Saturday, November 7, 2020

 November 7,  2020



INNER   ROOM

 
The door to my inner room –
doesn’t need WD-40. I sneak
in there every day – especially
when things get boring and
conversations aren’t happening.
 
Then one day I discovered
God was doing the same thing.
God  was sitting there waiting for
me – unless I had become boring
and conversations weren’t happening.

 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

Check Matthew 6:6


November 7, 2020



 ðŸ˜ŠðŸ˜ŠThought for Today

 “There is always some madness in love.  But there is also always some reason in madness.”  

 

Friedrich Nietzsche

Friday, November 6, 2020

November 6, 2020

 


BROKEN

 

What was my first broken?
 
Was it when a head came off one of my toy soldiers
or when my shoelace broke as my dad tied my shoes?
 
Was it when my juice cup fell off the table and
hit the kitchen floor with an “Uh oh! Oh no!”
 
Was it when Jimmy Hennessy’s died in the fourth
grade – and I didn't know what was happening.
 
I saw people crying – and silence was the only
feeling in the clumps of people who filled the room.
 
When was my first broken?
 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

November 6, 2020


 

Thought for Today

 

“Writing comes more easily if you have something to say.” 

 

Sholem Asch,

New York Herald Tribune,

November 6, 1955

Thursday, November 5, 2020

 November  5,  2020



NOVEMBER  CROSSES

 
Slouching through the woods
on a  dark November day - 
hearing a Simon and Garfunkle
song in my soul - seeing empty trees,
feeling cold quiet - hearing the sound
and the shuffle of dead leaves 
on the hard ground beneath my feet. 
I have lost too many friends, Lord,
and too many family members –
as I walked under so many empty
crosses in these cold November woods.

 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020



November 5, 2020




Thought for Today

 

“The fault is in us.”

 

Hanna Arendt

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

November  4, 2020



CHARLES  BORROMEO:

INTERESTING BULLET  POINTS

 

 
[Instead of a homily – for today’s feast of St. Charles Borromeo, I spent my time reading up on the life of Charles or Carlo Borromeo – and came up with some interesting things about his life.  Here are some short bullet points.]
 
He lived 46 years of life. I don’t know how average that was back in his dates -  1538 to  1584.
 
Charles Borromeo came from a name family and from money. His  father was the Count of Arona. The family had a castle on Lake Maggiore near Milan.  His mother was from the House of Medici.
 
Charles was the third of six kids – two boys and four girls.
 
His mother – Margherita -  died when Charles was 9.  His father – Gilberto died when Charles was around 16.
 
He had to grow up fast.
 
At the age of 12 he dedicated himself to the church – connecting himself to  a Benedictine Abbey.  He got a good education – going to the University of Pavia.
 
He had a speech impediment all his life.  I don’t know if this was a stammer or a stutter.  First impressions were that he was slow – but as life went on people discovered he had a first rate mind and gave concise clear comments.  
 
He was put in charge of the household  - but continued his studies – getting a doctorate in both civil and canon law.
 
Like his dad he became a count.
 
On Christmas Day, 1559 -  his uncle – Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Medici - became  Pope Pius IV. Charles  was invited to Rome to work with the Pope – who made him a cardinal deacon then a Cardinal – and a full time adviser to the pope – a month later.  He was not a priest yet.
 
There he was – age 23 -  doing all kinds of administration work for his uncle the Pope. He worked with the Knights of Malta, the Franciscans, the Carmelites. He was administering the governing of the Vatican.
 
When his brother died – people figured he might take over running the family and care for its interests – possibly marry. Nope, he handed over the family to an uncle.
 
When he was made administrator of the church in Milan, he decided to become a priest in 1536. He was also named archbishop  of Milan – and his term  was from 1564- 1584 – then Cardinal.
 
His hand and his mind and his skills were used in lots of different church matters – not only in Italy, but in other parts of Europe.
 
He also played a major role in the Counter-Reformation against the Protestants – founding seminaries and pushed for great education of priests as well as getting them to clean up their act.
 
1576 – a famine hit Milan – and then a plague and he worked big time to help the folks in this endemic.  He was in on feeding 60,000 to 70,000 people a day.
 
He was shot at once, but the assassin missed.
 
At  46 he caught a fever – asked for the last sacraments – and died on November 3rd, 1584.
 
He was canonized in 1610.
 


 November  4,  2020



WANDERING AND WONDERING

 

God, I think I know,
what you do all day:
you walk around and you watch!


You wander and you wonder.


You stop to watch the faces
of new born mothers and fathers
with their first child – that first week
they got them – laughing and loving
the new adventure of parenting.


You watch kids on ferry rides –
or trying their new bike – or playing
their first game of cards with the adults –
or sipping some beer – or taking pictures
with cell phones like the adults do. 

Life is filled with so much 
wandering and wondering.


 © Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


November 4, 2020

 


Thought for Today

 

“Wink at small faults; for thou hast great ones.” 

 

Thomas  Fuller

 


Tuesday, November 3, 2020

November 3, 2020




THE  PENDULUM
 
The pendulum
was slow and heavy,
a dark brooding rusting orange iron weight
in an oversized tie.
 
It had pushed too far.
 
Today, November 3rd, 2020,
a nation voted to stop the pushing.
 
He had gone too far.
 
Today it will start to fall
the other way. Our nation
will breathe a sigh of relief
by midnight – let’s hope.

And truth will come crashing
into our relationships with one another
on just what happened.

And please God, agita and anxiety
will leave our bodies and our souls –
at least for a needed rest and meanwhile.

