Quote for Today - December 19, 2012 "A decent provision for the poor is the true test of civilization." Samuel Johnson, Boswell's Life of, 1772
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
CONSUBSTANTIAL
INTRODUCTION
This will be a short homily for December 18th - because it’s going to complicated and
confusing. The topic is Jesus as God - and Jesus as equal with the Holy
Spirit to and with the Father. How could anyone explain the Trinity? We find it
difficult to explain ourselves and our relationships with each other.
The title of my homily is, “Consubstantial.”
Last year - for the First Sunday of Advent - the Nicean Creed which is the usual Creed for
Sunday Mass - changed in its wording from “one in being with the Father” to “consubstantial
with the Father.”
Some in the Church didn’t think “one in being with the Father”
was an exact translation from the Latin text’s words “consubstantialem Patri” -
which is a translation from the original Greek text of the Nicene Creed of the
year 325. The Greek word that early church leaders and theologians came up with
was “homoousios”. The first part of the word - that is, “homo” - means “same”. The
second part of that word “ousia” means in English “being” or “essence” - but
when you translate that second word “ousia” into Latin with the word
“substantia” you have grabbed a word that has material overtones as well. When we say “substance” we think stuff. The new translators want us to think “being”
or “essence”.
All these words have long, long, long, long histories.
It took the Catholic Church - East and West - till the year
325 at the Council of Nicea to develop and then declare Christ is one with the
Father - one in being with the Father - of the same Substance of the Father. In
other words, Jesus is God.
Further councils stressed the equality of the Holy Spirit in
this Trinity.
Further councils stressed the humanity as well as the
divinity of Christ.
TODAY’S GOSPEL
Today’s gospel text from Matthew 1: 18-25 was written before 110 A.D. and probably
around 80 to 90 A.D. It is key in all
the arguments for the next 300 to 500 years.
Matthew is very clear in pointing out that Mary become pregnant by the
Holy Spirit - without Joseph.
But Matthew wants to continue stressing as he did with yesterday’s genealogy
that Jesus is of the lineage of David and that comes through David - to Joseph -
who adopts - or takes on very courageously the calling that Mary had received
from God.
CONCLUSION
So those who translated the creed into English in the 1970’s
- chose “one in Being with the Father.”
Those who did the new translation chose “consubstantial” - substantial
having a different meaning than our word “substantial” - and the different
documents that came out said for us to try to explain all this.
Each time we
have the creed at Mass - like Sundays - we can use the Nicean or the Apostles
creed. I’ve done both - sometimes to avoid the word "consubstantial".
However, the
Apostles Creed has the phrase, “he descended into hell” and that doesn’t mean
“hell” the way we understand “hell”. It’s into the deeper areas after death
where all the dead are pictured. I’m sure that confuses people as well. At least that’s what I believe. Enough already. What was he talking about?
HATRED
Quote for Today - December 18, 2012 "If you want to be miserable, HATE someone." Anonymous Questions: Do you agree with that statement about hatred? Have you ever hated anyone? What happened next? Have you ever unhated? How did that icy fence come down between you and the other?
Monday, December 17, 2012
ALIVE ON THE EDGE
Quote for Today - December 17, 2012 "We are always attracted to the edges of what we are, out by the edges where it's a little raw and nervy." E.L. Doctorow, in the Los Angeles Times, April 5, 1989 Questions: Always? If we stop being attracted to the edges of what we are, does that mean we're dying? Who can better tell us what we are: ourselves or others? If we can name what we are like, name what is a little raw and nervy? Picture: Mohawk Men Working on a Skyscraper - found on line.
Now with a true bell your story becomes final. Now men in monasteries, men of requiems,
familiar with the dead,
include you in their offices.
You just stand anonymous among thousands, waiting in the dark at great stations on the edge of countries known to prayer alone, where fires are not merciless, we hope, and not without end.
You pass briefly through our midst. Your books and writings have not been consulted. Our prayers are pro defuncto N.
Yet some look up, as though among a crowd of prisoners
or displaced persons, they recognized
a friend once known in
a far country.
For these the sun also rose
after a forgotten war upon an idiom
you made great.
They have not forgotten you.
In their silence you are still
famous, no ritual shade.
How slowly this bell tolls in a monastery tower for a whole age, and for the quick death of an unready self!
The title was just “Joy” - till the news out of Connecticut on Friday.
TODAY IS JOYFUL SUNDAY
This Sunday we celebrate Joyful Sunday - Gaudete Sunday -
the half way point in Advent.
We heard in the first two readings and the Psalm the theme of joy and rejoicing, giving
thanks. We also heard the theme of motive for rejoicing: it’s new life - change
- and we heard this especially in today’s gospel - with the preaching of John the Baptist - to
various groups.
This morning a question: On a scale of 1 to 10 am I a joyful
person?
