Friday, July 31, 2015

July 31, 2015


ST.  IGNATIUS’ 
SIMPLE  DISCERNMENT  TEST

More or less?

What gives me life? More.
What’s killing me? Less.

Looking backwards,
when was I truly happy?  More.
When was I really unhappy? Less.

Looking at others:
who are the happy people,
who are the drainers and
the complainers? What about me?

Lord, Jesus, aren’t the words 
I want to hear when someone 
stands at my grave to be: “generous, 
served, gave without counting the cost, 
fought for what was right, even when 
it meant wounds and the hurt”?


© Andy Costello, Reflections, 2015

Part of a painting by Daniel Seghers
of St. Ignatius of Loyola, 1643
July 30, 2015



PRAYER TO SAINT PETER CHRYSOLOGUS 
PATRON  SAINT OF SHORT SERMONS 

[To be said silently in your mind when about to deal with long, long preachers.]

Dear Lord,
give this preacher
and all preachers
the gifts of St. Peter Chrysologus.
Inspire them to work hard
to make their sermons
short and simple,
clear and concise,
five minutes long,
filled with golden words,
with insights and challenges
on how to best live the Christian life. Amen.


© Andy Costello Reflections, 2015
Today is the feast of St. Peter
Chrysologus (Golden Words),
Bishop of Ravena,
Doctor of the Church,
dates c. 380-c.450.
176 of his sermons are around - estimated 
to be 5 minutes long and very clear
and very scriptural.



Wednesday, July 29, 2015

July 29, 2015


HOW DO I SEE LIFE?

Once upon a time I heard a preacher giving
a conference talk. He was saying he saw
life as a battle. Every day was warfare.
And, oh yes,  I started thinking, “Oh no!” 
He had his Bible and his quotes to do battle
with anyone who wanted to argue with him. [1]
I know I wanted to - but then that would only
prove his point. I wanted to say, “Why can’t
you taste those days when life is a delicious bowl of cherries, instead of concentrating on all your pits?”

For a time I was trapped in that war room,
but inwardly I realized I could go  AWOL:
Absence Without Official Leave. I could
retreat from his front line. I did. I could hear
his battle cries lessen as my mind wandered
out of that room and into the Coney Island
of my childhood or a funny game of rummy 
as an adult. I could be far from that battlefield
as he continued to argue and do battle with
some of his audience. Me?  I went into the hills
and the mountains with Jesus. He taught me
to look at the birds of the air and the flowers
of the fields - and to  enjoy sitting in the cool
of the evening with Lazarus and Mary while
their sister Martha grumbled inwardly about us
doing nothing but relaxing as she steamed 
up a supper for us in the kitchen. [2]


© Andy Costello Reflections, 2015

NOTES:

[1] Ephesians 6:10-17; 1 Corinthians 14: 8; Luke 14: 31-32

[2]  Today - July 29th, is the feast of St. Martha, so that's why I put this stuff in. Cf.  Luke 10: 38-42;  John 11: 1-44.

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

July 28, 2015


DROP THOSE STONES

She said, "I was so very dumb to
have done what I did. How could
God or anyone else ever forgive me?"

I listened and listened till I realized
the only person here who couldn’t
do the forgiving was she herself.

“Oh my God.” I said, “we have here an
authentic John 8:11" - so I said, loud
and clear, “Go away and go for it.”

© Andy Costello, Reflections, 2015

Painting on top by Pieter  Bruegel
the Elder, 1565. It can be seen in
the Courtauld Gallery in London.
Then there is another version,
which is attributed to his son,
Pieter Bruegel the Younger.
It is dated to around 1600
and it can be seen in the
Philadelphia Museum of Art.




FACE  TO  FACE WITH GOD 


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 17th Tuesday in OT is, “Face To Face With God.”

Today’s First Reading from Exodus, especially the words about the tent and the cloud and Moses seeing God face to face, is very ancient - around the 9th century BC. [Cf. Exodus 33: 7-11, 34:5b-9, 28.]

Because of their sins and their sinfulness, Moses set up his tent outside the camp. The people’s tents were set up inside the camp.

The cloud would settle over Moses’ tent and the people like little children got the message from Moses - through his words and body language - that God was not happy with them because of their sins.

Moses - like God - distanced himself from the people - and only met with God outside the village. They were not worthy of God. They would stand outside their tents and worship God from a distance - unlike Moses - who is described as seeing and being with God face to face.  In yesterday’s first reading from Exodus, we heard how they sculpted a golden calf and said this was their god - from their golden rings and things.  We can do things like that.

I was thinking that the basic instincts going on here are wanting to be close to God - good - and to get God under our control - according to our image and likenesses - not good.

IN THIS HOMILY

In this homily we could look at our relationship with God.  When we were little kids, what was our relationship with God like?  Does every parent - like Moses - use God to get their kids to be good? Where do people pick up that when things go wrong, they ask, “What did we do wrong?”

Answer: sometimes yes - sometimes no. Obviously there are things we can do to stop global warming. In the meahwhile we can bring an umbrella when it really looks rainly and wear a cool t-shirt when it’s going to be hot.

When did people pick up that God gets angry with folks? Where do people think that when anything goes wrong, it’s God punishing people?

In the New Testament we’re going to hear Jesus countering this thinking in various stories - especially ‘The Story of Man born Blind” - Chapter 9 of John.

