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The IncarnationOverview of Doctrinal Homily Outlines

Doctrinal Homily Outlines, a lectionary-based aid for homilists, began as this layman’s response to the Year of Faith Pope Benedict XVI declared for 2012-2013.

In Porta Fidei, Benedict’s apostolic letter announcing the Year of Faith, the Holy Father asked each of us to “rediscover the content of the faith that is professed, celebrated, lived and prayed, and to reflect on the act of faith” (§ 9). Our Catholic faith has an intellectual content to be known so it can be embraced, pondered, lived, and taught.

The homily is the best opportunity pastors have to help the laity deepen their faith and live it. Sunday Mass is the time each week when all the faithful who practice their faith are present.

The homily might not seem the natural place for a doctrinal catechesis. The General Instruction of the Roman Missal tells us the homily should be

an exposition of some aspect of the readings from Sacred Scripture or of another text from the Ordinary or from the Proper of the Mass of the day” to nurture the Christian life, taking “into account both the mystery being celebrated and the particular needs of the listeners (§ 65).

While the post-Vatican-II Lectionary for Mass is a rich presentation of the Sacred Scriptures following a systematic plan, the Scriptures are not, of course, a systematic presentation of the faith. Nevertheless, the doctrines of the faith are contained in Sacred Scripture, so the lectionary readings can be the basis for preaching about doctrine. Certainly, one of the critical “particular needs of the listeners” is a sound doctrinal catechesis. Hence, we had the Year of Faith.

This blog offers for every Sunday of the Year an outline which homilists can use to prepare doctrinally-focused sermons which grow out of the lectionary readings. To aid homilists, the outlines follow a three-part template: central idea, doctrine, and practical application.

• First, a central idea, which the group of readings contains, is articulated. In this way, the homilist can illuminate the overall salvific meaning of the Lectionary readings.

• Second, one doctrine from the Deposit of Faith or Catholic morals which the readings contain will be identified. The outline will help the homilist define, explain, and illustrate this doctrine.

• Third, practical ways that the laity can apply this doctrine to their lives will be offered. This third step helps accomplish the Church’s desire that the homilist “nurture the Christian life” of the lay faithful. It helps fulfill the goal of the Year of Faith that the faith be lived.

This template and the content the weekly posts supply will meet the requirement that the homily nourish the faithful by explaining the Word of God to them. It also answers the call of Pope Benedict to teach doctrine. Finally, it fulfills an urgent particular need of the laity: how practically to apply the faith in our ordinary lives.

No homily can fully expound all the riches contained in any set of Lectionary readings, but every homily can explain some of them. Homilists can get into the habit of drawing out the doctrinal riches which the Sacred Scriptures contain. In addition, pastors can connect these doctrines to the ordinary lives of the laity. Each week, the homilist can offer the faithful a new facet of the intellectual content of our faith so the faithful can embrace it, ponder it, live it, and even teach it to others as part of the New Evangelization.

Comments

2 responses to “Start here”

  1. Fr Peter Fitzsimons Avatar
    Fr Peter Fitzsimons

    Thanks for your work. I find your approach to the scriptures for developing homilies quite helpful. I also your devotion to St Josemaria Escriva as I am priest of Opus Dei living in Australia.
    While it’s easy to access your material for homilies for Sundays, I note that you have also put in some other posts about the gifts of the Holy Spirit and the beatitudes. However, there’s not a link on the menu to take you to those posts nor a search function on the page to find them. I can think for myself that the material would be particularly helpful when we come to Easter/Pentecost rather than at this moment but I don’t know if I could locate them again on your site at that stage.
    Am I missing something that is already there – eg a menu item for those posts or a search function?
    Thanks for your efforts once again.
    Fr Peter Fitzsimons

    1. Kevin Aldrich Avatar

      Fr. Peter,
      Thanks for you kind words. At the very top are some drop down menus. If you click on the menu for “Homily Outlines” you will see further menus for each of the three years of the Lectionary cycle.
      I hope this answers your question.
      Kevin

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