Friday, June 21, 2019

June 13, 2019


ONLOOKERS

Who are your onlookers -
those who are  watching you?

They have their list of
expectations for you.

Did you know that? They don’t tell you,
but they tell others behind your back.

Guess what?  You’re doing this as well.
You have expectations of others.

It’s called “Life”. It’s called, 
“Hope.” It’s called, “Community”.

However, when there are walls,
it's also called, "Loneliness."

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 13, 2019

Thought for today: 

“One  day I asked my father for find me a master who could guide me in my studies of Kabbalah.  ‘You are too young for that.  Maimomides tells us that one must be thirsty before venturing into the world of mysticism, a world fraught with peril.  First you must study the basic studies, those you are able to comprehend."  



Elie Wiesel, 
page 4 in Night.
June 12, 2019

PRESENTATION 


As Shakespeare put it, 
“All the world’s a stage ….” 
And there we are every day 
presenting ourselves - with 
our entrances and our exits - 
with our gifts and our talents, 
with our presentations to each other. 
But as Walt Whitman put it, 
“To have great poets, there 
must be great audiences too.” 
May we be just that each day: 
great audiences - clapping 
and present for each other. 


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 12, 2019


Thought for today: 


“Dust is a protective covering for fine furniture.”  


Mario Butta, quoted by John Taylor, 
“Fringe Lunatic,” Manhattan Inc. 
July 1986

June 11, 2019


EVOLUTION

There are still people who
don’t believe in evolution.

“Hello!”

They miss seeing people
learning to play the piano.

“Hello!”

They miss people learning
to change their opinions.

“Hello!”

They fail to see how having
children change their parents.

“Hello!”

They miss God at every Holy Water
font and every swimming pool.

“Hello!”

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 11, 2019

Thought for today: 


“A  committee  is a group that keeps  minutes and loses hours.”



 Milton Berle, 

News Summaries, 
July 1, 1954
June 10, 2019



FAITH  CALLS  
FOR  MOTION

Faith calls for motion, movement,
not just mouth and words.  It calls
for steps towards the hurting brother
or sister, child or nursing home folks.
It calls for study and then going down
into the river and coming up from the
depths a new creation - a beloved
daughter and son of God - and
treating everyone else the same way.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 10, 2019


Thought for today: 


“Having served on various committees, I have drawn up a list of rules.  Never arrive on time; this stamps you as a beginner.  Don’t say anything until the meeting is half over; this stamps you as being wise.  Be as vague as possible; this avoids irritating the others. When in doubt, suggest that a subcommittee be appointed;   this will make you popular; it’s what everyone is waiting for.”  


Harry Chapman, 
Greater Kansas City 
Medical Bulletin, 1963

June 9, 2019

CANDLE  GOING  OUT 

When does someone, anyone,
get what a candle going out means?

Watch little kids around a birthday
cake when the candles are blown out.

One kid stops and stares at the smoke
rising towards the ceiling and forever.

The others just see the cake  
and wish it was their birthday.

The one who wonders about the smoke is
the one who wonders about mystery forever.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 9, 2019


Thought for today: 


“A fanatic is one who can’t change his mind and won’t change the subject.”  


Winston Churchill, 
News Summaries, July 5, 1954

June 8, 2019


SABBATICAL

Without realizing it,
I was given a Sabbatical
in my 79th year of life.
I got sick.
I felt fragility with my triple by-pass.
I realized there are time limits.
In the Washington Hospital Center
I asked myself in the middle of the night,
“Is this it or will I have more time?”
I didn’t know.
The side effects of the anesthesia
and oxycodone unhinged my reality.
Time - and  I hope recovery
will give me answers.
I had the all already -
but why not more?   Why not?


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


June 8, 2019

Thought for today: 


“When  she  started to play,  Steinway came down personally and rubbed his  name off the piano.”  



Bob Hope, 
on comedian Phyllis  Diller,  
WNEW TV,  May 7, 1985
June 7, 2019



GRACE

There are nights - darkness - death -
and there are mornings - light - grace -
and the consequences of our decisions.

There better be a God. There better
be grace. There better be justice in
the long run - because sometimes ….
  

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 7, 2019

Thought for today: 


“I have treated  many hundreds of patients …. Among [those] in the second half of life - that is to say, over 35 - there has not been one whose problem in the last resort was not that  of finding a religious outlook on life.”  


Carl Jung, Time
February 14, 1955
June 6, 2019



THE  FIRST SCHOOL HOUSE

The first school house is the home
we’re brought up in - where we learn
love and language, laughter and how
to butter our bread - sweep the floor -
mirror our parents smiles - dance, sing,
pray and play cards - all those life
learnings before we go to school.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 6, 2019



Thought for today: 

“The motto was ‘Pax,’ but the word was set in a circle of thorns.”  


