The title of my homily for this Fourth Sunday of Easter, Year
B, is, “Does God Micromanage?”
VOCATIONS
We are supposed to preach today on Vocations? What to say?
We pray to the Holy Spirit as today’s first reading begins that we all do good deeds to others.
We pray for parents to be good parents - to impart and be examples of love and giving - aware that kids pick up everything
they see - except their toys. Kids learn by imitation. So to pray and then try
to practice the good stuff.
We pray that
teachers and nurses and doctors and accountants and engineers - and all workers - be wide awake servants - working for others - giving a good day's work for a
good day's salary.
We pray that there be priests and nuns and brothers - for the
service of the church - the people of God - teaching people how to get to know
God as today’s second reading proclaims - as well as knowing the voice of the
Shepherd as today’s gospel proclaims.
In other words - that all be Good
Shepherds with an eye on people as the focus - rather than be the hired man -
as Jesus says in today’s gospel - with an eye on the pay check.
DOES GOD HAVE A PLAN?
As I thought about vocations, I asked myself a few questions: Does God
have a plan for every person? Does every
person have a vocation - a calling in life?
If we don’t discover and then do that vocation, that calling, will we be
basically unhappy, incomplete, unfulfilled - always have a spiritual and a
human itch for more - for that something that is missing?
Obviously, as priest, I hear mention of “God” a lot - but
what about “God having a plan” - or what about “God’s will” for us?
Big questions. I think we all think about God’s plan, God’s
idea, God’s Will, from time to time. Does God have blueprints or scripts?
Is it God’s will or in God’s plans that Charlie die while on
vacation in Italy - at the age of 66 - just after he retired - and he and his wife Cassandra never had a
real trip like this since their honeymoon - and that was in the Poconos a long
time ago? Does God send snow in April
and the flowers and trees and animals are all faked out? How does weather and a
deer running into a car work?
How does God work? What are we praying for when we say in
the Our Father, “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven?”
If God has plan, a will, how specific is it? Or in other
words the title and question of my homily for today is, “Does God Micromanage”?
FIRST OF ALL: WHAT
DOES MICROMANAGE MEAN?
Those who use the word, usually mean it to complain about a
boss or a someone above them - who is picky, picky, picky.
Those who use the word “micromanage” use it to describe
someone who is a “control freak” or shriek. They delegate a job to us - but
they keep checking up on us - keep looking at the small details of a job. They
are at the door looking in or over our shoulder and they are breathing down our
neck. They keep telling us how to do a job they gave us to do. And they keep feeding us with tiny, tiny ways they want
us to do a job.
SECONDLY: WHY
WOULD SOMEONE MICROMANAGE?
I assume there are two kinds of people who micromanage. The
first type would be those who are neat, very neat by nature. They see
everything. They want the job done and done rightly.
I’m definitely not that type. Show me your
room or the trunk of your car and I’ll tell you who you are.
However, I’ve met those who are that way and it doesn’t
seem to take much effort to be that way. “Just doing what comes naturally.”
Years ago I was preaching at all the Masses in a parish
where we were going to preach a parish mission that coming week.
I’m standing in the back of church on a Saturday evening -
all ready for the 5 PM Mass. It’s about 10 to 5.
An usher standing back there introduces himself and spots a
Cheerio on the floor. He picks up that one tiny Cheerio and pockets it. I’ve seen parents come with those little zip
lock see through plastic bags with Cheerios in them for their kids at Mass. A kid must have
dropped a Cheerio on the way in or out of church.
The usher then spots the pastor coming in the vestibule door
and he’s talking to some parishioners. He asks me if I met the pastor yet. I
say, “Yes!” The usher says, “He’s very neat - very, very neat.”
Then while the pastor is still out there in the vestibule, the usher says to me with a smile on his face,
“Come with me and watch this.” I follow
him. The usher then reaches into his pocket and takes out the Cheerio that he picked up on the floor. He
places it on the flat edge of the back bench about 20 yards away. We are out of the
view of the pastor. Then he tells me, “Come back to the center" - we're still in the back - "and watch what happens when the pastor comes in. He’ll spot that Cheerio
in about 1 second and a half.”
Sure enough the pastor comes in: black suit. French cuffs.
Hair perfect like mine always is. Shoes shinned bright. He says to me, “Nice
crowd!” and while saying that he spots something and walks the 20 or so yards,
picks the Cheerio up and pockets it. Then he comes back and says that he’ll go
up front now and introduce me. He made no comment about the Cheerio. He did the Cheerio removal move while on remote.
That coming week I experienced a very neat and very detailed
pastor in action. Being a slob, I was a bit nervous at time - but I knew, come
Friday morning I’d be on the road again.
