Quote for Today - February 1, 2013 "Live so that the preacher can tell the truth at your funeral." K. Beckstrom
Thursday, January 31, 2013
RUINING
MY REPUTATION
Quote for Today - January 31, 2013 "Glass, china, and reputation, are easily cracked and never well mended." QUESTIONS: Have I ever ruined another's reputation by reporting to the winds what another has done - along with our thoughts on the other's motives? Has anyone ever ruined our reputation? Have I ever ruined my own reputation? Has it been mended? What have I learned from my mistakes - and the consequences coming from them?
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
LAUGHING AT OURSELVES
Quote for Today - January 30, 2013 "When we begin to take our failures non-seriously, it means we are ceasing to be afraid of them. It is of immense importance to learn to laugh at ourselves." Katherine Mansfield [1888-1923]
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
MISTAKES
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 3rd Tuesday in Ordinary
Time is, “Mistakes!”
We all make them. Like steaks, some mistakes are rare; some
medium; some well done. Mistakes!
The famous mayor of New
York, Fiorello Henry La Guardia [1882-1947] when
asked about an appointment he made that was a disaster said, “When I make a
mistake it’s a beaut!”
Today’s readings trigger thoughts of that theme - especially
the first reading from Hebrews. This
section of The Letter to the Hebrews gets
deeper into the theme of sacrifice, the human move to wash away sin - please
God, somehow, someway, some day from my life. What I did was stupid and sinful,
dumb and damaging. As Psalm 51- “The
Miserere” says it for all of us: “My sin is always before me!” Ugh. Humans
use blood - water - annual sacrifices of bulls and goats - anyway to wash away
our sins.
Mistakes stay and stick. We know ours. We have memorized
them.
Today’s readings stress that it’s God’s will that we be
healed - freed - saved - redeemed from our mistakes.
Today’s readings have the theme of doing God’s will - in all
three readings: First Reading, Psalm, and Gospel.
And when we go against God’s will - when we make a mistake - we feel it - sometimes
for the rest of our lives. So we go to God - praying, begging, wanting his will
to forgive us - wanting our sins to be washed away.
FORGIVENESS
& LOVE
Being educated in becoming a priest, I heard a thousand
times that love is the main message of Christianity. Then somewhere along the
line I heard loud and clear someone saying that forgiveness is what makes
Christianity different - unique - from
the world religions. All stress love of
God and neighbor as central. Christianity does that as well - but I heard that
day someone saying that forgiveness is the big one.
I have thought about that. As I get older and listen to
people, I discovered that for some forgiveness is central - is key - necessary.
So you hear me preaching that. Just the other day, someone
said to me on the street: “You priests here - really stress - forgiveness and
mercy.” I said, “Thank you. We’re supposed to. We’re Redemptorists and our
motto is from Psalm 130 - the De Profundis Psalm, ‘Copiosa apud eum redemptio.’
‘With him there is copious, fullness, plentiful redemption.’”
HAVE WE GOTTEN THAT MESSAGE YET - MACBETH?
Have we gotten that message yet? I’ve see Macbeth twice. I
haven’t understood all that Shakespearean language - or all those lines - but I
get the message that this famous Shakespearian play is all about guilt and the lingering
horror that clings to us from evil done. It keeps us from sleep - causes us nightmares - and leaves us with lingering fears - and horrors in every dark corner.
Macbeth kills Duncan the king - and his wife is in on it. She moves the bloody
daggers over to the dead king’s body.
King Duncan’s sons flee and are blamed for the murder of their father. Macbeth
becomes king. Then the play plays on the theme of the ghosts of what they have
done. Blood is on both Macbeth’s hands - especially Lady Macbeth’s and nothing
will wash it off.
CONCLUSION: CHRIST THE LAMB OF GOD WHO TAKES AWAY THE
SINS OF THE WORLD.
Christ is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the
world - as we pray and hear at every mass.
In today’s gospel folks have filled the house Jesus is in.
