Saturday, February 29, 2020


JESUS AS THERAPIST


INTRODUCTION

Sometimes people are looking for a therapist.

Someone is depressed – or they feel their life has gone blank for them. They are looking for meaning - so they want someone to turn to - for help – for healing – for a cure – for meaning.

JESUS AS THERAPIST

The title of my homily for this Saturday after Ash Wednesday  is, “Jesus as Therapist.”

The word “therapy” comes from a Latin word, “therapia” and the Greek word, which is identical -  but with a tiny spelling difference: “therapeia” -  meaning the remedy, the treatment, the method of curing someone.

I’m grabbing the word, “therapeia,” for my title. I want to point out that the Greek has several other words for healing in the New Testament – and you know that the New Testament’s original language was Greek.  It has “IAOMAI”– meaning “made whole,” or “healed”. That word is  used more than “THERAPEIA”. It also has “SOZO” meaning “saved” or “healed”. “SOZO” is a very familiar New Testament word.

Those of us who come to Daily Mass and hear the gospels over and over again, we know everyone wants Jesus over and over again – for what?  To be healed – to be cured.

People are always trying to find out where Jesus is. They want to catch him – in the desert – on the road – on a mountain – in a garden – back behind a house – on the other side of the lake.

And what do they want him for?  It’s healing?

So, the title of my homily is, “Jesus as Therapist.”

DS FS Q

Jesus’  Number 1 method of healing consists of an action step. “Do something for the good of another.”

His Number 1 method was to do something for the other quickly.   And he would touch people and they would be healed.

They would say, “Jesus just touch me!” “If I could only touch the hem of  his garment.”

His prescription was simple and direct.  It was a simple prescription: “DSFSQ”. 

And he might add, “30 or 90 doses of DS  FS   Q.”

Which stands for: “Do Something for Someone, Quickly.”

I love those scenes in the gospels where someone who has been healed – then wants to follow Jesus – but he says, “Go back home to your family and be there for them.”

DOCTOR  PATCH  ADAMS

A lady once told me that her  oldest son had dropped out of college and was floundering.  Someone told her to attend a talk in New Orleans given by Doctor Patch Adams.

So, she  went to hear him speak. You might have seen the movie about him: Patch Adams.

Doctor Patch Adams was a depressive at time.  He was suicidal there for a while.

But he got an idea or how to help people around the world. He had a dream to build a 40-bed hospital  - so he went around the world giving his talk – his lecture – sometimes 10 a day – on the road 300 days a year – speaking everywhere – Russia, Cuba, Bosnia, Afghanistan.  He preached humor, wholistic approaches, visiting the sick, doing for others.

He was considered a kook by many.

Well, this lady said she went to hear Patch – who said the following. “If you have a young adult who is lost, floundering, milking you, get him to volunteer with the local rescue squad.”

Well this lady went home and looked up “Local Rescue Squad”, checked it out – and then got her son to try it.  Surprise he loved it. Surprise he was good at it. Surprise he’s becoming a male nurse – with the idea of maybe becoming a PA – a Physician’s assistant and loves it.

THIS IDEA

When I read the first reading for today, there was the same idea.

Isaiah say “If you remove from your midst - oppression, false accusation and malicious speech;  if you bestow your bread on the hungry and satisfy the afflicted; then light shall rise for you in the darkness and the gloom shall become for you like midday.

Isaiah says if you do for others, your strength will be renewed. You’ll be like a watered garden.  You’ll be like a spring that never fails.  The ancient ruins will be restored.  You’ll be called “Restorer of ruined homesteads..

Read Isaiah’s first reading for today again and you’ll find a there is a lot more in the text.

CONCLUSION

Too many people are like the folks in today’s gospel. They spend their lives complaining about others who are taxing them – instead of being like Levi – who dropped everything and followed     Jesus.


February  29,  2020




IS GOD?

Is God the God
we’re looking for
in the mix
of rain or mist, 
or breeze or sunshine
or snow or storm?

Is God the God
we’re looking for
in the mix
of pain or cancer,
sickness or hurt
of hospital or nursing home?

Is God the God
we’re looking for
in the nothingness
or loneliness or the
empty hole of rejection,
or death or despair.

Is God
?

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

February  29,  2020

Thought  for  Today



"Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek."



President Barack Obama




Friday, February 28, 2020


February 28, 2020

 MOTHS

What are they doing 
and where are they - 
all day long and  - and 
all winter long – these 
moths - that silently 
show up searching 
for the light at night? 

