Wednesday, October 31, 2018



HAS ANYONE EVER CALLED 
YOU AN ANGEL OR A SAINT?


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Has Anyone Ever Called You an Angel or a Saint?”

I don’t know about you, but I have heard people say to me, “You’re an angel!”  or  “You’re a saint.”

Translation: I did them a favor. I covered for them. They were stuck and I got them out of a jam.

Translation: we’re supposed to be charitable - we’re supposed to be nice - we’re supposed to helpful to each other - and we figure that’s what angels and saints do.

ANGELS OR SAINTS

November 1st - the Church celebrates all the saints - known and unknown.

During the year we also celebrate the feast days of archangels - Michael, Raphael,  Gabriel - as well as and our guardian  angels - but angels are more fuzzy than flesh and blood saints.

However, angels  are worth thinking about at times. They are part of our theology and understanding about God - and life with God and each other.

And lately I’ve been hearing a reference to something Abraham Lincoln said in his First Inaugural Address - March 4, 1861:  “We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory will swell when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”

Have you been hearing speakers talk about the better angels of our being?
Then the speaker contrasts the better angels of our nature with our bad angels.

I don’t know if we think or talk like this or picture life this way.



A writer named Stephen Pinker spoke about this choice of good or bad angels in a book, “The Better Angels of our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined?

Has it - when we think about the regular reports of killings and violence around our world?

Pinker talks about 5 Inner Demons: Predatory Violence, Dominance, Revenge, Sadism and Ideology.

He also talks about 4 inner angels: Empathy, Self-control, Moral Sense and Reason.

He thinks we have improved.

Each of us has to ask if we  have improved.

Who’s sitting on my shoulder or my back: demons, the devil, or angels of messengers of mercy and compassion?

Then there are saints.

Which works better for you?  Concentrating on angels or saints?

ALL SAINTS DAY - SOME QUESTIONS

November 1st we are celebrating the saints.

Do we have a favorite saint?

Advertisers are trying to get us to model our lives - our looks - by good looking people - and what they wear, what they drive, what they use.

The Church is trying to get us to model our lives  - our way of doing life - by the saints?

Looking at our own lives - what are our strengths - and what do we need - what qualities do we see we’re lacking.

Are we a procrastinator or a doubter: pick St. Thomas the Apostle as an example of being late or absent or we have our doubts.

Are we clumsy, pick St. Camillus de Lellis as a patron saint.  He was saying Mass and preached and tripped on the steps into the front bench.  He was called to anoint and pray over a sick person and accidentally knocked a bed post over and it fell and cut the person in the bed in his head. Lots of blood.

Have our kids given up on all the Christian values we tried to get them to come back to church and the faith,  pray to St. Monica  - who prayed for her son Augustine for years and years and years.

Do we have a drinking or drug problems, there’s Francis Thompson the poet and the Irish holy man, Matt Talbot.

CONCLUSION

The title of my homily is, “Has Anyone Ever Called You an Angel or a Saint?”

Don’t do good to get compliments. Do good. Be an angel…. be a saint …. who 
makes life sweeter for those around us. Amen.





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