His mother and brothers - his followers - are trying to get into the house to be with
him. They send that message to Jesus. Jesus
says anyone who does the will of my Father is brother and sister to me. They
are at home with me.
Isn’t that what we pray now at every Mass. Lord I am not
worthy that you should enter under my roof - just say the word and my soul will
be healed. Jesus can heal us of these horrible memories we have from our past -
our sins and our mistakes.
Go to him. Grow with him. Be in communion with him. Be at
home - under the same roof with him. Amen.
FAILURES
Quote for Today - January 29, 2013 "Failure is God's own tool for carving some of the finest outlines in the character of his children." Thomas Hodgkin
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS
The title of my thoughts is, “St. Thomas Aquinas.”
Today the Catholic Church honors St. Thomas Aquinas - so let
me make a few comments about him. He died on March 7th, 1274. His
feast day was switched to January 28th. I didn’t spot any reason. I
assume it’s because his feast gets knocked out at times because it’s usually
during Lent. They picked January 28th, because that’s the date of
the publication of his Summa.
He is a gift to the world and to our Church.
He had a great love of Jesus’ Presence in the Eucharist. I
assume we do also being here for one
more weekday Mass.
He bridges philosophy and theology - and I assume there will be revivals of
Thomas’ writings on and off through the centuries - because of just that. He can bridge science and theology - a much
needed bridge. He said: authority is the weakest argument. Don’t just argue and
tell me. Show me!
Those in authority tried to silence him in his time. This
happens from time to time in our Church. I don’t know your take on that - but
my take is: don’t just condemn, prove. Theologians are silenced from time to
time. Then someone says: “Ooops!”
This happened to Dominicans and other theologians at the
time of Vatican II. Rahner and Marin Sola and De Lubac and Congar - were silenced.Then
surprise, they ended up being part of the formulations of the Documents of
Vatican II. And some still bad name them.
This also happened to scripture scholars in the early part
of the last century - till Pius XII came out with an encyclical on Scripture -
Divino Afflante Spiritu. It opened up the doors and windows of Cagholic
Scripture scholarship years before Vatican II. [1]
Pope Benedict 16 has experienced this as well when he was
Joseph Ratzinger - Theologian.
Thomas is very practical. We learn through the senses. Don’t
we all. The Catholic Church is very much sense based. The churches have statues
and stained glass windows. We use candles and water - and oil and gesture.
I love his use of Aristotle and his 5 arguments for the
existence of God. He stresses we know by our senses and then we reflect on what
we learn with logic and reason - before faith. We can know a lot by reason -
and I think this is the way to talk to young people - hoping and praying the
gift of faith kicks in - stress on gift - in God’s good time. For example, we know God exists by looking at
the earth and stars - the Grand Canyon and the
Big Dipper. We know that God is a Trinity by faith - and revelation.
As I was reading up about Thomas Aquinas this morning.
Different articles about his life mentioned places he had been. I pinched
myself because I have been to Cologne [1 hour ] -
Paris [one day and a morning] - Naples
[one day] - Monte Cassino [a couple of hours] - Rome [two times - once for 6 hours - once for
a few weeks]. That hit me for some
reason - and then I remembered a moment on a train from Rome
to Naples with Father
John Ruef. He pointed out the window at a stone tower. That’s the place where
Thomas Aquinas was held captive for 2 years.
Interesting Saint. Check him out. Just type into Google, “Saint Thomas
Aquinas.”
NOTES
[1] Cf. The New Jerome Biblical Commentary,
1990, 72: 20-41. Picture on top: St. Thomas Aquinas by Fra Bartolomeo
Monday, January 28, 2013
THE YAWN
Quote for Today - January 28, 2013 "It's a sad truth that everyone is a bore to someone." Llewellyn Miller, The Encyclopedia of Etiquette, Crown, 1968 Questions and Comments: Have you learned that truth yet? While preaching one gets used to yawns - folks looking at their watches - reading the bullentin - and holding a conversation with the person next to them. Have you ever watched the listeners - in a classroom, at a lecture, in church?