Bishop Robert Barron’s Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies

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Weekly homilies from Bishop Robert Barron, produced by Word on Fire Catholic Ministries.

Bishop Robert Barron


    • May 8, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
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    Ivy Insights

    The Bishop Robert Barron's Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies podcast is a transformative and enlightening resource for Catholics and non-Catholics alike. Bishop Barron has a unique gift for explaining the teachings of Christianity and Catholicism in a way that is accessible, relatable, and thought-provoking. His sermons have the power to change lives and deepen one's understanding of faith.

    One of the best aspects of this podcast is Bishop Barron's ability to reach a wide audience. Whether you are Catholic or not, his wisdom and insights can resonate with anyone seeking spiritual guidance. As an Anglican listener mentioned, Bishop Barron is considered one of their greatest spiritual teachers. This shows the universality of his teachings and the impact he has across denominational lines.

    Another standout feature is Bishop Barron's Sunday Sermons. These sermons provide listeners with an opportunity to learn about various aspects of the Catholic faith. They are enlightening, educational, and inspiring. Many listeners eagerly anticipate these weekly sermons and even share them with friends and family.

    During the COVID lockdown, Bishop Barron's masses served as a beacon of light for many individuals. These masses provided solace, guidance, and practical knowledge during challenging times. The sermons offered by Bishop Barron continue to offer thought-provoking insights in a world that desperately needs guidance and love.

    Bishop Barron's homilies are both easily understood and thought-provoking. They keep listeners coming back week after week for years. This consistency speaks to the depth of his teachings and their ability to engage audiences on an intellectual level while still being relatable.

    In terms of drawbacks, it is difficult to find any significant negatives with this podcast. Some may argue that there is a heavy focus on Catholicism within Bishop Barron's sermons, which may not be appealing to those outside the church tradition. However, as mentioned earlier, his teachings have resonated with non-Catholic listeners as well, showcasing the universal appeal of his message.

    In conclusion, The Bishop Robert Barron's Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies podcast is a must-listen for anyone seeking spiritual guidance and a deeper understanding of Christianity and Catholicism. Bishop Barron's gift for teaching, relatability, and thought-provoking insights make this podcast a transformative resource. Whether you are Catholic or not, this podcast has the power to change lives and deepen one's faith.



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    Latest episodes from Bishop Robert Barron’s Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies

    The Voice in the Depths of Your Soul

    Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2025 13:55


    Friends, on this Fourth Sunday of Easter, we have this marvelous, short but very punchy reading from the Gospel of John: Jesus referring to himself as the good shepherd. This is a remarkably apt metaphor for how God reaches out to us—knows us personally—and how we are able to discern and follow his voice. But how do we hear the voice of the shepherd? In a lot of ways—but I wonder if the clearest way isn't through the conscience, which John Henry Newman called the aboriginal Vicar of Christ in the soul.

    Becoming a Disciple of Jesus

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 15:44


    Friends, on this Third Sunday of Easter, we have the magnificent Gospel from the very end of the Gospel of John, chapter twenty-one, which is so rich theologically. We see here, on full display, what it means for us—who are all ambiguous characters—to stop resisting the cross of self-denial and love and to walk the way of the Lord.

    Everything Has Changed

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 14:52


    Friends, we enter now into the Easter season, and here is the thing I want you to know: We misunderstand Easter dramatically when we think primarily of spring festival time, the weather getting nicer, and Easter bunnies and bonnets. All of that is great; but if you don't understand Easter as a revolution—as an earthquake that has changed the entire world—you have not understood it.

    Something Happened on Easter!

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025 15:07


    Friends, happy Easter! Many of you probably know that I've spent much of my life reading philosophers and spiritual writers—Plato, Aristotle, Confucius, Cicero, Marcus Aurelius, Anselm, Aquinas, Kant, Hegel. What all those figures have in common is a kind of calm, musing detachment as they talk about high ideas. Well, there's all of that—and then there's the Gospel, the “Good News.” Yes, the Gospels have inspired philosophers and spiritual teachers, but at their heart, they're not abstracted philosophical musing; they're the urgent conveying of news. Something happened—and I need you to know about it!

    The Forgiveness of Sinners

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 15:03


    Friends, we come to Palm Sunday, which is also called Passion Sunday because we always read at Mass the Passion narrative from one of the synoptic Gospels. This year, we hear from Saint Luke, and I want to look at two elements unique to his particular version, both of which have to do with forgiveness.

