Tuesday, October 13, 2009


UNEXPECTED WORDS


It’s these unplanned unexpected conversations
that bring a relationship, a family,
a parish, a friendship together,
like last Sunday when you and I
just happened to come out of church at the same time.
We just began to talk, standing there by our cars.
Or like that shopping trip last Saturday.
We didn’t decide to go together, but we did,
and we spoke the kind of words
that glue people together – hearing what the other feels.
As they say, “Thank God the electricity went out!
We really hadn’t talked to each other in years.
Yes, we need the meetings and the meals,
but it’s these unexpected moments at doorways
or when things fail, that we open up the doors.



© Andy Costello, Reflections, 2009







INSIDE JOB

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Inside Job.”

TODAY’S GOSPEL

In today’s gospel from Luke [11:37-41], Jesus is telling us once more to be careful of not becoming stuck outside the cup – concentrating on externals – and not taking care of inside business.

There is that temptation to avoid the hard work of inside growth: attitude growth, value growth, spiritual growth. It’s the stuff only we and God see – and sometimes that causes us an, “Uh oh! Oh no!”

There is that temptation to stay outside, because it’s often messy inside. So we avoid the mess by being superficial – which literally means, “staying on the surface”. Concentrate on the look – clothes – symbols of honor. Try to look good out there like the Pharisees – or concentrate on what others are doing wrong or not to our liking.

Christianity is an inside and outside job – but it starts within. Daily conversion begins as an inside job – in the heart – in the inner room.

Hey, as Jesus said, it’s much easier spotting other’s faults instead of dealing with our own. Gossip is easier than prayer. Gossip is easier than Gospel – being bearer of Good News.

I love the end of today’s gospel. In spite of what Jesus just said, he gives us a way out. Even if our life is a mess inside – put something in the poor box. Be generous. At least help the poor.

And there were a lot of people needing help here last night – for assistance from the St. Vincent de Paul Society. Thank you for your generosity.

ROMANS

And today’s first reading from Romans, [1:16-25], Romans which we started yesterday – the great letter which Augustine, Luther, and Barth, and so many other greats and littles, have been challenged by, urges us inside – inside God. Paul challenges us to see God’s invisible attributes in creation. Study, ponder, consider, God’s visible creative works of art that surround us – and see the power and divinity of God in them.

The next time you see a spider web, study it. Be amazed at the engineering, before you pull it down with a cleaning rag or mop.

The next time you see a baby’s fingers or toes, study them for a few moments – then tickle them.

The next time you have a ginger ale or soda, just look at the fizzy bubbles jumping up in the glass. From time to time I love to pour a can of soda into a glass and put the glass up to my chin and feel the ginger ale bubbles hitting my chin. Try it. You’ll like it.

Go to art museums or cathedrals or go to the aquarium in Baltimore and look at all those amazing creations.

Next time it rains, put your tongue out and taste some rain drops. Imagine a second grader telling her classmates, “My 84 year old grandma loves to lick rain drops out of the air.”

It’s October. Soon we’ll be seeing all those autumn leaves – with the October colors of fire red and orange orange and banana yellow and then the brown and tan colors of November leaves. Be ready to hear the sound of leaves on November sidewalks – running with the wind – moving with a shuffling sound up and down the red bricks of Annapolis.

Paul is saying visible creation shows us the power of the invisible God – inside everything. It’s an inside job. Spot God. Be amazed by God. Tell God, “Nice job – God – thank you for another beautiful day of life.”

CONCLUSION


So instead of spotting stuff we don’t like in others – like the Pharisee in today’s gospel, spot outside stuff and make it inside stuff. Reflect on the little things of everyday – as well as the vast canvas of the night sky. Let the little child in you start crying and laughing. Have the time of your life with God. God is a great baby sitter. [Cf. Mark 10: 13-16]

Start within. Life is both an inside job and an outside job.

We do a better outside job – if we do a better inside job.

Isn’t that why we come inside Church, inside God, inside prayer, inside the cup, each morning – so we can go out and do great outside jobs as well? Amen.


[This was my homily for this morning, the 28th Tuesday in ordinary time. The picture is of a big spider web in St. Mary's Prayer Garden - spotted by Pam our chef!]

Sunday, October 11, 2009


ITCH AND SCRATCH


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Itch and Scratch.”

Today’s gospel [Mark 10:17-30] has the word “lacking” in it – and as I reflected on that word and idea – and I looked it up Greek [hustereo] – and all that – to get a better grasp at what might be going on here, the word “itch” hit me. It might have been the sound of “ck” and “ch” in those words: “lack” and “itch”. Or I might have been itching my ear at the time. I don’t know.

But I began to think about “Itch and Scratch.” And this is not an ad for the Maryland Lottery – those buy and scratch cards,

A SHORT QUESTIONNAIRE – 5 QUESTIONS

1) How many times in a day is it normal for someone to feel an itch and scratch it?

2) Do we have more itching and scratching of our skin in the winter than in the summer?