I think I’m usually a 9 or a 10 on that. So I think I am a
joyful person.
However, others have a voice, a vote, about that vote. They have to deal with
me. Each of us experiences each of us.
Everyone has to ask at times: “When I walk into a room, do I
get a ‘Yes’ - an ‘Oh good’ vote or an ‘Oh no!’ vote?”
That’s an “Uh oh!” if I get an “Oh no!” vote.
And if I give myself an, “Oh no” vote when it comes to being
a joyful person - being a person who
brings joy to the world - when, where and how can I change?
CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCE
I like to say that everyone has the following experience I once had. I’m
playing stickball as a kid on 62nd
Street in Brooklyn,
New York and the pink Spaldeen
ball goes into the man up the streets front yard. He’s sitting on the stoop. He
won’t let us get it. He’s a grouch. What happened? I’m standing there watching
him yelling at us kids and I say to myself, “I don’t want to be like that when
I grow up.”
Each of us has to ask, “Have I?” I think everyone has that kind of an
experience and I hope everyone chooses to be a joyful person. Have I?
A CHRISTMAS CAROL - BY CHARLES DICKENS
I saw A Christmas
Carol again Friday night put on by the Colonial Players of Annapolis - up
at the Colonial Players theater on East
Street. Once
more there were lots of little kids there. Did any one of those kids
consciously or unconsciously decide, “I don’t want to be like Scrooge when I grow up.” Once more I had to look at
myself and ask: “Have I become a Scrooge?”
As I looked around the theater - before the play - which
they put on every other Christmas - I
noticed lots of little kids. It’s an every other Christmas event for some
families. This time it was extra significant - because I noticed all the little
kids there. It was just like these kinds
of kids who were killed on Friday in Sandy HookSchool in Newtown, Connecticut.
A prayer, “Oh my God, no!”
I was doing what millions of Americans were doing - aware of
little kids a lot more - since the shooting. Last evening I got an e-mail from
a friend of mine in Ohio.
She wrote, “Today - Saturday - I went
with Marilyn and her family - including her 3 year old granddaughter Phoebe -
to see the Toledo Ballet/Symphony perform ‘The Nutcracker’. Most of the dancers
were professionals, but they did incorporate around 20 children dancers from
the Toledo
area. It was delightful. I enjoyed it so much. But, a few times, when the young
children were dancing, I thought of the little ones who lost their lives
yesterday in Connecticut,
and the tears began again.”
Life like the rosary beads has the sorrowful mysteries along
with the joyful ones. I prefer joy.
REVIEW OF THE WEEK
We come to Sunday Mass and in our moments here - 50 to 60
minutes - we do what the Sunday morning
talk shows do. We look back on our week and we look forward to a new week.
How was your last week? What would it sound like to each
other on a Sunday morning talk show? What are your hopes for this week - 9 days
before Christmas?
To practice what I preach, I looked back on last week.
Last Sunday night we went out to dinner - Date night - as a
community to Adam’s Ribs. We toasted Father Blas who was leaving on Tuesday
morning for home - for Paraguay
- to celebrate his 25th Anniversary a priest. Nice. It was joyful.
He was looking forward to seeing his brother Gustavo who was recovering from
cancer. That was sorrowful. We find out
when the bill came, someone paid for it. Woo. Thankful. Nice.
I was on duty - and no calls came when we were in the
restaurant. Good. The Giants had won that day. It was joyful. I was rooting for the Ravens to beat the
Redskins - which would help the Giants. It wasn’t meant to be. I learned long
ago not to let sports results dominate my spirit. I made that decision when the
Baltimore Colts beat the New York Giants way, way back, in 1958 - in Sudden
Death - 23-17. Bummer. I was stuck in a convent that day in Scranton, Pennsylvania
visiting my sister Peggy a nun. And there was a TV set in the big room we were
sitting along with lots of families. Bummer. I didn’t find out they lost till
we got back home to Brooklyn. That got to me.
Somewhere along the line I said, “I won’t let that sap my spirit like that ever
again.”
I got a call to the hospital that night - a lady was dying
of cancer. I anointed her and I prayed with her for her - along with her
family. She said, “I’m ready!”
Translation: I’m ready to go home to God. It was a sorrowful moment for
me - triggering more sorrow than joy.
Each of us is our own translator of life’s moments.
Early Monday morning I got another call to get to the
hospital - a baby was dead - stillborn. The duty guy is on till 8 AM. This was
6:35 AM. That was a sorrowful mystery. Why God? Why? 33 weeks old. We prayed. I
baptized the little girl Alexa - and prayed with and for her parents - and
grandmother. A sorrowful - sorrowful mystery.
I found out when I got back from the hospital last Monday
morning that Father Blas had just found out that his brother Gustavo had died.
Ugh. That was a sorrowful mystery. What would that be like planning on flying
home on Tuesday morning to celebrate - and to see one’s family - and to find
out on Monday morning - one’s brother had died.
