
About this episode
Fr. Patrick Cardine reflects on the importance of running the race of faith without presumption as Lent approaches.
We stand at the edge of Lent and hear a warning carried on both Gospel and Epistle: do not presume. The vineyard stretches from Adam to Christ, from dawn to the eleventh hour, and those who labored longest are not guaranteed the prize. Envy felled angels. Presumption cut down a chosen people. The last may be first — and the first, last. We who have been grafted in must not grow comfortable. Our fathers passed through the sea, ate spiritual food, drank from the Rock — and that Rock was Christ. They had Him, truly. Yet many fell in the wilderness. Baptism is not immunity. Eucharist is not entitlement. The race must be run; the body disciplined; the lamp kept filled. Two thousand years is a long time to live in Babylon. It is long enough to mistake exile for home, to build our stone houses and forget the fire that will test every work. But Christ is not distant. Through anamnesis He is as present now as He was in the cloud and the sea. There is no excuse for cold love. Only one thing will endure the burning: love for God and neighbor, made visible in holiness and good works. All else will pass. Are we still running — or have we begun to settle?
People in this episode
Host: Fr. Patrick Cardine
Topics covered
- Lent
- spiritual discipline
- Christian faith
- presumption
- love for God
- holiness
- exile
Keywords
- Lent
- spirituality
- Christianity
- presumption
- love
- holiness
- Eucharist
- Baptism
- discipline
- exile
More episodes of Lorica
- Episode 308 - The Sabbath is Over · April 12, 2026 · 11 min
- Episode 307 - Let No One Go Forth Hungry · April 11, 2026 · 5 min
- Episode 306 - He Trod the Winepress Alone · April 10, 2026 · 15 min
- Episode 305 - Fresh From the Battle of Edom · April 8, 2026 · 12 min
- Episode 304 - When He Hid His Identity · March 22, 2026 · 16 min
- Episode 303 - Hear Him on the Mountain · March 8, 2026 · 20 min
Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Lorica podcast page.