Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 179

Hope you had a blessed Sunday!🙏✝️

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday.

😄😄😄
😄🙂💲💲
Why are all these memes about money?? 😄💲
My favorite way to celebrate! 💤😴
God heals through the Sacrament of Confession. 🙏🙏🙏
The real reason why unicorns are extinct. 🦄😄
I or III for me! 🙏🙏🙏
The letter America needs!
Why I tell my gifts we GET to go to Mass. 🙏🙏🙏
Love one another! ♥️❤️‍🔥🙏
“But the LORD sent a great fish to swallow Jonah, and he remained in the belly of the fish three days and three nights.”
—Jonah 2:1
Sooooo accurate. 😄
😄😄🙏🙏

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

An 845 Word Interview with Cameron the Catholic


Editor’s Note: Matthew Chicoine interviewed Cameron Riecker via phone call on February 17th, 2025. Some of the questions have been rearranged and edited to provide the best reader experience without losing any integrity of the answers given.


How did you get involved in Catholic apologetics? 

Well, I supposed initially it started when I was dating a Protestant girl in college. We started talking about our future. Through that relationship and a real occasion to study (through Augustine’s work and other Church teachings). After that relationship ended with the girl, I developed a devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary. I went into seminary in 2018 (eventually discerned out) and I am married now with two children. During these experiences I learned I had a knack for theology and explaining the faith to others. 

Much of modern Catholic apologetics focuses on defending the faith against secular critiques. How do you balance addressing contemporary challenges while staying rooted in the Church’s traditional apologetic approaches from figures like Augustine and Aquinas?

It’s just an application of the same knowledge to different situations. The Church has already answered most of these questions. It’s a matter of presenting these questions and defenses of the faith in a way modern readers can understand but the main aspects of the answers are the same. 

Your channel covers both theological depth and accessibility for seekers. Could you share how you approach making complex Catholic doctrines understandable without oversimplifying their richness?

You proceed to the unknown through the known. The knowledge of principles allows you to proceed to unknown conclusions. In order to be a good teacher you need to know what your students already know and where you want to guide them.

I think God has been able to give me the ability to use analogies to help teach the faith. In order for people to get the concept at a basic level I think these stories and analogies are helpful. 

What has been the most surprising or transformative insight you’ve gained through your work in Catholic apologetics, from studying the tradition? 

I think one of the more profound insights I got from studying Saint Thomas Aquinas is the imminent proximity that God exists. This notion that anything good I do or anything someone else does is that it is because of God. All that is evil comes from creatures. All that is good comes from God. Isaiah 26:12 refers to this. God is sustaining our being all the time. Having my eyes opened to this changed things for me.

Engaging with people’s questions/comments?

People are really fascinated with the Blessed Virgin Mary for good or ill. It is the most common objection related to this subject. The Devil realizes that at this point in human history Jesus has given a lot of influence to Mary. Satan can see the spiritual battlescape and he knows that once people receive Mary they are out of his grasp. 

Many young Catholics today struggle with questions about faith and science. Which resources or approaches have you found most effective in demonstrating the harmony between Catholic teaching and scientific understanding?

I taught senior physics from 2020-2024. Studying physics is studying God’s creation. There is nothing for authentic religion to be concerned about science. The main principle is that God is the author of creation and the Scriptures go hand-in-hand. 

When engaging with people from other faith traditions or non-believers, what do you find is the most commonly misunderstood aspect of Catholic teaching, and how do you address it?

It’s always Mary. I address that a little bit and why. The main distinction that Protestants struggle with is that you can venerate a saint without worshiping them. Not fully understanding the classical distinction between latria, hyperdulia, and dulia.

Your channel aims to serve both lifelong Catholics and seekers. Could you share a particular moment or conversation that exemplifies why you believe apologetics remains vital for the Church today?

Once again going back to the Mary thing, recommending the Rosary has been fruitful in my work. Saint Louis de Montfort said in his book True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, “Mary has produced, together with the Holy Ghost, the greatest thing which has been or ever will be— a God-Man; and she will consequently produce the greatest saints that there will be in the end of time.”

Looking ahead, what do you see as the most pressing challenges facing Catholic apologetics in the next decade, and how can we best prepare to address them?

I think sexual ethics is coming down the pipe. Additionally, the role of the Pope internationally. Many people have lived their life without knowing who the Pope is even now in the 21st century. We respond to this by making distinctions and defending the same faith the Church has taught for 2000 years and pray. That’s it! 

About Cameron:

Cameron Riecker is a Catholic apologist, life coach, and speaker who lives in Phoenix, Arizona with his wife and two kids. 

When he’s not working, he enjoys basketball, weightlifting, and going on hikes with his family.

Thank you for sharing!

Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 178

Hope you had a blessed Sunday!🙏✝️

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday.

😄😄😄
Begone snakes! 😄🙂🙏🐍
What’s your favorite title of Saint Joseph? 🙏

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 177

Hope you had a blessed Sunday!🙏✝️

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday.

