidden insults, and the attitude that men are incapable of being men punctuates many female conversations. It is troubling, but it also serves as a sobering examination of conscience: Do I contribute in some way to this narrative? Do I, on some level, believe I have to teach the men how to be men? 

It also sheds some light on the rise of the manosphere. Exhausted by feminism and henpecked men, young boys are looking for male leaders. They need and crave a father figure. And if they turn to their Catholic community only to find that it’s more women lecturing them, well, it’s no wonder that in a very short period of time individuals like Tate and Fuentes became popular names. 

I am blessed to attend an FSSP parish, and all of our priests are true father figures. They are amazing examples of masculinity, and their care and wisdom is Christ-like. They are the everyday heroes who walk among us, fighting dragons and saving souls. Good men exist. In fact, dare I say, good men abound. I see them in my home, my church, and my community. 

Yes, as Catholics we should be promoting masculinity. But we don’t need women to do the work of men; there are plenty of good men to do it. It is an insult to act like there aren’t.

Time to Accept Limitations

In Sigrid Undset’s The Axe: Master of Hestviken, there is a scene where a boy and girl are about to embark on a journey. The young boy, frustrated by the girl, who is unenthusiastic as she prepares for the venture, takes note of her form. As if for the first time, he recognizes how delicately God designed her. 

In that moment, he understands her lack of enthusiasm not as pathetic but as part of her design. Something honorable stirs in his heart as he views her not as weak but precious. In that moment, he vows to protect and cherish her. It is the sweetest scene, and it exemplifies how acknowledging our limitations gives way to the harmony meant to exist between men and women. 

Without limitations, our world dissolves into chaos. Limitations are the parameters writers use to compose glorious sonnets, architects use to build magnificent cathedrals, and painters use to reach up to the heavens. Without those limitations, anything goes; mud-splattered canvases and grotesque costumes masquerade as art and brilliance. A world that once had much to communicate is now bereft of language and yet engulfed in noise. 

It is absurd to deny that these limitations do not extend to men and women; after all, we are finite beings. When women discover their own limitations, they find the strength of men—and vice versa. Our limitations don’t thwart the masculine and feminine; instead, they implement the necessary boundaries for them to thrive.  

It is through embracing our limitations that we rediscover the harmony and reverence rather than mistrust and derision between the sexes.  

It is almost the Feast of St. Joseph, a virile and holy father. If you find your heart corroded by doubt and mistrust, turn to St. Joseph to help you heal. He will guard your heart, just as he protected Mother Mary and Baby Jesus. 

Please, let St. Joseph love you. In the words of Venerable Fulton Sheen, “St. Joseph was on fire with love.”

Monday of the Fourth Week of Lent

Today's Holy Mass from SSPX ANZ-District. You may follow the Mass at Divinum Officium.

Monday of the Fourth Week of Lent ~ Dom Prosper Guéranger

Monday of the Fourth Week of Lent


From Dom Prosper Guéranger's Liturgical Year:

The Station is in the venerable Church of the Four Crowned (Brothers); their names are Severus, Severianus, Carpophorus, and Victorinus; they suffered martyrdom under the persecution of Diocletian. Their bodies, as also the Head of the great Martyr St. Sebastian, are among the Relics of this Church.

COLLECT

Grant, we beseech thee, O Almighty God, that we, who annually celebrate this holy fast, may be well pleasing to thee, both in body and mind, through Christ our Lord. Amen.

EPISTLE

Lesson from the Book of Kings 3:16-28

In those days: Two women that were harlots, came to King Solomon, and stood before him; and one of them said: I beseech thee, my lord, I and this woman dwelt in one house, and I was delivered of a child with her in the chamber. And the third day after that I was delivered, she also delivered; and we were together, and no other person with us in the house, only we two. And this woman’s child died in the night, for in her sleep she overlaid him; and rising in the dead time of the night, she took my child from my side, while thy handmaid was asleep, and laid it in her bosom, and laid her dead child in my bosom. And when I rose in the morning to give my child suck, behold it was dead; but considering him more diligently when it was clear day, I found that it was not mine which I bore. And the other woman answered: It is not so as thou sayest, but thy child is dead, and mine is alive. On the contrary she said: Thou liest, for my child liveth, and thy child is dead. And in this manner they strove before the king. Then saith the king: The one saith my child is alive, and thy child is dead: and the other answereth: Nay, but thy child is dead, and mine liveth. The king therefore said: Bring me a sword. And when they had brought a sword before the king, Divide, said he, the living child in two, and give half to the one, and half to the other. But the women, whose child was alive, said to the king (for her bowels were moved upon her child), I beseech thee, my lord, give her the child alive, and do not kill it. But the other said: Let it be neither mine nor thine, but divide it. The king answered and said: Give the living child to this woman and let it not be killed, for she is the mother thereof. And all Israel heard the judgment which the king had judged, and they feared the king, seeing that the wisdom of God was in him to do judgment.