Are there moth like
people in every class, 
church, library, and group – 
hoping for light – 
hoping for answers 
to their deep dark 
unanswered questions?

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


February  28,  2020


Thought  for  Today

I  prayed for twenty  years  but received no answer until I prayed with my legs”

Frederick Douglass

Thursday, February 27, 2020


CHOOSE  LIFE


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this Thursday after Ash Wednesday is, “Choose Life.”

In Hebrew it’s  Bacharta Ba’Chayim”.  Choose Life!

It’s a key command from Moses to his people – at a key moment in their lives.

They are standing there ready to cross the Jordan River and finally move  into the Promised Land.

Today’s first reading – from Deuteronomy 30 - is one of the most important Old Testament writings.

Today’s first reading begins this way, “Moses said to the people: ‘Today I have set before you:   life and prosperity, death and doom.’”

Then he spells out what he wants to say,  “If you obey the commandments of the Lord, your God, which I enjoin on you today, loving him, and walking in his ways, and keeping his commandments, statues and   decrees, you will live and grow numerous, and the Lord, your God, will  bless you in the land you are entering to occupy.”

Then he gives the if, the but, the catch, “If you don’t, you won’t have life!”

Then he gives the great statement. “I call heaven and earth today to witness against you: I have set before you life and death, the blessing and the curse. Choose life!”

GEORGE  WALD – HARVARD BIOLOGIST  - 1906-1997

Years ago, I was driving along by myself, listening to NPR Radio. George Wald, a famous Harvard biologist was being interviewed.

He was asked one of those questions people sometimes are asked. “If you were all alone, stuck on an abandoned island, in the middle of ocean, and you could have one book, and one book only, what would that book be.”

The New York Times Book Review asks the same question this way, “What books are you reading right now – the ones on your  lamp stand, that little table next to your bed?”

George Wald answered the one book on the abandoned island question with a 2-word answer, “The Bible.”

The interviewer asked back, “Why?”

“Well,”  he answered. “I’m sort of cheating with my answer. The Bible is a whole library of a people – a portable library – with many books, many scrolls – from a long period of time – that contains thoughts that have been written and re-written to help a people with life.”

Then George Wald, I still remember his said, “Just take Deuteronomy 30. There’s a great text, where Moses calls the people together and gives them 2 choices. The stuff that gives you life and the stuff that will kill you. Choose life.”

MARY  OLIVER

A rabbi - in a sermon on Deuteronomy 30 - said  Mary Oliver in her poem, The Summer Day, said the same thing so powerfully.  He says he has a hand written note on his refrigerator door with Mary Oliver’s question which is used every May in hundreds of commencement  addresses: “Tell me, What is it  / you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?”

IGNATUS OF LOYOLA

All this is the basic message of Ignatius of Loyola. I once took a summer program at Wernersville PA – the Jesuit Retreat house – on Ignatius. The Jesuit Exercises help people make a serious retreat and look at their lives.  They look at what’s giving them life; more. They look at what’s killing them; less.

JESUS CHRIST

Jesus is saying the same thing in today’s gospel – but he says it in paradox and in contradiction.  It’s the message of the cross.  If you want to follow me, you have die to self and rise to new life.

CONCLUSION

This Lent there is the great question.

What are you doing with your one wild and precious life?

What’s killing you? Less.

What’s giving you life? More.

Choose the cross – it looks like a killed – it looks like death – but it brings new life and resurrection.

Choose life.

February 27,  2020


RED LIGHT

Sometimes when I’m driving
and it’s raining and I come to
a red light – I like to give the
windshield wipers a break
and watch the rain for a few
moments – rolling down my
windshield –pausing - just
enjoying the present moment.

There’s something about rain
on a rainy day – the sprinkle
of Holy Water – the whole of
the city being baptized – the
black macadam – washed –
then the lights turn green –
windshield wipers waving,
“Hello!” “Wake up!’ “Move it!”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

February  27,  2020 


Thought  for  Today 

“If  you're  white and you're wrong, then you're wrong; if you're black and you're wrong, you're wrong. People are people. Black, blue, pink, green - God make no rules about color; only society make rules where my people suffer, and that why we must have redemption and redemption now.”

Bob Marley

Wednesday, February 26, 2020



HIDDEN

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Hidden.”

Part of Jesus’ spirituality is, “The Hidden Life.”

Jesus must have seen too much externalism  and show in the spirituality of the Pharisees. “Hey, world, look at me.”

I’ve seen too much Phariseeism in the Catholic Church, in seminarians and in the clergy etc.