3) Do we itch and scratch more when we’re nervous or in traffic jams?

4) Do we itch and scratch when we lie?

5) Has anyone done any research on itching and scratching?

THE SPORTING SCENE

I was watching the Dodger 2nd playoff game the other night – I’ve been a Dodger fan all my life – and I was watching Andre Ethier of the Dodgers biting some skin on his right thumb – up near the nail. They were losing and the game was almost over. His biting that tiny bit of skin was ongoing – and the person with the camera was focusing on the faces of the Dodger players leaning on the railing at the edge of dugout. I noticed players scratching their noses – their ears, their hair. I’ll stop there. So maybe the answer to my 3rd question is: “Yes, we itch and scratch more, when we’re nervous.”

INNER ITCH


How about inner itches? How about an itch in our soul? How about spiritual itches?

The man in today’s gospel ran up to Jesus, knelt down before him, and asked him, “Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”

What triggered this man to do this? Was it something Jesus said? Was he watching Jesus? Did he hear about Jesus? What caused the itch? Did Jesus’ scratch at the way to do life itch him?

WEDDINGS, BAPTISMS AND FUNERALS


My first two years as a priest was in a parish, Most Holy Redeemer, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York City. It was a fascinating experience. I was living and working in the East Village – 1967 - 1969 – right in the middle of the Hippie Revolution. Then I was changed to a retreat house in New Jersey and for the next 33 years I wasn’t a parish priest. I worked in two retreat houses, preached on the road – giving parish missions, priests’ retreats, nuns’ retreats, teaching, doing group work – all over the country. Then in August of 2002, I began this wonderful experience of being stationed here at St. Mary’s, Annapolis, just being a parish priest and not being a pastor and not having to worry about money or management. Couldn’t be better.

In general, the only weddings, funerals and baptisms before I got here were family ones. I discovered here at St. Mary’s an interesting phenomenon. The wedding is over, the funeral is over, the baptism is over, and someone afterwards comes over to me and says something about the Spirit – God – religion – that touched them. Something triggered an itch in them. Something scratched this person’s surface.

I think what happens is what happened to this man in today’s gospel. Something got itched during the wedding or funeral or baptism. They haven’t gone to church or synagogue or temple in the longest time – and something itches them. Their surface was scratched a bit during the service. To me it’s also exactly what today’s second reading is saying, “The word of God is living and effective, sharper than any two edged sword, penetrating even between soul and spirit, joints and marrow, and able to discern reflections and thoughts of the heart.” The sword of the word gets in there – into a person – underneath their outside and as a result they have a spiritual itch. [Hebrews 4:12-13]

I am very sure of this. It’s happened to me a lot here at St. Mary’s in the past 7 years.

And afterwards, I find myself also scratching the surface of their comments.

Of course, I want to know what triggered a movement of grace – an itch of God – a scratch of God – on the skin of that person’s mind or soul.

To me to wonder about this is scary. It makes me nervous. It borders on mystery – guessing – judging. It borders on the idolatry – saying this is how God works. And I know, I don’t know the mind of God.

I know from studying preaching and movies and reading novels and being on the stage a bit in the seminary, the key to good preaching, writing, drama, is not noticing the actor or the writing, but the listener is noticing his or her’s own heart and own story. As priest, my prayer is that nobody notices me or what I’m saying or doing, but they are noticing themselves – scratching themselves and their own heart and family and life.

I also know that I can get in the way. I know that some people want to hear personal stuff from the preacher at times and others go crazy when the preacher mentions his family. I am aware that some preaching institutes teach that a good way to unfold a sermon is to proceed with these three steps: telling the preacher’s story, the scripture story, and then the listener’s story. I know the 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 rule. One third like you, one third don’t like you, one third don’t care and don’t even notice you. My goal in preaching is that the only persons you notice are God and you.

I know that people want spirituality – want the personal – want a good story – want interesting – want challenge – want God when they come to church. I know that Greg Pierce, a writer out of Chicago, said that the Sunday sermon congregation spend most of their time – other than sleep – in two places: work and relationships – and too many sermons and much of spiritual writing don’t go there. (1)

Where do you itch for challenge – insight – a new take?

I pinch myself being stationed in Annapolis – with so many different people with so many different itches – and sometimes someone tells me about one of them – like after a wedding or a funeral or a baptism.

Amazing. Where do you itch?

THE MAN IN THE GOSPEL

The man in today’s gospel wanted more. This man came to Jesus with an itch for more – for something different in his life.

The man in today’s gospel has Mark saying this about him, “Jesus, looking at him, loved him and said to him, ‘You are lacking in one thing. Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me.”

With that look and with those words Jesus not only scratched the surface, but Jesus went inside this man – who was scratching his head about Jesus and life.

Jesus talked to the man and said to him, “You know the commandments” and the man said he knew and kept the commandments – since his youth.

Then Jesus really scratches the surface of this man and challenged him to let go of everything. At that his face fell. At that and he went away sad, for he had many possessions.