St. Paul explained to us, in yesterday’s Epistle, the antagonism that there is between the Synagogue and the Church; he showed us how Sara’s son, who was the father’s favorite, was persecuted by the son of Agar. The two women, who appear before Solomon, are another figure of the same truth. The child they both lay claim to, is the Gentile people, which has ‘been brought to the knowledge of the true God. The Synagogue, typified by the woman who has caused death to her child, has misled the people confided to her care; and now unjustly claims one that does not belong to her. And whereas it is not from any motherly affection, but only from pride, that she puts forward such a claim, it matters little to her what becomes of the child, provided only he be not given to the true mother, the Church. Solomon, the King of Peace, who is one of the Scriptural types of Christ, adjudges the child to her that has given him birth, and nourished him; and the pretensions of the false mother are rejected. Let us, then, love our mother, the Holy Church, the Spouse of Jesus. It is she has made us children of God by Baptism. She has fed us with the Bread of Life; she has given us the Holy Spirit; and, when we had the misfortune to relapse into death by sin, she, by the divine power given to her, has restored us to life. A filial love for the Church is the sign of the Elect; obedience to her commandments is the mark of a soul in which God has set his kingdom.

GOSPEL

Sequel of the holy Gospel according to John 2:13-25

At that time the Pasch of the Jews was at hand, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. And he found in the temple them that sold oxen, and sheep, and doves, and the changers of money sitting. And when he had made as it were a scourge of little cords he drove them all out of the temple, the sheep also and the oxen; and the money of the changers he poured out, and the tables he overthrew. And he said to them that sold doves: Take these things hence, and make not the house of my Father a house of traffic. And his disciples remembered that it was written: “The zeal of thy house hath eaten me up,” Then the Jews answered and said to him: What sign dost these thou shew us, seeing thou dost these things? Jesus answered and said to them: Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up. The Jews then said: Six and forty years was this temple in building, and wilt thou raise it in three days? But he spoke of the temple of his body. When therefore he was risen again from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this, and they believed the Scripture, and the word that Jesus had said. Now when he was at Jerusalem, at the Pasch, on the festival day, many believed in his name, seeing his signs which he did. But Jesus did not trust himself to them, because he knew all men, and because he needed not that any should give testimony of man, for he knew what was in man.

We read, in the Gospel of the first Tuesday of Lent, that Jesus drove from the Temple them that were making it a place of traffic. He twice showed this zeal for his Father’s House. The passage we have just read from St. John refers to the first time. Both occasions are brought before us during this Season of Lent, because this conduct of our Savior shows us with what severity he will treat a soul that harbors sin within her. Our souls are the Temple of God, created and sanctified by God to the end that he might dwell there. He would have nothing to be in them which is unworthy of their destination. This is the Season for self-examination; and if we have found that any passions are profaning the sanctuary of our souls, let us dismiss them; let us beseech our Lord to drive them out by the scourge of his justice, for we, perhaps, might be too lenient with these sacrilegious intruders. The day of pardon is close at hand; let us make ourselves worthy to receive it. There is an expression in our Gospel which deserves a special notice. The Evangelist is speaking to those Jews who were more sincere than the rest, and believed in Jesus, because of the miracles he wrought; he says: Jesus did not trust himself to them, because he knew all men. So that there may be persons who believe in and acknowledge Jesus, yet whose hearts are not changed! Oh! the hardness of man’s heart! Oh! cruel anxiety for God’s Priests! Sinners and worldlings are now crowding round the Confessional; they have faith, and they confess their sins! And the Church has no confidence in their repentance! She knows that, a very short time after the Feast of Easter, they will have relapsed into the same state in which they were on the day when she marked their foreheads with ashes. These souls are divided between God and the world; and she trembles as she thinks on the danger they are about to incur by receiving Holy Communion without the preparation of a true conversion. Yet on the other side, she remembers how it is written that the bruised reed, is not to be broken, nor the smoking flax to be extinguished. (Isaiah 42:3) Let us pray for these souls, whose state is so full of doubt and danger Let us, also, pray for the Priests of the Church, that they may receive from God abundant rays of the light, whereby Jesus knew what was in man.

Bow down your heads to God.

We beseech thee, Lord, hear our prayer, and grant us Thy protection, as it is Thou who inspires us to ask it. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Let us pray for the conversion of Sinners, using the beautiful Preface given us by the Roman Pontifical, which was formerly recited during the Reconciliation of the public Penitents.

PREFACE

It is truly meet and just, right and available to salvation, that we should always and in all places give thanks to thee, Holy Lord, Almighty Father, Eternal God, through Christ our Lord: Whom thou, O Almighty Father, didst will to be born among us by an ineffable Birth, that so he might pay to thee, his Eternal Father, the debt contracted by Adam, and put our death to death by his own, and bear our wounds in his own Flesh, and cleanse away our stains by is Blood; hereby enabling us, who had fallen by the envy of the old enemy, to rise again by his mercy. Through him, Lord, we suppliantly beseech and pray thee that thou mayest graciously hear us making intercession for the sins of others, who are not worthy to plead for our own. Do thou, most merciful Lord, recall to thyself, with thy wonted goodness, these thy servants, who have separated themselves from thee by their sins. For neither didst thou reject the most wicked Achab when he humbled himself before thee, but didst avert from him the punishment he had deserved. So, likewise, didst thou graciously hear Peter, when he wept, and didst afterwards give to him the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and thou didst promise the reward of that same kingdom to the thief when he trusted in thee. Therefore, O most merciful Lord! mercifully welcome back these for whom we offer to thee our prayers, and restore them to the bosom of thy Church, that the enemy may not triumph over them but that they may be reconciled unto thee by thy co-equal Son, and by Him be cleansed from their guilt, and graciously admitted by Him to the banquet of thy most Holy Supper. May he in such wise refresh them by his Flesh and Blood, as to lead them, after this life’s course is run, to the kingdom of heaven.