Jesus’ religious life was within life – authentic inner growth life – like the field growing and nobody sees growth happening. It’s slow and not showy.

Go back and read Mark 4: 26-29: "This is what the kingdom of God is like. A man throws seed on the land.  Night and day, while he sleeps, when he is awake, the seed is sprouting and growing; how, he does not know,  Of its own accord the land  produces first the shoot,  then the ear, then the full grain in the ear.  And when the crop is ready, he loses no time: he starts to reap because the harvest has come."

THE INSIDE, THE HIDDEN LIFE

Jesus saw and Jesus knew where his Father  was.

Our Father is in our inner room.  It’s nice when it feels like heaven.

As we heard Jesus say in  today’s gospel, “But when you pray, go to your inner room,  close the door, and pray to your Father in secret.  And your Father who sees in secret will repay you.”

I was pumping gas into my car recently. It wasn’t in New Jersey – when you can’t pump your own gas.  I saw a guy – with lots of plastic bags – sitting on the doorstep of the gas station. I figured he was a drifter. As I was paying for my gas – I spotted a 20-dollar bill  in my wallet – with an Andrew Jackson looking right at me. I walked over to the man and handed him a 20 and said, “McDonalds is right across the street.  Get yourself some breakfast and a good cup of coffee.”

He looked at me – sort of strange.  He wasn’t begging. But I was heading home for breakfast and why should I be the only one who might be hungry?

Surprise! My right hand knew what my left hand was doing. 

In today’s gospel Jesus gets at that as well.

That’s tricky – not only hiding our religious stuff from others – but also hiding our stuff from ourselves – as in inner bragging.

Jesus – this is tough stuff – to do.

ASH WEDNESDAY

Ash Wednesday is a funny one.

When we were kids – Ash Wednesday was always on a school day – and we would compare how long ashes would last on our foreheads – throughout the day.

I always laugh at the Ash Wednesday gospel: Matthew 6: 1-6,16-18.  It says when fasting,  don’t look gloomy. Wash your face. Anoint your head.

Does anyone go home on Ash Wednesday and wash their face?

THE  HIDDEN  LIFE

Jesus died when he was around 33.  Much of his life was hidden.

Our lives – in 500 years from now – whether we are cremated or what, we will be gone – hidden in a grave – maybe the stone will be long gone.  We’ll be the long forgotten – hidden dust – or resurrected dust – maybe our dust becomes part of a mosquito or maybe our dust becomes earth and becomes part of a blade of wheat or a grape on  a vine – a while back – all that is hidden from us – but our faith  is this:  we will be alive in Christ in the big inner room of eternity.

CONCLUSION

This world – has been around for over 5 billion years now – who knows what and who – and where we have been – so hear Jesus say to us when we get the ashes today,  “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”


February 26, 2020


EASY

I want to be easy 
with you, and you too …. 
Easy with words …. 
Easy when chit chatting …. 
Easy in walks around the lake, 
with you, and you too …. 
Easy with the words 
and sandpaper feelings, 
the what of what  
you’re trying to tell me, 
especially when you’re hurting - 
and you feel there is no one  
to talk to, nobody who 
understands you - in this big - 
whole wide world. 


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

February  26, 2020




Thought   for  Today 

I find in my poetry and prose the rhythms and imagery of the best - I mean, when I'm at my best - of the good Southern black preachers. The lyricism of the spirituals and the directness of gospel songs and the mystery of blues are in my music or in my poetry and prose, or I missed everything.”

Maya Angelou

Tuesday, February 25, 2020


February 25, 2020





THE TONGUE

He sat there in the empty church 
that afternoon – looking at the red 
vigil lights – tongues of prayer – 
still burning from after Sunday Mass. 

The tongue – that instrument of love 
and hate – but mainly used for life’s 
daily chit chat - spoken in cars, bars, 
and on one billion cell phones each day. 

As the Bible’s Letter of James said 
a long, long  time ago, “How great     
a forest is set ablaze by a small fire.
And the tongue is burning fire.”

And the rabble-rouser cried,
“Burn down the whole town.”
And the crowd went wild and
burned the whole town down.

And the singer sang and moved ten
thousand youth – to wave their arms
in concert, and to buy her records,
with her many songs of love.

And she spent two hours on the phone
each day – with her boy friend.
And her mom spent two hours on
the phone each evening with her mom.

And God said, “Let there be words.”
And the  tongue of God spoke. And the
Word became flesh and Jesus and his
words made their dwelling amongst us.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


February  25,  2020



Thought  for  Today

“The price of hating other human beings is loving oneself less.” 

