6th Sunday in Ordinary Time
My dear brothers and sisters in Christ,
“This is the day the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it”. ( Psalm 118:24)
This weekend I would like to prepare all of us, in a gentle and prayerful way, to enter into the season of Lent which begins on Ash Wednesday, February 18, 2026.
The Lord, in the Gospel of Matthew 5:17-37, gave a new dimension to the old Mosaic Law as a way to advance towards perfection. It is an invitation by the Lord to all of us to grow in holiness day by day. Let us accept the Lord’s invitation and enter into Lent with the hope of becoming better disciples.
The Lenten season consists of forty days based on the Biblical reference to the forty days and nights of floods at the time of Noah (Genesis 7:4), the forty years the People of Israel wandered in the wilderness before entering the promised land (Numbers 14:33), the forty days and nights Moses spent on Mount Sinai before receiving the Ten Commandments (Exodus 24:18) and the forty days of fasting and prayer by our Lord Jesus Christ in the wilderness (Matthew 4:2).
The number “40” in the Bible symbolizes a time of testing, trial, purification and preparation for something new and better—a higher transformation. In the Church, we have the tradition of giving up something during this time or making a pledge to do something positive such as spending extra time in prayer or doing additional works of charity. Please use this Lenten season to focus your time and attention on the Lord and what He asks of you. Let us all make the best use of this time of Lent to prepare ourselves for the glories of Easter.
On a personal note, I would like to share that in 2023, I gave up Facebook during Lent. The grace from that Lent is that I now have no desire to get back on Facebook. I use the added time towards the holy hours which I do for different intentions. Praise the Lord!!!
Our Parishioners Roger and Kelli Crabb have purchased 230 copies of the book ‘The Seven Pillars of Catholic Spirituality’ by Matthew Kelly for our Lenten reading. Please take one per family. We thank them for their generosity to our Parish.
I highly recommend that parents talk to their children about the seven pillars of Catholic Spirituality. It will strengthen their faith.
Finally, I want to invite you to look forward eagerly to Lent not as a somber or negative time, but as an invitation to each of us to come close to the Lord. By the end of the day and by the end of our lives, all that matters is GOD!
God bless you!
Fr. Bob Romaine