This man had stuff – but perhaps without knowing it – he had a lack – and Jesus itched it.

It seems he wanted Jesus to scratch his back after he scratched Jesus back by calling him, “Good teacher” – and by kneeling down before Jesus. You scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours.

Then Mark presents Jesus’ observations about possessions and stuff. Possessions can possess us. Stuff can stuff us. Our soul can become so bloated – that we can’t fit through the eye of the needle – and enter into the Kingdom of God.

THE KINGDOM OF GOD

The Kingdom of God – have you entered it yet? Have you scratched the surface of that one yet?

The Church is about the Kingdom – not vice versa. People get upset about the church all the time. Of course, the Church is people. There’s 1/3 characters in it we don’t like. The Church is not for itself. How many times do we churchy people have to hear this?

Hopefully, our itch is not for churchy stuff – but for kingdom stuff.

I spent 9 years in a job called “Novice Master” – preparing and screening young men who were figuring out whether they wanted to spend their lives – in the way Jesus talks about in today’s gospel – giving up everything – house, family, having wife and children, for the sake of the gospel and the kingdom. It was a one year experience and I did this with 9 different classes. It was a very interesting 9 years of my life – getting up close and personal – getting into the heart and mind of men – mostly in their twenties – trying to figure out what they were going to do with their lives.

Part of the process was to go to programs with similar young men and women who had entered the religious life – to become nuns, priests and brothers – people wanting to discern their future.
I was very aware of the old, old monastic saying, “Habitus non facit monachum.” “The habit doesn’t make the monk.”

The vestments, the churchy stuff, doesn’t make the priest.

The hats and the robes don’t make the pope or bishop.

In my opinion, in my judgment, in my way of seeing, unfortunately I saw people wanting the habit, the robes, the externals. Sometimes it’s the reason some knocked on our doors and began the process – but my hope was they would discover Jesus – and the Kingdom – and hear Jesus trying to knock that outlook out of them – as he did with the Pharisees who wanted tassels and front seats – and recognition – and as a result they couldn’t fit into the kingdom of God. (2)

Scratch the surface. Get to the inner stuff. Discover the essence not the look. Be like Columbus – leave home, set sail into the unknown in search of something – only to discover you’ve discovered something else. Life. And Jesus said, “I have come that you might have life and that you have it to the full.” [Cf. John 10:10a]

SHAKESPEARE

It’s the stuff Shakespeare is getting at – over and over again – in his plays.

Read the “To be or not to be” speech in Hamlet. “That is the question.” How to deal with life’s slings and arrows – "a sea of troubles" – “the heartache and the thousand natural shocks That flesh is heir to.” Is the purpose of life to sleep – to dream – to die – "to shuffle of this mortal coil" – or is it, instead to go deeper – “to face enterprises of great pith and moment”? [3]

All these things are "the rub" – as Shakespeare puts it – the stuff beneath the look, the clothes, the glitter, the possessions, the skin, till we discover the stuff on the kingdom.

The call of Jesus is to let go of everything – to squeeze through the eye of the needle – and when we get onto that other side – we’ll find ourselves laughing a lot more. We have a lot more of the wisdom today’s first reading is talking about. [Wisdom 7: 7-11] We’ll know a lot more – because the sword of the word – has opened us up so we can see the significant cuts we can make in our life. The letting go, the emptying, then the filling of the lack is what life is all about - so that we’ll find ourselves with Jesus in the kingdom he came to start.

CONCLUSION

When God gives you the itch, scratch.

Then, hopefully, you’ll see and experience Jesus looking you right in the eye and he’ll say, “Do you know what you’re lacking?”

And we’ll mutter a few things. Then he’ll really tell us.

Then we have the choice to make the cut or cut and run – like the guy in today’s gospel who walked away sad. Hopefully, we’ll stay like those who stayed and we'll too discover this new world – on the other side of the eye of the needle called "The Kingdom of God" – Life with Jesus - which goes on forever and ever. Amen!


[1] Gregory F. A. Pierce, Spirituality At Work, Loyola Press, Chicago, Illinois, 2001

[2] Matthew 23; Mark 12: 38-40; Luke 11: 37 to 12:3; Romans 2: 29

[3] Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act 3, 1, 56

Sunday, October 4, 2009


DIVORCE

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Divorce.”

The word “divorce” jumps off the page of today’s gospel – so I decided to line up some thoughts and wonderings about divorce.

What does the word “divorce” trigger for you?

Today’s first reading from the second chapter of Genesis proclaims God saying, “It is not good for us to be alone. We need a suitable partner.”

So God made all the animals and brought them to the First Man. It’s great story telling. And no animal was a suitable partner. “Woof! Woof. Meow. Meow. Chirp. Chirp.” Sorry. Sorry.

