Catholic Mass Readings and Reflection June 23, 2026
Tuesday – 12th Week in Ordinary Time
23th June 2026 (Tuesday)
Psalter: Week 4
Here are the Catholic Mass readings and a daily reflection for Tuesday, June 23, 2026, an ordinary weekday. Today a cornered king spreads his troubles before God, while the Gospel gives us the golden rule and points us toward the narrow road that leads to life.
Readings of the Day
First Reading: 2 Kings 19:9b-11, 14-21, 31-35a, 36
At those days: Sennacherib king of Assyria sent messengers again to Hezekiah, saying, “Thus shall you speak to Hezekiah king of Judah: ‘Do not let your God in whom you trust deceive you by promising that Jerusalem will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria. Behold, you have heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands, devoting them to destruction. And shall you be delivered? Hezekiah received the letter from the hand of the messengers and read it; and Hezekiah went up to the house of the Lord and spread it before the Lord. And Hezekiah prayed before the Lord and said: “O Lord, the God of Israel, enthroned above the cherubim, you are the God, you alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth; you have made heaven and earth. Incline your ear, O Lord, and hear; open your eyes, O Lord, and see; and hear the words of Sennacherib, which he has sent to mock the living God. Truly, O Lord, the kings of Assyria have laid waste the nations and their lands and have cast their gods into the fire, for they were not gods, but the work of men’s hands, wood and stone. Therefore they were destroyed. So now, O Lord our God, save us, please, from his hand, that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you, O Lord, are God alone.” Then Isaiah the son of Amoz sent to Hezekiah, saying, “Thus says the Lord, the God of Israel: Your prayer to me about Sennacherib king of Assyria I have heard. This is the word that the Lord has spoken concerning him: “She despises you, she scorns you—the virgin daughter of Sion; she wags her head behind you—the daughter of Jerusalem. For out of Jerusalem shall go a remnant, and out of Mount Sion a band of survivors. The zeal of the Lord will do this. “Therefore thus says the Lord concerning the king of Assyria: He shall not come into this city or shoot an arrow there, or come before it with a shield or cast up a siege mound against it. By the way that he came, by the same he shall return, and he shall not come into this city, declares the Lord. For I will defend this city to save it, for my own sake and for the sake of my servant David.” And that night the angel of the Lord went out and struck down one hundred eighty-five thousand in the camp of the Assyrians. Then Sennacherib king of Assyria departed and went home and lived at Nineveh.
Psalm 48:2-3ab, 3cd-4, 10-11, (R. see 9cd)
R/. God establishes his city forever.
Gospel Acclamation
V/. Alleluia
R/. Alleluia
V/. I am the light of the world, says the Lord; Whoever follows me will have the light of life.
R/. Alleluia
Gospel: Matthew 7:6, 12-14
At that time: Jesus said to his disciples, “Do not give dogs what is holy, and do not throw your pearls before pigs, lest they trample them underfoot and turn to attack you. So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets. Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.”
Daily Gospel Reflection
Tuesday – 12th Week in Ordinary Time
Main Point: The wide and easy road is crowded for a reason. It asks nothing of us. Jesus points instead to a narrow gate, harder to enter, but the only one that opens onto life.
1. We are wired to look for the easy way. The shortest line, the smoothest road, the choice that costs the least. Most of the time that instinct serves us well. But when it comes to the soul, Jesus warns us that the easy road and the right road are rarely the same one.
2. “Enter by the narrow gate.” Then He explains why so few do. The gate to ruin is wide and the road is easy, and the crowd pours through it. The gate to life is small and the way is hard, and only a few find it. He is not describing a popularity contest. He is describing a choice that goes against the flow.
3. Notice He does not promise that the right path will be comfortable. He says the opposite. The way to life is hard. Anyone who tells you that following Christ is easy has not read this page. The narrow gate is narrow precisely because we cannot drag our pride, our grudges, and our hidden sins through it. We have to set them down to fit.
4. Saint Jerome put it plainly. The road is hard “that leads to life,” but the hardship is not the end of the story, only the doorway to it. The difficulty is not God being cruel. It is the simple truth that anything worth reaching asks something of us on the way. No one drifts into holiness by accident.
5. And in the middle of this, Jesus hands us the simplest rule ever given for daily life. “Whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them.” We call it the golden rule, and we have heard it so often it can slide right past us. But sit with it. Every hard question about how to treat a person can be answered by turning it around. How would I want to be treated here?
6. See how the golden rule and the narrow gate belong together. The wide road says, look after yourself first. The narrow road says, treat the other person the way you would want to be treated, even when it costs you. That small daily choice, made again and again, is how a person actually walks through the narrow gate. It is not one grand act. It is a thousand small ones.
7. The first reading gives us a man at the narrow gate in the worst hour of his life. King Hezekiah is surrounded. A mighty army is at the walls of Jerusalem, and the enemy sends a letter mocking him and mocking his God. He has every reason to despair. The easy road would be to surrender or to strike a desperate deal.
8. Instead, look at what Hezekiah does. He takes the threatening letter, walks into the temple, and spreads it open before the Lord. He does not hide his fear or pretend to be strong. He lays the whole crisis out in front of God and prays. And God hears him, and the city is saved without Hezekiah lifting a sword. The narrow gate, in his hour, was the hard choice to trust God instead of his own panic.
My Practice: There is a wide door in front of you today and a narrow one, and you already know which is which. The wide one is the sharp reply, the easy lie, the corner quietly cut. The narrow one is the harder, honest thing your conscience keeps pointing to. Take the narrow one. And when a hard situation comes, do what Hezekiah did. Spread it open before God in honest prayer instead of forcing your own way through. The crowd is on the easy road. Life is on the other.
Read Yesterday’s Catholic Mass Readings and Reflection June 22, 2026
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