    The Conversion of Saint Paul

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 15:23


    Friends, we come to the Fifth Sunday of Lent, and I want to reflect today on our second reading from the Letter of Paul to the Philippians. It is a passage of both literary genius and spiritual power, one that uses the language of conversion—of letting go of the way I understood and defined my life and turning toward an entirely new way.

    The Heavenly Banquet

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2025 15:16


    Friends, this Fourth Sunday of Lent gives us marvelous readings: the First Reading from the book of Joshua, the Second Reading from Paul's Second Letter to the Corinthians, and the Gospel reading, which is the magnificent parable of the prodigal son from Luke. The correspondences between these three readings I think are quite striking, and they have to do with the Eucharist and divinization.

    You Can't Grasp—or Hide From—God

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 14:49


    Friends, we come to the Third Sunday of Lent, and we have the extraordinary privilege during Cycle C of reading this account, in the third chapter of the book of Exodus, of Moses's encounter with the burning bush. It's one of the pivotal texts in all of Scripture; so much of our great tradition refers to and flows from it, and it sheds light in every direction, telling us profound truths about God, about the spiritual life, and about our relationship to the Lord.

    When the Eternal Breaks Through

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 15:51


    Friends our Gospel for the Second Sunday of Lent this year is Luke's account of the Transfiguration. And it opens up something that is marvelous and confounding; there is sort of an aching and a longing associated with this text. It speaks to us of these moments when reality becomes incandescent or transparent to something more—something that lies beyond our ordinary experience.

    Three Questions to Ask Yourself During Lent

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 14:53


    Friends, we come to the holy season of Lent. Pascal said that most of us go through life diverting and distracting ourselves so that we don't come to terms with the big questions: God, meaning, purpose, eternal life. The Gospel for this week, Luke's marvelous account of the temptation of Jesus, invites us to wrestle with three questions in particular.

    The Revolution of the Resurrection

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2025 15:17


    Friends, for this Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time, the Church gives us the opportunity, in our second reading from 1 Corinthians 15, to reflect on the Resurrection of Jesus from the dead. It was the Resurrection that Paul correctly took as the hinge, the central teaching, of Christianity. But what do we mean by “Resurrection”? How do we theologize about it?

    Give Expecting Nothing Back

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 14:52


    Friends, our Gospel for today is from the Sermon on the Plain, which is Luke's version of Matthew's Sermon on the Mount, and it's not only saying something about the moral life; it's also saying something very profound about God. It has to do with what a number of philosophers in the twentieth century called the aporia—the difficulty or even impossibility—of the gift. Can we give a gift that's truly a gift, with no strings attached?

    Place Your Heart in God

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2025 15:01


    Friends, on this Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time, we have the first reading from the prophet Jeremiah in tandem with the Gospel from Luke's Sermon on the Plain. And both readings draw out a basic feature of biblical spirituality—namely, the ordering of the heart, that deepest organizing principle of one's entire life, to the Lord. 

    Graced Sinners on Mission

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 14:27


    Friends, for the Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time, the Church gives us a wonderful pairing of readings: the first reading from the sixth chapter of Isaiah and the Gospel from the fifth chapter of Luke. They both speak to what I think are three key moments in the Christian spiritual life: first, the breakthrough of grace; then, the acknowledgement of sin; and finally, being sent on mission.

    God Returns to His Temple

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 14:37


    Friends, it's easy enough to sentimentalize the Feast of the Presentation. But we oughtn't to, because this story is getting at, if I can put it this way, a hard truth. And the clue is given to us in the first reading, which is from the prophet Malachi: “And suddenly there will come to the temple the LORD whom you seek.”

    You Can't Give What You Don't Have

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2025 14:23


    Friends, on this Third Sunday of Ordinary Time, I want to talk to you about walls and bridges. There is a tendency today to be simplistic and one-sided about walls and bridges: walls are bad and keep people out, while bridges are great and establish connection. But you need both walls and bridges—both identity and relevance, both the Word and the Word proclaimed—to live the Christian thing correctly.

