Tuesday, May 19, 2015

May 19, 2015

THE MIRROR

The big mirror - the one just near
the door - the door from the big dressing room - that leads to the stage in 
Radio City Music Hall -  has enjoyed 
the compliments, the comments,
the smiles, the sneak peeks at the           Rockettes by stage hands  -
looking at all these beauties
in the mirror - down through the years.

The big mirror - always thought people
were praising her and not the girls, 
when people caught sight in the
mirror of young skin, slim thin waists, 
tall, tall legs, great measurements.

The big mirror stood there doing
its job for a good 50 years now.
Then  - no the mirror didn’t break -
but it was replaced. The old one
was given to a nursing home
up on the Upper East Side. 
Now it’s all  wrinkles, wrinkles,
wrinkles. Still give God the Glory.
Give God a wink. Give the mirror
a taste of its old glory. Amen.



                                                                     © Andy Costello, Reflections 2015


GIVE  GOD  THE GLORY

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 7th Tuesday after Easter is, “Give God the Glory.”

That word “glory” appears 455 times in the New American Bible and there it is 5 times in today’s gospel [John 17: 1-11a].

In the Bible we hear over and over in many different ways, “Give God the Glory.”

If we watch sports on TV, we often see an athlete make a great play or a great catch or a great hit and he or she stops to give God the glory. They raise their index finger and point to the skies - giving God the glory - not themselves.

After winning a game or a season or a championship athletes often pause and praise their moms or coaches or teammates - everyone. They praise everyone - they give others the glory. Hopefully athletes who are faith drop outs - or what have you - at least thank their parents for good DNA and coaches for great tips and skill practices.

GOOD MOVE

Obviously, it’s good to do this - because this is the reality.

Giving God the glory is a great prayer and a great play.

When I see this on TV or at a game - I often wonder who was the first to announce it publically - to honor God.  

I also think of Lou Gehrig's famous luckiest man on the face of the earth speech? Who started this custom? Praise God. 

Success can harm us - give us a big head - smother us in self-glorification.

Thanking God and others is an act of true humility.

POEM BY THOMAS HARDY

In the sacristy here at St. Mary’s behind this altar there is a mirror which I spot before and after Mass when I walk into the sacristy. When I see that mirror, I  smile as I think of this poem by Thomas Hardly.

Better explain two words in the poem: “vestry” and “glass”. Vestry is the sacristy - where one vests. “Glass” is the mirror.

It’s a story poem about a preacher - a priest - a minister. The title of the poem is, “In Church.”

It goes like this.

IN CHURCH

“And now to God the Father,” he ends
And his voice thrills up to the topmost tiles
Each listener pervades the crowded aisles.
Then the preacher glides to the vestry-door,
And shuts it, and thinks he is seen no more.

The door swings softly ajar meanwhile,
And a pupil of his in the Bible class,
Who adores him as one without gloss or guile,
Sees her idol stand with a satisfied smile
And re-enact at the vestry-glass
Each pulpit gesture in deft dumb-show
That had moved the congregation so.
Thomas Hardy

Give God the Glory!

CONCLUSION

Last night, I wrote a short poem for my blog for today on this same theme - a poem that bounces off the Thomas Hardy poem.

Let me see how this feels and sounds in public. It’s only a first draft and I’ll continue to work on it.  To me writing is re-writing.



THE MIRROR

The big mirror - the one just near
the door - the door from the big dressing   room - that leads to the stage in 
Radio City Music Hall -  has enjoyed 
the compliments, the comments,
the smiles, the sneak peeks at the             Rockettes by stage hands  -
looking at all these beauties
in the mirror - down through the years.

The big mirror - always thought people
were praising her and not the girls, 
when people caught sight in the
mirror of young skin, slim thin waists, tall, 
tall legs, great measurements.

The big mirror stood there doing
its job for a good 50 years now.
Then  - no the mirror didn’t break -
but it was replaced. The old one
was given to a nursing home
up on the Upper East Side. 
Now it’s all  wrinkles, wrinkles,
wrinkles. Still give God the Glory.
Give God a wink. Give the mirror
a taste of its old glory. Amen.

May 18, 2015


SELF TEST #  13

I am a hand.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am an ear  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am a nose.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am an eye.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am a smile.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am a scream.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am a laugh.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am a scowl.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am a wrinkle.  Yes _____  No ______ Sometimes ______

I am a word made flesh. Yes ____  No ____ Sometimes ___


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015

Monday, May 18, 2015


TRINITY:
SERMON # 123

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 7th Monday after Easter is, “Trinity: Sermon #123.”

