I spotted a magnifying glass on the kitchen counter as a kid. I noticed how it made small things bigger. To my surprise, I later discovered that a magnifying glass could make fire.
The sun’s beam could be intensified to the degree that it could burn whatever it touched. However, it lost its fire when I pulled the magnifying glass from the object toward me.
Our possessions are like a magnifying glass. When we pull our affection and love away from others to ourselves, our possessions lose their power to do a greater good.
Think about how God gave us our hearts, souls, minds, and strengths to love him first. Indeed we can’t love a variety of persons and created things at once, but we can only focus on one thing, God, others, or ourselves.
It can be dangerous to divide our hearts into compartments, some for God, some for others, and some for ourselves. When our love is divided, we love no one but ourselves. We ask, “What’s in it for me.?”
However, loving God first is like the magnifying glass that gathers all the sun’s rays into one beam. So, all our love for people and things is magnified into a powerful beam that increases our intensity to do good.
The man in the gospel put all his goods in one basket, his heart. There wasn’t any room left for anyone else. Loving God first makes our hearts so big that there is plenty of room to do good for others. Why? Because we have God’s heart that will always provide for ourselves and others.
Get out your magnifying glass and set God’s goodness ablaze.
April 22, 2025, John 20:11-18 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040726.cfm Ask the Question. Anyone who plays golf knows the frustration of hitting a bad shot repeatedly. So, I asked
April 6, 2025, Matthew 28:8-15 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040626.cfm Matthew reports that the Angel told the women that Jesus had risen from the dead and told them to
April 5, 2026, Matthew 28: 1-10 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040526.cfm The Ragman One Friday morning, I saw a young man, 6-5, handsome, arms like tree limbs, pulling a
April 4, 2026, John 20:1-9 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040426.cfm Who Will Fill My Emptiness? Peace be with you, my friends, and to all you love and cherish. Welcome
30 July, 2022 09:17
Fr. Rick’s Two Minute Homily for 18th Sunday in Week in Ordinary Time 07-31-2022
18th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2022
Luke 12:13-21 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/073122.cfm
DISCOVERING THE POWER OF A MAGNIFYING GLASS.
I spotted a magnifying glass on the kitchen counter as a kid. I noticed how it made small things bigger. To my surprise, I later discovered that a magnifying glass could make fire.
The sun’s beam could be intensified to the degree that it could burn whatever it touched. However, it lost its fire when I pulled the magnifying glass from the object toward me.
Our possessions are like a magnifying glass. When we pull our affection and love away from others to ourselves, our possessions lose their power to do a greater good.
Think about how God gave us our hearts, souls, minds, and strengths to love him first. Indeed we can’t love a variety of persons and created things at once, but we can only focus on one thing, God, others, or ourselves.
It can be dangerous to divide our hearts into compartments, some for God, some for others, and some for ourselves. When our love is divided, we love no one but ourselves. We ask, “What’s in it for me.?”
However, loving God first is like the magnifying glass that gathers all the sun’s rays into one beam. So, all our love for people and things is magnified into a powerful beam that increases our intensity to do good.
The man in the gospel put all his goods in one basket, his heart. There wasn’t any room left for anyone else. Loving God first makes our hearts so big that there is plenty of room to do good for others. Why? Because we have God’s heart that will always provide for ourselves and others.
Get out your magnifying glass and set God’s goodness ablaze.
IGNITE THE FIRE!
Father Rick Pilger, I.C.
pastor
or .
Share:
More Posts
Father Rick’s Two-Minute Homily for Tuesday in the Octave of Easter
April 22, 2025, John 20:11-18 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040726.cfm Ask the Question. Anyone who plays golf knows the frustration of hitting a bad shot repeatedly. So, I asked
Father Rick’s Two-Minute Homily for Monday in the Octave of Easter
April 6, 2025, Matthew 28:8-15 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040626.cfm Matthew reports that the Angel told the women that Jesus had risen from the dead and told them to
Fr. Rick’s Two Minute Homily for Easter Sunday
April 5, 2026, Matthew 28: 1-10 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040526.cfm The Ragman One Friday morning, I saw a young man, 6-5, handsome, arms like tree limbs, pulling a
Father Rick’s Two-Minute Homily for Easter Vigil
April 4, 2026, John 20:1-9 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040426.cfm Who Will Fill My Emptiness? Peace be with you, my friends, and to all you love and cherish. Welcome
Categories
Send Us A Message