Peter is in Rome

Why We're "Roman" Catholic

by Father Brian J. Soliven on Sunday January 25, 2026

We can’t ignore the proclamation of Jesus in today’s Gospel passage – "the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” It reverberates with mighty significance. It calls us to awaken from our slumber, as though with the trumpet of an archangel, urging us to lift our eyes from the mundane of the world and behold the extraordinary.

 

When Christ first uttered these words, He spoke to the hopes of a people longing for more (have you noticed, by the way, the human heart always wants more and yet nothing in the world can satisfy that hunger?). The Lord’s words are a call to embrace not a realm of terrestrial grandeur, nor a kingdom of swords and spears, but one of spirit and truth. It was an invitation for all to enter into a new covenant, where God Himself would dwell among men in the flesh, making His abode in the hearts of those He loves.

 

The historical biblical meaning of this proclamation lies not in geopolitical liberation, but in the liberation of souls. The Jews of Jesus’ time anticipated the Messiah as a political liberator; yet, in His divine paradox, Christ offered them freedom of a higher order – deliverance from sin and death, the true tyrants of humanity. The kingdom of heaven is an already-but-not-yet consummation of the divine promise—a present reality through the Church, Christ's mystical Body, and a future hope to be fulfilled in its fullness at the end of the world..

 

Moreover, it is a call to recognize our true inheritance as sons and daughters of the Most High. In this divine family, we find not just a distant God, but a Father who desires our conversion and holiness. We are made co-heirs with Christ, inheritors of eternal life and divine grace. It is a truth both humbling and exhilarating, that we, frail creatures of earth, are invited to partake in the divine nature, to be transformed from dust to something more beautiful and everlasting.

 

In this vein, we must ask ourselves: are we living as children of this kingdom? Are we bearers of the light, spreading the joy and truth of this proclamation to a world in dire need of hope? Let us then examine our own lives and strive to reflect the glory and justice of our heavenly inheritance. Each of us is called to be a sign of this kingdom made manifest, to live as though the very gates of heaven might swing open at any moment. And so, as we ponder this great mystery, allow the words of our Savior to challenge us: “Is your life aligned with this ultimate reality, the kingdom He declared?”