    The Marriage of Divinity and Humanity

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 14:34


    Friends, we return now to Ordinary Time, and this Sunday, we hear the marvelous story of the wedding feast at Cana from the Gospel of John. It's as though, as we commence the ordinary liturgical year, we're meant to see everything through the lens of this reading. The Church sets it up with our first reading from the prophet Isaiah, who speaks of God's desire to marry his people. Jesus, in his own person, is the marriage of divinity and humanity, and therefore it's appropriate symbolically that the first of his signs would take place at a wedding.

    Why Was Jesus Baptized?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 13:26


    Friends, the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord is exceptionally important. All four Gospels talk about it, and John the Baptist is a kind of door we have to go through to understand Jesus properly. What was John the Baptist doing in the desert? Why did the Messiah, the Lord, go to him for a baptism of repentance? And why do we still spend time with this strange, puzzling, and even embarrassing event?

    Science Points to God

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 14:34


    Friends, we're all familiar with the story of the three wise men, which has been depicted in thousands of Christmas cards. And there is something romantic and charming about it. But on this great Feast of the Epiphany, I want to develop an important angle of the story very much on the minds of many people today—namely, the whole problem of religion and science.

    Freeing Your Family for God

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2024 14:29


    Friends, I always love preaching on the Feast of the Holy Family because I think the biblical message here is very surprising. We say the Bible is associated with family values, and indeed it is, but they're probably not the ones we would automatically think of. We see this in the two stories that the Church brings to our attention today: the story of Hannah leaving Samuel at the temple in Shiloh, and the story of Mary and Joseph finding Jesus at the temple in Jerusalem.

    Why Mary Matters

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2024 15:12


    Friends, on this Fourth Sunday of Advent, we come to the Advent figure par excellence: the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of God. What I want to do in this homily is to look at some of the Church's classical titles of Mary. These are not simply pious exclamations, but rather very substantive insights into her role in bringing Christ to birth—both in history and in us today.

    Freeing Your Family for God

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 15:12


    Friends, I always love preaching on the Feast of the Holy Family because I think the biblical message here is very surprising. We say the Bible is associated with family values, and indeed it is, but they're probably not the ones we would automatically think of. We see this in the two stories that the Church brings to our attention today: the story of Hannah leaving Samuel at the temple in Shiloh, and the story of Mary and Joseph finding Jesus at the temple in Jerusalem.

    The Peace that the World Can't Give

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2024 15:00


    Friends, on this Third Sunday of Advent, called Gaudete Sunday, I want to draw attention to our second reading, which is from St. Paul to the Philippians. These lines about joy, anxiety, prayer, and peace can run right through our minds, but they're actually breathtaking, and they open up something at the very heart of the spiritual life.

    Have You Wandered Away from God?

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2024 14:44


    Friends, in our readings for the Second Sunday of Advent, there is a lot of talk about building highways. In the Bible, both Old Testament and New, we find the theme of exile. Very often, Israel finds itself sent away from its own Promised Land, and a great hope is that one day, the exiles will return home on a highway that God has built. This is a symbol of spiritual exile—and to meet the highway that God has prepared, we have to do some preparation ourselves.

    Three Dimensions of Advent

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2024 14:48


    Friends, we come to the First Sunday of Advent, which is the commencement of the new liturgical year. “Adventus” in Latin means arrival or coming, and one way to look at Advent is to see three comings of Christ. There is the coming of Christ in history in Bethlehem, the coming of Christ now as he approaches our hearts, and the coming of Christ someday in the future. All three of these dimensions belong to our Advent preparation.

    Which Kingdom Are You In?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 14:47


    Friends, we come to the end of the liturgical year with the Feast of Christ the King, where we meditate upon the kingly reign or rule of Christ. Now, we in the modern liberal West have a hard time with kings; we like democratic polities. The United States emerged out of a great rebellion against the king. But we should get over this modern hang-up, because kingship—from Adam all the way up to Christ—is a basic biblical idea. And the importance of today's feast is that it forces a decision about which king we follow.

    A New World Unveiled

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 14:30


    Friends, we're coming toward the end of the liturgical year, and as is typical, the Church gives us readings of an apocalyptic nature dealing with the end times. “Apocalypse” means “unveiling,” and what's being unveiled in our readings is the emergence of a new world—not so much in the literal, cosmic sense as in the sense of how we navigate and understand the world. Something has fallen apart; the old world has given way. 