WILLIE NELSON
Speaking of Willie Nelson, myself and another priest, named
John, who was my boss, and about 86%
neat, were watching the 10 o’clock news one night. On came a story about Willie
Nelson and marijuana. Willie was wearing his jeans and faded T-shirt - his red
bandana around his head, which had long braids as well as a scraggily beard. John says
to me, “Who is this guy?” I say, “That’s Willie Nelson!” And he says, “That’s
Willie Nelson! Oh my God no. I liked his songs till now.”
I always liked Willie Nelson’s songs before and after that
incident, - especially, “On the Road Again” - “Can’t wait to get back on the
road again!” That song hits me at times
when I have to deal with rigid, my way or the highway, micromanaging, type of person on the road of life - someone who gets me to want to be on the road again.
Then there are a second type that micromanage. This type we like. These are the ones who spot viruses - and terrorists - and hair in the French Fries - before they get to a customer's tray.
BACK TO GOD
Now is God a micromanager?
That to me is a great question - and it sounds to me that I'm hesitating to get to it.
Don’t you love it when you are at the Q. and A. session - after
a talk? Or are you the type that wants to run. Gentlemen start your engines. I love it when someone asks a question and the speaker says, “Now that’s a good
question.” You figure it’s giving the speaker
time to figure out where to go with what the speaker thinks the person
is asking or really asking.
I like Q. and A. situations - because they can provide “Ah ha”
moments - sometimes better than a whole speech.
A significant learning moment
in my life took place way back in the late 1960’s - in the Hilton Hotel in New
York City - where well over a thousand people met for a power breakfast on the
Drug problem in New York. The main speaker was Governor Nelson Rockefeller and
someone asked a question. I don’t remember the question, but I remember the
answer. Rockefeller didn’t say, “Now that’s a good question.” He said, “Are you crazy? I wouldn’t answer
that. Next!”
For the past 45 years I’ve sort of used Nelson Rockefeller's approach. When someone asked
certain questions, I would say, “I can’t answer that!” Or, “I wouldn’t know how to answer
that.” “Are you crazy? That’s a set up question.” Sometimes I add, “I don’t
think that’s a question. I think you already have an answer to your question.”
Now back to the question: “Does God micromanage?”
Answer: “I don’t know!”
That would be my primary answer.
I don’t know. I don’t know God.
In fact I get scared when people say, “This is what God wants!” or “This is God’s
will.” I don’t know if it’s true in that
situation - other than to say, “God wants us to love one another and care for
his stuff!”
I noticed in the paper the other day that some priest in that trial
that’s going on in Philadelphia was said to have said to some kid that it was
God’s will that the kid do what the priest wanted him to do. Now that’s a horror
show. And when fanatics of any religion think they have God’s will and then do
other horrible things, uh oh.
Think about your life and your experiences. Have you ever
winced or squeezed you face muscles in disbelieve when someone pulled the,
“This is God’s will” statement on you one to one or from the pulpit or what
have you?
We have a whole generation of Redemptorists in our province
who went through the seminary with a priest in charge who thought that whatever
he decided when it came to telling a seminarian that he didn’t have a vocation
- and he would have to leave - that his decision was God’s will. I think many
of us who reflected upon that experience, hesitate when anyone says, “This is
God’s will.”
It took me a while, but that experience taught me
experientially that I think that’s crazy.
Years later, I ended up having a
similar job for 9 years and I had to make decisions on future priests and
brothers. If I cut someone even though it was not their choice, I inwardly prayed deeply to God. I would say to them, “Sorry, I don’t
know if this is God’s will or not, but this is my decision.” And I made it with
advice from an assistant and I forced myself to put my reasoning into writing
and I’d give the seminarian a copy and gave him time to challenge me - if he
wanted to. Then I had to send my recommendation to those above me for a
decision.
To say something is God’s will can be a form of idolatry -
just as it is to say or think that my image and likeness of God is God.
What is your image of God? Have you ever checked it out with God in prayer and
study and reflection with others?
So does God micromanage?
I think God is aware of everything in the universe as well
as a billion, trillion, gazillion other things, all the time. He’s keeping in
existence the tiniest little algae at the deepest part of the ocean as well as
germs on the head of pin as well as a door knob as well as a sore left back
foot on an old elephant in Kenya
right this second.
I think God gave us humans free will - choice - selection -
and we can choose what we choose - within our limitations - so if we decide to
fly up to the ceiling in this church to change a light bulb if it was out - we
can’t. But we can choose to change a light bulb that is out with whatever
gadget or machine they have to change light bulbs in a place like this.