I had Mass with the whole St. Mary’s high school on
Wednesday. It was a wonderful Mass. The
psychic energy - was calm and mellow. Sometimes the kids seem so elsewhere.
Sometimes they seem noisy and upsetty. Last Wednesday morning it was a joyful -
prayerful Mass. Mystery. Mystery. Mystery.
Thursday morning I was at the School of the Incarnation for
the Sacrament of Reconciliation - confessions. They had lined up 8 priests - so
that made it easier to hear all those confessions. The kids come face to face.
The kid walks over to one of the priests who is sitting there and the kid sits.
We begin with a greeting and a sign of the cross. Kids sins are mentioned and a
penance is given. I usually ask the kid to do something nice for mom or dad or
brother or sister. Then there is the pardon and absolution prayer and Go in
Peace.
I think this way of confession is much better than we were
kids - going into the box and sometimes making up numbers and sins. I like it
that a little kid has the experience of talking to an adult for a moment and
you can see their face picturing moments - usually at home - talking back to
parents, skipping homework, fighting with siblings - Amazing they use a word
like “sibling”. I never had siblings when I was a kid. I had a brother and 2
sisters.
A thought hits me. I see a kid’s face. Is this the kid for
life? A smile? A worry? Joyful? Sorrowful? What will become of this child? I
pray that the kid has a great life. Since they are mentioning a moment when
they did a negative, a so called “sin”, I like to ask, “What are you good at? A
sport? A subject in school? Soccer. Social studies. Music. Lacrosse.
I drive back to St. Mary’s after a second session with the
kids after lunch and get back just before school gets out: a joyful moment.
Friday I turn the radio on while driving back from the 12:10
Mass and hear the first sounds for me - about the horror in Connecticut.
People will want us clergy to pray for the kids and the
folks up there and parents and teachers everywhere. People will want us to say something that
helps. Uh oh!
Translation: will they be angry when we say, “Horrible.
Don’t know what to say. Scary? Terrible”?
I see the last name of the killer. Sounds Catholic. Always
wish that our faith would challenge and help us not to make such horrible
decisions - do such horrible actions.
Want to know motive - like the rest of people.
Want to say: presidents cry. I cry. God cries?
Could say: there is evil in life - in people.
Could say: there is sickness in people - craziness - mixed upness.
Could say: there is sorrow in people - as well as joy.
Could ask: does Christmas really mean - Christ’s Mass - and
does each Mass - or at least Christmas Mass have any impact on the lives of
those who are there?
Could say: Joy is the echo of God within us - as someone put
it.
Could ask: if that is true, does sorrow mean, God is absent
- from the minds and hearts of some people?
Yes at times. That night in the garden and that afternoon on
the cross Jesus screamed, “My God, my God, why have your forsaken me.”
Felt some joy last night when that priest, Monsignor Robert
Weiss up there in Newtown
or close by spoke some words that this is horrible and we just need to be with
each other in moments like this.
Recalled one of my lifetime learnings: “Teach thy tongue to
say, ‘I do not know.”
As someone said on TV last night: at a moment like this,
some people need words - some people need silence. What do you need? If it’s
silence, take some good walks this week. If you need words, talk and listen to
each other. Communion with Christ doesn’t just mean 5 minutes here in church on Sunday
morning.
CONCLUSION
Christmas is coming. It’s going to be different in the lives
of a lot of people this year because of this tragedy.
Christmas comes every year - and every year we sing, “Joy to
the World the Lord Has Come.”
And Jesus keeps coming into a world where are plenty of
moments of sorrow and moments of joy - and hopefully most of us choose to be
people who bring joy to our world - at home - at work - at school - on the
roads.
Each week - each day - we have lots of experiences - and it’s our choice to
bring joy, light, hope, a good word to that experience.
Each newspaper has good news and bad - its announcements of births and deaths, victories
and defeats, ads and arrests, cartoons and crossword puzzles - along with
Sudoku.
Our move. Of course tragedies kill us. Ugh. Every death is our death. As John Donne
[1572-1631] the preacher and poet said, “Every time that bell tolls it tolls,
don’t ask for whom? It tolls for thee.” We
are all related toe each other. We are all God’s children. We are all sisters
and brothers - siblings. Hopefully, we will be resurrection, hope and joy to
others as well. Hopefully we hear Jesus’ call to us to “Go into the whole world
and bring Good News to others. Amen.”
LOVE EQUATED
WITH JOY, BUT ....
Quote for Today - December 16, 2012 "I wonder why love is so often equated with joy when it is everything else as well. Devastation, balm, obsession, granting and receiving excessive value, and losing it again. It is recognition, often of what you are not but might be. It sears and it heals. It is beyond pity and above law. It can seem like truth." Florida Scott-Maxwell, The Measure of My Days [1972]