Saturday, August 22, 2020

August 22, 2020


PATTERNS

When we have step back …. 
When we look long … 
sometimes, we’ll  see patterns.  

But when we’re just seeing 
the moment, when we’re 
just seeing one thread 
working its way into the fabric 
of our  life, it’s  not enough…. 

Yet, when we can’t sleep, 
when we’re on a  plane flight 
or a summer vacation,  or in 
a hurt, the patterns are there. 
Sometimes our life  makes sense. 

But if we don’t pause – we might  
have to wait till old age to discover  
there are patterns in the fabric of our life. 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020 
August   22,   2020



Thought  for Today

"Enter this door 
as  if  the floor 
within were gold; 
and every wall 
of jewels all 
of wealth untold; 

As if a choir 
in robes of fire 
were singing here; 
nor shout nor rush 
but hush … 
for God is here.” 



In the vestibule
of  many a church
in England.

Friday, August 21, 2020

August   21,   2020





VE  FOR  VICTORY


Victory for everyone. 
…..  ve, 
the last two letters  
of some very important words:  
give, serve, save, live, love;  
the ending 
of some very important actions:  
to give, 
to serve, 
to save, 
to live, 
to love, 
and then when we do them 
we experience 
victory for everyone.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

August   21,  2020


Thought  for  Today

“The  first  blow  is  half  the battle.” 

 Oliver Goldsmith

Thursday, August 20, 2020

August  20,   2020


ST.   BERNARD  
IS A VERY INTERESTING CHARACTER  TO  KNOW  A  FEW THINGS ABOUT 


The title of my thoughts  and reflections is this:  "St. Bernard Is a Very Interesting Character to Know A Few Things About.”

So here are about a dozen comments about St. Bernard.

He wrote thousands of letters  - with  a little help from secretaries.

He was born in what later on will be France. His dates are 1090-1153.

He had a bad stomach ulcer they think – for a good bit of his life.

He came from an elite family.

He was the third of seven children, six of whom were boys.

He joined the Abbey of  CĂ®teaux   in his early 20’s with 30 other young men.  In time a lot more young men joined because of him – the result being they needed room so they were moved around a bit and were told to begin new sites.  Eventually his father also joined – and his one sister became a nun after permission from her husband.

He had a brother who is listed as Blessed and as Saint – Gerard of Clairvaux – dates about 1120 - 1177.  He became abbot of Clairvaux. He was known as a strict disciplinarian. Then while making a visitation of the abbey at Igny, he was murdered by Hugh, a monk, whom Gerard had threatened with disciplinary punishment. 

Bernard was also known to be quite strict and quite caustic. In Butler's description of Bernard we read: "He was not afraid to expose wickedness and condemn stupidity in even the great and powerful - in cardinals, abbots, the members of the Curia - and meanness and narrow-mindedness in anyone. Though people often heeded his rebukes, some resented them."  (page 195)

He wrote lots of stuff – especially about Mary. He’s not made a doctor of the church till 1830. Pius XII described him as the last of the fathers of the church on the 800th anniversary of his death.

He became involved in church controversies – schisms, crusades, papal elections – 2 popes.

Cardinal Harmeric, on behalf of the pope, wrote Bernard a sharp letter of criticism. It said, "It is not fitting that noisy and troublesome frogs should come out of their marshes to trouble the Holy See and the cardinals."

Bernard answered that letter by noting that  he had assisted at the council,  because he had been dragged to it by force. 

Then Bernard added: “Now illustrious Harmeric  - if you so wished, who would have been more capable of freeing me from the necessity of assisting at the council than yourself? Forbid those noisy troublesome frogs to come out of their holes, to leave their marshes .... Then your friend will no longer be exposed to the accusations of pride and presumption.”

He got into a big time argument and theological fight with Peter Abelard.  Abelard was rational – Aristotelian – and logical.  There was name calling like “heretic” by Bernard. Abelard publicly challenged Bernard to a debate.  Bernard eventually said, “Yes” but before the debate he went to those who would be making the judgment to get their support against Peter Abelard. Abelard  left – saying, “It ain’t worth it.”