FACE TO FACE

I think the solution is to ask the Lord to have an intimate, face to face, relationship with him - and to let go and let God be God - however the mystery of God works.

Yet to still strive to be with God….

Yes, to be like little children, who see their father in the corner reading the paper and they go over - climb up on his lap and pull down the paper wall - or to get up into their father’s face and climb closer - face to face - nose to nose  - and to look into God’s face and say hello.

In fact, if we have  a relationship with a distant God - we might tend to be way off when it comes to knowing God.

LIFETIME EXPERIENCE

God is a lifetime experience.

The Jewish Scriptures - give us many people’s perceptions of God. That’s why we read them. We read them - we hear them - and we act and react to them.

The Jewish Scriptures - the New Testament - give us the gift of Jesus - and how he struggles to tell us who he his - and who his Father is - and what they are like - and to pray to and for their Spirit - as we slowly move deeper and deeper into the mind of God.

It’s a lifetime experience like any close - face to face relationship - we have with each other - not from a distance - not outside our tent - but inside the tent called our family and the bigger tent called our places of worship - and hopefully somewhat before we die - but definitely after we die - the cloud with disperse and we will be with God - in a face to face eternal experience - or however eternity works.

Monday, July 27, 2015

July 27, 2015

KINGDOM  PRACTICES 

Hold the door open. Let another in ahead of us.
Enjoy the food and thank the cook or the waitress.
Say, “Hi” to those in the elevator with us.
Give a smile to the driver in the car next to us.
Pick up garbage, wrappers, etc. on the sidewalk.
If there are crayons, and there is paper, draw.
Say to the dog walker, “Nice dog. What kind?”
Give the street musician at least a quarter!
Take the grandkids out for ice cream!
Turn the other cheek. Answer anger with peace.
Go the extra mile - especially for the stuck.
Forgive 70 times 7 times and then some more.
See the good the others do; Miss the mistakes.
Wave! Smile! Greet! Acknowledge others.
Give glasses of cold water.
Say, “Beautiful baby. Wow. Lucky mom and dad.”
“Want a cookie?” "Want a cup of tea?"
Break and share your bread.
Give positive comments about great T-shirts.
Check your baggage - free up the overheads.
Tell others to tell that story about their kid.
If a kid loves chess - ask her to teach you the game.
Pray with others - especially when they are facing a problem.
Call you old coach when you see his name in the paper - especially after a tough loss.
Go to high school musicals and plays - even when your kids are long finished college.
Never stop being like a little child.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015
PRONE  TO  EVIL? 
HOW  PRONE? 


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 17th Monday in Ordinary Time is, “Prone To Evil?  How Prone?”

I take that title and that thought from what Aaron, the brother of Moses, says to him in today’s first reading from Exodus 32: 15-24, 30-34, when Moses comes down from the mountain and all the people are singing, dancing, chanting and worshipping the Golden Calf.

Moses was just up the mountain in ecstasy, in awe, in worship, with God, Yahweh, the presence that brought them out of Egypt and slavery.

How soon they fall into sin!  How soon they drop the invisible God - for a visible God - the Golden Calf.

Aaron says to Moses, “Don’t be angry. You know well enough how prone the people are to evil.”

QUESTIONS THAT COMMENT TRIGGERS?

That comment in Exodus 33:22 triggered for me the following questions:
·       “How prone am I to evil?”
·       “Are we all different in degree when it comes to sinful tendencies?”
·       “If different, what sins am I prone to?”
·       “Have I changed through the years?”
·       “What are my temptations?”

PRONE

Other translations of Exodus 32:22 use the word “bent”.
The New English Bible has Aaron say, “You know they are troubled.”
The King James Version says that the people “are set on mischief.”
The Good News Version goes this way, “you know how determined these people are  to do evil.”
KEY THEME

For a homily thought today, please answer this question for yourselves.
Why do we sin? Why do our kids mess up? Why the horror stories in life?
Why do we hurt ourselves or others?

Another series of questions:

·       Are we predetermined? 
·       Are we born bent out of shape?
·       Is it our parents or TV or friends that give us good or bad example?

I’m serious. We need to reflect deep on this.

Genesis begins by saying, “All is Good. All God makes is Good.” 

Then we have the Adam and Eve and bad fruit story - and we are the ones who choose evil.

Next Cain kills his brother Abel.  In that Hebrew Story in Genesis 4 - we hear about the “Yetzer hara”- a Hebrew term for the evil that lurks at our door and we are the ones who invite evil into our house or tent.

All through the Old Testament we have this question - of why Evil.

In the New Testament Paul’s answer in Romans is, “I don’t know.” I tell myself, today I’m going to do this and I go out and do the opposite. Why? Why?

Why do find ourselves saying on a regular basis after we do a nasty, “Next time less wine, next time less whining, next time less eating, next time less gossip and we do the opposite?”

CONCLUSION

I don’t have a conclusion.

This is the lifetime struggle. Paul will say in Romans - as Augustine read in the garden - that the only person we can turn to is Jesus Christ. [Cf. Book 8 of the Confessions and Romans 13:11-14]

In the meanwhile, be like Moses and find some alone space and listen to the 10 Commandments.

In the meanwhile, follow Jesus, the New Moses, and hear him tell us what he learned on the mountain: the Sermon on the Mount.


Or scream out to the Lord, “Help! Bend me back into shape. Prone me towards you.”