Fixation on Christ
Fr. Pat discusses the myrrh-bearing women and what united them.

Fr. Pat discusses the myrrh-bearing women and what united them.
Fr. Pat discusses the patterns of thought that make man so resistant to the cross.
Fr. Pat discusses the moral order in three stages.
Fr. Pat discusses three moral fallacies that corrupt the conscience.
Fr. Pat discusses the history of Great Lent and the practice of fasting.
Fr. Pat argues that the above phrase possesses all of the clarity of the Last Judgment.
Fr. Pat reflects on three points related to the Prodigal Son.
Fr. Pat explains that prayer is the highest of all human activities.
Fr. Pat reflects upon the Feast of the Presentation as a boundary between two seasons. It marks the end of the Christmas season and the beginning of the Lord's Passion.
Fr. Pat reflects upon two people who wanted to see Jesus but were unable to—and what they did about it.
Fr. Pat shares his homily on the Feast of Theophany.
Fr. Pat explores three ways of looking at Protagoras's infamous assertion.
Fr. Pat shares his homily from the Sunday of the Genealogy.
Fr. Pat discusses three Old Testament saints that are particularly important in preparation for Christ.
Fr. Pat explains that what God's Son did for the crippled woman is what He came to do for all mankind—to raise us up and straighten out our twisted lives.
Fr. Pat discusses the parable of the wedding invitations.
Fr. Pat reminds us that in Christ we start all over.
Fr. Pat discusses St. Paul's warnings regarding the influence of evil forces in Corinth.
Fr. Pat explains that love must be intelligent, practical and generous, and miraculous.
Fr. Pat shares his homily from the Feast of the Nativity of the Theotokos.
Fr. Pat discusses three experiences associated with prayer to Jesus.
Fr. Pat shares his homily on the centurion and his servant.
Fr. Pat examines the story of Christ calling his first disciples under three aspects.
The man born with the blindness that we all share sees differently and looks different.
Fr. Pat reflects on goodness, beauty, and truth in Jesus's encounter with Photini of Samaria.
Fr. Pat shares his homily from the Sunday of the Paralytic.
Fr. Pat again addresses the "transcendentals," this time explaining how the Incarnation is the manifestation of truth, goodness, and beauty.
Fr. Pat considers the Gospel message of St. Thomas Sunday through the triple lens of what classical philosophy calls "the transcendentals": the true, the good, and the beautiful.
Fr. Pat discusses the three things we ask for in the prayer before the Gospel in Matins that mirror the three gifts of the Holy Spirit as expressed by the Prophet Isaiah.
Fr. Pat address some of the themes of Pascha in preparation for this Feast of Feasts.