So God puts the man into a deep sleep and takes from the man one of his ribs and closes up the spot with flesh. Then God builds the first woman. If you know the book of Genesis, you know this is the second creation account in the book – but it’s much more primitive and filled with great symbolism. It gives us our human dimension. The first creation account – in the first chapter of Genesis, but not as old, gives us our God dimension, “God created man in the image of himself, in the image of God he created him, male and female he created them.”

In today’s creation account we have this earlier story and the God who made the first man out of the mud and clay of the earth, steps down to earth for the creation of woman.

I love James Weldon Johnson’s creation account where he has God say, “I’m Lonely, I’ll make me a world.” (1)

I love Bill Cosby’s creation account where he has Adam say when he first sees Eve, “Woo Man!”

Then today’s first reading from Genesis jumps in time to a reflection: the two should leave their father and mother and cling to each other – and the two shall become one flesh. Cling implying rib to rib cling. Great static cling. Very important.

Marriage – weddings – celebration. We’ve been to many of them and we drink, dance, lift our glass and celebrate and sometimes we look and wonder at the couple – in tux and gown. Will they make it? We pray for them. We look ahead and hope for them.

Will they be the part of the 60 % who make it or the 40% who don’t?

Divorce statistics are very tricky – and vary very much.

Divorce. Disaster. Mess. What do they do with the wedding pictures and the keepsakes in a box under a bed or in a closet? What happens to that little couple that was on top of their wedding cake?

WE KNOW

We know about divorce. It happens in our families or with our neighbors or with our friends. Messy. Never easy. Difficult. And we don’t know what to say. I know I don’t.

As priest sometimes it seems absolutely smart, right, best for these two – that they get divorced – but then sometimes because of kids, there is the feeling of hesitation.

And we know that many couples have stayed together because of the kids – and sometimes that seems the right thing to do – and sometimes it seems like that it is a mistake as well – because sometimes the kids sense the tension – and hear the word fights – and it’s tearing them apart as well.

Divorce. Mixed feelings. Drama. Pain. Hurt. Questions. Wonderings.

What are your thoughts and questions and wonderings about divorce? I’m wondering: what would be helpful words from the pulpit?

And I feel guilty at times, because I wish I had better skills and better advice and answers when listening to a couple in a problem marriage. Their marriage just isn’t working the way it should be working. I try to get them to go for counseling. Sometimes they do and sometimes only one wants to. Sometimes couples make the Retrouvaille Seminar – a Marriage Encounter type weekend program for problem marriages - and that helps. (3) Sometimes nothing helps.

COKIE ROBERTS AND SAM DONALDSON

A good bunch of years back I was watching television one Sunday morning in between Masses. Well, Sam Donaldson says to Cokie Roberts, something like this, “Cokie, you’re Catholic. What’s going on with this Kennedy fight up in Massachusetts? He got an annulment and she is contesting it. What’s the story? I think she wrote a book in protest.” (4)

And Cokie said something that I found remarkably clear. She said the Catholic Church proclaims a theology of marriage that says: marriage between two baptized Christians is a lifetime covenant. The teaching is that these two vow to stay together in sickness and in health, in good times and in bad, till death do they part. And Cokie said that the Church has to teach this. Unless you go into marriage with the idea that this is it for life, you won’t struggle as hard to make it last for a lifetime. The couple needs that for themselves as well as if they are blessed with kids.

Then Cokie said, “Sometimes things fall apart. Sometimes there are disasters.. The couple get divorced. People are living much longer and more people were getting divorced. So the Church relooked at annulments to see if we can do something to help people start again and remain in communion with the Church community – if they get re-married. Pastoral theology called for this."

I thought then and I still think now: her description on what happened in our Church was a good assessment. Obviously, more has to be done to strengthen marriages as well as to help folks who had disastrous marriages to stay with the Church. They need the sacraments more than ever. “It is not good to be alone. It’s good to have a partner.”

CONTEXT

I would assume that context is a key issue in all this as well as much of life. That’s a good word and concept to do a lot of thinking about: context.

Cokie Roberts was trying to give context.

Whenever we hear about a couple getting a divorce, what is the context of these two people?

That’s one of the reasons why the annulment process is a long process. Sometimes it looks like a crazy or too difficult a process. Hopefully, it helps people to not only see what happened, but to take a deep look at their life patterns – family patterns – who they are and where they have come from – and areas where they have to grow – otherwise we are repeat performances – and déjà vu is our modus operandi.

What’s the context?

We don’t know the context of so many things – not only why and what someone said or someone did, but the whole process.

I assume that’s one reason Jesus said not to judge. [Cf. Matthew 7:1-5]

I assume that’s why the Native American saying, “Don’t judge someone till you have walked a mile in their moccasins.”

I would add, “till you have walked a mile in their sins.”

In today’s gospel Jesus says there is to be no divorce – nobody can separate what God has joined together.

What is the context that Jesus was looking at? As best as I can gather, women in the time of Jesus were treated as second class citizens or had no citizenship in a marriage. They didn’t have the rights of males. They could be dismissed or dumped and divorced for various reasons.