So that's just a few comments about Bernard. If I discover a well documented life of Bernard, I’ll read it. 

Thomas Cahill - in his book, Mysteries of the Middle Ages  - which I just happened to finish today  - tells us he gives a hasty caricature of Bernard. The one comment by Cahill that intrigues me is found in a footnote about Dante on page 305: "Similarly, he [Dante] places Bernard of Clairvaux in Heaven, whereas I would exclude him, despite his undoubted importance, on account of his insufferable self-righteousness.  Dante knew far less than we do about the life (as opposed to the pious writing) of Bernard.  Bernard had been canonized in 1174, almost a century before Dante was born; and Dante, despite his bad opinion of many popes, took with all seriousness the act of papal canonization. Dante's assignments to the afterlife are spot on whenever he actually knew someone (e.g. Boniface VIII) but less accurate for those he knew only by their medieval reputation."

I wouldn't put anyone in hell - a sure way of gaining a reputation as a softie.

August  20,  2020


RED  RUBY  EARINGS


Nobody really noticed her red earrings –
that she wore the same ones –
every Tuesday evening for 14 straight years.

Her husband had bought them that Tuesday
– plus a love card – and even had written
some fluffy love stuff in that anniversary card.

He was going to take her out for dinner after she
picked him up at the airport  on that Tuesday
evening to the place where he proposed years ago.

You know the rest of the story. 
The suitcases in the hold were 
the only things that survived the crash. 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

August  20,  2020

Thought  for  Today



“The man who lives for himself and for himself is apt to be corrupted by the company he keeps.”   

Charles H. Parkhurst

Wednesday, August 19, 2020

August  19,  2020




TORNADO  WARNING


Till 10:30 AM there was a tornado warning.
We were told by phone to head for cover.
We were told to go below – to get out of
harm’s way, so most of those in the building    
headed for safety – headed for  the basement.

On the way down to a safe place, I stopped.
I was now on the first floor. I could look out
the windows. I could stop and watch the ocean.
The waves were like teenagers at a teen dance.  
The water – the scenery - was sort of dark brown.

It’s now 11:30 AM – I’m back  on the second floor.
Once more I’m looking out the window – at the
ocean. The water is still dark – but  the air is
different. It’s white. It’s bright. It’s light. It’s
definitely a different day now.  Different ….



 © Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


August  19,  2020



Thought  for  Today

“In  prayer it is better to have a heart without words  than words without heart.”

John  Bunyan

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

August 18,  2020





ABSTRACT   PAINTINGS

I walked into a big room in an art museum.
I had seen a notice about this special exhibit.
It was filled with his paintings – all abstracts.
As I was looking at his paintings – I could
hear different comments – from different
couples – usually by the male – and she
would agree. “I could be rich!” Translation:
“I could do this.” I looked at each canvas –
not getting the titles or the meanings. Then
I walked into the next room – portraits, pears,
fields, weather – and I said to myself,
“Now these are paintings.”  Wow, was I
surprised. They were by the same artist
in the room I had just left. Translation:
“I am poor. There are things I can’t do.”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

August  18,  2020



Thought  for Today

“Once  a  word is let out, a swift horse can’t overtake it.”

Tzu Kung, an even older
 quote and aphorism.


MEANING

The title of my homily – a short one – is meaning.

Meaning – understanding – figuring things out is one  of life’s biggest issues.

How many times do we ask, “What did she or he, mean by that?”

Today’s first reading - for this 20th Monday in Ordinary time -  has people asking Ezekiel, “Won't you tell us what all these things you are doing mean for us." [Cf. Ezechiel  24: 15-23]

Every time we preachers have to preach a homily, we read the scriptures for the day and we try to figure out their meaning.

If there is any book in the Bible where this question comes up the most, it’s the Book of the Prophet Ezekiel.

Down through the years I’ve heard commentators on Ezekiel say he was deaf and did his preaching with short skits or plays – to get a message across.

