Saturday, March 7, 2020

March  7,  2020





THE    WATER’S   RISING

Well, the water is either rising
or the water, it is going down.

Life …. Things are never the same.
That’s what we gotta get used to.

There’s a knock on the door or
there’s a call on the phone.

Or someone is leaving home
for the last time, this time. Woo!

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

Friday, March 6, 2020

March   7, 2020


Thought   for  Today 

“Just because everything is different doesn’t mean anything has changed.”  

Irene Peter

March  6, 2020



I’M  ALIVE 
THANK YOU GOD 

Want a morning,
noon and night prayer?
“Gracias a la vida ….”

Sing it, say it, feel it -
every day and in every
way -  life comes to you.

I’m alive. Thank You God.
"Gracias a la vida ...."
"Efcharistó Theé mou."*

Use your eyes, your ears,
microphones, music, hands,
words, sounds, violins. Sing!

Thank You, God, for those
on stage, those in the crowd
and all those - all around us.

I'm alive.
Gracias Dios 
por el don de la vida.

*Thanks to You, God.
In Greek: Eυχαριστώ Θεέ μου
© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020









Lyrics


Gracias a la vida que me ha dado tanto
Me dio dos luceros que cuando los abro
Perfecto distingo lo negro del blanco
Y en el alto cielo su fondo estrellado
Y en las multitudes el hombre que yo amo

Gracias a la vida que me ha dado tanto
Me ha dado el oído que en todo su ancho
Cada noche y días
Grillos y canarios, martillos, turbinas
Ladridos, chubascos
Y la voz tan tierna de mi bien amado
Gracias a la vida que me ha dado tanto
Me ha dado el sonido y el abecedario
Con el las palabras que pienso y declaro
Madre, amigo, hermano y luz alumbrando
La ruta del alma del que estoy amando
Gracias a la vida que me ha dado tanto
Me ha dado la marcha de mis pies cansados
Con ellos anduve ciudades y charcos
Playas y desiertos, montañas y llanos
Y la casa tuya, tu calle y tu patio
Gracias a la vida que me ha dado tanto
Me dio el corazón que agita su marco
Cuando miro el fruto del cerebro humano
Cuando miro el bueno tan lejos del malo
Cuando miro el fondo de tus ojos claros
Gracias a la vida que me ha dado tanto
Me ha dado la risa y me ha dado el llanto
Así yo distingo dicha de quebranto
Los dos materiales que forman mi canto
Y el canto de ustedes que es el mismo canto
Y el canto de todos que es mi propio canto
Gracias a la vida
March   6,  2020

Thought  for Today 

“It’s a sick plan that cannot be changed.”

Latin Proverb

Thursday, March 5, 2020

March 5,  2020



WRONGFULNESS

Jesus was right about righteousness.
The Pharisees were wrong about Jesus –
thinking he was wrong about what was right.
Right? Or does that seem wrong?
Practice wrongfulness. Sit in the back seat
when you come to pray. Say few words.
Be like little children. Turn the other cheek
when someone tries to slap you down.
Go the extra mile when someone forces
you to go one mile. Love those who think
you think they’re your enemies. Surprise
them by loving them with your whole heart,
mind, soul and strength. Don’t throw
rocks at people you think are wrong.
Share your bread with the hungry.
Hoarded bread can turn to rock.
Broken bread brings broken people
Into communion with each other.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020






March   5, 2020


Thought   for  Today

“Skepticism has an  important place in critical engagement.  It is part of the apparatus of reflection and discernment.  But skepticism can become a form of bad faith too, a reflexive paradigm of doubt that distorts our perceptions the way cataracts cloud sight.  When you are stalking the miraculous, you need both doubt and faith.”

Theodore Prescott  in an article
Stalking the Miraculous 
in the Wilds of Art, 
page 85 in Image
A Journal of the 
Arts and Religion, 
November 22,  
Winter / Spring 1999, 
Number 22

Wednesday, March 4, 2020


SOMETIMES   JONAH 
CAN  STILL  BE  HEARD


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this First Wednesday in Lent  is, “Sometimes Jonah Can Still Be Heard.”

This morning’s first reading is from the Book of Jonah.

Jonah is a short little book in the Old Testament that’s only 4 short chapters.  We hear from him on just one Sunday – the 3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year B – so that’s only 1 Sunday every 3 years.

We hear from him every other year for 3 days in a row – the 27th Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday – and from one other weekday, today Wednesday in the first week of Lent.

For such a short little book or scroll, that’s not bad – and Jonah is mentioned a few times in the New Testament - like today’s gospel.

FISH STORY

We all know the fish story in the Book of Jonah – that he’s on a boat – running away in the opposite direction from God – and the boat starts having big time storm problems – so the crew figure out it’s he who is the problem – so they toss him overboard.