In the time of Jesus marriages were not just about two people. Marriages were arranged by families – without much choice by the couple to be married.

In the time of Jesus children were not seen like children of today are seen. I was surprised that the gospel a few weeks ago called a child an “it” instead of he or she. (Cf. 25 Sunday OT B, Mark 9: 36)

In the time of Jesus, if there was a divorce, often whole families would end up in the feud.

In the time of Jesus most people did not live as long as folks are living today – so are we asking people who are divorced and get remarried without benefit of an annulment, to stay away from communion for the rest of their marriage?

That’s context. [5]

TWO BOOKS

I recently read two books that were eye openers. The Bookseller of Kabul was the first. (6) It was written by a Norwegian woman journalist, Asne Seierstad. She went into Kabul in Afghanistan two weeks after the September 11th attacks. She met a bookseller in Kabul named Shah Muhammad Rais. He spoke English and he invited her into his home for a few months. Being a journalist she decided to write a whole book about her experience. She changed his name in her book to Sultan Khan – and it’s a sort of fictionalized non-fiction. He sends his first wife off to Pakistan and buys a new wife – aged 16.

In her book, she gives the context for women in Afghanistan. It’s horrible. It was worse under the Taliban. It’s still horrible. The book takes the reader into the back room – into the inner workings of Afghan family life. As I was reading it, I sensed that it’s closer to what family life might be in a Nazareth village 2000 years ago.

The second book is entitled, When Men Become Gods (7). It’s an investigation by a man named Stephen Singular. The book gives you an inside view into the life of Warren Jeffs – leader of an offshoot Mormon group. It tells about countless young girls who are manipulated into polygamy by Warren Jeffs and his group.

Both books were page turners. I the reader was given the context of life as a woman in Afghanistan and life as a woman in various Mormon polygamy situations in Utah, Texas – and various places where Warren Jeff’s was operating.

Women in some countries have certainly come a long way – and when they discover horrible, unredeemable, abuse, hopefuly they can learn to run – but with great difficulty.

IN THE MEANWHILE

In the meanwhile, each of us ought to do what we can do to strengthen life in the context we live and work in.

I remember a continuing education course I took in New York under Father Benedict Groeschel. He told us he was asked by Cardinal Cooke to be the person the Cardinal would send a priest who wanted to leave the priesthood.

The priest had fallen in live or become angry with the institutional church or had become disillusioned. I listened up – because I was ordained in 1965 and saw lots of priests leave. Talk about divorce. They left our communities. Half my ordination class of 16 left. And it was not only a blow to the places where they were living and working, but also on our lives. So I think I know the impact of divorce – without seeing it in my own immediate family.

As Benedict listened to these priests, he began to see it was too late. Many were already involved with someone. Their minds have been made up and they wanted out of the priesthood.

So he told us, we need to do things now to strengthen what we have, before a problem would arise. The goal of the course was to come up with a whole group of priests to serve as spiritual directors – to get priests talking to other priests about their life.

When a couple come to me with a marriage that is falling apart, if the timing is right, I ask a key question, “Is there someone else?” That’s a whole different ballgame. That’s a whole different context.

In the meanwhile, here we are in Church this Sunday morning. If you are married, what does your marriage look like? What is the context you’re living in?

CONCLUSION: THREE RECOMMENDATIONS

Let me make three recommendations for strengthening a marriage.

1) Communication: shut off the TV and talk. Shut off the zillion and one gadgets and communicate with each other. Talk about the context of your marriage, family, life, how you’ve grown, how you’ve taken each other for granted. Listen. Listen. Listen to each other. The opening question is always, “How’s it going?” or “What’s happening?” or “Where are we?” And listen – listen – listen.

2) Compliment: I love to tell the story about the grandfather whose 8 year old granddaughter took his wedding ring off his finger. They were sitting and talking with each other on a couch. The girl looked at the ring. Then inside the ring, she sees the letters, “SSNTST”.

The little girl says, “Grandpa what do those letters stand for?”

He says, “Oh something. Just something.”

Well, the little girl wouldn’t let up. She had to find out what the letters, “SSNTST” stood for.

Finally the grandfather says, “Okay Jessica, but you have to promise you won’t tell anyone.”

She says, “I promise I won’t tell anyone.”

So her grandpa says, “Well, after your grandma and I were married we got too used to each other, so I felt something was wrong. I went to a priest and we talked. He listened and said, 'Take your wedding ring to a jeweler and have him engrave inside your wedding ring, the letters, ‘SSNTST.' Like you, I asked him what does that mean. He said, ‘Say Something Nice To Sara Today.’ And I’ve been doing that ever since.”

Jessica still holding the ring said, “That’s really beautiful!”

Then she jumped off the couch and ran into the kitchen yelling, “Grandma, grandma, let me show you something that grandpa has on his wedding ring about you.”

Yesterday after a wedding at St. Mary’s, I’m standing in the back of the church with the daughter of the videographer for the wedding. I think that’s who she was. Without knowing it, she compliments me by saying, “Great wedding. You know what I’m going to do when I get home today. I’m going up to my husband and thank him and hug him to death for marrying me.”

