The Old World Has Been Shaken - Bishop Barron’s Sunday Sermon
The Old World Has Been Shaken - Bishop Barron’s Sunday Sermon The Old World Has Been Shaken - Bishop Barron’s Sunday Sermon Friends, we come to the Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time, which means that next Sunday is the final Sunday of the liturgical year. During this time, the Church always gives us apocalyptic readings, and our Gospel today is from “the little apocalypse” in the Gospel of Luke. Apokalypsis in Greek does not mean “end of the world”; it means “unveiling”—taking away the kalyptra, the veil. This is why, when apokalypsis is rendered in Latin, we get revelatio, revelation—taking the velum, the veil, away. So apocalyptic literature is all about the showing forth of a new world. But that has to be preceded by a sort of shaking of the old world. Mass Readings: Reading 1 — Malachi 3:19-20a Psalm — Psalm 98:5-6, 7-8, 9 Reading 2 — 2 Thessalonians 3:7-12 Gospel — Luke 21:5-19 ———VIDEO LINKS——— Ep. 62 | Robert Cording - Finding the World’s Fullness: Celebrating St. John Henry Newman Becoming a Doctor of the Church: The Cry for Christ: A Missionary Journey to London: ———WATCH——— Subscribe to this Channel: Word on Fire Institute Channel: Word on Fire en Español Channel: ———WORD ON FIRE——— Word on Fire: Word on Fire Español: FREE Daily Gospel Reflections (English or Español): ———WORD ON FIRE INSTITUTE——— Join Bishop Barron and over 20,000 evangelists inside the Word on Fire Institute at ———SOCIAL MEDIA——— Bishop Barron Instagram: Bishop Barron Facebook: Bishop Barron Twitter: Word on Fire Instagram: Word on Fire Facebook: Word on Fire Twitter: Word on Fire en Español Instagram: Word on Fire en Español Facebook: Word on Fire en Español Twitter: ———SUPPORT WORD ON FIRE——— Help Bishop Barron continue to produce videos like this: Word on Fire Store: Friends, we come to the Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time, which means that next Sunday is the final Sunday of the liturgical year. During this time, the Church always gives us apocalyptic readings, and our Gospel today is from “the little apocalypse” in the Gospel of Luke. Apokalypsis in Greek does not mean “end of the world”; it means “unveiling”—taking away the kalyptra, the veil. This is why, when apokalypsis is rendered in Latin, we get revelatio, revelation—taking the velum, the veil, away. So apocalyptic literature is all about the showing forth of a new world. But that has to be preceded by a sort of shaking of the old world. Mass Readings: Reading 1 — Malachi 3:19-20a Psalm — Psalm 98:5-6, 7-8, 9 Reading 2 — 2 Thessalonians 3:7-12 Gospel — Luke 21:5-19 ———VIDEO LINKS——— Ep. 62 | Robert Cording - Finding the World’s Fullness: Celebrating St. John Henry Newman Becoming a Doctor of the Church: The Cry for Christ: A Missionary Journey to London: ———WATCH——— Subscribe to this Channel: Word on Fire Institute Channel: Word on Fire en Español Channel