A 2006 convert from Agnosticism, David L. Gray has emerged as a prolific Catholic theologian, author, and humorist. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from Central State University, Ohio, and a Master of Arts in Catholic Theology (ThM) from Ohio Dominican University. He is currently pursuing a Doctor of Ministry (DMin) in Liturgical Catechesis at the Catholic University of America. For more information about Mr. Gray, please visit davidlgray.info
Reflection on the Readings at Mass for the Pentecost Sunday. The Liturgical Sense of the Scriptures Podcast, by Catholic Author and Theologian David L. Gray. (Pentecost Sunday) Year A. READINGS: Acts 2:1-11, 1 Corinthians 12:3b-7, 12-13, and John 20:19-23.
Reflection on the Readings at Mass for the 6th Sunday of Easter – Year A. The Liturgical Sense of the Scriptures Podcast, by Catholic Author and Theologian David L. Gray. (Fourth Sunday of Easter) Year A. READINGS: Acts 8:5-8, 14-17, 1 Peter 3:15-18, and John 14:15-21.
Reflection on the Readings at Mass for the 5th Sunday of Easter – Year A. The Liturgical Sense of the Scriptures Podcast, by Catholic Author and Theologian David L. Gray. (Fifth Sunday of Easter) Year A. READINGS: Acts 6:1-7, 1 Peter 2:4-9, and John 14:1-12
Reflection on the Readings at Mass for the 4th Sunday of Easter – Year A. The Liturgical Sense of the Scriptures Podcast, by Catholic Author and Theologian David L. Gray.
Reflection on the Readings at Mass for the 3rd Sunday of Easter – Year A. The Liturgical Sense of the Scriptures Podcast, by Catholic Author and Theologian David L. Gray.
Reflection on the Readings at Mass for the 2nd Sunday of Easter – Divine Mercy. The Liturgical Sense of the Scriptures Podcast, by Catholic Author and Theologian David L. Gray.
Rather than only worshiping Jesus, this book teaches us how to do the one thing that Jesus called us to do: take up our Cross and follow Him to Calvary.
The Liturgical Sense of the Scriptures Podcast, featuring Catholic Author David L. Gray, reflects on Palm Sunday Mass readings. The liturgy illustrates that all things, including our most valuable possessions, belong to God. This truth, echoing through the Gospels, demands our recognition of divine ownership and authority. The illusion of ownership leads to possession, contrasting with the humility taught by the liturgy. Gray urges self-reflection on our attachment to possessions and calls for a return to the acknowledgment that our whole lives should be offered to God, as modeled in the Mass.