If we read the gospels, we meet people asking the question over and over again, “What does this mean?”

At some time in life it’s worth reading Viktor Frankl’s book, Man’s Search for Meaning [1946].

Here is a section of his book.  Understand this moment in a concentration camp, and then re-read the Prophet Ezechiel again.   Both men lost their wives.  I'm putting his long paragraph in poetic form to catch its power and beauty even more:

We were at work in a trench.
  
The dawn was grey around us; 
grey was the sky above; 
grey the snow in the pale light of dawn; 
grey the rags in which my fellow prisoners were clad, and grey their faces.

I was again conversing silently with my wife,  
or perhaps I was struggling to find the reason 
for my sufferings, my slow dying.

In a last violent protest
against the hopelessness of imminent death, 
I sensed my spirit piercing 
through the enveloping gloom. 
I felt it transcend that hopeless, 
meaningless world, 
and from somewhere I heard a victorious 'Yes' 
in answer to my question of the existence 
of an ultimate purpose.

At that moment 
a light was lit in a distant farmhouse, 
which stood on the horizon as if painted there, 
in the midst of the miserable grey 
of a dawning morning in Bavaria.

"Et lux in tenebris lucet" - 
and the light shineth in the darkness.

For hours I stood hacking at the icy ground. 

The guard passed by, insulting me, 
and once again I communed with my beloved.

More and more 
I felt that she was present, 
that she was with me;  
I had the feeling that I was able to touch her, 
able to stretch out my hand and grasp hers.  
The feeling was very strong:  she was there.

Then, at that very moment, 
a bird flew down silently 
and perched just in front of me, 
on a heap of soil 
which I had dug up from the ditch, 
and looked steadily at me."

Let me close with a jumping off from Descartes famous principle and change it to:  "I search for meaning, therefore I am."


Monday, August 17, 2020

August 17, 2020


FORGOTTEN  PROMISES

Promises – forgotten -  are worse 
than a lost sock or glove or where 
did I leave my glasses or my wallet? 

I told you I’d be there by 4 PM and 
you’re waiting there in the mall for me 
and it’s 6 PM and I’m taking a nap. 

Not good …. And I don’t know that 
you made a decision around 5 PM 
to end this relationship and I’ll play 

the “But you promised” card for the 
next year – and I won’t know why 
you’re doing what you’re doing. 


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

August  17,  2020


Thought  for  Today 

“A  four-horse  chariot cannot overtake the spoken word.”


Tzu  Kung,  an  aphorism 
quoted  by  Confucius,  
c. 500  BC 

Sunday, August 16, 2020





400,000   HITS


Today, Sunday August  16,  2020 my blog had its 400,000  hit. 

I want to just tag that piece of information for myself.

I started this blog  back on June 17,  2007.

On the 10th Anniversary, June 17th, 2017 there were 226,545 hits and 4879 blog entries.

Today I’m up to 7618 entries.  Not all are mine. If you check out my blog – you know I like putting in a quote for the day – and they are from others.

Once more I want to thank Norm Constantine for setting up my blog for me.

I also want to thank those who have thanked me for providing some food for thought – from others and from myself.

All the best as you navigate this pandemic.  Wear a mask and may the Lord help you make it through the nite. Amen.



August  16,   2020



MOVIES  RE-RUNS

The power of some movies
is that they keep playing in
our mind and our memory.
When at the ocean – or when
we’re swimming trough life,
be careful, you never know
what Jaws could be underneath.
In life Rocky kept  running
and kept getting back up.
The Natural  figured out it’s
never too late. We still can be
the best there ever was - even
though we keep paying for the
mistakes we made in our past.
When we think life is not fair,
we can remember Doctor Zhivago.
He kept looking – kept hoping –
kept writing – especially his poetry.
Be careful what you wish for,
especially when you want to be Big.
Talk to people. Find out what are
the movies still playing  in their
memory? What are the movies
still playing on our inner screens 
movies that still moving us?











August 16, 2020





Thought  for  Today

 “Honesty  is  the first chapter of the book of wisdom.”