He ends up being swallowed by a big fish – and is inside the fish’s belly for 3 days – and then is burped out onto the shore he’s supposed to be headed.

It’s a parable. It’s a legend. It’s a made-up story to teach a lesson.

What I get out of it is that I can be a disaster in a sermon – and somehow God catches fish from my babble and blarney.  Every priest finds out in life that someone thanks him for a sermon – telling a lesson he never intended.

SECOND STORY

We all know the second great message in the Book of Jonah.  It’s not in today’s readings – but it’s a great message.  Jonah is hiding out and cooling off under the big leaf of a gourd plant – while waiting and watching for the destruction of Nineveh.  The plant shrivels up and Jonah gets really upset – and God gets really upset with Jonah for worrying about himself and not the 120,000 people in the city who were going to perish – and many animals as well.

We’ve all seen people who have fallen into that trap many a time – worrying about the tiny – and missing the big problems all around them.

FAST, FAST, FAST

And the third message is the message of fasting – probably put here because fasting is one of the regular 3 practices for Lent: fasting, praying and almsgiving.

CONCLUSION

If we read the book of Jonah, we’ll first wonder, “How did this story get in here?” and then we’ll realize: “Okay, now I get it. Amen.”


March 4, 2020


LETTING  GO

Sticks  and  stones 
may break my bones 
and names will often hurt me …. 

So too we have memories 
and deja vue past hurts 
still hurting us.

Letting go is tough going.
There are scars and echoes: 
reminders that won’t go away.

So too the Law of Gravity
is always with us – weighing us
down with stuff we can't let go of.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

March 4,  2020




Thought for Today


"Literacy is the path from slavery to freedom. There are many kinds of slavery and many kinds of freedom. But reading is still the path.” 

Carl Sagan,
The Demon-Haunted
World Science as a
Candle in the Dark

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

March 3, 2020


                                   


SILENCE

Sometimes, 
silence is smart
Sometimes,
it is very smart.
It’s tricky. It often
gives us time to figure out
what another might be really asking –
or it gives them time
to figure out what they are
really saying. Ooooh!
But only sometimes …. 

© Andy Costello,  Reflections



March  3,  2020


Thought  for  Today

"The  future  belongs to young people who know where the  accurate, reliable knowledge is, how to get it, how to think about it, and how to turn it into better work, better products, better lives."  

Rexford Brown,
Educator and Author



March   2,   2020




BRIEFCASE

Every morning – I take 5 minutes
to load my briefcase. I put in there:
10, usually,  10 “Thank you’s!”;
5 “Congratulations!”;
2 jokes;
7 “Sorry’s”;
1 “Ask Joe about his dad.”;
My thin Bible to read one psalm
around 2:30 this afternoon;
1 twenty dollar bill  to give to
a beggar outside my office building.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

Monday, March 2, 2020

March 2, 2020


Thought  for  Today

 "... the  people  can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders.  That  is  easy.  All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger."  

Hermann Goering,
 Nuremberg Trials

Sunday, March 1, 2020



 CHOOSING 

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this First Sunday in Lent  [A]  is, “Choosing.” 

C  H  O  O  S  I  N  G  …. 

The other day I noticed that the first word for this year’s retreat theme is the word “choosing” – as in “Choosing to Live in Peace.” 

Choosing …. 

Our hope was to present ideas – images – hopes – dreams – stories - prayers – talks -  thoughts about peace -  that are in every human heart – to see the benefits of peace - that we choose -  to want peace – to  be peacemakers – to make life sweeter for each other. Obviously, by being here since Friday evening, we hope you said to yourself inwardly a bunch of times,  “That’s just what I want. I want peace for my family. I am going to go home now and try to make peace happen – at home – at work – in my jobs – in my groups – with my neighbors – in my being.”

A homily …. An attempt to bite into the readings for today.

TODAY’S FIRST READING  IS ALL ABOUT CHOOSING

Did you notice today’s first reading is all about choosing?

God says: “First couple – I made you this enormous garden.  I planted some beautiful trees in this garden – with some delicious fruit.”

But there’s the catch. There’s always a catch – in every story and movie and novel  – there is always a catch. That’s not novel. There’s always a catch – in hopes of catching you.

God says, “You can eat from every tree in the garden except this one tree: the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.”

There’s always forbidden fruit.

There’s the devil – the cunning serpent – sliding and slithering around – in the garden – whispering in the first couples’ mind and heart and being.

Don’t take. Don’t eat. Don’t swallow everything.

The serpent asks the why question.

Why not? Why can’t you eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in the center or the garden?

And the serpent gives answers: You will become like God. You will know what is good and what is evil.

