Heart of the Homily
Our Podcast revisits Sunday’s Gospel and homily by Fr Vigoa, digging deeper into it’s message and how we can take it from the pew into the rest of our week. Also enjoy Fr. Vigoa's daily homilies here that will call you deeper into discipleship with Christ and mission.
We hope “heart of the homily” podcast and homilies transforms how you pray, think, live and love this week.
Heart of the Homily
Homily | June 23, 2026 | Spread It Out Before God | (Episode 172)
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We notice the easy-to-miss moment where Hezekiah receives a threatening letter and refuses to let fear run the story. We follow his simple move of laying the problem before God, then connect it to Jesus’ call to choose the narrow gate of trust over the wide road of panic.
• a threat designed to break confidence and push distrust of God
• Hezekiah spreading the letter before the Lord instead of spiraling
• the modern “letters” we carry: diagnosis, money stress, family crisis, uncertainty
• how worry grows through replay, obsession, and imagined monsters
• the comfort of God’s words: “I have listened”
• why faith becomes real when it is threatened
• choosing the narrow gate of prayer and surrender
Instead of carrying it alone, do what Hezekiah did. Spread it out before the Lord. Bring it to him in prayer. Tell him everything.
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The Threatening Letter Arrives
SPEAKER_00There's a moment in today's first reading that's easy to miss, but it may be one of the most important moments in the entire story. The king of Assyria sends a letter to Hezekiah. It's a letter full of threats, a letter full of fear. It's a letter designed to break his confidence. The message is simple don't trust God. Every nation that stood against Assyria had fallen. Every city had been conquered. Every army had been defeated. And now the king of Assyria is essentially saying, What makes you think you're any different?
Hezekiah Brings It To God
SPEAKER_00What does Hezekiah do? He takes a letter, he walks into the temple, and he spreads it out before the Lord. I love that image. He doesn't immediately form a strategy, he doesn't panic, he doesn't call an emergency meeting, he doesn't spend the night worrying. He takes the very thing that is causing him anxiety and lays it before the Lord. That's one of the greatest lessons in prayer we can learn.
The Letters We All Receive
SPEAKER_00Because all of us receive letters, not literal letters, perhaps, but messages. A message of fear, of anxiety, a message of discouragement, messages of uncertainty, a diagnosis, a financial problem, a family crisis, a broken relationship, temptations, a fear about the future, a retirement. And there's that voice that says this situation is impossible. Nothing is going to change. You're going to lose. You're going to collapse. God can't help you. You are the only one that's going to be able to resolve this situation. The question is not whether those messages will come. The question is, what do we do when they do come? Most people carry them around. They replay them over and over in their minds. They create monsters where there are none. They worry. They have anxiety. They obsess over it. That becomes their whole entire life. Hezekiah shows us there's another way. Bring the problem into the presence of God. Spread it out before him. Tell him everything. The beautiful part of the story is what happens next.
God’s Comforting Reply
SPEAKER_00Isaiah sends a message. I have listened. Those are among the most comforting words in Scripture. God says, I have listened. Not, I'm aware of the situation. Not I'll handle it. Not figure it out, you're strong. No. God says, I have listened. The circumstances may not change immediately. They're not going to change overnight, but God hears every prayer offered in faith. They're not empty words. And then something astonishing happens.
When The Impossible Collapses
SPEAKER_00A mighty Assyrian army, the most feared military force in the world, disappears overnight. The threat seems unstoppable. This threat vanishes. Why? Well, what because what is impossible for man is never impossible for God.
The Narrow Gate Of Trust
SPEAKER_00Now notice how this connects with the gospel. Jesus says, Enter through the narrow gate. The wide gate is the path of the world. It is the path of self-reliance, the path of panic, the path of following the crowd, the path that says, trust your fears more than trust God. Many, many of us travel that road. But Jesus says there's a narrow gate, and it's different. The path is of faith, the path of obedience, the path of prayer, the path of trusting God when circumstances suggest otherwise. And that path is not easy. It's a narrow pre it's narrow precisely because it requires trust, surrender. Anyone can trust God when everything is going well. Faith becomes real when it's threatened, when that letter arrives. Faith becomes real when the diagnosis comes. Faith becomes real when the future is uncertain. Our faith matures and is real when the odds are against us. At that moment we choose which gate we will enter. The broad road that says you take control. Panic, you got to control the narrative. Give up. Or the narrow road that says, take it to God. Place it before God. And that's the invitation today.
The Invitation To Lay It Down
SPEAKER_00What letter are you carrying? What fear, what burden, what situation seems impossible? Instead of carrying it alone, do what Hezekiah did. Spread it out before the Lord. Bring it to him in prayer. Tell him everything. And trust that God, who said to Hezekiah, I have listened, is saying the same exact thing to you. Why? Because a narrow gate is not merely a hard road. It is the road that leads us to discover that God is stronger than every enemy, every chain, every fear, every impossible situation we will ever face. And those who walk that road find life, newness of life, a conviction to live in Him. Amen.