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It’s the Feast of St. Matthias, 2nd Class, with the color of Red. In this episode: the meditation: “A Childlike Heart”, today’s news from the Church: “The Vatican Bank Takes an Ethical Turn”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.


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Saint Matthias is the apostle chosen to fill the place left vacant by Judas, a quiet yet decisive figure at the beginning of the Church’s mission. Unlike Peter, John, or Paul, Matthias does not appear prominently in the Gospels. Yet his story carries profound significance. After the Ascension, the apostles gathered in prayer, aware that the circle of Twelve symbolized more than friendship. It represented the restoration of Israel and the visible foundation of the Church. The betrayal of Judas left a wound not only in trust, but in structure. A replacement was necessary.

The community proposed two men who had accompanied Jesus from the beginning, from His baptism by John to His Resurrection. Matthias was one of them. The apostles prayed for guidance, asking the Lord to show whom He had chosen. They cast lots, and the choice fell upon Matthias. This moment reveals something essential about apostolic vocation. Matthias was not selected for brilliance or personality. He was chosen because he had been faithful from the start, present through the hidden years as well as the dramatic ones. His apostleship was rooted in constancy rather than prominence.

After Pentecost, tradition holds that Matthias preached the Gospel in regions such as Judea and possibly Ethiopia or Cappadocia. Accounts of his missionary journeys vary, but the Church consistently remembers him as a martyr who sealed his witness with blood. Some traditions say he was stoned and then beheaded. Others speak of crucifixion. What remains certain is that he did not merely occupy a vacant place. He fulfilled it. The apostolic mission continued unbroken.

Matthias embodies a form of sanctity often overlooked. He stepped into a painful absence and did so without resentment or comparison. His role was not to eclipse Judas, but to restore wholeness. In this way, he teaches that God’s work continues even after betrayal and failure. Loss does not cancel mission. It refines...