Quote for Today - July 29, 2013 "We learn the rope of life by untying its knots." Jean Toomer, Definitions and Aphorism, Li, 1931
Sunday, July 28, 2013
THE OUR FATHER -
THINK ABOUT IT
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 17th Sunday in
Ordinary Time C is, “The Our Father -
Think About It.”
I was at a wedding reception somewhere along the line and
I’m talking to this guy - who says to me, “I don’t go to church - but I do say
the Our Father.”
Seeing me, did I cause guilt or something? Funny comments happen at priests at weddings.
He continued, “The Our Father is a great prayer. I say it
every day. It has everything in it.”
Then he said, “Think about it!”
I don’t know what I said next or what have you - but I
thought about what that guy said. I want to thank him - because like many
people I say the Our Father over and over again - most of the times without
thinking about it. This guy got me to think about it.
TODAY’S GOSPEL
I thought about that moment when I read today’s gospel. It
contains Luke’s version of the Our Father - a bit different than the one we all
know very well: Matthew’s version. I assume that both Luke and Matthew’s
version have the basic ingredients of the prayer that Jesus taught his
disciples.
Luke was writing for Gentile Christians. His gospel is dated
from around 80 to 90 AD - some scholars think in Antioch
in Syria - the 3rd
largest city in the Roman Empire at the
time. Matthew was written 75 to 90 - perhaps in South Syria - or
Northern Palestine for Jewish Christians - certainly after 70 when Jerusalem was destroyed.
The Our Father is the first part of the New Testament and
the gospels that is translated into the language of any new group that
Christians are reaching out to.
Understand the Our
Father and you understand an awful lot of Jesus’ message.
As priest I noticed that the two things people remember till
their end is the Our Father and Happy Birthday. I was once in a nursing home
in Ohio and I
noticed a sign on the door of the person I was visiting. It said, “Happy
Birthday.”
I asked the lady if it was her birthday. She gave no
response. She was all alone and was out of it and close to death. I wanted to
ask an attendant if anyone sang, “Happy Birthday” to the lady, but I didn’t see
anyone. I can’t sing or carry a tune, but what the heck, the lady was dying.
So
I sang, “Happy Birthday!” and it woke her up and she gave me a face - making me
feel like a fool and off tune. I was.
Surprise she began to sort of sing along
with me. Then she spaced out again.
I said the prayers in the book and anointed
her and then I said the Our Father also out loud.
Surprise! She was praying
along with me - and then spaced out again.
No problem. I’ve often seen people
coming in and out of it during sermons.
So that’s why I say the last two things people remember are
Happy Birthday and the Our Father - Matthew’s version.
And sometimes if the person says, “For thine is the kingdom,
the power and the glory” at the end, I know he or she was either in AA or went
to a ProtestantChurch.
As an aside, wouldn’t it have been nice if the Catholic
Church added that Protestant addition at the end of the Our Father we say at
Mass - as a gesture of good will. Yet at Mass, we did add it a bit later.
TEACH US HOW TO PRAY
Today’s readings are about prayer. They are a good reminder. They are a wake up
call and a challenge for us to think about our prayer life - our communication
- our relationship with God. How is it?
Today’s first reading has the fascinating story in the
primitive text of Genesis - how Abraham like anyone in the marketplace tries to
haggle down a merchant on how much something is going to cost. Abraham gets God
from 50 down to finding 10 good people in Sodom
and Gomorrah -
and God won’t destroy it.
Message: there is nothing wrong with arguing, haggling, begging, bargaining, bothering
God with our prayers.
Today’s Psalm Response has one of the 4 most basic prayers
there are: Help, Sorry, Thanks and Wow! Petition. Contrition. Thanksgiving. And
adoration. The Psalm response we sang was a good prayer, “Lord, on the day I
called for help, you answered
me.” If God doesn’t answer you, pray some more - and let God know you’re angry
with Him. The Psalms are loaded with that reality - especially, “Help!”
Today’s second reading from Colossians
challenges us to bring to prayer the need for God’s power to forgive us our
sins - our transgressions - one of the key parts of the Our Father.
Today’s gospel begins with a great way to learn how to pray: Go to Jesus and
say to him: “Lord, teach me how to pray.”
Today’s gospel gives us Luke’s Version of the Our Father and
then the key message of asking, seeking, knocking at God’s door - any time of
the day or night and keep nagging him - nagging him - nagging him.