    Trusting God in Dire Straits

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2024 14:28


    Friends, our first reading is that wonderful story of Elijah and the widow of Zarephath, which is a kind of hidden gem in the Old Testament. Like so many of the stories in the Bible, it is very understated, but chock full of spiritual meaning. And it has to do with how we respond—and the strange and surprising ways God might respond to us— when things are toughest.

    The Highest Good Is God Alone

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 14:51


    Friends, the readings for this Thirty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time take us to very holy ground. In the first reading, taken from the sixth chapter of Deuteronomy, we hear the “shema,” a prayer fundamental to Jewish theology and spirituality. And in the Gospel, when one of the scribes asks Jesus which is the greatest commandment, the Son of God, the Torah made flesh, recites the same prayer. We can't get any more sacred or any clearer indication of how we should govern our lives.

    Answering God's Call

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 15:22


    Friends, all three readings for this Thirtieth Sunday of Ordinary Time have a golden thread running through them, which is the idea of the call—of the primacy of God's action in the life of salvation. Whenever we start thinking that this is our own ego project and that we are in command, we are ipso facto on the wrong path.

    What Real Power Looks Like

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 14:37


    Friends, our Gospel this Sunday is taken from the tenth chapter of Mark, and it is high-octane spiritual business. Something pivotal is being laid out for us in this passage, and it has to do with power, suffering, and a willingness to go where Jesus goes.

    What Do You Ask God For?

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 14:55


    Friends, for this Twenty-eighth Sunday of Ordinary Time, our first reading from the marvelous book of Wisdom presents an old biblical trope: If you were to ask God for something, or if God were to come to you and say he will give you whatever you want—what would you ask for? This is a really clarifying question. And while many things might come to mind, the answer of the paradigmatic wisdom figure is instructive.

    The Biblical Vision of the Family

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 14:43


    Friends, the first reading from Genesis and the Gospel from Mark this week are of great importance. They have to do with what we call Christian anthropology—the biblical understanding of who we are—and most specifically, in relation to marriage and family. This question of how we define ourselves is of course on the minds of many people today, and the readings, in a beautifully compact way, bring out the Christian answer.

    Whoever Is Not Against Us Is For Us

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 14:01


    Friends, the first reading and Gospel this Sunday have to do with the Church at war with itself. The devil is the scatterer, the divider, and one of his favorite tricks is to take the Church—which is meant to be an instrument of the Gospel in the world—and to turn us against one another.

    The Ladder Doesn't Matter

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2024 14:39


    Friends, why was the story of Jesus with the little children, versions of which appear in the three synoptic Gospels, so vividly remembered by the first Christians? I think they intuited that it got very close to the heart of Jesus' teaching. The way Mark sets up his account of this story in our Gospel for this weekend is frankly funny, and it's an example of the disciples completely missing the point of everything. 

    Faith Without Works Is Dead

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2024 14:52


    Friends, “fools rush in where angels fear to tread”—and this week, I am going to go once more into the issue of faith and works, which has been dividing Western Christianity since the Reformation. Our second reading from the Letter of James is a key text on this issue, and its metaphor of healing—together with Paul's forensic metaphor—orient us to the Catholic view of justification.

    Be Opened!

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2024 14:49


    Friends, our Gospel for today is the evocative scene of Jesus healing a man who cannot hear and cannot speak. This man is beautifully symbolic of many in our culture today: we don't listen to God, and therefore we can't speak clearly about God. To us, as to him, Jesus says, “Ephphatha!”—be opened to the Word of God!

    The Goodness—and Dangers—of the Law

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 14:47


    Friends, as Americans, we have a very ambiguous relationship to law. On the one hand, we are a nation of independently minded people; we don't like the law imposing itself on us. At the same time—let's face it—we are a hyper-litigious society. We see the same ambiguity about law—both its beauty and its shadow side—in our three readings today.

    Do You Accept This Teaching?

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2024 14:52


    Friends, we come now to the close of this great discourse of Jesus in the sixth chapter of John, where we see the aftereffects of his teaching on the Real Presence. The Eucharist is a standing or falling point of Christianity, and the question Jesus poses to the Twelve is posed to every one of us today: Do you also want to leave over this teaching? Do you reject it, or do you accept it? 

