Synopsis
From the classroom to the office to everywhere in between, struggling for goodness & holiness can be a daunting task. In these homilies and meditations by Fr. James Searby, Chaplain and Director of Catholic Campus Ministry at George Mason University, discover the possibility of Holiness for the Working Day.
Episodes
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A Meditation on Fortitude
16/04/2026 Duration: 36minWhat does it take to stand firm when everything in you wants to fold — not just on the battlefield, but in the garden at Chelsea, in the courtroom, at the kitchen table with someone you love? In this episode we look at fortitude, what Adam Smith called "the uniquely splendid quality of man," through the eyes of Thomas Aquinas, Aristotle, and some of the most vivid moments in Scripture, literature, and film. We start where the Church starts us this week — with the apostles, sprung from prison by an angel, walking straight back to the temple at dawn to keep preaching. That is fortitude in its purest form. From there we explore why only the vulnerable can be truly brave, why Aquinas says endurance is a harder and nobler act than attack, and why most of what the world calls courage is actually one of five convincing counterfeits. We spend time with Thomas More, standing quiet and unshakeable before the most powerful man in England, and we ask what his daily courage demands of us — not the grand martyrdom, but the
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Mercy's Transformative Healing Power
12/04/2026 Duration: 22minDivine Mercy Sunday 2026 Our pain, wounds, fears and flaws are "Transubstantiated" by His Mercy
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Easter Sunday: Running To Seek Him
05/04/2026 Duration: 19minEaster 2026 HE HAS RISEN! HAPPY EASTER TO ALL!
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It Is Amazing What Can Happen from An Unexpected Gift
05/04/2026 Duration: 19minEaster Vigil 2026 HAPPY EASTER! HE HAS RISEN!
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Palm Sunday and the Age Old Battle
29/03/2026 Duration: 09minPalm Sunday 2026 Enter this week in silence, get rid of the distractions if only for a week, and allow the Lord to invite you on the Way.
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Meditation on the Annunciation and "The Religious Sense"
26/03/2026 Duration: 36minSome years ago, a simple car ride with my young nephew became something unexpected, a window into the deepest structure of the human heart. His endless questions, his wonder at everything from trees to passing strangers, revealed something we are all born with but often lose, what Luigi Giussani calls the religious sense. In this episode, we trace that childlike openness all the way to the Annunciation, where Our Lady, fully awake and receptive, encounters God in a way that awakens everything and demands a response. Drawing from Giussani, Thomas Aquinas, and Joseph Ratzinger, we explore how vocation is not something we construct, but something spoken to us, and how true freedom is not keeping options open, but giving ourselves completely to what is real and good. This is an episode about wonder, encounter, and the quiet, world-changing power of a single yes.
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Complaining and the Serpent on the Stick
24/03/2026 Duration: 07minMonday of the 5th Week of Lent, 2026
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"If You Had Been Here"
24/03/2026 Duration: 21minThe Raising of Lazerus and the Pondering of Death 5th Sunday in Ordinary Time, year A 2026
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Healing Wounds, a Husband's Prayer and Grace in the Mess
24/03/2026 Duration: 01h25sA Great Conversation with Fr. Ken Gerasi I am honored to have Fr. Ken Gerasi on the podcast with me. Fr. Ken recently led our lenten parish mission here at the Basilica of St. Mary and our fireside chat was a real treat for me. I am happy to share it with you. This is the link to the video: https://stmaryoldtown.org/searbygeraciconverse/ Fr. Ken Geraci lived the life of the prodigal son for most of his young adult life. Raised in a nominally Catholic family, who only lived the externals of the faith, as a young man, he left the Catholic Church for many years. During that time, he earned a business degree and achieved business success, but made little room for God. God, however, did not give up on him. During this journey, Our Lord presented him with challenges that forced him to question his personal beliefs and to ask the question "What is Truth?" Through a series of conversions, years of struggle, study and questioning, Fr. Ken found his way from agnosticism, to non-denominational Christianity, and ultimat
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An Ode to Teachers
24/03/2026 Duration: 45minA talk to Atrium teachers in the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd. A special thanks for all teachers in this episode.
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A Meditation on Justice, Part 1
13/03/2026 Duration: 36minIn this first part of a meditation on justice, we explore the classic definition given by St. Thomas Aquinas: "reddere unicuique suum"—to give to each person what is due to them. Beginning with powerful scenes from A Man for All Seasons and reflections from Aristotle, Chesterton, and the Christian tradition, this episode examines why justice is rooted in the dignity of the human person created by God. We consider the origin of rights, the meaning of "inalienable," and why justice ultimately begins not with defending our own rights but with giving others theirs. Along the way we reflect on the nobility of the human person, the dangers of societies that deny that dignity, and how justice shapes everything from public life to our interior attitudes toward others. This is the first half of a longer meditation that lays the philosophical and spiritual foundation for understanding justice in our time.
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Meditation on Prudence in an Age Obsessed with Youth
07/03/2026 Duration: 33minA warm evening walk through Old Town turned into a meditation on something I keep noticing more and more in our culture, the strange fear of growing older. The line between youth and adulthood has become so blurred that many people seem to cling to the appearance and customs of youth long after that season has passed. The old milestones of adulthood have faded or been pushed further and further out, and beneath it all there seems to be a deeper anxiety about aging, meaning, and death itself. In this meditation I reflect on how the classical virtue of prudence helps us see reality as it truly is and teaches us to live in harmony with it. Prudence allows us to accept the season of life we are in with honesty and even with a kind of elegance, rather than pretending to be something we are not. The Christian life ultimately frees us from the desperate need to stay young, because our hope is not in youth but in the eternal life promised by God.
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Lenten Meditation on Prudence
26/02/2026 Duration: 34minthis is part 1 of a series on the Cardinal Virtues.
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Using Desert Power
22/02/2026 Duration: 14min1st Sunday of Lent, Year A 2026 The Tempation in the Desert
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Jesus, the Great Romantic
14/02/2026 Duration: 19min6th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A and Valentine's Day 2026
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Meditation on Lent as the Training Camp of Love
12/02/2026 Duration: 36minThis Lent, we step into a type of Groundhog Day and discover that the real loop is not time, but of the heart. Like Phil Connors, we can drift through repetition, chasing comfort and distraction, or we can let repetition become formation. Lent is not a diet, a productivity plan, or spiritual biohacking. It is a training camp for love. It is the joyful adventure of waking up to the ordinary day and choosing to grow in it. It is the season where the mind is reawakened, attention is purified, and sanctifying grace elevates our natural powers so we can truly know Christ and love like Him. This is the school of love, where virtue is formed through daily practice, where the fog lifts, where the intellect comes alive, and where the loop breaks not because circumstances change, but because we do as we journey to Easter.