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Be Salt. Be Light. Be Human First.

Some Sundays the lectionary feels like a theme. This Sunday it feels like a map.

Isaiah doesn’t start with lofty ideas. He starts with lunch. “Share your bread with the hungry… shelter the oppressed and the homeless… then your light shall break forth like the dawn.” (Isaiah 58:7–10) Jesus doesn’t soften it either: “You are the salt of the earth… You are the light of the world… your light must shine before others.” (Matthew 5:13–16)

So here’s the question the readings quietly hand us:
What does “light” look like in Augusta this week?

It looks like the reality behind the headlines: neighbors navigating tightened safety nets and rising costs. Local reporting has highlighted how changes to SNAP work requirements are creating fresh obstacles for vulnerable people, including those experiencing homelessness and veterans, while community organizations face growing demand and declining donations. The story names what many families already feel: housing costs, food costs, mental health barriers, and limited access don’t arrive one at a time; they stack.

And then the weather reminds us how quickly “policy” becomes “survival.” During a recent extreme cold snap, local nonprofits and community partners worked to get people into warming centers and hotel rooms when shelters were full or unsafe. One unhoused person was found dead outdoors. That detail is a bell you can’t unhear. When Jesus says a lamp isn’t lit to be hidden, he’s talking about moments exactly like this, when being seen, being safe, and being warm are not guaranteed.

This is where Psalm 112 feels like spiritual grounding instead of a nice poem: the just person is steady, generous, and not undone by bad news, not because they’re detached, but because they’re rooted. “Salt” is rarely dramatic. It’s faithful. It’s the small things that make life more livable. “Light” is often quiet. It’s a presence that says, You matter, you’re not invisible, and you’re not alone.

And if you’re reading all of this and thinking, “I want to help, but I don’t know what to say,” St. Paul steps in with relief: “I did not come with sublimity of words… I came in weakness and fear… so that your faith might rest not on human wisdom but on the power of God.” (1 Corinthians 2:1–5) The readings give us permission to stop waiting until we feel impressive. You can do mercy without a script. You can love people without a speech.

That’s one reason our parish’s Human First Outreach matters so much right now. This ministry focuses on providing food and toiletries to our homeless neighbors in Augusta, along with feminine hygiene supplies and pet food, and it explicitly calls volunteers into compassionate presence: engage people in a loving way, refrain from proselytizing, and listen deeply. That is “salt and light” with skin on.

And because “light” is also about clarity, especially when Christianity is used to harm, our Reclaiming the Cross Outreach exists to help “set the record straight on what the Bible says” about issues facing society today. Light isn’t weaponized. Light heals, reveals, and guides.

Even our longer recovery stories belong in these readings. Augusta continues to detail the ongoing cost and complexity of Hurricane Helene recovery, projects submitted for FEMA review, reimbursements still pending, infrastructure still being restored. This is what steady “Psalm 112” goodness looks like at a civic scale: persistence, remembrance, and rebuilding that lasts longer than the news cycle.

And at the one-year mark, the city held a remembrance of those lost while naming tangible progress and what remains under repair. Light doesn’t rush grief. Light keeps faith with it.

So the invitation this week is simple, but not small:

Let Isaiah’s “share your bread” become something you can hold in your hands.
Let Paul’s “not with persuasive words” free you from needing to be perfect.
Let Jesus’ “salt and light” become specific enough that someone’s day gets easier.

If you want a one-line practice for the week, try this:
Be the kind of light someone can feel before they can explain it.

Pax et Bonum,

Bishop Greer
Join us every Sunday at 3:00 PM at 557 Greene Street in Augusta, Georgia in the sanctuary of the MCC of Our Redeemer. Rosary starts at 2:25 PM every Sunday.

February 8, 2026: Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Mass Intention: For Bishop James St. George and family and for Saint Miriam Parish and School.

February 15, 2026: Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Mass Intention: For all the clergy and laity of the OCCI.
For the St. George family; Fr. Bryan Wolf; Mary Nehls; for Kelesh’s daughter; James (Cancer); Jacob (Cancer); James Long (Cancer); Mickey; Jacob Williams; Sherlock Bones; Tatum Johnson (Job); Brittney (Cancer); Jennifer (DV Survivor, Homeless); Bishop James Long; David; John; Greenbear (RIP); Bishop Ben and Darlene Williams; Ryn Ingells; Ralph Wilkins; Bridget (RIP); Dillan; Wolfie; Misa; Kellsie; Ember; Chris Thompson; Killa Nova; Helena; David Lawrence; growth for our parish family; all those in the path of severe weather, end of hostilities in Ukraine and the Middle East; for an end to gun violence.

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Joint Fellowship Opportunities

Parish Bible Study

Our Bible study is in full swing with our study of the book of James. Please take a moment to sign up on Gaggle, listed in the image below, for more information.

Our Parish Outreaches


Human First Outreach

This ministry focuses on providing food and toiletry supplies to the homeless in the Augusta, Georgia area. We provide feminine hygiene products to those that need them and food for the pets of our homeless friends and family.

We are working to bring a human touch to this ministry as we encourage volunteers to engage with the individuals we are helping in a compassionate and loving way. We expect all volunteers to refrain from proselytizing and preaching to those we serve. Instead, take a hint from Hamilton “talk less, listen more”.

If you would like to donate to this important ministry, you can visit our Amazon wishlist and purchase items to be sent directly to us.

Our you can donate by visiting this page here on our website.

Reclaiming the Cross Outreach

Check out our newest outreach in which we work to set the record straight on what the Bible says about many of the issues facing our society today!

Reclaiming the Cross is an outreach of our parish headed up by Subdeacon Luna Godsey.

Visit Reclaiming the Cross by clicking this link: https://oursaintfrancis.org/outreach/reclaiming-the-cross-outreach/

Podcast Outreach

You can always check out our Podcast Outreach at https://oursaintfrancis.org/outreach/podcast-outreach/.

Sunday Selfies

Don't forget to take your Sunday Selfie and send them to us! You can email them to us at info@oursaintfrancis.org or tag us on Facebook using #saintfrancisparish and #sundayselfie.

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