I said, “Thanks for making my day.”

3) Surprises: Three weeks ago at a wedding rehearsal, the father of the groom said that an old man one time told him the secret of a happy marriage. It went something like this, “Provide surprises and give unexpected gifts to spouse on a regular basis.” And he told me that it has really worked in his marriage – and I said, “Can I steal that message from you?” He said, “Of course.” I said, “Thank you.”

It’s like sticking that famous bumper sticker, “”Practice Random Acts of Kindness and Senseless Acts of Beauty” on your marriage.

Enough already. What’s happening with you? What’s context are you in right now?



NOTES

(1) The Book of American Negro Poetry, Ed. James Weldon Johnson, New York, Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1922

(2) Bill Cosby, Cf. Audio Tapes on Creation Account

(3) Type “Retrouvaille” in your computer search engine check out what this seminar type program is about.

(4) Type into your search engine, Joseph Kennedy’s marriage to Sheila Rauch and her 1997 book, Shattered Faith.

(5) For exploring the context of this text from Mark, confer, Social-Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels by Bruce J. Malina and Richard L. Rohrbaugh, pp. 240-242. Cf. also Gaudium et Spes, The Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, Part II, Chapter 1, "Fostering The Nobility of Marriage and the Family," pp.248-258 in the Walter M. Abbot, General Editor, edition, 1966; Cf. also Catechism of the Catholic Church, Liguori Publications, 1994, 1601-1666, 2380-2400, -

(6) Asne Seierstad, The Bookseller of Kabul (2003)

(7) Stephen Singular, When Men Become Gods, (2008)

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

BETTER SHUT UP


Those who know, don't talk;
those who don't know, talk.



Today, September 30th, being the feast day of Saint Jerome, the above is a paraphrasing of something he wrote, "It is still worse to be ignornant of your ignorance." © Andy Costello, 2009

Sunday, September 27, 2009


DEMONS:
AND LEAD US NOT INTO TEMPTATION,
BUT DELIVER US FROM EVIL. AMEN.



INTRODUCTION


I’m not sure whether to give my homily a one word short title: “Demons” or to give it a long, long title: “Demons: And Lead Us Not Into Temptation, But Deliver Us From Evil. Amen.”

My hope is that you reflect upon demons and prayer.



Suggestion. One of my ongoing suggestions in homilies has been to use one’s rosary not just for Hail Mary’s.*

Suggestion, better recommendation: Be evangelists and catechists. Give your kids rosary beads and tell them they can use a rosary for all kinds of prayers. I have suggested using a rosary to say 59 times – with the 59 beads of the rosary – one word prayers, like “Thanks!” or “Help!” or “Peace!” or three word prayers, “Lord have mercy!” “Come Holy Spirit!” or switch them around for the different decades – or just use one decade.

Please do that! It works. Or recommend to your kids or others to take a rosary and use them to name 59 people they remember and want God to bless or Mary to bless or what have you. Or use them like Moslems sometimes use their so called “Worry Beads,” their 33 beads, which they go through 3 times, coming up with 99 names for God. We can do it for 59 names for God or for Jesus Christ, the Son of God: “Light!” “Joy” “Happiness” “Peace” “Creator” “Lord.” “Savior” “Friend” “Presence” “Eucharist” and on and on and on.

Today my suggestion – my recommendation is for you – not just your kids. Take your rosary and use the 59 beads to say just part of the Our Father, “And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”

TEN TIMES

“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”

In 49 seconds I just said that prayer 10 times. I know it was 10 times because I used a rosary – which is a counting device.

If I just said “Help” 10 times, it would be 9 seconds.

THIS ROSARY

This rosary beads is the saddest rosary beads I have ever been given. They came in an envelope after a funeral I did for someone. The family gave them to me. I already have several rosaries. I said to myself, “Why didn’t they keep them for themselves as a memory of their dad who died – who obviously prayed with them many times over? They are well used.”

The message on the envelope was that their dad got the rosary in Palestine.

I am not supposed to judge, but at the funeral, nobody seemed to know when to sit or stand or know the prayers of the Mass – so I didn’t know if they were Catholics or if they were Catholics any longer.

That was an even more reason why I would hope they keep their dad’s rosary – to remind them to pray.

That’s another reason why I recommend using a rosary beads to say Hail Mary’s or other prayers with the hope the person would pray in Jesus’ name as we heard in today’s gospel.

RANGER ROSARY

This parish is known around the world now for the Ranger Rosary. I think that’s great, wonderful, amazing. For the past few years now, thanks to various people in this parish, Ranger Rosaries keep on being made and shipped to our men and women in our Armed Service. The men and women around the world in the Armed Services have in hand – or pocket – a reminder and a help – a perpetual help – to pray – to say the Hail Mary’s and the Our Father and the other prayers of the rosary.