Rumer Godden, 
on a Benedictine motto, 
In This House of Brede
Viking 1969

June 5, 2019

THE GOLDEN CUP


God handed me the Golden Cup -
to take a taste of God’s Precious Blood.
I did - as well as a piece of the
Sacred  Bread. I did - as I realized
God without pause accepts me as is.

Wait! Stop! Pause! I just realized
God wants to taste of my precious
blood and my sacred body - but I
cannot fathom why God would  want
to be in Sacred Communion with me.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019
Chalice on top commissioned by
Catherine the Great in St. Petersburg
in 1791, Designed by Iver Windfelt


June 5, 2019



Thought for today: 

“Knowing  your  own  darkness is the best method for dealing with the darkness of other  people.”  

Carl Jung, in a letter to a former student 
on reassessing religious values outlined 
to Sigmund Freud a half century later, 
quoted in Gerhard Adler, 
editor of Letters, Vol I, Princeton 1973

June 4, 2019


HE  DECIDED 

He decided on dropping church -
out of his life. How long was this
decision  on his mind - in his heart? 
Being a priest, should I have asked?
I didn’t - but  he did say he was fed up
with his parish priest blasting gays and
getting into politics from the pulpit.

I sense  this dropping out is on the
increase. It adds to the pressure on a priest
to be light and salt - example and inspiration -
hope and challenge - Christ and Church -
to the many. It  makes me want to scream,
“What are you  doing to make people want
to be here? What’s your example like?”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 4, 2019



Thought for today: 

“Being with an  insanely  jealous person is like being in the room with a dead mammoth.” 



Mike Nichols, 
New York Times, 
May 27, 1984


June 3, 2019

TRANSLATION



We didn’t know it, but we have
the ability to translate from
any language - just by watching,
just by listening - just by working
on figuring out what people are
feeling, singing, saying. to each other.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 3, 2019


Thought for today: 

“A  lie  can travel half way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoe.”



Mark Twain

Sunday, May 19, 2019

June 2. 2019 - 7th Sunday after Easter C


FAMOUS LAST WORDS

 OPENING QUESTION

I would like to begin with a question and then ask for a few moments of quiet—a pause—to reflect on the question: “If you could choose your dying words—the last words of your life—what would they be?”

(PAUSE FOR A FEW MOMENTS OF QUIET)

Now, obviously, most of us will not have that choice. As the Dutch proverb puts it, “Death does not blow a trumpet.” Most of us will not know when or where or how we will die.

So let’s put the question this way: “Right now, what would you like your last words to be?”

(PAUSE FOR A FEW MOMENTS OF QUIET)

OPENING IMAGE

A man was a hopeless alcoholic for most of his life. He abused his wife. He was a menace to his children. Then there was the separation and the divorce. As a father, he was a disaster and a failure.

The family lost track of him as they grew up, married, and moved to various parts of the country. However, one of his daughters, almost by accident, found out he was dying in a nearby hospital.

And she was blessed to be by his bedside before he died. A short time before he sank into final unconsciousness and death, his final words were: “I’m sorry. I really made a mess of my life, didn’t I? You kids and your mom had every right in the world to be angry with me. I’m sorry. I apologize. Please forgive me.”

Those were the last words he spoke. For months after his death, his daughter thought about his dying words. Slowly she was able to forgive him for what he had done to her, mom and the other kids. Not only was she able to forgive him, but she was also able in time to be healed of many of the hurts that were still inside of her because of him.

And in time she was also able to share with her brothers and sisters that final scene of his death and his last words and how she learned to forgive him and the inner healing that resulted.

HOMILETIC REFLECTIONS

In today’s Gospel from John 17: 20-26], we have a scene from the Last Supper — FAMOUS LAST WORDS—of Jesus the night before he died.

He prayed a powerful prayer to his Father for unity, that all might be one.

Isn’t that the prayer of so many parents for their families, that there be family unity, especially after they die?

Jesus prays for his disciples, but also for the whole world, for all families, for all communities, that all may be one.

Recently in class, a group of 8th Graders were sharing their dreams. A 12 year old girl said that she would like to go to Russia. “Why?” And she answered her teacher’s question, “They can’t be all that bad. They’re people. There must be some way we can get this world together.”

Now isn’t this dream of a 12 year old girl at the beginning of her life, the same hope and dream of Jesus at the end of his life—just before he died?

“That all may be one—as we are one!”

And from the cross the next afternoon after his Last Supper, Jesus gave us a formula for unity. It’s a “HOW TO”—a how to bring about unity and peace. And it’s one of Jesus’ traditional Seven Last Words from the Cross before he died: “Father, forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing.”

