Sunday, April 28, 2013

7 C’S:
MAKE ONE OF THEM 
COMPARISONS 



INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 5 Sunday of Easter C is, “7 C’s: Make One of Them Comparisons.”

Have you ever noticed that words beginning with “C” often appear when talking about spirituality and religion?

For example: “Conversion, Change, Challenge, Care, Concerns, Community, Choice, Christ, Communion, Contrast, Comparisons.”

The title of my homily is, “7 C’s: Make One of Them Comparisons.”

TODAY’S READINGS

Today’s readings offer great contrast, great change and great comparisons.

In today’s first reading from the Acts of the Apostles we have the closing message that the door of faith is now opened to the Gentiles. Tremendous new life lay on the other side of that door.

When the Apostles and followers of Christ were communicating with the Jews - there was conflict and controversy. When the door opened to the outside world - to the Gentiles - things changed. We’re hearing now in the Acts of the Apostles - this post gospel writing - about what happened next - we see the door open to the whole world. The Gospel moves out of Jerusalem, out of  Israel and into the whole Mediterranean world and beyond - and eventually to us.

The door has opened.

Today’s second reading from the Book of Revelation offers with great imagination and energy - a contrast between the old and the new.

Being a product of the 1960’s I hear Bob Dylan’s song, “The Times They Are A Changin” in this second reading.

The last sentence in this reading we heard today has, “The One who sat on the throne said, ‘Behold, I make all things new.” The first sentence has, “Then I, John, saw a new heaven and a new earth.”

Sandwiched in between those two sentences we have the great image of a wedding, a new marriage, between heaven and earth - God with us. We have the great contrast between the old city, the old Jerusalem, and the New Jerusalem - and the heavens opening up.

Here comes new life…. Here comes the Bride …. Sin and death are gone…. divorced from us….  The Great Divorce that Adam and Eve caused - their Original Sin that got us thrown out of paradise - is ended. The New is here. That’s the Good News that Christ proclaimed.

Powerful language - powerful images - powerful possibilities - powerful contrasts and comparisons.

And today’s gospel begins with a scene from the Last Supper. Judas leaves the room and then everything changes in comparison.  Now the Son of Man can be glorified. There is a world of difference between a room filled with Judas and a room without Judas.

COMPARISONS

The title of my homily is, “7 C’s: Make One of Them Comparisons.”

Think about the power of comparisons!

Think about the power comparisons play in our thinking processes.  

Think about the power of comparisons - how they can overwhelm us - wham us - push us - manipulate us - mess our minds up -  to do things we might not want to do.

We have all heard the saying, “Comparisons are odious.”

We’ve all heard the saying, “Comparisons can crush!”

We have all heard the saying that comparisons can lead to happiness as well as to feeling miserable.

Sometimes we secretly rejoice when the rich and the famous - the other - fails and falls - we feel better about ourselves in comparison. It’s the stuff that sells and populates  and peoples People Magazine.

Comparisons can also get us to rush to do something new - to try to be different - sometimes to be stupid or overspend - because we want  to shut up inner comparisons and complaints we’ve been talking to ourselves about ever since we were kids.

Think about our life.  Are we comparing ourselves to someone else?

Are we comparing our bodies, our flab, out love handles, our house, our cars, our jobs, our vacations, our salary, our wrinkles, our age, with others?

I’m saying here to listen to our inner voices: comparisons have tremendous power. Do we want to give it that much power in area A, B, and C?

Parents want their kids to be different than they are.

Kids want their parents to be like so and so’s parents.

Parents compare themselves to other parents.

Adults compare the care and energy and effort and cost they have to put out for aging parents or siblings or children - sometimes comparing all they are doing compared to what their brothers and sisters are doing - or compare themselves to other people - often without crossing their threshold and knowing what they are going through.

I like that image of the door in today’s second reading.

Write the word “comparison” in ball point pen on your hand - and think about all this, this week,

Use contrast - use comparison - and construct the rooms - the mindsets we’re living in - and then construct - imagine - a changed room - a rearranged life - and then make choices to change. Ask Christ to come into our rooms, into our homes, into our mind set and here him say to us, “Peace.” Then work with him towards change and conversion - one step at a time - not wanting another to change - but to change ourselves and then see how the rest of the room - the rest of our lives change - step by step - a day at a time - because we have changed.

I like that image at the beginning of today’s gospel. Things change when Judas leaves the room.

I like to ask from the pulpit: “What happens when I walk into a room? What happens when I walk out the door? Do people say, ‘Phew. Finally. Now we can relax.’”

I remember hearing how hurt a priest felt when he walked down the aisle and heard, “Oh no not him again!” We’re lucky is this parish - you can avoid us - if you want.

Comparisons are powerful….

Let’s use that image to go deeper.

Think of the Judas we are to ourselves - in our upper room - this complaining self - this stealing self - screaming inwardly all the time how things are going - wanting my picture to be the picture of how life works. See ourselves selling ourselves out for 30 pieces of silver or whatever. See ourselves crucifying the Christ within us.

Give that Judas his or her walking papers and start living the Gospel life.

Contrast, compare, ourselves in those two modes.

Chose life.  Choose Christ.

Comparisons can crush - but see that comparisons can also get us to rush - slowly - to new life - to have new order in our life.