Eldridge Cleaver

Monday, February 24, 2020

February  24,  2020

Reflection


ANCHORS

Most of the time we don’t see anchors. 
They are either under water or hiding 
behind the side of the upper deck. 

Yet there are anchors – those solid 
people  we hold onto tight in port and 
we know they are there in choppy seas. 

 © Andy Costello, Reflections 2020



February   24,   2020

Thought for today





That little man in black there, he says  women  can't have as much rights as men 'cause Christ wasn't a woman! Where did your Christ come from? Where did your Christ come from? From God and a woman! Man had nothing to do with Him.”

Sojourner Truth

Sunday, February 23, 2020


BECOME A FOOL,
SO AS TO BECOME WISE

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 7th Sunday in Ordinary Time [A] is, “Become a Fool, So As to Become Wise.”

That’s a wisdom statement from Paul in today’s second reading.

Think about it: “Become a Fool, So As to Become Wise.”

TODAY’S THREE READINGS

Today’s three readings tell us to do some foolish things.

Today’s first reading tells us no hatred, no revenge, and cherish no grudge against any of your people.

Today’s second reading presents the message of this homily, “Become a Fool, So As to Become Wise.”

Today’s gospel tells us if someone slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other one to them as well.  If someone takes you to court over your  raincoat, give him your umbrella as well.  If somebody pushes you to walk a mile with them, go two miles. If someone wants to borrow something from you, don’t disappear, let them borrow it from you – even if you’re thinking: “Kiss that baby good bye!”  If  someone hates you, love them back.

There’s some dumb counterintuitive behaviors to try right there.

LENT BEGINS THIS COMING WEDNESDAY

Lent begins this week with Ash Wednesday.  

It’s kind of weird – kind of different  -  kind of dumb to have someone smear some ashes on your forehead and wear them that day till they fade away during the day.

Why would anyone do that – or allow that to happen to them?

Lent is 40 days  - to try some spiritual growth stuff.

How about a good spiritual reading book?

How about an extra drop into this church or some church or some sacred spot – like at the ocean. Walk.  We haven’t had snow yet this winter.  It might yet. In the meanwhile,  walk around Takanassee Lake – 20 minutes – or use the Long Branch or Asbury boardwalks – breathing in some fresh air and stretching your legs once or twice a week for these 40 days of Lent.

How about skipping one lunch – put the 10 or 15 bucks in an unmarked envelope and give it to someone anonymous – on the street – or in the mall – and keep moving – not wondering if they are poor or rich or what have you. Surprise folks with random acts of kindness.

Got a paper calendar. Check off three things you’ll try each day of Lent. Make up your own three: compliment one person behind their back; compliment one person to their face; make a comment to a total stranger  each day. Initial in your calendar box for each day of Lent:  BB for a compliment about someone behind their back; FF for a compliment face to face; and HS – a hello to a stranger.

PROVING FOOLISH THINGS WORK – AND BRING WISDOM

Years ago a heart doctor in California or somewhere suggested the next time you’re on line in a bank or any place where there are lines  - pick the longest line – if that’s the way it works in the bank or in the wherever. Then we’re you’re about 2nd on line, get off the line quietly – and walk to the back and get on the longest line. Do it smoothly – so as not to be noticed.

I thought that was weird when I first read it - but I tried it a bunch of times. The heart specialist – use the time on line – trying to remember say all your classmates in your high school graduating class.  This spiritual exercise can teach you patience – laughter.

It can teach us how to watch. It can teach us how to be calm when stuck in traffic or at long lines in banks, air  ports, movie theaters, etc.

It gave me a high school graduation commencement address which I entitled, “What Ever Happened to What’s His /Her Name?”

CONCLUSION

Lent starts this Wednesday. Do some stupid or foolish things for this Lent and by the time Easter is here you will have risen at least 25%.

And you too will say, “Become a Fool, So As to Become Wise” – smart move.

February  23,  2020

GO FIGURE

Before love,
before caring,
before communication,
before relationships,
before freedom,
comes trust.

Go figure that out.

In fact,
before sin,
before failure,
before mistakes,
before change,
comes trust.

You probably won't figure that out.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020
February  23, 2020

Thought  for  Today



"Preachers at black churches are the last people left in the English-speaking world who know the schemes and tropes of classical rhetoric: parallelism, antithesis, epistrophe, synecdoche, metonymy, periphrasis, litotes - the whole bag of tricks."

P.J. O’Rourke