Then there is grace, nudges, notices, angels, experiences, messengers,
messages from God to help us - but these are mysterious and I am not scared to
say out loud, “These have me baffled!” They always have and always will.
I see that we are what we eat - we are what we choose - what
we buy - what we say. Just as there is a law of gravity, if I drop a book, it
will fall to the ground and make a noise on certain floors, so too there is the
law of consequences.
People do what they do in life - and when they make bad choices - the consequences can be harmful.
Much of what happens to us - health problems - this or that - is often what happens as the consequence of our decisions and actions. Sometimes when things go bad, people then blame God for what happened.
We become our habits. Our habits become us.
If they are good, we become better. If they are bad, we
become worse. Good habits are called virtues; bad habits are called vices.
So does God micromanage? Does God rain on Cassandra’s parade
and not rain on Charlie’s parade? I don’t know. I know if it’s raining, and
there is a parade scheduled for that time and place, it’s going to rain on our
parade.
There is an Earth Day thing today up near TargetCenter. It was cancelled last Sunday because of rain. I was told, if it rains, it will be called off again. And there will be no
third chance. I won’t pray for either. I do pray for rain, but I have to admit
I don’t know how that works. That will be one of my questions for God, after I
die, if God has a personal Q. and A. session.
CONCLUSION
So what do I know about how God manages people and things?
I know by faith that God sent his Son Jesus into our world
and we have a choice to say “Yes” to him or “No” to him - that I be a wise builder - building my house on rock and not sand - asking Christ to be the cornerstone of my life. [1]
I know by reflection and luck and blessings and grace that I
got that gift of faith from my mom and dad. They had it and I got it. And I
thank those way back before them who made faith and life choices that came down as gifts to our family.
I know by reflection - especially on experiences - that God
is fascinating.
I also know from experience that when I keep the Great
Commandments - the consequences are inner peace.
I know from experience, that if we didn’t have freedom of
choice, life would be rather boring. What makes life fascinating is that a
human being can choose his or her life in the way he or she chooses to live it
- as well as deal with what happens to us by nature or others actions. So if
someone chooses to want to marry us - then what makes marriage so great is
precisely that. And what kills us is when another stops choosing to love for
whatever number of reasons. I’ve seen
divorces and I’ve seen disasters and I’ve seen classmates and friends leave the
priesthood - as well as see people I know get divorced - and sometimes when I hear this kind of bad news, I want to run - and get on the road again.
So I don’t think God micromanages the choice to love - except to send his
Son - the great lover. Amen.
NOTES
[1] Matthew 7: 24-27; today's First Reading Acts 4: 11; today's Responsorial Psalm 118: 22.
GOD'S WILL?
April 29, 2012
Quote for Today
"Many pray, not to find God's will, but to get God's approval or their own."
Anonymous
Questions:
Whoever wrote that, how do they know that? Did they take a scientific poll or professional survey? Or did some preacher just make that up, figuring it sounds right? Based on my reflections - which are rather superficial - as can be gleaned from my homily for today, "Does God Micromanage?" - I would think without any scientific survey, that most just do their own will without any consideration of the God question What would be your take on all this?
Saturday, April 28, 2012
YESTERDAY
April 28, 2012
Quote for Today
"Anytime the future looks gray, I have an attic full of yesterdays."
Anonymous
Yesterday is from the 1965 Beatles Album, "Help". The song had more than 1,600 cover versions. It was voted the #1 song of all time by MTV and Rolling Stones Magazine. It as performed more than 7 million times in the 20th Century.
What does the song trigger for you?
What yesterday do you return to the most in your life - your # 1 yesterday? Was it a good day - a good moment - a good memory or a bad hurt, a bad memory, a bad experience?
If you could relive one yesterday, one moment, what would it be?
Who was the key person in your yesterdays?
Ooops. Do you remember this song?
Friday, April 27, 2012
FLAUNT IT,
IF YOU GOT IT!
April 27, 2012
Quote for Today
"It pays to advertise. There are 26 mountains in Colorado that are higher than Pike's Peak."
Someone.
Or is the message: do something, climb, give, explore, study, research and maybe they'll name a mountain or at least a peak or a park or a hospital or a vaccine or a street after us.
Second attempts can also fit into the quote. If I have it correctly, Zebulon Pike Jr. and his soldiers didn't make it to the top on the first attempt.
Thursday, April 26, 2012
ON THE OTHER SIDE
OF THE DARK NIGHT
April 26, 2012
Quote for Today
"If you want to enjoy the glory of the sunrise, you must live through the dark night."
Something everyone knows
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
ST. MARK’S GOSPEL
INTRODUCTION
The title of my thoughts on this feast of St. Mark - April
25th - is “St. Mark’s Gospel”.