 
© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020





November 3, 2020

 

Thought for Today

 

“What is life? It is the flash of a firefly in the night.  It is the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime.  It is as the little shadow that runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.”

 

Truman Capote,  
In Cold Blood,  1965

Monday, November 2, 2020

 November 2,  2020

ALL  SOULS  DAY

 

Today we remember all those who have
gone before us – saints and sinners – all souls.
 
Today we remember our mom and dad and
all family members who have gone before us.
 
Today we remember all those who have nobody
left to remember them – nobody left to pray for them.
 
Today we remember all those people who died
horrible deaths in war and gas chambers – in violence.
 
Today we remember babies who never got to be born
and old people who never had people to visit them.
 
Today we remember all those we hope to meet
and greet when get to the heavenly Kingdom, please God.
 

 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

 


 November 2, 2020

 


Orson Wells by Gore Vidal

Thought for Today

 

 “Gluttony is not a secret vice.”

 

Orson Wells


Sunday, November 1, 2020

November 1, 2020

 


Thought for Today

 

“Others are not against you; they’re merely for themselves…”

 

Jan Christian Smuts

 

 

  _____________________________________________

 


November  1,  2020


 


ALL   SAINTS  DAY

 
“You’re a saint!”
 
How many times have we said that
to those who came to our rescue?
 
“You’re a saint!”

How many times have we thought that
of those who bring barrels of sweetness?
 
“You’re a saint!”
 
How many times have we felt that
about a neighbor who is always so giving?
 
“You’re a saint!”
 
How many times have we experienced that
of another who is always so forgiving?
 
“You’re a saint!”
 
How many times have we know that of
a family member who is always good news?
 
“You’re a saint!”

 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

 

 


LISTENING  SESSIONS

 
 INTRODUCTION
 
The title of my homily for this feast of Saints Simon and Jude v- October 28 -   is, “Listening Sessions.”
 
PROVINCE CONVOCATION ON LINE
 
Last week our province listened on Webinar – sort of like a Group Zoom – but different than that. We listened  to different people on two main issues that we as province needed to hear more about:  Opioids and Young Adult Ministry.
 
They were two themes chosen before the Corona Virus.
 
Speakers were in New York City, San Diego, Toronto, the Islands – etc.
 
Patrick Rivera  head of Young Adult Ministry in San Diego said a bunch of things – but one thing  jumped out at me.  It  was this: when Bishop Robert McElroy became bishop of San Diego he went to the 100 parishes of the diocese for listening sessions. I heard that comment.
 
Now I don’t know what the process was like – how information was gathered – what kind of atmosphere was set up – what’s the best way to do this – how to  evaluate what was being said – paper forms, priority gathering, etc. follow up, etc. etc. etc. Who ran the sessions etc.?
 
Just doing that – great. I also wondered if that idea was pushed and promoted at the National Bishops conference, etc. for the whole United States, etc.
 
Wouldn’t that be wonderful if bishops listened to each other – to other bishops – to parents – to kids – to parishes – to immigrants – to gays – the folks in the military – teachers – to politicians – to everyone …
 
Listening sessions – listening to each other – smart and wonderful idea.
 
ADMIRAL MIKE MULLEN
 
In my last assignment – St. Mary’s Annapolis -  Admiral Mike Mullen – a  former chair of the joint chiefs of military staffs - gave the commencement address at  our high school graduation.
 
One of things he said to our h.s. kids was to listen and learn and be willing to change. For example: he asked folks to evaluate how he was doing as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
 
Someone watched for a while and said, “Have you looked at your staff. It’s all white men.”
 
Optics – very important idea.
 
Earics – a new word I just made up – what are the sounds we’re making – what are the words we’re saying?
 
He heard that. A year later it was something like 3 women, 3 people of color, etc. etc. etc.
 
TODAY’S READINGS FOR THIS FEAST OF ST’S SIMON AND JUDE
 
I thought of those two things when I read today’s readings.
 
Today’s first reading from  Ephesians 2: 19-22 -  describes us as no longer sojourners and strangers – but fellow citizens of the household of God.
 
We are temple sacred to the Lord – with Christ as our capstone – being built together into a dwelling place of God in the Spirit.
 
Temple: that’s one of the four  basic metaphors of church in Lumen Gentium  – temple, field, flock and body -  all of which – show diversity and the need for unity.
 
Today’s gospel  - Luke 6: 12-16 - gives the list of the twelve disciples chosen to be apostles.
 
We don’t know enough about the different apostles – but we hear in the gospels that Jesus listened to them, picked them, asked questions and discovered their differences. He picked different. He picked strong characters.
 
In reading about Simon and Jude I noticed in a few commentaries that both are described as zealots according.
 
We find them in every parish and every group: intense, non-nonsense, pushy people.
 
Notice my prejudice against this type.
 
In Zeffirelli’s movie, Jesus of Nazareth, some Roman soldiers came riding into a village – and grab bread . Two guys – who were zealots  - pulled out their swords - and someone said, “Put away your swords for now." I’d assume today they would be those we see with guns on the outskirts of the crowd in the Black Lives Matter marching or this or that.
 
CONCLUSION
 
The title of my homily is, “Listening Sessions.”
 
It hit me that every group needs to listen to all the members of the  group.
 
And every group – if we listen to each other – will begin to hear the differences in t
he group.

___________________________________________

Paintings on top: Simon on left 
by Juseppe de Ribera
 and Jude Thaddeus on right  
by Georges de La Tour