Saturday, December 8, 2012

TODAY! 
RIGHT WHERE YOU ARE!




Quote for Today - Saturday - December 8, 2012

"Cast your bucket where you are."

Booker T. Washington [1856-1915], in the Cotton State Exposition Speech at the Atlanta Exposition - September 18, 1895

Friday, December 7, 2012

HELL

Quote for the Day - Friday,  December 7, 2012

"Hell, Madam, is to love no longer."

Georges Bernanos [1888-1948] in The Diary of a Country Priest [1936]



PLEASE CLAP FOR ME


Quote for the Day, Thursday, December 6, 2012

"People ask you for criticism, but they only want praise."

William Somerset Maugham [1874-1965], in Of Human Bondage, [1915],  chapter 50
INDIFFERENCE


Quote for the Day - Wednesday,  December 5, 2012



"The tragedy of love is indifference."

William Somerset Maugham [1874-1965], in The Trembling of a Leaf  [1921] 


Note: Next to this painting I found on line by Fritz Hirschberger  was this poem by this same painter: 

Fear not your enemies, 
for they can only kill you.

Fear not your friends,
for they can only betray you.

Fear only the indifferent,
who permit the killers and
betrayers to walk safely on earth.



And below it were these notes:

Text and art by Fritz Hirschberger are from "The Holocaust Series: Sur-Rational Paintings" and reprinted with permission of the Regis Foundation, Minneapolis, MN. Fritz Hirschberger's full series of art work on the Shoah can be found athttp://www.chgs.umn.edu/Visual___Artistic_Resources/Fritz_Hirschberger/fritz_hirschberger.html andhttp://www.chgs.umn.edu/Visual___Artistic_Resources/Fritz_Hirschberger2/fritz_hirschberger2.html. For more information, contact the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies: Dr. Stephen Feinstein, Director, tel: (612) 626-2235, email: feins001@umn.edu, web: http://www.chgs.umn.edu.

© 2005 Anti-Defamation League


Tuesday, December 4, 2012


JUSTICE!
MAKING SURE
EVERYONE GETS 
A PIECE OF THE PIE!



INTRODUCTION

The title of my reflection for this First Monday in Advent is, “Justice! Making Sure Everyone Gets a Piece of the Pie!"

Justice is one of the various possible themes in today’s first reading - amongst several. I picked one I don’t preach on that often - justice - just to refresh my thoughts - to highlight - to mark with yellow Magic Marker - something that is important.

Isaiah 11: 1-5 is talking about a future leader - the Messiah - a shoot of David -  who will have lots of gifts: a Spirit of wisdom and understanding, a Spirit of counsel and strength, a Spirit of knowledge and fear of the Lord.  Then Isaiah adds, “He shall judge the poor with justice.”  He further adds, “Justice shall be the band around his waist.” Band is also translated “belt” or “loincloth”. In other words, one is wrapped tight when it comes to justice.

So a few thoughts about justice - a central thought - especially from the prophets.  And as we know - prophets are crucified and killed - rejected and told to leave town and pulpit - probably a reason we don’t hear too many homilies on justice.

JUSTICE IN THE OLD TESTAMENT

The Hebrew word used in our text is SEDEK. It can be translated righteousness, integrity, justice, fairness - words like that.

It’s especially used when talking about fairness in matters of how judges make decisions - as well as arguments about not being partial  - as well as having honest weights in the market place - and being aware of the cries of the poor.

Don’t we often heat in the scriptures the refrain, “God hears the cries of the poor.” Do I?

JUSTICE IN THE NEW TESTAMENT

In the New Testament the key word used would be “DIKAIOS”. It would be used to say what’s right in a given situation before God.

This is what we’re praying for when we say, “Thy will be done!”

Jesus came to set things done right. To discover justice is to discover  the solemn judgment of God in what’s happening between each other - in family, in neighborhood, in whatever situation one runs into. It’s the call to be right and fair with each other.

SOME QUICK OBSERVATIONS

In today’s gospel - Luke 10: 21-24 - Jesus says the little ones - the childlike - have a wisdom. With regards justice watch kids at a birthday party when the cake is cut. The knife doesn’t cut all pieces of equal size and amount of frosting. Listen to the prophets in the room: “Hey that’s not fair. She got more than me.” “He got more than I did.”

In today’s first reading we also hear the great scene of, “The Peaceable Kingdom” - where “the wolf shall be a guest of the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; The calf and the young lion shall browse together, with a little child to guide them. The cow and the bear shall be neighbors, together their young shall rest; the lion shall eat hay like the ox. The baby shall play by the cobra's den, and the child lay his hand on the adder's lair.” [Cf. Isaiah 11: 6-10]

Look for Christmas cards with that scene. Christmas is the time of peace and justice. The message is: Work for peace by working for justice.  We don’t have to be animals clawing, biting, devouring each other.