    Really, Truly, and Substantially Present

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2024 14:42


    Friends, we continue reading from the sixth chapter of John, this pivotal section of the New Testament where John lays out his Eucharistic theology. And we come today to the rhetorical high point of this discourse, where things really come to a head. It is the ground of the doctrine of the Real Presence: Jesus is not simply symbolically present in the Eucharist; he's really, truly, and substantially present under the signs of bread and wine.

    Strength for the Journey

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2024 14:14


    Friends, we're continuing our reading of the sixth chapter of the Gospel of John, which is all about the Eucharist. And here's my take on our reading for today: A long trip by car or plane can be uncomfortable, even overwhelming. But we're heading somewhere else; we're on a journey. And on a long journey, you have to find sustenance to keep going.

    Everything in This World Passes Away

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 14:27


    Friends, in the midst of our country's great Eucharistic Revival, we continue our reading of the sixth chapter of the Gospel of John. And this week, I want to reflect on a line that names something so spiritually basic: “Do not work for food that perishes but for the food that endures for eternal life.”

    Where Heaven and Earth Meet

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2024 14:43


    Friends, this Sunday we begin five weeks of Gospel readings from the sixth chapter of John, which is all about the Eucharist. Jesus will get into a lengthy discourse about the Eucharist, but it commences narratively with the familiar story of the multiplication of the loaves, which is an iconic presentation of the Mass.

    The Shepherd Has Arrived

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 14:42


    Friends the readings for this Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time are interwoven with each other in a very interesting way. I want to start with the first reading from Jeremiah, then look at the Gospel from Mark, and then circle back to the second reading from Paul's Letter to the Ephesians, which I think sheds the most light on the thematics here—namely, God's desire to shepherd his people, and the arrival of the shepherd in Christ.

    The Earliest Moments of the Church

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 15:47


    Friends, on this Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time, our Gospel from the sixth chapter of Mark is Jesus sending the Twelve out on mission. These are the very earliest moments of the Church—in a way, the “pre-Church”—so it's important for us to pay attention to what the Lord tells them. 

    A Thorn in the Flesh

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2024 14:43


    Friends, on this Fourteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time, our second reading is from Paul's Second Letter to the Corinthians. The focus of the reading is “a thorn in the flesh” that was given to Paul “to beat me, to keep me from being too elated.” What was it? We don't know, but whatever it was, it wasn't trivial. We all have something like this—some physical, psychological, or spiritual suffering that's chronic and deeply troubling. Yet this struggle with the thorn in the flesh is very often what brings us back to God.

    Reach Out in Faith

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2024 15:28


    Friends, there's something Hemingway-esque about Mark's Gospel—something very direct and uncomplicated. But in another sense, he shows great literary sophistication, and you see it especially in this famous passage for today: the story of the daughter of Jairus, which is interrupted by the story of the hemorrhaging woman. Of course we read these as marvelous miracle stories of Jesus, but they're meant to speak of the miracle of grace that still goes on in the life of the Church today.

    Peace in the Storm

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 14:15


    Friends, our Gospel for today is Mark's account of the stilling of the sea. We know the basic structure of the story: Jesus is in the boat with the disciples; when a storm kicks up, he's asleep in the stern. The disciples are panicking and wake Jesus up, and once he's awakened, he calms the storm. Then he says, “Do you not yet have faith?” What I'm going to do is give you three separate interpretations of this story, all of which have come up out of the ancient Church, and all of which shed light on the spiritual life.

    See Things Differently

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 14:23


    Friends, people of faith just see things differently. They see what the nonbeliever sees—they read history and watch the news and see what's going on in the world—but they see more than that. They see the world according to God's plans and purposes—an ample and even peculiar vision that can often make spiritual people seem a little crazy. All three of our readings this Sunday are touching on this theme.

    What Is Sin?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 14:55


    Friends, we return now to Ordinary Time, and this Sunday, the Church gives us such a fundamentally important reading from the third chapter of the book of Genesis, which is about the fall. To return to this story—written, under God's inspiration, with stunning perceptiveness—is to discover again the nature and basic dynamics of sin.

    The Power of Eucharistic Adoration

    Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 15:10


    Friends, we come to the great Feast of Corpus Christi—the Body and Blood of Christ. This year, as the Church in the US is going through a lengthy Eucharistic Revival, it's good for us once again to turn to this greatest of sacraments. What I want to do today is to talk about a spiritual practice that has become very dear to me in the course of my life—and that is Eucharistic Adoration.

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