Obviously, we all should know what we are doing, but so many times we don’t.

“Father, forgive us for we don’t know what we are doing.”

PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS

Now, these famous last words of Jesus from the cross can bring about the peace and unity he prayed for at his Last Supper.

“Father, forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing.”

Isn’t that the formula that the alcoholic father I mentioned earlier was asking his daughter to accept as he was dying? He wanted his daughter to forgive him because it wasn’t till the very end of his life that he realized what he had done. And eventually she forgave him. It took time. It took prayer and reflection on his dying words, but she reached the point where she could let go of the many hurts he had inflicted. And the result was inner peace and unity within herself and with her dad—even though he was dead.

Now most people would say, “It’s too hard. It’s too difficult to forgive. I just can’t forgive him.” “I just can’t forgive him or her after all he or she did to me.” “I could never say, `Father, forgive him for what he did to me.” And don’t they add, “He knew very well what he was doing to me.”

And the result is: we stay where we are. We remain in a pit of anger—a hole of hurt. But do we realize we are actually hurting ourselves by not forgiving others? Most of us don’t know that’s what we are doing. “Father, forgive us for we don’t know what we are doing.”

And isn’t that the reason why Jesus taught us to forgive. Trying to get back at another boomerangs back at ourselves. Why continue the vicious circles of hurt and mistakes in our life? We are the ones who can stop problems by starting to forgive—by starting with ourselves and not by sitting around sulking because other people are not changing and saying they are sorry.

“Father, forgive me, I don’t know what I am doing.”

“Father, teach me to know what I am doing: forgiving.”

“Father, forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing.”

“Father, teach them to know what they are doing: hurting others.”

So the first step is to start with ourselves. We have to become more aware of what we are doing. We need to step back and realize we excuse ourselves all the time for not knowing what we are doing. And if we forgive ourselves with the excuse: “I wasn’t thinking,” or “I didn’t know what I was doing,” why can’t we do that to others?

Forgiveness then is a key ingredient in being a Christian. In fact, along with love, it’s one of the two major signs of being a Christian. As the old song went, “Yes, they will know we are Christians by our love, by our love. Yes, they will know we are Christians by our love.” Now let us add: “Yes they will know we are Christians by our forgiving, by our forgiving. Yes, they will know we are Christians by our forgiving, by our forgiving.”

In today’s first reading, we see the story of someone who followed Jesus’ advice and uttered almost the same last words of Jesus. As he was being killed, Stephen said these last words before he died: “Lord, don’t hold this sin against them.”

Wouldn’t we all love those last words of Stephen or the last words of Jesus to be our last words? There would be lots of healing for years to come after our death because of them.

But as I said in the beginning, we don’t know what our last words will be. And why wait till our end to speak words of forgiveness, unity and peace? Make Stephen’s last words, make Jesus’ last words, your words right now.

And we don’t have to go to Russia to find people we are not united to. There are people all around us—right now—in our midst whom we can forgive. There are members of our family whom we still hold hurts and resentments against. Why wait till our death bed? Why not make future moments in hospitals and funeral homes easier now, by words of forgiveness now?

And don’t we all still inwardly say, “All this is beautiful; forgiveness is wonderful, but it’s too difficult?”

And behind that objection stands one person: myself alone.

We forget that being a Christian means that we don’t have to go it all alone. We have community. We have others. We can reach out for help, for advice, for counseling, for prayer, to learn how to forgive. And C. S. Lewis would add that we don’t have to start learning how to forgive with the big stuff. Start with the little stuff.

And today’s second reading [Revelation 22: 12-14, 16-17, 20] challenges us to reach out to Jesus for help. Pray the prayer which is the famous last words that end the New Testament, “Amen! Come, Lord Jesus.”

Jesus is the Alpha and the Omega of forgiveness, the first and the last to forgive, the Root and the Offspring of forgiveness, the Morning Star of forgiveness. If you find it impossible to forgive someone who hurt you, if you find it impossible to pray the words of Jesus, “Father, forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing”, if you find it impossible to say the words of Stephen, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them”, have you reached out to Jesus in prayer and asked him to teach you how to forgive, “Amen! Come, Lord Jesus!”

June 2, 2019


A  RIVER  RUNS  THROUGH  IT

Next time you are near a river
take the time to stick your hand
into  the water and feel the flow,
feel the history, feel the mystery,
of that river - big or small - feel
the implications of time and the
river, time and all the upstream
and downstream of that river.