FAVORITE GOSPEL
A question I like to ask people is, “What is your favorite
Gospel: Matthew, Mark, Luke or John?”
People, if it's something they thought about, usually say Luke or John. Less people mention Matthew or Mark. At least that's my experience.
So what is your favorite gospel?
Years ago, those who saw Alec McCowen on Broadway do The Gospel According to Mark by memory might
choose Mark. Alec McCowen was a nominee for a Tony Award for his performance in
1979. He didn’t win, but those who saw that monologue remember it for
life. A priest friend of mine saw it in
1980 and again in the 1990’s and what intrigued him was the difference in Alec
McCowen. Obviously, Alec McCowen had changed. Don’t we all? And as we change,
as we grow, as evolve, hopefully the scriptures evolve for us - along with us.
When I was in the seminary, our New Testament professor
liked Mark #1 - and didn’t like Matthew. I was surprised at that - but it
opened my eyes. So I found that rather interesting at the age of 24 and 25.
I prefer John, but when we are going through Luke and Mark
and Matthew, I get very interested in them as well. Aren’t we lucky if we can
get to daily Mass - we have a chance to go through all 4 gospels every year? And on Sundays we go through Mathew, Mark and
Luke every 3 years - with John being inserted here and there - and especially
in the Easter season. We’re in Year B now - and this is the year of Mark.
FEAST OF ST. MARK
Today is the Feast of St. Mark - the patron Saint of Venice, Italy. As an aside, I went to Venice
by accident in 1984. I was in the wrong car on the train to Vienna - which split at Mestre - or somewhere.
As I was looking out the window, I started to see water on both sides of the
tracks. I knew this wasn’t Vienna.
It must be Venice.
I got off the train and walked across the platform and took the next train which
was right there back to Mestre and then to Vienna.
Last September I got to Venice with a group from the parish and I was
too late to get into St. Mark’s Cathedral, but I did see the famous St. Mark’s
Square and the pigeons. They missed.
FASCINATING QUOTE
In my blog for today, I put the following quote:
“Canon Leon Vaganay, from Lyons, was a great
specialist in textual criticism; he relished it with all the
love of a keen amateur just as he practiced it with the skill of
a master. When the war years came [1939-1945]and there was no way to
obtain Nestle's New Testament, he heard his
colleagues groaning about it and said to them smiling, 'Oh,
that does not bother me; at the beginning of the first class, I
dictate to the students a half verse from Mark, and with that we
have material for the whole year.'" It’s from Henri
de Lubac’s book, At the Service of the Church: Henri de Lubac Reflects on the
Circumstances That Occasioned His Writings.
I love that quote because it
gives the Catholic position and attitude on how to read and mine the Scriptures:
to dig into them and make them mine.
The documents of Vatican II stressed
opening up the treasures of the Scriptures to all the faithful - and that has
certainly happened in the last 50 years. [1]
Has it happened to you?
Do you have a Bible that is
falling apart from use - duct tape and all?
Better: how has that happened
to you? Do you open up a Bible on a regular basis - like 5 minutes a day -
keeping a Bible next to a favorite prayer chair or spot? Have you ever gone through a gospel, say
Mark, and selected a favorite text in that gospel? Try it. Pick 5 texts and then narrow those down to 3
and then pick 1. And then ask why does that text grab you? What does that tell you about you to
yourself? Have you ever read scriptures out loud with another? People walk together,
talk together, how about reading a Bible section together? I know a couple in Pennsylvania who told me
they read a chapter every night in bed before going to sleep. In fact, they
said, that they finished it and started it again going backwards. Interesting.
In my blog quote for today - mentioned above - the teacher said he could spend
a year on just a half verse from the Gospel of Mark. Which one was it? At first
it sounded like an exaggeration, that is till I remember attending the first
lecture of a semester course by Walter Burghardt who on just one verse from
Genesis: “God made man in his image, in the divine image he created him; may
and female he created them” [Genesis 1: 27].
CONCLUSION
Enough. Happy Feast of St. Mark.
NOTES
[1] Dogmatic Constitution on
Divine Revelation, (Dei Verbum), Vatican II Chapter 4; Constitution on
the Sacred Liturgy (Sacrosanctum Concilium), Chapter II
Painting on top: "St. Mark Enthroned" by Titian - around 1510-1511. It can be seen in Santa Maria della Salute Church in Venice Italy. It was commissioned because of the plague that hit Venice. Along with Saint Mark, four saints are pictured as protectors of the city: St. Roch and St. Sebasian (arrows) on the right and St. Cosmas and St. Damian (doctors) on the left.