PRAYER SUGGESTION: USE A ROSARY
One simple, short, suggestion: use your rosary for your
praying.
I like to say in the pulpit, “Rosary beads aren’t just for
Hail Mary’s.” I’m not saying I’m against the great prayer called, “The Hail Mary.”
What I am saying is to use a rosary as a reminder. When you
reach for it in your pocket in the car or at a boring meeting or while walking,
you’re saying to yourself: “I am now
about to pray.”
Muslims do the same thing with beads and prayer rugs. Just
take them out and you’re telling yourself, I am now going to pray. Rosary beads
are great worry beads - they are great prayer beads - and don’t be scared to
let people see you use them. We’re supposed to be evangelizing folks.
PLEASE EXPLAIN BETTER
If you tell me next summer. I heard your sermon last summer
about using one’s rosary beads for prayer - and for this past year my rosary
beads are right here in my pocket - and I take them out from time to time to
pray - and I wasn’t scared to tell family and friends what I was doing.
Next I hope you hear the following.
Before using a rosary for Hail Mary’s, the Our Father, the
Glory be and the Apostles Creed, say on the 59 beads for a month - once a day
the opening request in today’s gospel: “Lord, teach me how to pray!”
Just do that for a month.
Second month: Our Father….
In today’s gospel, Jesus then teaches his disciples the Our
Father.
Now, it’s an obvious disaster what we can do with the Our
Father when we say it as if it is one long word: OurFatherwhoartinheavenhall owedbethynameThykingdomcomethywillbedoneonearthasitisinheavenGiveusthisdayourdailybreadandforgiveusourtrespassesasweforgivethosewhotresspassagainstusandleadusnotintotemptationbutdeliverusfromevil.Amen. It’s not one word….
As that guy at the wedding said to me: Think about it.
For that second month simply say on the 59 beads the words,
Our Father - and forget about the counting - let the beads do that for you.
Ponder God as Father - our Father - while saying those two words 59 times. If
you’re a father, what kind of a father are you? Think about God - as Father.
That’s one of Jesus’ big teachings. It can be seen as sexist - or it can be
seen as God as core - God as central - God as creator and provider - mother and
father, parent. God as the one who keeps the whole house of the Universe
together. Our Father.
By saying that we’re saying we believe in God. We’re saying,
“I’m not in this life alone.” We’re saying, “There is a God - Our Father - and
He is aware of me.”
Say for the next month, “Our Father who are or art in
heaven.” Saying there is a heaven is
another act of faith. See where that takes you by saying it 59 times and
thinking about it for a month.
Say for a month: “Hallowed be your name.” A person’s name is sacred. The person whom we
love, we say their name all the time in our inner brain. I read once that
lovers say one word - all the time - the name of the person they love. Hallowed
be your name - our Father.”
“Your kingdom come.” Say that for a month on your beads. See
where that takes us. Mathew adds, “on earth as it is in heaven”. Luke just
says, “Your kingdom come.” What does
kingdom mean? Isn’t the kingdom what God desires - what God wants, what God
wills, what God hopes for. Isn’t that what we want, a dream world and a dream
hereafter. Compare our dream with God’s dream and see where that takes us - in
the here and in hereafter.
“Give us each day our daily bread.” We feed birds. We give animals water in the
dog days of summer. We keep hearing lots of folks are starving and there is
enough food for all. People eat. People are hungry. It’s great when we see
beyond our own bellies and do for the bellies and stomachs of all.
“Give us this day our daily bread.” Notice the word “Our”. That one prayer can
get us to volunteer for Thanksgiving Dinners for others - or to volunteer to
help with the St. Vincent de Paul Society or put money in our poor boxes - or
to help out once a month at the Lighthouse or make sandwiches once a week - or
once a month - or once a year -for hungry folks or what have you.
Forgiveness is the next big theme to pray for a month on -
using our beads. Luke’s version is shorter than Matthew’s. I think one
reason Matthew’s version is more
accepted and known is because it interconnects our being forgiven with the way
we ourselves forgive others.
And lastly, spend a month with our beads with the prayer:
“lead us not into temptation” or “the final
test” as Luke’s version in English puts it. Saying the prayer: “Lead us
not into temptation” - or “Prepare me for the final test.” Say that 59 times on
our beads for a whole month. See where that takes us.
CONCLUSION
The title of my homily is, “The Our Father - Think About
It.”
I think I gave you some practical ways of learning how the Holy Spirit can help
us to pray and how to grow in prayer - how to be with Jesus praying to Our
Father each day.
