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On the Third Sunday after Pentecost, the Church sets two images before us: a devil prowling like a lion, and a shepherd who leaves everything to find the one lost sheep. This week's reflection draws on the Epistle from First Peter, the parables of the Lost Sheep and Lost Coin from Luke's Gospel, and the beautiful theology of Saint Gregory of Nazianzus, who saw in the shepherd's shoulders the shadow of the Cross and in the woman's lamp the light of Christ's own flesh. Desolation, spiritual combat, and the unrelenting mercy of God who carries us home — this is a Sunday for anyone who has ever felt lost.
Visit thedomesticchurch.com for more Catholic content for families and kids.
By The Domestic ChurchOn the Third Sunday after Pentecost, the Church sets two images before us: a devil prowling like a lion, and a shepherd who leaves everything to find the one lost sheep. This week's reflection draws on the Epistle from First Peter, the parables of the Lost Sheep and Lost Coin from Luke's Gospel, and the beautiful theology of Saint Gregory of Nazianzus, who saw in the shepherd's shoulders the shadow of the Cross and in the woman's lamp the light of Christ's own flesh. Desolation, spiritual combat, and the unrelenting mercy of God who carries us home — this is a Sunday for anyone who has ever felt lost.
Visit thedomesticchurch.com for more Catholic content for families and kids.