

Preach: The Catholic Homilies Podcast
America Media
Every Sunday, millions hear homilies. But what separates the forgettable from the inspiring? Preach, from America Media, goes behind the pulpit to reveal the art and craft of great Catholic preaching. Host Ricardo da Silva, S.J.—Jesuit priest and associate editor at America Media in NYC—features weekly homilies from outstanding preachers, followed by intimate conversations. From Scripture interpretation to delivery, discover what makes today’s most compelling Catholic voices so transformative.
Read featured homilies and daily Scripture reflections at americamagazine.org/subscribe
Preach is supported by a generous grant from Lilly Endowment Inc., as part of its Compelling Preaching Initiative.
Read featured homilies and daily Scripture reflections at americamagazine.org/subscribe
Preach is supported by a generous grant from Lilly Endowment Inc., as part of its Compelling Preaching Initiative.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 9, 2026 • 28min
Preaching the pillars of Lent: Fasting
What is fasting for? What biblical precedent do we have for the practices of fasting and abstinence? And how can preachers steer between the two extremes of self-punishment and loophole hunting? “Preach” concludes its Lent 2026 series on the three classical pillars of the season with a conversation on fasting. Host Ricardo da Silva, S.J. is joined by James Keane — senior editor at America and a writer who has spent some time reflecting and writing on what fasting is and what it’s for.
Timecodes:
0:00 What’s fasting for?
2:00 The Brazilian loophole to abstinence during Lent: capibara
3:55 What does the church teach on fasting and abstinence?
6:53 Fasting is meant to bring you closer to God
8:35 Biblical citations of fasting
11:05 Fasting evolved alongside seasons of food scarcity and abundance
14:10 St. Ignatius’ fervour for fasting
16:10 Avoiding the two extremes of self-punishment vs. loophole hunting
18:58 Pope Leo XIV’s message this Lent
James Keane’s articles on fasting:
On fasting: The difference between our preaching and our practice
7 things you never knew about fasting
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Mar 2, 2026 • 34min
Preaching the pillars of Lent: Almsgiving
What is almsgiving — and why does the Church teach that it is more about justice and right relationship than simply personal charity or philanthropy? As “Preach” continues its Lent 2026 series on the three classical pillars of the season—prayer, fasting and almsgiving—we turn to almsgiving, perhaps the most confronting of the three. In this conversation, Ricardo da Silva, S.J. is joined by Kerry Robinson, President and CEO of Catholic Charities USA., and author of Imagining Abundance: Fundraising, Philanthropy, and a Spiritual Call to Service, a book that reflects on generosity as a spiritual practice rooted in faith.
Timecodes:
0:00 Generosity is at the heart of almsgiving
2:30 Our cognitive dissonance with money and faith
5:43 How Kerry became a steward of her family’s 80-year-old foundation
8:20 About Catholic Charities U.S.A.
11:50 Biblical teachings on giving alms
16:36 Mother Teresa: “never take away the right of another to be generous”
21:30 We need both charity and justice
26:24 New insights from Pope Leo and ‘Dilexi Te’
28:08 Preach almsgiving with thanksgiving
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Feb 23, 2026 • 31min
Preaching the pillars of Lent: Prayer
What is prayer? And maybe more importantly for preachers—what are we inviting people into when we stand in the pulpit and speak about it? As “Preach” continues its Lent 2026 series, we turn to the three classical pillars that shape the season: prayer, fasting and almsgiving. In this first conversation, focused on prayer, Ricardo da Silva, S.J. is joined by Amy Ekeh, Director of Mission Advancement for the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, retreat leader, author and adjunct instructor in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at Sacred Heart University. Amy is the author of several books, including:
Stretch Out Your Hand: Reflections on the Healing Ministry of Jesus
Come to Me, All of You: Stations of the Cross in the Voice of Christ
Lent: Season of Transformation
Timecodes:
0:00 We can’t be afraid to ask for God’s help
1:25 Who is Amy Ekeh?
2:50 Prayer is relational
7:57 Prayer is nurtured in community
14:30 Good preaching requires you to know your congregation
16:53 Ask for healing! The people in the Gospels did.
21:38 Jesus’ Gethsemane prayer
26:16 Carving out space for silence
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Feb 16, 2026 • 43min
A Preacher’s Guide to Lent: History and the Sunday readings
As “Preach” begins its Lent 2026 series, Ricardo da Silva, S.J. sits down with liturgical theologian Anne McGowan to ask a foundational question: what is Lent for — and how do these practices reshape our faith, not just our habits for six weeks? Together, they trace its history from a two-day fast in the early Church to the 40-day season we know today, and explore its theological arc in the Sunday lectionary—from temptation and transfiguration to water, light and life, and finally the passion that leads into Easter, where new Christians are baptised and the faithful renew their baptismal promises.
0:00 Introducing the Lent 2026 series
2:30 Meet Anne McGowan: why she loves the liturgical year
6:20 You can’t understand Lent without Easter
8:10 The history of Lent: from two days to 40 days before Easter
10:40 Lent: a season of challenge and joy
15:05 Compunction and joy: do we have to choose?
20:55 The Sundays of Lent explained: from temptation to the passion
31:13 Preaching the whole journey of Lent
34:49 Preaching more than just the Sunday readings this Lent
36:22 How to come alive this Lent
A Preacher’s Guide to Holy Week: These are long liturgies. Be brief!