And the woman saw that the fruit looked delicious. It will give wisdom, so she bit and she gave some to her husband – and he ate and it worked. Their eyes were opened – they realized they were naked and sewed fig leaves together and made loin clothes for themselves.

This is one of the  world’s most important stories – one of the world’s most basic stories.

Yes, we learn more from biting into mistakes than we learn from same old, same old, tree called everyday life.

Years ago, Bill Cosby told this same story in his own way – and please God – he learned down deep the lesson he was telling.

Bill Cosby said that when we were kids, we heard our parents telling us we were having guests tomorrow – and they were going out tonight. They told us that they bought 2 cakes. They told us  kids we could  eat of this cake here but not of this cake here. This cake is for our guests who will be here tomorrow evening.

And the obvious happens.

As soon as mom and dad leave, the kids head for the forbidden cake.

They took and age and their eyes were opened.

They were growing up.

They learned from the forbidden sweets.  They learned guilt. They learned blame. They learned lying. They  learned fear.

They learned nakedness.

They learned time: mom and dad will be coming home.

They learned death – their parents are going to kill them.

They learned they were not their parents.

Oh my God, they are home. I can hear the garage door opening.

The tree of life – the center – the steady – the everyday – life –security -  is still there – but once we bite of the wrong- once we bite from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil – all is changed.  The normal – the norms – the regular has been forgotten.  That becomes the central reality of life – and death.

Nakedness is consciousness.

Choices have consequences.

Choices make us blind to the regular tree – the tree of life.

And from now on we remember our sins, mistakes, the dumb – the dumb choices – the regrets of our lives.

So, today’s first reading from Genesis is about choosing – with an ancient primitive story about the forbidden fruit – perhaps an apple -  how we discovered naked evil and how we try to cover over our mistakes with all kinds of different fig leaves.

TODAY’S SECOND READING IS ABOUT CHOOSING

Today’s second reading from Romans continues the conversation.

Because of Adam – and Eve - and Moses and all people -  sin entered our world – and continues in our world.

Today’s second  reading from Paul to the Romans tells us that pattern is still around.  Sin brings death

Today’s second reading from Paul to the Romans  also tells us about the new Adam – Jesus Christ – who by his death on the tree – the cross – the new tree in the middle of our lives – the tree that Bad Friday showed us the naked Christ – the naked us when we sin – when we blame others – when we scream out – Crucify him!

Today’s second reading from Paul talks about grace – acquittal – new life – and we have learned  from this new Adam – this new us – to come to this tree – in this garden – and hear Jesus at every Mass moment – of togetherness with each other – to take and eat of this new fruit and food – the body and blood of Christ and discover hint of resurrection – new life.

We can choose to make that Bad Friday – Good Friday.

TODAY’S GOSPEL IS ALL ABOUT CHOOSING

Today’s gospel is all about choosing.

The devil  - still around – still whispering – whispers 3 big temptations into Christ – the New Adam’s ear.

They are there in today’s gospel   every year as we begin Lent.  Matthew, Mark and Luke – give us their shadings of the story.

Like the Adam and Eve story – we listen and compare them with similar stories and moments in our life.

Knowing the naked self – we know we have to work for our daily bread – for ourselves and each other. Knowing the naked me – we know we have to be the servant of all – and life is not to be served – but to serve each other – to feed and wash each other’s feet. Knowing the naked self – we know that the world in all its magnificence is for all – not just me – and if we open our eyes we will see that’s the way God made it – and gives the world to us each day – it’s  like coming up the aisle and being handed communion – we receive the wheat from the fields and the grapes from our vines.

CONCLUSION

The theme for this year’s retreat was: Choosing to Live in Peace.

Christ is and Christ teaches and Christ calls us into these great messages and realities – called Peace.

Hopefully we all Choose to Live in that Peace – and we go home and go through the walls – of the upper rooms – the minds of all those we know – and bring what Christ did – in every Easter moment: Shalom. Peace!

March  1,  2020




TWO  BLACK  PLASTIC  
GARBAGE BAGS

Two ripped - black plastic garbage bags -
with their guts spilth out onto the sidewalk,
as well as the street, lay there torn open
by the teeth and paws  of a hungry alley dog.

I figured this happened some time last night.
Well, to say the least that’s how both of them
felt this  morning  - as they left their house
silently and in separate cars.

I suppose the trash collectors will scoop up
the contents of the two bags - but will these
two ever take the time to sort out how they
got to be mean alley dogs in the night?

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

March  1,  2020

Thought  for   Today


“Do  you  remember that in classical  times when Cicero had finished speaking, the people said, ‘How well he spoke’" but when Demosthenes had finished speaking, they said,  ’Let us march.’”