😄😄😄
Wait it’s not spelled Katherine?! 😳🙂😄
Ironically, I gave my kids waffles for breakfast today. 🧇
Are you eating pancakes to celebrate the day before Lent?
The LORD is my strength! 🐈➡️🦁
Chris Pratt is promoting the Hallow app. 🙏🙏🙏
To Jesus through Mary. 🙏
To all those Catholics who attend Ash Wednesday we hope to see you this Sunday too. 🙏🙏🙏
The Communion of Saints 🙏🛡️💪
😄😄😄
Rick is incompatible with Lent. 🎶🎵🙂😄
We need a lumberjack for this eye log! 😄🙂🙏🙏
Rolling Back the Tomb 🎵🎶🙏

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 176

Hope you had a blessed Sunday!🙏✝️

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday.

Amen! 🙏🙂
Mary guides you to Jesus. 🙏
Found this meme on a secular page but my immediate thought was this looks like the Consecrated Host after the Fraction Rite. 🍞 ✝️🙏
Too punny! 🐝🐝😄🙂
The struggle is sooo real!
🙂😄🙏
You ready Father???
We love bones! ☠️💀😄
😄💇‍♂️💈✂️
😄😄😄
😄🎵🎶😄
Tony, Tony, something is lost and must be found!
The Woman crushes the head of Satan (see Genesis 3:15).  🦶🐍🙏
😄😄😄

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

Eucharistic Adoration: He Waits for You in the Silence

The church door closed with a soft click. Empty pews stretched toward the altar. A single candle flickered near the monstrance, its flame steady. Sunlight filtered through stained glass, casting colored patterns that moved slowly across the floor. The air felt still.

An elderly woman sat in the third pew on the left, rosary beads sliding between weathered fingers. She didn’t look up.

The wooden kneeler creaked. Silence filled the space, not empty but full. The gold of the monstrance caught the light once, then didn’t again. A car passed outside, then nothing.

The clock on the wall ticked. The Host remained unchanged, white against gold. Minutes stretched. The elderly woman shifted slightly, then returned to stillness.

Somewhere, a heating system hummed briefly, then quieted. The colored light on the floor had moved an inch. The candle flame didn’t waver.

God Waits

Saint Alphonsus Liguori proclaimed, “Of all devotions, that of adoring Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament is the greatest after the sacraments, the one dearest to God and the one most helpful to us.”

Yet God doesn’t need our love—He wants it.

The Blessed Sacrament doesn’t demand attention with bright lights or loud sounds. It waits. The miracle sits in plain sight, ordinary and extraordinary at once. Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity behind the appearance of bread.

A Different Kind of Time

In Eucharistic Adoration, time changes. Not faster or slower—different.

St. Mother Teresa understood this: “When you look at the crucifix, you understand how much Jesus loved you then. When you look at the Sacred Host, you understand how much Jesus loves you now.”

Now. Present tense.

The elderly woman with the rosary knew this. Her weekly visit wasn’t obligation—it was appointment. Her same pew each Wednesday, surrounded by familiar silence, enveloped in His unchanging Presence.

What Happens in Adoration?

St. Clare of Assisi said simply: “Gaze upon him, consider him, contemplate him, as you desire to imitate him.”

Some call it spiritual tanning—basking in the light of the Son. You can’t help but be changed by it. Too much exposure and your sins become visible, uncomfortable. The longer you remain, the more grace accumulates.

The wooden pew feels hard after twenty minutes. The mind wanders. The silence grows deeper. And then, sometimes, a moment arrives that wasn’t there before.

The Invitation

The Church doesn’t merely suggest Adoration—it recognizes our need for it. As the Catechism states, “The Church and the world have great need of Eucharistic adoration. Jesus waits for us in this sacrament of love.”

He waits.

The church remains mostly empty on weekday afternoons. The Host doesn’t mind. The monstrance holds the miracle whether witnessed by hundreds or just an elderly woman with arthritic hands.

The invitation remains open.

Find fifteen minutes this week. Ask your parish office when Adoration hours are scheduled. Walk in. Sit down. Nothing spectacular may happen.

But the candle will flicker near the monstrance. Sunlight might cast colored patterns across the floor. The silence will be waiting.

And so will He.

Thank you for sharing!

Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 175

Hope you had a blessed Sunday!🙏✝️

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday.

Seriously, the hate against the Blessed Virgin Mary is a real head scratcher at times.
Found you bishop! 😄🙂
At least 18 syllables, it depends on whether we are in the Easter season or celebrating a solemnity and then it’s closer to 30. 🙂
We know how to party in the Catholic Church.
💀😄🙏
Such a powerful analogy for humility. 🍊🙏
February 14th is a jam-packed day!
😄🙂🙏
Amen! Visit Jesus this week. ☀️🙏
The First Rosary. 📿🙏
🙏🐮🐄😄
A Valentine’s Day card for next year. 😄🙂🙏
The Rosary is a prayer both so humble and simple and a theologically rich in Biblical content. I beg you to pray it.” —Saint John Paul II
Bible pick up lines Boaz edition. 😄🙂
🙏🙏🙏
One last Valentine’s Day meme. ♥️🙏😄

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!