Episodios

  • Praying Through The Fog Of War | April 12, 2026
    Apr 10 2026

    In this episode, we start with Iran in the headlines and then pull the camera back to something smaller and more personal: an Iranian student in an Oklahoma high school, far from home, carrying a life we barely understood. That memory becomes a challenge to how we talk about conflict, national security, and “winning” while ordinary families on every side try to survive the day.

    From there, we face the fog of war and the uncomfortable truth that certainty often outpaces knowledge. Even the people closest to the action rarely see the whole picture, and fast media can amplify confidence without adding wisdom. We ask what a Catholic view of war requires from citizens and leaders: humility, moral clarity, and a willingness to question whether policies pursued in our name actually serve the common good.

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m
  • What if There is More Than Death? | April 5, 2026
    Apr 5 2026

    Before sunrise, a group of women walks through a city controlled by Roman power, carrying spices and cloth for a burial they expect will be painful and final. They’re not looking for a miracle. They’re looking for a body. That simple, human mission becomes the doorway to one of the most disruptive claims in Christian faith: the tomb is open, the grave is empty, and the world is no longer limited by death.

    In this episode, we reflect on how expectation shapes everything we do, how grief follows scripts we think we can trust, and why the first reaction to the empty tomb is confusion and suspicion rather than instant belief. In a Jerusalem tense with politics, fear, and the memory of a crucifixion, even a stolen body seems more “reasonable” than resurrection. But Easter does not arrive as an idea; it arrives as a fact that demands interpretation, and the women are entrusted with a message that reframes the impossible: Jesus is risen, and risen as he promised.

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m
  • Jerusalem On Edge As Jesus Arrives | March 29, 2026
    Mar 28 2026

    Jerusalem is packed for Passover, and it feels like the whole city is holding its breath. In this episode, we step into that tension on Palm Sunday, when Roman occupation, local religious leadership, and street-level resentment all collide with one name on everyone’s tongue: Jesus. From the first minutes, we follow the rising pressure of a place where whispers can become a revolt, and where every public gesture gets read as a political signal.

    We talk through why Jesus draws crowds so quickly: the blunt urgency of his preaching, the nearness of the kingdom of God, and the undeniable weight of his ministry in healings, deliverance, and wonder.

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m
  • Shifting Prayer Paradigms | March 22, 2026
    Mar 23 2026

    Prayer is suddenly everywhere online, from polished apps to celebrity invitations to “join us” for a few minutes a day. Are we witnessing a genuine renewal of prayer, or are we simply more aware of it because the internet puts constant spiritual marketing in our pocket?

    If we can learn to approach God together, maybe we can begin to hunger for the unity Christ desires, and avoid the shallow cycle of spiritual excitement that fades when the “sheen wears off.”

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m
  • Battlefield Headlines | March 15, 2026
    Mar 14 2026

    Missiles fly, predictions spread, and suddenly “World War III” becomes a casual phrase on the lips of people who will never pay the real cost. In this episode, let's take a sober, Catholic look at the war talk surrounding current military conflict with Iran, and why reckless language can do more than describe reality. Words can pressure leaders, inflame public emotion, and make escalation feel normal. If wars are easier to begin than to end, then the way we speak at the beginning matters more than we admit.

    We walk through history to show how media voices have helped tilt nations toward catastrophe, from the great wars of the twentieth century to the myths and resentments that linger long after the shooting stops. We also explore why we’re drawn to violent headlines, using Walker Percy’s insight that carnage seizes our imagination more easily than care. When the news cycle becomes a steady diet of destruction, it’s easy to lose moral clarity, forget proportionality, and stop asking what any conflict is truly for.

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m
  • What if You Didn’t Know You Were Alive? | March 8, 2026
    Mar 7 2026

    What if the real plot twist isn’t learning you’re dead—it’s discovering you’re already alive? In this episode, I start with the movies we all know, from Ghost and The Sixth Sense to Shaun of the Dead, and then flip the lens to reveal a deeper current running through ancient myths, modern history, and the Gospels. Instead of a world where choice manufactures meaning, we enter a world where meaning arrives first, solid and surprising, and our choices learn to catch up.

    I also share about a vivid near-death account that captures the shock of recognition—seeing your own body from above—and use it to ask why so many stories hinge on slow awakening. From the Egyptian Book of the Dead to C.S. Lewis’s The Great Divorce, humanity keeps circling the same threshold: what does it take to notice the rules have changed? That question points straight to the New Testament, where Jesus doesn’t negotiate a future possibility but announces a present reality. The time is fulfilled. The page has turned. Whether or not we voted for it, the kingdom is at hand.

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m
  • We Went Outside to Pray and Accidentally Learned Ecclesiology | March 1, 2026
    Feb 28 2026

    What if the loudest place in town is the best place to learn how to pray? In this episode we will talk about the Living Stations of the Cross at the Blessed Stanley Rother Shrine in Oklahoma City—a crowd shouting, a cross moving, voices cracking—and follow that energy into a bigger question: how does faith change when it steps outside and faces the street? From there, we trace a living thread through Church history, where stalls along a Roman road became sanctuaries, prayer was spoken for all to hear, and stained glass dressed Scripture in the clothes and cities of its makers so salvation felt near, not archived.

    Joining the crowd reveals our place in the Passion, and acting the story teaches what reflection alone cannot. Along the way, Augustine’s surprise at Ambrose reading silently becomes a window into the rise of interior privacy—and how modern habits can fence faith indoors. We talk about monasteries that formed charity by sharing work, prayer, and even sleep; seminaries that reintroduced roommates to recover the muscle of common life; and processions and Holy Week traditions that knit strangers into a people.

    We also face the pitfalls. Public religion can turn hollow, just as private piety can grow stale. The remedy is union. Lent invites us to bring our bodies into the story: to read the Passion and then walk it, to pray with our hands as much as our minds, to place acts of mercy where the city can see, and to let shared practices at home—meals, prayers, apologies—turn interiors into common ground.

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m
  • From "Occupied Territory" to Freedom In Christ | February 22, 2026
    Feb 21 2026

    In this episode, we rethink sin not as a list of wrongs but as a power that shapes habits, culture and the heart, and we frame Lent as training in freedom through grace. Stories, theology and poetry converge to show how confession, prayer and the sacraments move us from bondage to hope.

    • why images of sin as simple stains fall short
    • Lent as a reset for deeper truth and renewal
    • Feynman’s maps and how pictures both help and hinder
    • the slow schooling of compromise and conscience
    • sin as occupying power and infectious force
    • confession as rescue and victory, not mere bookkeeping
    • shared bondage and shared grace in the Church
    • practical courage to begin again and recalibrate

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    Father Don Wolf is a priest of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Living Catholic also broadcasts on Oklahoma Catholic Radio several times per week, with new episodes airing every Sunday.

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    25 m