In this episode, Mike O.F.M. reflects on a friendship that shaped his life—through laughter, illness, and the quiet wisdom of presence. A rediscovered funeral program opens a doorway into memory, gratitude, and what it means to be truly seen by another.
This Trinity Sunday falls on Father’s Day, and in this episode, I reflect on both—through the memory of a Bolivian fiesta, a traditional Cueca dance I was pulled into, and the divine rhythm of love we’re all invited to join. The Trinity isn’t something to solve; it’s something to step into. And so is fatherhood. Whether you’ve been dancing a while or still feel off-beat, you belong in the circle.
What do we do when the shape of love changes — when the people we cherish move away, when routines shift, or when goodbyes come too soon? This episode explores the quiet ache of transition and the deeper invitation to love without grasping. Grounded in Gospel, Franciscan spirituality, and lived experience, it reflects on how love can stretch across distance, time, and even loss — and how we might stay present to what still is, even as we let go of what was.
In this episode of A Franciscan Heart in the World, Brother Mike reflects on a spring morning at a local garden center — and the quiet, surprising kindness of fellow gardeners. What is it about planting and tending that makes us more polite, more gentle, more human? Drawing on the wisdom of St. Francis and Wendell Berry, this reflection explores how gardening can be more than a hobby — it can be a sacred practice that calls us to slow down, pay attention, and become the best version of ourselves.
In this episode of A Franciscan Heart in the World, Brother Mike reflects on the Feast of the Ascension — that strange, sacred moment when Jesus departs and the disciples are left staring at the sky. What does it mean to feel left behind? And what might Franciscan spirituality say to those moments in our own lives when God feels distant or absent? Acts 18:1-8:1-11
In this episode of A Franciscan Heart in the World, Brother Mike Johnson shares the story of a man facing terminal illness and the grace that emerged in his final season. It’s a reflection on courage, love, and the quiet ways God meets us in life’s storms.
Drawing on last Sunday's reading on Good Shepherd , we reflect on Primary Trust, the story of Kenneth — a quiet man who finds healing through simple kindness. With echoes of the Shepherd’s voice, we ask: How do we calm, encourage, and seek out with a Franciscan heart?
People have been asking me repeatedly over the last days , "Are you excited to have an American Pope?" He is how I have answered.
What does it mean to plant seeds for a future we may never see?
In this reflection, Brother Mike shares a story from his time at his Maryland parish, when a simple act of planting trees became a deeper lesson in hope, legacy, and trust in God’s slow work.
Drawing on Franciscan spirituality, Scripture, and gentle humor, this episode explores how small, faithful acts — whether planting trees or nurturing relationships — can bear fruit long after we are gone.
What seeds are you planting today?
When Peter denies Jesus, it happens beside a charcoal fire.
When Jesus invites him back, it happens beside another fire—
this time, with breakfast waiting.
This is the final episode of From Ashes to Alleluia: A Franciscan Journey Through the Early Church.Thank you for walking this Easter journey with me.
I have launched a new weekly podcast called A Franciscan Heart in the World—stories and reflections about finding God in the ordinary joys, struggles, and surprises of everyday life.
I hope you’ll join me there.
John 21:1–14
What if the hardest part of resurrection is learning to trust it? In this episode, we explore why hope can feel scary, and how Jesus meets us gently—even in our doubt.
Br. Mike explores how healing begins with presence, not solutions—from the temple gate to a subway seat. Sometimes, the first miracle is simply choosing to see. Acts 3:1-10
In a world that clings tightly to “mine,” the early Church reminds us what it means to live as if grace is real. This episode explores Acts 4:32–35 and the radical, freeing power of Christian community—where no one claims ownership, and no one is left out. With a story of hospitality and a quiet act of courage from a woman named Sheila, we’re invited to rediscover what it means to hold our lives—and our resources—with open hands.
I relfect on the readings from today in light of the passing of our holy Father Francis
Jan is 42 and just starting chemo. Anna is 71, a retired teacher who’s been down this road before. What begins as a quiet companionship becomes something sacred—echoing the Road to Emmaus.
This Easter, discover how Christ still walks with us—often in ways we don’t recognize at first.
Holy Saturday is a day of silence, darkness, and waiting. But what if waiting isn’t wasted? In this reflection, we look at how Francis of Assisi lived through his own Holy Saturday moments—times of prison, retreat, uncertainty, and surrender. From the cave to the mountaintop, from silence to witness, Francis shows us how to sit in the in-between—and how to trust that God is working even when we can’t see the end of the story.
This Holy Saturday, we sit in the in-between and trust that even in the silence, God is already making all things new.
On this most solemn day, we remember a love that would not retreat.
He was betrayed, denied, abandoned—and still he loved.
John 18–19
On a dusty Holy Thursday in a Peruvian slum, a basin of water turns black—and everything changes. In this episode, we return to a sacred moment in a chapel with broken windows and a sand floor, where foot washing became more than ritual. Rooted in Franciscan spirituality, this reflection invites us tosee the Eucharist not just as bread broken, but as love enacted.
The question is not only “Whose feet will we wash?”—but “Will we have the humility to kneel?”
John 13:1–15 friars.us
Judas, Mercy, and the Love That Never Leaves
Judas Iscariot: the name still makes us flinch. But what if his story is notonly about betrayal—but about despair, shame, and the love he couldn’t believewas still his?
Drawing from The Last Days of Judas Iscariot, Franciscan wisdom, and thetheology of Duns Scotus, this Holy Week reflection invites us to ask:
What defines us—our failures, or the mercy that never stops reaching for us? friars.us Matthew 26:14-25
A Franciscan Reflection on Purpose and Trust
We all have moments when we wonder if what we do really matters. Isaiah felt it. Francis wrestled with it. Scotus reminded us that each of us is uniquelycreated for a purpose only we can fulfill. In this episode, we explore what it means to trust in God's plan when our efforts seem to fall short. How do we move forward when we can't see the results of our labor?