And as we Catholics also know, rosaries are kept in pockets, around necks, on rear view mirrors, as visible reminders to pray for God’s protection and help each day.

THIS HOMILY

In this homily this morning I’m also suggesting using your rosary to say the last part of the Our Father, “And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.”

DEMONS: TODAY’S GOSPEL – TODAY’S READINGS

Now a few words about demons – and temptations and tests – and my hope is you understand the gist of my words.

Today’s gospel and today’s readings are tough stuff.

The gospel begins with John saying to Jesus, “Teacher, we saw someone driving out demons in your name, and we tried to prevent him because he does not follow us.”

To understand the gospels and the writings in the Bible, we not only have to remember it’s from thousands of years ago – when people understood not only the sun and the moon and the stars differently – but also body and mind health very differently.

Demons lurked everywhere and understanding a bit about demons can help us understand the scriptures better.

In his Dictionary of the Bible, John L. McKenzie S.J. under Demons and Demonology, says that the beliefs and understandings of the people of Mesopotamia regarding demons had a great influence on the way the people of Israel saw life. Literature and art from that area and time tell us that people thought there were countless demons roaming around – outside and inside people. To counteract evil demons you had to know their name and chant the name of a more powerful god – hence Jesus’ name became very powerful and important – for some people.

Listen to this list of demons and what part of the body they attacked. People would chant the demon’s name to try to get them to leave. It’s a very interesting way of understanding health care.

· The demon named, “Ashakku” attacked the head.
· The demon named, “Utukku” attacked the neck.
· The demon named, “Namtaru” attacked the throat.
· The demon named, “Alu” attacked the chest.
· The demons named, “Etimmu” and “Ilu” attacked the hand.
· The demon named, “Gallu” attacked the foot.


“Pazuzu”, he thinks, was probably the demon in the South West wind that brought the infection of malaria.

I was wondering whether the words “Atchoo” which people say when they sneeze or “shoo” when they want someone or something to go away – are somehow in this mix of sounds.

In one way, Jesus moved amongst people who were dealing with a lot more medical problems than we have in our day – while on the other hand, most people died very young.

In the meanwhile Jesus said, “Stop worrying about people using my name, but in the meanwhile give cups of water to people to drink.”

Then Jesus gets into deeper sicknesses – sins – giving bad example to kids – or the sins of the eyes – what we see, the sins of the feet where we go – entering into hell – going into places like Gehenna – the garbage dump in Jerusalem – that was always smelly and burning.

Now of course, Jesus doesn’t want us to gauge out our eyes or cut off our hands and feet – but he does challenge us to make deep cutting decisions in our life – to cut and run from what is destroying us.

Question: What are your demons? What are your temptations? What are your sins? What are your addictions? What’s killing you?

Today’s first reading talks about jealousy and sniping about others.

Today’s second reading talks about avarice and hoarding – the opposite of generosity. Today’s second reading from James talks about unfair wages – and fat cating it.

Tough stuff – some of the ongoing temptations of life – practices unfortunately our kids can pick up from us – by our bad example – and bad example to young people Jesus warns this morning is a big no, no. It would be better if a great millstone was tied to our neck and we were thrown into the sea.

CONCLUSION

Young people also pick up good example – generosity, acts of kindness, giving of our time, treasure and talents – as well as cups of water to the thirsty.

The title of my homily is, “Demons: And Lead Us Not Into Temptation, But Deliver Us From Evil. Amen.”

My action step recommendation is to use a rosary to say that prayer 10 times each day or 59 times each day. Maybe someone will see you with your rosary in hand and ask, “What are you doing? Or what’s that beady thing in your hand?” Go for it!



*Cf. Chapter 22, "Rosary Beads Aren't Just For Hail Mary's Any More, in the book, Thank God It's Friday, by Andrew Costello, The Thomas More Press, Chicago, Illinois, 1987, [Out of Print]

A CUP OF WATER

[In today’s gospel for the 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B, Jesus tells us to give each other cups of water – so I made up this story for today’s Children’s Mass. It’s a reminder to make sure we give cups of water to each other. Amen.]

The 8th grade of St. Henry’s Catholic School in Aurora, Oklahoma, visits a nursing home just across the street from their school as a way of putting their Christian faith into practice.

Each Wednesday after lunch, the 28 kids in the 8th grade, walk across the street with their teacher, Mrs. Julia Washington, and stop in to see different folks who are living there in the Aurora Springs Nursing Home, Aurora, Oklahoma.

The mostly older folks living there – as well as the nursing home staff – look forward to the kids’ visit every Wednesday. The kids are great. Old folks, as well as the nursing home staff, need to see young folks. The kids are trained very well by their teacher, Mrs. Julia, whose mom is in a similar nursing home in Oklahoma City. She found out that no kids or volunteers drop in to see her mom or those in her mom’s nursing home. She found this out because each Sunday afternoon she drives the 137 miles to Oklahoma City to see her mom.