It could be just  as easy to entitle this homily, “Trinity: Sermon #321.”

Translation: This is just one more homily on The Trinity - one of many - down through the years. How many? I have no idea.

St. Patrick in talking about the Trinity - said, “It’s like a shamrock: three leaves, one shamrock.”

That’s simplicity - an image like a triangle: three corners - one triangle.

I’m willing to guess that we’ve all heard at least a dozen times the legend about St. Augustine and the little boy at the beach. Augustine was working on a document - on the Trinity for 30 years.  He’s down at the seashore walking along on the beach - at the edge of the water - thinking about how to put into words who and how the Trinity is. He spots a little kid bringing water in a seashell from the sea and then pouring the water into a hole.

Augustine asks the kid, “What are you doing?”

He answers, “Putting the whole ocean in this hole.”

Augustine says, “You’ll never finish. It’s impossible.”

Boy answers, “It would be easier for me to do this than for you to explain the Trinity.”

And Augustine closes his eyes to think about what this little kid just said. Then when he opens his eyes the little boy has disappeared.

It’s a legend - but a good one.

OUR GOD: THE TRINITY

The Christian theology of God as Trinity - is based on the arrival of Christ - coming into our lives - into our time-  and it says that God is One - but God is also  Three Persons. We call them Father - Son and Holy Spirit.

After that we really don’t know.

Will we grasp how God is God in eternity - or will it take an eternity to grasp and understand God?

Is that heaven - entering into God - becoming God?

We have to die to find out.

Is prayer - entering into God - becoming God in God?

Is that prayer  - here and hereafter?

TODAY’S READINGS

Today’s readings provoke this Sermon # 123.

The first reading  brings us to the Holy Spirit question.

Many people basically are saying what people in today’s first reading are saying, “We have never even heard that there is a Holy Spirit.”

Many people make the sign of the cross: “In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit” - when they walk into church - when they attend a baptism - when they enter into prayer - yet still don’t think of God as Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Many people don’t know Jesus Christ beyond his humanness - as we hear in today’s gospel.

In fact, the gospel of John is the gospel that talks about the Trinity the most.  We hear Jesus telling us he is simply re-telling what the Father has taught him.

Many people say all religions are the same. There are lots of similarities - the Golden Rule etc. - but we are very different - those who believe in God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit and those who don’t.

CONCLUSION

We’re about to get to Pentecost and the Feast of the Holy Trinity.
Keep your mind open to ponder on these things. Start by making the sign of the Cross - slowly - slowly praying to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit - to God as Trinity.

Listen to the connection between Father, Son and Holy Spirit.


Walk the beach with these images and thoughts. Let the Ocean of God fill all the empty holes within your spirit.


Sunday, May 17, 2015


ASCENSCION

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Ascension.”

In the 1990’s the Catholic Church - as well as other Christian Churches moved Ascension Thursday to this 7th Sunday after Easter. Some Catholic dioceses did just that; some dioceses didn’t.

I really don’t know the WHY of all this.  

I assume it was to make things easier. I assume that people were missing out on the feast - so some pushed to have it moved to this Sunday - so people would reflect upon the Ascension of Christ into heaven.

Somewhere along the line I found myself saying that I don’t like the word, “obligation” - as in “Sunday Obligation” - as well as, “Holy Day of Obligation”  and somewhere along the line I discovered nobody really cares what I think.

Yet when I heard my sister Mary say: “I wish the Catholic Church would change their wording to “Holy Day of Opportunity,” I said to myself, ‘I like that!’”

So I cared what someone else said in the halls of public theology.  I also cared when I’ve heard various people say, “I wouldn’t want to be at something that you had to come to by obligation or else you’re in trouble. I’d rather be at something I’d want  to be at.”

Yet those who skip celebrations or obligations or what have you - sometimes get looked down upon.

Guilt gets results - obligation works. At Mass, and family get togethers, there are people there with  an unhappy face on. They are there because they feel a have to - as opposed to a want to.

DOWN SYNDROME USHER

I once heard a wonderful - and funny - story.

In a parish in some city in the Midwest there was this neat young man with Down Syndrome.  Every Sunday he went with his parents to Sunday Mass - and in time his dream was to be an usher.

Finally, he got his wish. The rest of the ushers said, “Why not? It’s tough getting ushers at times - especially during the summer.”

So this young man was made an usher and he loved it - and everyone in the parish got to love him.

Surprise! The collection went up - and it was noticeable.

