The Price of Ignoring Poverty | Catholic Daily Readings and Reflection | September 28, 2025 episode artwork

EPISODE · Sep 28, 2025 · 13 MIN

The Price of Ignoring Poverty | Catholic Daily Readings and Reflection | September 28, 2025

from Christus Dominus Daily Bread · host Christus Dominus Studios

Catholic Daily Readings and Reflection for Sunday, September 28, 2025 - Twenty-sixth Sunday in Ordinary TimeEvery morning, the rich man stepped over Lazarus on his way to breakfast. For years, this was their routine—purple silk and fine linen versus sores and hunger, with only a gate between them. Today's readings from Amos 6, Psalm 146, 1 Timothy 6, and Luke 16 explore how moral blindness develops through practiced indifference.The devastating detail isn't the rich man's wealth but that Jesus gives the poor man a name—Lazarus—while the rich man remains anonymous. In a culture where names meant everything, the powerless beggar achieves immortality while the powerful becomes a cautionary tale. This reversal exposes how moral blindness works: not through sudden cruelty but gradual hardening when we repeatedly choose comfort over compassion.Amos understood this psychology, targeting those who "lie upon beds of ivory" while remaining unmoved by others' collapse. Paul's charge to Timothy takes on urgent relevance: pursue righteousness, devotion, and love—qualities developed only through engagement with real people, especially those who can't benefit you in return.Discover why the rich man's tragedy unfolds through physical separation from need, emotional detachment from suffering, and spiritual deadening to human dignity. Even in torment, he still sees Lazarus as a servant rather than addressing him directly, revealing that hell might be the condition of being so spiritually atrophied you can't recognize God's image in others.Learn why most of us are closer to the rich man than we want to admit, how "practiced indifference" develops through comfortable routines that avoid confronting poverty, and what it means that our eternal destiny connects to how we respond to immediate human need. Perfect for anyone examining their relationship with wealth and poverty, people struggling with social responsibility, believers learning about economic justice, and those discovering that comfort can become the enemy of compassion.📖 ReadingsAmos 6:1a, 4-7Psalm 1461 Timothy 6: 11-16Luke 16:19-31⏱️ Timeline00:00 Introduction00:15 Reading I - Amos 6:1a, 4-700:54 Psalm Response - Psalm 14604:49 Reading II - 1 Timothy 6: 11-1605:40 Gospel - Luke 16:19-3107:27 ReflectionPerfect for Catholics examining their relationship with wealth and social responsibility, Christians struggling with economic inequality and justice issues, believers learning about preferential option for the poor, anyone discovering how comfort can insulate from moral demands, people studying Catholic social teaching, and those exploring the connection between daily choices and eternal consequences.🎧 Prefer to listen on the go? The Christus Dominus Daily Bread podcast is now available: Video Podcast: Spotify → https://open.spotify.com/show/7H4YZ5ZIq4rVVF3670Av3t YouTube → https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTPJP7WEcCSTIO2N4N_AoIsxmzIYRYiSt Audio Podcast: Apple Podcasts → https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/christus-dominus-daily-bread/id1826298886#CatholicDailyReadings #CatholicMass #RichManLazarus #SocialJustice #PracticedIndifference #CatholicReflection

Catholic Daily Readings and Reflection for Sunday, September 28, 2025 - Twenty-sixth Sunday in Ordinary TimeEvery morning, the rich man stepped over Lazarus on his way to breakfast. For years, this was their routine—purple silk and fine linen versus sores and hunger, with only a gate between them. Today's readings from Amos 6, Psalm 146, 1 Timothy 6, and Luke 16 explore how moral blindness develops through practiced indifference.The devastating detail isn't the rich man's wealth but that Jesus gives the poor man a name—Lazarus—while the rich man remains anonymous. In a culture where names meant everything, the powerless beggar achieves immortality while the powerful becomes a cautionary tale. This reversal exposes how moral blindness works: not through sudden cruelty but gradual hardening when we repeatedly choose comfort over compassion.Amos understood this psychology, targeting those who "lie upon beds of ivory" while remaining unmoved by others' collapse. Paul's charge to Timothy takes on urgent relevance: pursue righteousness, devotion, and love—qualities developed only through engagement with real people, especially those who can't benefit you in return.Discover why the rich man's tragedy unfolds through physical separation from need, emotional detachment from suffering, and spiritual deadening to human dignity. Even in torment, he still sees Lazarus as a servant rather than addressing him directly, revealing that hell might be the condition of being so spiritually atrophied you can't recognize God's image in others.Learn why most of us are closer to the rich man than we want to admit, how "practiced indifference" develops through comfortable routines that avoid confronting poverty, and what it means that our eternal destiny connects to how we respond to immediate human need. Perfect for anyone examining their relationship with wealth and poverty, people struggling with social responsibility, believers learning about economic justice, and those discovering that comfort can become the enemy of compassion.📖 ReadingsAmos 6:1a, 4-7Psalm 1461 Timothy 6: 11-16Luke 16:19-31⏱️ Timeline00:00 Introduction00:15 Reading I - Amos 6:1a, 4-700:54 Psalm Response - Psalm 14604:49 Reading II - 1 Timothy 6: 11-1605:40 Gospel - Luke 16:19-3107:27 ReflectionPerfect for Catholics examining their relationship with wealth and social responsibility, Christians struggling with economic inequality and justice issues, believers learning about preferential option for the poor, anyone discovering how comfort can insulate from moral demands, people studying Catholic social teaching, and those exploring the connection between daily choices and eternal consequences.🎧 Prefer to listen on the go? The Christus Dominus Daily Bread podcast is now available: Video Podcast: Spotify → https://open.spotify.com/show/7H4YZ5ZIq4rVVF3670Av3t YouTube → https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTPJP7WEcCSTIO2N4N_AoIsxmzIYRYiSt Audio Podcast: Apple Podcasts → https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/christus-dominus-daily-bread/id1826298886#CatholicDailyReadings #CatholicMass #RichManLazarus #SocialJustice #PracticedIndifference #CatholicReflection

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The Price of Ignoring Poverty | Catholic Daily Readings and Reflection | September 28, 2025

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Catholic Daily Readings and Reflection for Sunday, September 28, 2025 - Twenty-sixth Sunday in Ordinary TimeEvery morning, the rich man stepped over Lazarus on his way to breakfast. For years, this was their routine—purple silk and fine linen versus...

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