I AM
INSIDE MY HEAD
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily is, “I am
Inside My Head.”
Today - August 29th, we
look at the beheading of St. John the
Baptist.
The gospel is quite vivid. It’s easy
to picture the whole scene. I’ve seen it
acted out in a few movies about Christ. Movie producers and directors would
obviously want to include a dance - of a young woman - dressed dancingly in a
revealing dress - as she was manipulating her step-father - and pleasing all
the men in the room.
It’s also easy to hear and think
about Herodias, her mother, and her inability to let go of her anger towards
John the Baptist.
Then there is Herod and his bitter regrets that he shot his mouth
off and said to Herodias’ daughter, the dancer, “I swear to you, ‘Ask for
anything you want. I’ll give it to you – even up to half my kingdom.’”
THE FLY ON THE WALL
We’ve all heard the phrase, “the fly
on the wall”?
At times we all say and think things
like, “Wow would I like to be a fly on
the wall in the president’s marriage when his wife heard about the intern or
the dancer who could cause a storm.”
I remember a talk a nun named
Maureen McCann gave years ago. She used
the image of a radio - or any speaking device that has a speaker loudness dial.
She said it’s good to listen to what we ourselves are talking to ourselves
about - inside our head. She said there
are various stations on the radio. Pick one. Turn up the volume and listen. She
also said we talk to ourselves about all kinds of people and situations. Well,
dial into one - turn up the volume - and then listen carefully.
Be the fly on the inside of the
walls of your skull.
We humans spend all kinds of time thinking
about what we say and do - every day.
How many different conversations do we have with ourselves? How many topics do we cover? How many
experiences have air time in our brain?
We all know about Descartes’ famous saying, “I think.
Therefore I am.” “Cogito. Ergo sum.”
It’s one of the few things everyone can say in philosophy.
TODAY’S GOSPEL
Looking at today’s gospel I see it
is rich in human comments and conversations.
As already mentioned, Herodias can’t
shake John the Baptist’s attack on her marriage situation.
As already mentioned, Herod bitterly
regrets that he was over bragging and over promising, when he shot his mouth
off to his step-daughter, the dancer. Checking out with her mother, she had a blank check, so she then gives the
ugly request, “I want the head of John the Baptist brought in on a silver
platter.
I AM STATEMENTS
The title of my homily is, “I Am
Inside My Head.”
Jesus liked to make I Am statements.
God did one big one to Moses in the
Book of Exodus. Who are you God asked Moses and God answered, “I Am Who Am.”
In this homily I’m suggesting,
“Listen to yourself.”
Clearer: Listen to your I am
statements.
Don’t cut off your head. Listen to
what’s going on inside your head.
What are your I am statements today?
I think, therefore I am.
I feel, therefore I am.
I am at Mass. God I need you.
I am happy today.
I’m worried about our Catholic Church today.
I’m worried about our country and
our world today.
I’m thinking about my family today.
I regret, therefore I am.
I can’t let go of things –
especially hurtful things people say – and I hold onto them for hours, days,
weeks, years, sometimes a lifetime; therefore I am.
I want to scream sometimes when I
see wrong, unfairness, laziness, craziness, and sometimes I say nothing and
then beat on myself for not speaking up – and sometimes I do speak up – and
when I do, sometimes people chop my head off – or I do it to myself; therefore
I am.
I am an angry echo – echo – echo in
the soul – anger triggered by the presence of another, or the reminder of
another, or of a painful experience from another – and it seems ever times I
run into this person or see this person – I want to cut them down. I want to
chop off their head.
I cry, therefore I am.
I tried, therefore I am.
I pray, therefore I am.
I laugh, therefore I am.
I’m funny, therefore I am.
I forget, therefore I am.
When I am young, I spend too much
time in the future; when I am old, I spend too much time in the past. Therefore
I am.
I die. Therefore I was – because
others cry, laugh, tell stories about me and then in time, I am forgotten – and
the words and numbers on my tombstone, fade.
I am I am today.
God, Christ, you are - you are today.
Let’s do this life together.
I am with you all days - and I
believe you said, “I am with you all days, even to the end of the world.”
Listen up.
Hopefully we all say, "I am...."
Hopefully we all say, "I am...."
1 comment:
Great thoughts today at Mass. You are who you are, and never forget that. Never apologize for speaking your mind, never.
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