THREE QUICK STORIES

First: I remember hearing some Catholic high school kids on a retreat calling one of their  nuns, “Sister Peace and Justice.” I asked why. Answer: "because all she talked about was peace and justice.” What a great nickname!  Wouldn’t that be a great comment in our eulogy that we'd all want?

Second: when we took our 4 years of  theology  in  the major seminary after college, the last two years were Moral Theology. I’ll  never forget our teacher Father Charlie O’Leary. His nickname was, “The Bull”. He rammed ahead with his main stress: justice. To him it was the key cardinal virtue - the key life virtue -   - over all  the others. I’m glad he wasn’t off on sex or pride - but on the practical issue of fairness across the board.

Third: I’m sure you remember Father Jack Lavin [1] who lived  and worked here at St. Mary’s for many years.  I learned that the issue of justice was his number 1 priority. We’d be at lunch or supper. He would be rather quiet till an issue came up in conversation that had sandwiched in it, the issue justice. Then he  would come alive. He had a nose for fairness issues - justice issues - especially for the poor and unnoticed. Justice was his bottom line.

CONCLUSION

What’s your issue? What are you off on?

I don’t know what I’m off on - but maybe those who know me - know what it is. Both that nun, that teacher, Charlie O’Leary and Jack Lavin, helped me see that people can be off on the issue of justice - and how that leads to peace.

We all have heard Pope Paul VI’s mantra: “Want peace; work for justice.”

I once saw a great video - that brought out the issue of justice and peace, fairness and solidarity, big time.

The main speaker in the video said that peace in the world, peace in our community, peace in our family, peace in ourselves - will only exist and work when we have fairness.

The video said things like, “To have peace, everyone has to have a piece of the pie.”  “Everyone has to feel they also have a piece of the action. In other words everyone has a voice and a vote.”

Leave someone out. Expect a cry - and sometimes a revolution - from the poor slobs that are being neglected. Amen.



OOOOOOOOOO

NOTES:

Read Father Jack Lavin's book, Noticing Lazarus at Our Door


EMOTION


Quote for Today - December 4, 2012

"Emotion is not the Cinderella of our inner life, to be kept in her place among the cinders in the kitchen. Our emotional life is us in a way our intellectual life cannot be."

John MacMurray

Chew on that thought. Agree? Disagree? It all depends? Don't understand? Please explain? Would someone say that the reverse be also true?


Monday, December 3, 2012

WHAT IF'S 
AND 
IF IT WASN'T FOR'S

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this First Monday of Advent is, "What If's and If It Wasn't For's."

Life consists of both "What if's" and "If it wasn't for's."

WHAT IF'S

There are lots of things in life we could have done and didn't do.

It could have been a word, a conversation, a help, towards mom or dad, brother or sister, neighbor or stranger - but we didn't do it.

Some might have been sins of omission.

Realizing them can paralyze us - dumb us down - de-energize us - discourage us. 

We all have our "What if's."  

They are our regrets

What we can do now is to say, "I'm sorry!" if others are living. We can always try again. We can learn from our blindness - or selfishness. 

Yet, they reappear and haunt us from time to time.

BUT THERE ARE ALSO THE POSITIVES

We can also look at the positives. We can look at all those, "If it wasn't for me" or "If it wasn't for you" this would never have taken place. 

If it wasn't for our mom and dad meeting, marrying, loving each other, we would not be hear - obviously. I

If it wasn't for so and so coming back to the faith or because they went to church - they gave us good example - and so we are here today.

It's good to think and thank God for all these positive things that happened - and we are different as a result. 

IF IT WASN'T FOR

If it wasn't for St. Francis Xavier - whose feast we celebrate today - the Jesuits would be different. Yet he was one of the original 7 - and that made many a difference. 


There would be no Xaxier high schools and colleges and universities. There would be no kids named, F.X. 

If it wasn't for his 13 month ocean voyage to Goa and the Orient - many, many would never have become Catholics - would never have found Christ in their lives. 

If it wasn't for his style of being poor, the poor in Goa would not have gravitated towards him. The upper classes didn't go for him like the lower castes did. 

If he didn't make the switch in style - wearing fancy classy clothes, he would not have been allowed a chance to preach Christ in Japan. That gave him entrance - and  a base for operations. 

WHAT IF HE WENT TO CHINA?

Back to the "What if's?" What if he got into China. He was headed there but died at the age of 46.

CONCLUSION

So life is loaded with both "What if's" as well as "If it wasn't for him or her's".

It would make good Advent reflection on these two issues. 

Here's two questions:

1) When it comes to Christ, what if I...?

2) If it wasn't for Christ I would ...?