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Feb 9, 2026 • 46min
Catholic preaching in a traumatized Minnesota
“Things are happening [in Minnesota] that my friends and family elsewhere are really having trouble understanding,” Laura Kelly Fanucci says, “because the media is saying one thing, and all these partisan politicians are saying another thing.”
“But sometimes I think what Jesus [is saying in the gospel], is that when you are close to the center, sometimes you will know things about the mystery of God that are going to be difficult for other people to understand.”
Award-winning author, Laura Kelly Fanucci, joins host Ricardo da Silva, S.J., to share what she has been preaching on her Instagram account @thismessygrace since U.S. federal immigration agents fatal shooting of Renee Good, and later, Alex Pretti. After attending Mass the Sunday following the killing of Renée Good and hearing no mention of it from the pulpit at her parish, Laura began offering three-minute homilies on Instagram.
In this conversation with Ricardo da Silva, S.J., Laura offers practical advice for preaching in this historical moment marked by violence, terror and community upheaval. In her daily Scripture reflections on Instagram Laura models how to thread the needle of preaching the gospel and responding to surrounding events, without slipping into partisan rhetoric.
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Dec 24, 2025 • 19min
There is room for Jesus: a Christmas homily on what Luke’s Gospel really says
This Christmas homily challenges traditional nativity images, revealing modern interpretations that provoke thought. The discussion emphasizes that Mary and Joseph weren't necessarily turned away; instead, their welcoming experience contrasts with assumptions. Ricardo highlights how God enters our busy lives, finding room amid our crowded schedules. Through stories of families making space despite limitations, he argues that Jesus is accessible to everyone, inviting us to reconsider the concept of hospitality during the season.

Dec 16, 2025 • 41min
Preaching (and living) Advent without rushing to Christmas
“I really appreciate it when the truth is spoken very plainly,” says Tsh Oxenreider. Homilies that cut to the chase—and call us to conversion now. Host Ricardo da Silva, S.J., speaks with writer and podcaster Tsh Oxenreider about what active waiting means during Advent; sitting with discomfort, resisting the rush to Christmas. They explore the traditional meanings of the liturgical weeks—joy in week three, love in week four—what penance looks like in this season, and the O Antiphons. Tsh speaks directly about what she needs from preaching: homilies that tell the truth plainly and call us, here and now, to confess our sins and get right with God.
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Dec 9, 2025 • 1h 11min
Christmas Carols: A secret lesson for preachers
This week on Preach, we’re offering an Advent treat. Host Ricardo da Silva, S.J., sits down with fellow producer Maggi Van Dorn for a rare on-mic conversation about the spiritual power of Christmas carols. Drawing on their work as producers of another America podcast, “Hark! The Stories Behind Our Favorite Christmas Carols,” they reflect on what these songs can teach preachers:
that the liturgy is more than the homily.
that beauty itself does theological work: it’s not just what is said, but how it’s delivered. The structure, rhythm, and form—whether in music or a homily—carry meaning and touch the heart.
that good preaching must reach the heart before the mind.
After their conversation, we bring you the second episode of “Hark!” Season 5: “Angels We Have Heard on High.”
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Dec 1, 2025 • 53min
Preaching Reconciliation: Confession isn’t just about sin—it’s an act of faith
“I’m thinking about the end of time in another way,” says Ann Garrido. “Because end can mean the conclusion, the finish, but it can also mean the purpose.” For 25 years, Ann has taught homiletics, pastoral theology and catechetics at Aquinas Institute of Theology, written 10 books and spoken at more than 350 gatherings.
A longtime catechist in the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd movement, Ann offers her reflection for a planned Advent reconciliation service at St. Thomas More Parish in Decatur, Ga. She begins with a conversation from the parish atrium about the end of time—children offering answers like “God will be all in all” and “there will be peace,” before one boy insists his paradise is “hamburgers.” From there, she moves into Isaiah’s peaceable kingdom and the real work of reconciliation: making peace with those closest to us—whoever our ‘X’ is, the sibling we fight with, the friend we’ve fallen out with, the neighbor who drives us crazy.
Part of the “Preaching for the Sacraments” series, host Ricardo da Silva, S.J., speaks with Ann about what distinguishes Advent reconciliation from Lent. Ann looks to the ancient roots of confession, where the early “confessors” proclaimed faith rather than only naming sin: “What we’re really confessing is our belief in a God who can heal and work out things that we ourselves are not gonna be able to fix.” Ricardo echoes this reframing: “Perhaps it's helpful not to think of it only as a confession of sin, but really also a confession of faith that we go there to proclaim our faith in a God who heals the impossible.”
Ann also reflects on a recent glioblastoma diagnosis and how it has sharpened her sense of call and taught her to preach from vulnerability—without making herself the hero of the story.
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Nov 3, 2025 • 41min
Why preaching for the feast of this building matters
The Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica in Rome—a feast about a building—can intimidate preachers. The temptation? Mention it briefly and move on to the readings. But Sylvester Tan, S.J. says this feast is worth the work of preaching well.
In this episode of “Preach,” Sylvester, a Jesuit theologian and local superior in Dallas shares his homily for one of the few feasts that actually replaces the regular Sunday liturgy when it falls on a Sunday. Then he joins host Ricardo da Silva, S.J. to reflect on three challenges: How can preachers use history without boring people? “Our faith is a historical faith,” he says, “and history is always messy. God doesn’t reject history; he works through history.”
They also discuss why we shouldn’t skip difficult feasts—“Where we get uncomfortable, there’s always an invitation to go deeper”—and how to preach about divine anger without losing sight of divine love.
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