In my life, I’ve been blessed to
live on the banks and near the
edge of a lot of water and each
has had an impact on my life:
the Narrows near Brooklyn, Lake Erie,
the Patapsco, the Hudson, the East River,
Tobyhanna - the stream, Spa Creek,
Lake Oconomowoc, and the Atlantic.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


June 2,  2019

Thought for today: 

“Education  is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten.”  

B. F. Skinner,  
Education in 1984, 
New Scientist
May 21, 1964
June 1st, 2019

FOREVER

What would happen to us,
if it hit us that we are going
to exist forever?  FOREVER …?

That we can’t suicide ourselves
out of existence ….  that we will
die - but we’re going to exist forever.

I sense we avoid facing that thought -
that question - because it has powerful
earthquake - eternal - consequences.

When I die - will the me I am - exist
somehow, someway, somewhere -
forever - FOREVER -  FOREVER?

If the answer is, “Yes!” then we ought
to sense we better be doing something
about that  - now - before the FOREVER.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

June 1st, 2019



Thought for today: 

“People ought to listen more slowly!” 



Jean Sparks Ducey, Librarian, 
“On confused requests such as, 
‘Do you have the wrath of grapes’ 
and ‘I want a book about 
the Abdominal Snowman,’” 
in Christian Science Monitor
December 9, 1986

May  31, 2019


HANDS  REACHING  OUT  

I see hands reaching out ….
The old man for the nurse ….
The child from her carriage ….
The husband for his wife
as they walk into church
for a friend’s funeral ….
Couples hearing the song
Sweet Caroline at the
ball game: “hands, touching
hands, reaching out,
touching me, touching you ….”
  
© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019



May    31, 2019

Thought for today: 

“I’ve noticed that everybody that is for abortion has already been born.”  

Ronald Reagan, 
as presidential candidate, 
quoted in the New York Times
Sept 22, 1980


May 30, 2019


MOMENTS

Pick another moment,
there are many, when
you’re having a bad one.

Pick the moment you
came down the aisle
for marriage or graduation.

Pick the moment you won
a spelling bee - or you made
your first chocolate layer cake.

Pick the day you got off a joke
that got a great laugh and you
were also surprised - so clever.

Pick the surprises - the sunrises -
not the storms or the sins or
the dumb moves or the hurts.

Pick the Easter Sunday mornings -
pick the Christmas Midnight Masses -
pick the moments God sang Halleluja.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

May    30, 2019


Thought for today: 

“I wanted to be a doctor that I might be able to work without having to talk because for years I had been giving myself out in words.” 


Doctor Albert Schweitzer, 
Recalled on his death, 
September 4, 1965


May 29, 2019

ECHOES


A piano going “Blink, blink, blink” -
a cold silver butter knife like
blinking sound going  through  
open autumn afternoon windows ….
A bowling ball rolling down
a well waked wooden floor, but it
only hits 9 pins - leaving one standing ….
A car horn beeps, “Beep! Beep! Beep!”
It’s from the  angry driver
in the car right behind my car ….
I’m too slow for her - I guess ….
As I’m aging I’m hearing
more and more echoes of
anger and anxiety ….
I guess I’m getting too slow
for too, too many people.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

May    29, 2019 -


Thought for today:  


“You know more than you think you do.”  


Doctor Benjamin Spock, 
First sentence of Baby and Child Care, 
Quoted in Ladies Home Journal, March 1960


May 28, 2019

SAME SEAT, DIFFERENT TIMES

Park benches, porch swings,
couches, waiting room chairs,
seats on buses, trains, planes,
10,000 people have sat in
these same seats - without
taking the time to sit back
and talk about what we have in common.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

May    28, 2019 -

Thought for today: 


“One goes through school, college, medical school and one’s internship learning little or nothing about goodness but a good deal about success.”


Ashley Montagu, 
Northwestern University
 Allumni News, Summer 1973


May 27, 2019


RETURNS

Standing there - fifth on line -
at the RETURNS counter
at the Department Store ….
The person - up front -
first for the moment
was yelling - yelling.
Slow …. Slow …. Slow ….
The second person,
then the third and the fourth
with gifts, gloves, skirts,
boxes, boxes, boxes,
started to yell, “Manager!”
“Get a second person
here. Hurry up! It’s all too slow.”
I turned around and walked
out of the store and donated 
a neat blue blazer  - with
sleaves too short for me -
to a begger just outside
the door of the store.
But he yelled at me -
but it was a nice yell:
“Hey! Thanks! Nice!”
And I turned and gave
him a return,
“You’re welcome.”

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

May    27, 2019


Thought for today: 


“Each of us carries within himself a collection of instant insults.”  


Doctor Haim Ginott, 
Between Parent and 
Teenager, Macmillan, 1969