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Jan 25 – III Sun of Epiphany / Conv. of S Paul

Jan 25 – III Sun of Epiphany / Conv. of S Paul

Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
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It’s the III Sunday after Epiphany, 2nd Class, with the color of Green. In this episode: the meditation: “The Confident Prayer of the Leper”, today’s news from the Church: “Cardinal Fernández: The Destructive Potential of an Incompetent Person?”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.

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The Conversion of Saint Paul is one of the most dramatic turning points in the history of the Church, not because of spectacle alone, but because of what it reveals about grace. Celebrated on January 25, the feast does not honor Paul’s martyrdom or his missionary achievements, but the moment when God intervened decisively in a life moving in the wrong direction. Saul of Tarsus was not searching for Christ. He was opposing Him with conviction. Educated, zealous, and convinced he was defending God’s honor, Saul actively persecuted the early Christians, consenting to imprisonment and death in the name of religious purity.

On the road to Damascus, everything collapsed. A light brighter than the sun struck him to the ground, and a voice addressed him personally: “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?” The question was not an accusation alone, but a revelation. In harming the Church, Saul was harming Christ Himself. Blinded and helpless, he was led into the city he had intended to enter as an enemy. There, in darkness and silence, the foundations of his identity were dismantled. When Ananias laid hands on him, Saul regained his sight and was baptized. The persecutor became a disciple, not gradually, but completely.

The Church has always understood this event as more than a personal conversion. It is a revelation of how God works. Paul was not persuaded by argument or softened by example. He was interrupted. Grace broke into his certainty and reordered his zeal. His intellect was not erased, but purified. His strength was not destroyed, but redirected. From that moment on, Paul’s life became a continual dying and rising with Christ, marked by suffering, travel, rejection, and unshakable joy.

Historically, the feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul developed early in Rome, where devotio

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