CONCLUSION

It’s Spring …. It’s Earth Month …. Last Monday was Earth Day …. the call is to clean up our environment.

We’ve been told to talk about the environment from the pulpit. I gave a whole sermon on that last week….

Let me throw in a few comments in my ending…..

It’s easy to complain about the other person’s garden - yard - house. It’s easy to complain about the other person’s habits.

I’m pushing for looking and working on self….

I hate it when I see people dump on Annapolis - but I found out I can’t do much about it. But I can pick up stuff people dump on St. Mary’s Parking lot or Newman Street across from the front of our church - leading down to Compromise Street. I can make that compromise in my mind and do what I can do.

I can challenge those who make fun of those concerned about our earth - by saying, “I’m a tree hugger. I like trees - spring, summer, fall and winter.  I like clean water. I am glad that smokers are not blowing smoke in my face - and people who don’t smoke I think get 10 more years of life than those who don’t.

The title of my homily is, “7 C’s: Make One of Them Comparisons.”

Compare yourself to the self you are called to be. Then open that door and work with Jesus and say, “Behold I make all things new!”

BEAUTY AND BREAD


Quote for Today - April 28,  2013

"Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in, where Nature may heal  and cheer and give strength to body and soul alike."

John Muir, The Yosemite, 1912


Saturday, April 27, 2013

SEEING  -  WONDERING

Quote for Today - April 27, 2013



"I walk in the garden,  I look at the flowers and shrubs and trees and discover in them an exquisiteness of contour, a vitality of edge and a vigor of spring as well as an infinite variety of color that no artifact I have seen in the last sixty years can rival ... Each day, as I look, I wonder where my eyes were yesterday."

Bernard Berenson

Friday, April 26, 2013

TIMES 
THEY ARE A-CHANGIN



Quote for Today - April 26, 2013

"If we live good lives, the times are also good. As we are, such are the times."

Saint Augustine [354-430]

Comment: Next time someone says the time we are living in horrible times, try that quote.

Or quote the opening paragraph of Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens [1812-1870], "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way - in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only."  

Thursday, April 25, 2013

THE PAST



Quote for Today - April 25, 2013

"Even God cannot change the past."

Agathon  (447?-401 B.C.)

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

WAITING FOR 
AN INSPIRATION 




Quote for Today - April 24, 2013

"If you wait for inspiration you'll be standing on the corner after the parade is a mile down the street."

Ben Nichols

Tuesday, April 23, 2013


CHRISTIAN:
NOUN OR ADJECTIVE?

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this Tuesday in the Fourth Week of Easter is, “Christian: Noun or Adjective?”

The last comment in today’s first reading is the fascinating text, “It was in Antioch that the disciples were first called Christians.”

I’d like to say a few words about the word “Christian” - leaving today’s Gospel to just sit there - especially because the gospel for this past Sunday is part of today’s gospel.

NOUN OR ADJECTIVE

Every time I hear that comment at the end of today’s gospel,  I think of a comment by C. S. Lewis about how  the word “Christian” is used as a noun and an adjective. He thinks it’s wiser to use the word “Christian” as a noun. Then if you want to make judgments about someone and/or their behavior or their lifestyle - add an adjective like good or bad or devout or non-practicing Christian.

To make his point, C.S. Lewis in the preface to his book, Mere Christianity, uses the example of the word “gentleman”. It meant someone who had a coat of arms and some land. It wasn’t a compliment to call someone a gentleman. He could be a liar or a fool - but he was still a gentleman - if he had the coat of arms, the land and the title. In time it came to describe behavior.

He says the same thing happened with the word “Christian”. It didn’t happen with the word “doctor” or “priest”. They could be good or bad, old or young. Notice I didn’t mention weight or looks.

I slip on this, but I prefer to go the way of C.S. Lewis.

To be a Christian - you are baptized.  Then one can  declare oneself a member of the Christian community. Keeping it a noun, some say, “I used to be a Christian.”  Noun! They were baptized.

It’s tricky when you bring the word “Catholic” into the mix. I would assume it was an attitude and an adjective when it was first coined - but became a noun. I don’t know if C.S. Lewis said it of the word “Catholic,” but I think it too works better as a noun.

And  we’ve all heard people say, “I’m a Catholic Christian”. That becomes tricky - especially if one also thinks about the comment, “I’m a Christian Catholic.”  That is saying something as well.

We know or could find out if someone is baptized - but as to whether a person is Christian - if you make it an adjective - that’s tricky.

The best road I think would be to reserve the judgments about who’s a good or bad Christian to judging oneself only.

IN ANTIOCH AND IN ANNAPOLIS

I would assume that here in Antioch in the Acts of the Apostles - it was a noun - and it was used to describe those folks who joined the movement called the Way - or “followers of Jesus” or “Christians” and how they were living their lives.

What about us here in Annapolis?

We’d probably go with the word “Catholic” as a noun - as “Christian” as noun and adjective.

When it’s used to judge, label, fight, argue, with each other, then I try to hide.

When it’s used for us as Catholics to try to follow Jesus - by doing what he did - imitating what he did - then being called “Christian” hopefully energizes us to love one another, to turn the other cheek, to go the extra mile, to have concern for the poor, to forgive, to be with the Father in secret, all those things.

CONCLUSION

In the meanwhile, let’s care for one another and maybe some people will know us as the old hymn goes. “They will know we are Christians by our love, by our love.”