The 33rd Week of Ordinary Time Mass Is Anything But

-

The Terry Center, filled with Jesuit Dallas and Strake students, teachers, and guests, sit in anticipation for the mass said by Father Carlos Esparza S.J., class of ’98. Father Esparza’s return to Jesuit is preceded by working with the Department of Defense, joining the Jesuits, working at Jesuit Strake, and now preaching in Denver, Colorado. He returns to the school on the 33rd week of Ordinary Time, a day that also holds the meeting of Jesuit Dallas and Jesuit Strake on the basketball court. Father Esparza, a graduate of Jesuit Dallas and a former teacher at Jesuit Strake, has a connection to both schools.

The homily focused on the theme of trying to look past the turmoil in the world and using the many gifts we are blessed with at Jesuit to make the world a better place. Father Esparza says, “The readings were tough”, but he “[focused] on what were the good things,” and was able to overcome it by “[praying] with the readings,” and “[talking] to alumni.” He says he likes to ask people “What are things you would like to know?” and “What would be helpful for you?” before any of his homilies. Upon reflection, Father Esparza thought about “how we [could] make use of all the gifts [at Jesuit]” and decided to incorporate that theme into his sermon.

Lachlan Carton ’18 said that he was able to connect the homily to, “a spiritual reflection [he] did in theology about God calling us by name,” which, he adds, “related to how he called us to use our talents to help others.” Father Esparza’s call to utilize our God-given talents hit home with many Jesuit students. Lachlan put it simply by saying that the most important thing about our gifts is “just to use them.”

Saying the mass for the first time at Jesuit, Father Esparza says the experience “felt like he was a freshman again,” adding that the largest mass he’d said before this was for 300 hundred people. He added that “when [he] thinks about [his] priesthood, it comes back to [Jesuit],” claiming, “if it wasn’t for my [teachers and priests], I would not be a Jesuit priest.”

While working for the Department of Defense prior to joining the Jesuits, Father Esparza “had a house, and a really nice car” and was “making good money” yet he felt, “God was calling him to something better.” Thus, Father Esparza found joy through the Society of Jesus only after he’d stopped “looking for those ways society says are [successful].”

The mass of the 33rd week of Ordinary Time united two Jesuit schools, and reunited Father Carlos Esparza S.J. with his alma mater, Dallas Jesuit, and the lessons in his homily of seeing past the bad and making use of our gifts are sure to stick with us.

Categories

4 COMMENTS

The Jesuit Journal

Fall 2025

The Jesuit Journal provides a space for students interested in writing and visual art with a space to showcase their creative talents.

Latest News

Lacrosse Makes History with Fifth THSLL State Championship Title

On a sun-soaked Monday afternoon at Lesley Field, the Jesuit Dallas Rangers captured their fifth Texas High School Lacrosse League Class AA State Championship with a 9-8 victory over The Woodlands, capping off one of the most memorable postseason...

Jesuit Crew Finishes Strong Throughout Successful Spring Season Push

The Jesuit Crew Spring Season has been built on the stable belief that the will to win means nothing without the will to prepare. Through countless training sessions and hours of work, the team has proven itself not only...

15 Years Online: The Roundup’s 21st Century Odyssey

For a decade and a half now, The Roundup has brought you only the finest online media. Far have we come from the days of a bi-annual physically printed newspaper! The Jesuit school newspaper is well and truly "with...

Nurse Anna – 2026 Bluebonnet Award Recipient

Occurring in tandem with the national Nurses Day, Jesuit Dallas Nurse Anna Hjertstedt was named one of two Bluebonnet Award recipients across the state of Texas. This prestigious award is given by Cartwheel to recognize often unseen and unrecognized...