He would push the basket into the benches he served….  This was before “Faith Direct.” If someone didn’t put some money into his basket -  he would hold it - there - right in front of a person - and gesture with the basket, “How about some green?” He would also say at times, “Uh, Uh, Uh” with the basket at the person. It was usually a visitor or a “once and a whiler” this happened to. The regulars loved it - and would joke about it outside of church after Mass. And they too added to the collection.

Shame, shake downs, guilt, works. 

Obviously wanting to be generous - to support the church - to help others - or what have you is a much better attitude and motive and outlook.

I was at some banquet or fund raiser once and people  were going around selling 50-50’s - those tickets with the numbers on them. One ticket stays with the seller for a later on drawing. The other ticket with the same number on it goes into the buyer’s pocket. Felling guilty or I better make a contribution to the cause,  I said, “Give me ten.” The seller said, “They are 100 dollars apiece, Father.” “Ooops,” I said, “Give me one.” I thought they were a dollar each.

Obligation works…. In public view works….

THE HUMAN ASCENT

In his book, The Ascent of Man, Jacob Bronowski in talking about evolution, said, “Among the multitude of animals which scamper, fly, burrow, and swim around us, man is the only one who is not locked into his environment.”  Bronowski continues, “His imagination, his reason, his emotional subtlety and toughness make it possible for  him not to accept the environment but to change it. And that series of inventions by which man from age to age has remade his environment is a different kind of evolution - not biological, but cultural evolution. I call that brilliant sequence of cultural peaks The Ascent of Man.”

THE DECENSION AND ASCENSION OF CHRIST

There is a key Christian Life text in Paul’s Letter to the Philippians.

As you know some of Paul’s letters were with us before the gospels.

Philippians is one of them - dated back to the 50’s.

Philippians 2: 5b-11 gives us an early Christian hymn  - which means it’s even earlier - which says Christ was God - and he emptied himself of his being God and became one of us - and he descended even lower and became a slave for us - and then even lower - he was killed  - on a cross - for us - because of us - us at our lowest - and because of this obedience - this choice by Christ to lift us from our lowest - God exalted him - raised him up - Ascension - so that everyone will see him as our savior - redeemer - our God. That’s the kind of God we have.

And that’s not the way we people are at times. At times we step on others. We stand on others. We put others down - so we can look higher - bigger - better than the other guy or gal.

Just look around! We brag. We boast. We want to look bigger and better than others: with house, with car, with cash, with Botox, with clothes, with kids with better marks, smarts, looks than your kids.

Life is according to Paul and Christ - is lowering ourselves so others can rise.

I find myself hearing another tell a story - and I got to top them - ascend higher than them.

Decension, listening to others, letting them shine in a conversation is what Christ is about. Hey he didn’t start till he was almost 30 and his mother dragged him into his start - at a wedding in Cana of Galilee.

Isn’t that what Jesus kept saying, “Lessen that ego - empty that self - wash feet - put out the garbage - empty the dishwasher - empty yourself of self-importance -  help your neighbor - hold doors - deflate yourself - let your hot air out - and you’ll sail through the air better like a Tom Brady football - and you’ll win the Super Bowl of Life.

CONCLUSION

So why come to church? Why pray?

Answer: Become quiet and to learn this evolution.

Or as Octavio Paz - the Mexican poet -  put it, “Solitude lies at the lowest depth of the human condition.  Man is the only being who feels himself to be alone and the only one who is searching for the Other.”


And Paz capitalizes that word “Other.”  

The Other is God - and life is all about our ascension - our ascent to God the Father - as Christ showed us with his life.
May 17, 2015



ASCENSION

Are there steps out of me? I don't know.
Was there an open window? I don't know. 
Jesus did you simply slip out of me -
going through the walls of my upper room 
ascending into the darkest night?  
Jesus, it seems you've disappeared. 
That image hits me the hardest. 
Did I bore you? Did I disappoint you? Jesus you were there in me in the darkest corner of my inner darkness? I remember our dark nights - when we met each other in that divine darkness  - and I discovered that you Jesus were the Light of the world. Jesus, if you've 
ascended into heaven - allow me to ascend to you right now in this dark night or prepare me to be ready for you to introduce me to your Holy Spirit. Amen! Come Holy Spirit. Come!


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015

Saturday, May 16, 2015

May 16, 2015

ALL IN  THE  FAMILY

All families have givers and all
families have those who are takers.

All families have someone
who won’t talk to someone.

All families have closets and bottom
drawers, containing family secrets.

All families have someone who is the
favorite and someone who is the least favorite.

All families have moments that pull us
together and moments that pull us apart.

All families pray - some openly - and some
only when problems knock on the front door.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015