REMEMBER WHEN
THE MUSIC ....
Quote for Today - July 28, 2013 "Like dead, remembered footsteps on old floors." Edwin Arlington Robinson [1895-1935], The Pity of the Leaves
Saturday, July 27, 2013
THE WHEAT AND
WEEDS PARABLE
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 16th Saturday in
Ordinary Time is, “The Wheat and Weeds Parable.”
Today’s gospel - Matthew 13: 24-30 - has an intriguing parable from Jesus.
It’s a very difficult parable to put into practice. Jesus
calls parables seeds. They slip into our ground and grow and then new life appears
or pops up to challenge us in different places and in various ways.
FIRST STEP: GRASP THE PARABLE
Jesus tells about a farmer whose workers planted wheat seeds
- but someone - an enemy - planted weeds.
Different commentators on the parable say it might be
something that really happened - and
Jesus heard about it - and used it as the basis for his parable.
When the crop of wheat and weeds started showing up, the farm hands came to the owner and said what
was happening. They asked if they should pull up all the weeds - like right
now - like immediately.
The owner of the land says, “No. Do that you might pull up
some of the wheat along with the weeds. At harvest time then we can do the
separation.”
That’s the parable. Then Jesus asks us: “What’s your take on
it?”
SECOND STEP: APPLY THE PARABLE: THE MIND
AS A FIELD
Picture the human mind or brain as a field. In it are
planted lots of stuff. Sometimes it’s done by an enemy. Sometimes it’s done by
ourselves. If we have the TV remote or
the computer - we can put all kinds of stuff into our mind. We can also turn
off the TV or the Computer or what have you.
Some stuff - some seed - once it’s inside our brain - it’s
there and we can’t get it out.
I was in Chartres Cathedral in France in 1996 with my two sisters
and my brother-in-law. The tour guide said in English: “Don’t look over to our
right - watch your wallets and pocket books - because there are two pickpockets
there.” Well of course, everyone turned
and looked and I saw the two pickpockets quickly duck behind a big pole. Guess
what? The two pickpockets are still in my brain. I see them in many churches.
And they came to mind: as I was putting together this homily.
THIRD STEP: APPLICATION
# 2: LET THEM BOTH STAY
The second application is the great challenge from Jesus.
Some people go crazy with weeds in their garden. It’s like the old story of the person who
wrote six times to the Dear Mr. Gardener in the local newspaper. Six different times
the person wrote for advice. Obviously, the first five suggestions didn’t work,
so the sixth suggestion from Dear Mr. Gardener was, “Learn to live with them.”
Some people learn to live with dirt on other people’s
glasses and some don’t.
Some people have problems with bugs on other people’s windshields.
Some people go crazy with strings of spaghetti on their
dad’s shirt as he eats at the nursing home and some don’t.
Some people can’t stand such and such a priest’s long
sermons and some read the bulletin.
Some people don’t like the way so and so dresses for Mass - some people are
thinking about last nights ball game.
Some people think so and so is wrong in how they pronounce Boston or Baltimore
and some don’t mind it when people say “good” when it should be “well”.
Some people complain about who comes to church and who
doesn’t - who goes to communion and who doesn’t.
Some of us have lists about ourselves; some have lists about others.
CONCLUSION
Sometimes we don’t get the remote and we can’t change the channel.
Sometimes we can sit behind poles in church or go to
different Masses or check the web site to see who has what Mass or walk down
different streets or don’t look - but sometimes those weedy thoughts and
comments and scenes appear on our screens and we have to learn to live with
them.
Bummer.
In the meanwhile we can enjoy the wheat called Bread -
called communion - with Jesus - even though we’re thinking about the weather
for this Saturday as we’re walking back to our bench from receiving Communion.
Enjoy life. Enjoy the Lord. Don’t step on the weeds.
DAUGHTER
Quote for Today - July 27, 2013 "My son is my son, till he marries a wife, But my daughter's my daughter all the days of her life." Saying
Friday, July 26, 2013
LIFE DREAMS
Quote for Today - July 26, 2013 "In dreams begins responsibilities." Willian Butler Yeats [ 1865-1939], Responsibilities [1914], epigram (from an old play)
Thursday, July 25, 2013
CIRCLES
Quote for Today - July 25, 2013 "He drew a circle that shut me out - Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout. But Love and I had the wit to win: We drew a circle that took him in." Edwin Markham [1852-1940], Outwitted.