Mrs. Julia, as the kids call her, their 8th grade teacher, trained her class on just what to do each Wednesday afternoon when they walk over to the nursing home. Mrs. Julia scouted the nursing home out and with the help of the head nurse and the activities director, she lined up 14 folks who would love a visit on a regular basis. The kids were assigned in teams of two to the person whom they were to visit. It was just like the way Jesus sent his disciples out – two by two.

The 8th grade kids would bring art work from their younger brothers and sisters as well as from 1st and 2nd grade kids whom they would also visit and tell about their visits to the old folks across the street in Aurora Springs Nursing Home. They would also have a question of the week for their assigned person in the nursing home – and sometimes they would bring muffins or flowers or home made chocolate chip cookies to the person they were visiting.

It was a great plan – and the 8th grade kids got more out of it than the person they were visiting.

Well, one evening, at supper, an 8th grader named Cory Branch, was asked by his dad, “How was your visit to Mr. Mannix this afternoon?”

And Cory told the following story about Mr. Tim Mannix whom he and his classmate Teri would visit every Wednesday afternoon.

“Teri and I went in and our question of the day was to ask our guest to tell us the ten top memories of that person’s life. I was the reporter, the questioner, and Teri was the one who had to write down the answers.

“I said to Mr. Mannix, ‘We have to make a report on the ten top memories of your life. So please help us with our homework.’

“Mr. Mannix smiled. ‘No problem Teri and Cory,’ he answered. ‘You’ll get an A with my answers.’

“Dad, mom, his mind is still very sharp. In fact, Mr. Mannix said, ‘This is like a question from David Letterman. Okay, let me start with #10 and go to # 1 – the most important thing I think that I have done in my life – or at least my best memory.’

“‘Number 10: When I was a junior in high school, I pitched a no hitter in baseball.

“‘Number 9: My mother had a cousin who was the Governor of Wyoming in the 1930’s – so that makes me a cousin of someone who was a governor and we used to visit him from time to time.

“‘Number 8: Did you know that I played minor league baseball? I made it to the Major Leagues one September – but that was when they call everyone up and there are at least 40 players on the bench. But I did get up to pinch hit 3 times and pinch run 2 times in the Major Leagues. That was it. But nobody ever asked me to give them an autograph.

“‘Number 7: I was in World War II and was captured by the Germans and spent 2 years in a German Prison Camp. I thought I was going to die many times – but I survived – and when the U.S. Army made it to our prison camp, I had lost 48 pounds.

“‘Number 6: I had a brother who was in navy and he was killed in World War II when his ship sank. I didn’t find out about this till after the war was over and I came back to the United States.

“‘Number 5: After the War I went to college and got a degree – thanks to the G.I. Bill of Rights. I became an engineer and worked with aluminum – in fact, I was part of the team that helped make aluminum cans for soda and beer.

“‘Number 4: I became president of a company that made racing bicycles – and Lance Armstrong used one of our bikes to win the Tour de France 3 different times – and we all got to meet him.

“‘Number 3: I am ¾ American Indian – and have written a book about my grandfather who was a full blooded Creek Indian.

“‘Number 2: I was married to a wonderful woman named Mary. She was the love of my life – but we weren’t blessed with kids – so that’s why it’s so wonderful that you and Teri come here every Wednesday. And my Mary died very early of cancer at the age of 36. That was a tough one. That is a rough memory.’

“Well, when he came to # 1, he paused and started to cry a bit. Teri and I got a bit nervous at first – but his tears were coming down a face that had a beautiful smile. We just sat there and waited. Then he told us what he felt was the best thing he ever did in his life – and he said it was his best memory.

“‘When I was a young kid my dad had a stroke and he couldn’t talk. We didn’t have any nursing homes or places like this at the time. My mom had to go out to work in a factory – to make money for my dad, my older brother and I. So when I got home from school in the afternoon – except during the baseball season – I would sit with my dad and talk and talk and talk – and he would listen, listen, listen.

“‘After a while, and this was what became the most beautiful moment. My dad would signal for water. At first I would get it out of the faucet. Now this was before this new thing called, “Bottled Water.” Then I found out he loved iced water. I would get ice cubes and really cold up that water – in a big pitcher of water I kept for him in our ice box. That’s what we had before refrigerators. I was doing this for years – every day – and he would almost say every time, “Thank you.” He loved cold water.

“‘Then surprise I’m in church this one Sunday and the priest said in his sermon that Sunday morning, “Want to be a good Christian? Simply give each other glasses of cold water!”

“‘Looking back at my life, I consider doing that was the most important thing I did in my life – giving my dad glasses of cold water for over 12 years till he died at the young age of 44.’”

Then Cory said, “We were crying hearing his wonderful story – then Teri spoke up and said, ‘Mr. Mannix can Cory and I have your autograph.’

“And he signed her notes – and next week I’m bringing a baseball in for him to sign.”


[P. S. Someone asked after Mass if there was an Aurora, Oklahoma and I answered, "As far as I know, no. The story is an imaginary story - with hopes that it could become real."]