Friday, September 25, 2015

September 25, 2015


LEADERSHIP

You ask me,
"What do I think about the pope."

My hopes about this pope are these -
that people will say and people will think:

"He's a leader. I could follow this guy."

"I gotta get back to church, synagogue,
temple or mosque!"

"Oh, that's what church is all about."

"Uh oh! I'm a lost sheep on some of this."

"Baa, baa, baa, please find me!"

"Ooops I'm lost I gotta get found."

(c) Andy Costello, Reflections 2015
Check Luke 15


September 24, 2015


SUNRISE - MOONRISE

All alone - early morning - the first to put
my footprints on the brand new canvas - of
this brief edge of ocean - walking along
listening to the lapping of the water -
like the tongue of my chocolate lab -
at his silver bowl - walking along - before
the many more footprints of this day -
the sun to my left - out there rising up
from the ocean sky - before the heat -
before the simmering heat - before
the long of this day - and Lord, you give
me this day - this gift - and I’ll walk along
this same silver beach tonight - in the moon
light - thinking about the all of this day -
the first day - and all is good - and all is,
“Thank You God - in the cool of this evening!”



© Andy Costello, Reflections, 2015

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

September 23, 2015

POTATO  PEOPLE

Potatoes are a hard dry brown crop - needing
to be dug up out of the dirt brown earth. They
are not pretty or attractive and delicious looking
like a plum or cool yellow green grapes or a rich
red apple. Potatoes are like the necessary people.



And look at the hands of the potato diggers.
They are not the pretty people - the types that
make People Magazine. Nope. But they are
the necessary people - the many of the earth.
Did you know potatoes are the fourth largest
crop on the planet - right after maize. wheat
and rice? Did you know that they too immigrated
from western South America and have been
on the move ever since - planted all over the earth?

And like the poor and the unpretty, potatoes are
placed on dinner plates off to the side - never
the main feature. Yet they are as necessary
as the waiter or waitress bringing us the meal  -
or those who dig the potatoes or those who
help transport them all around our world.



Lord teach me to see the potatoes I eat and
that I see the poor of the earth when I walk
this earth - this rich brown ground beneath me.


© Andy Costello, Reflections, 2015

Painting in middle, The Potato Harvest,
(1855) by Jean-Francois Millet

Painting at bottom, The Potato Eaters
(1855) Vincent van Gogh

Tuesday, September 22, 2015


GO  REBUILD  MY  CHURCH


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 25th Tuesday in Ordinary Time is, “Go Rebuild My Church.”

I chose this title and theme for two reasons. 

First of all, today’s first reading from Ezra 6: 7-8, 12b, 14-20 is all about the Jews coming back from exile and are rebuilding the temple. They receive help from Cyrus and Darius and Artaxerxes - Persians -which ironically is present day Iran. The temple had fallen into the need of big time rebuilding.

And in biblical texts - like Ezra -  we find out there was a lot of complaining about how the temple was being repaired.

So for a quick homily for today I’m grabbing that theme of rebuilding.

POPE FRANCIS - VATICAN II

The second reason for this theme is that Pope Francis seems to have rebuilding in mind. In a church this big we certainly need reform - change - upkeep.



Pope Francis would be very aware of Francis of Assisi hearing the voice, "Go rebuild my church" and how Francis first thought it meant rebuilding San Damiano.

In time he learned it was the call to renew the whole church - and Francis and Franciscans certainly did that.

I’ve been reading that Pope Francis -  Jorge Mario Bergoglio - is a pope who experienced Vatican II  - a rebuilding council - like most of us.

His take on this is that  Vatican II was a rebuilding - reforming - renewing Council. That was 50 years ago.  There were major changes in our church - starting with Pope John 23. The windows of the Vatican were opened and fresh air blew in.

As I read about what happened after Vatican II, I could hear many reads on all this. One strain and strand was that there was recentralization during Pope John Paul II’s years.

Decentralization was dropped. Recentralization was in.

Some people want top down management. 

Some people want grass root bottom up management.


Control can be a big issue for some.

I’m hearing and reading that Pope Francis wants to get back to our roots in the Vatican II decisions and documents about aggiornamento - rebirth - renewal in our Church.

In other words to get back to the restructuring fostered at Vatican II - much of what in my judgment was grassroots up.

At Vatican II things changed in our church - on the floor - at the meetings - coffee breaks - and in the chit chat after the formal meetings.

The documents that were presented at the beginning of Vatican II were much different than the documents promulgated after discussions, arguments, meetings during the years of the council that ended in 1965.

ONE CLEAR EXAMPLE

Vatican II decided that the Mass, the Liturgy, should be of the language of the people at the local level.

This happened - but with objection - and foot dragging here and there.

In the English speaking world out came missals that had a translation that worked. However, an even better one - would  be in the works.

The key principal was to come up with a translation that had a “dynamic equivalence with the Latin text.”  

That was 1973 mandate.  In the early 2000's,   other people - in the Holy See changed the principle to have a translation that had a “formal equivalence with the Latin text.” The Holy See said it had to be a translation in the most exact manner.

By 1998 a new English translation of the whole missal - the Sacramentary - was completed. In the meanwhile the official group was replaced. A group of 8 [I’m not sure of the number and the particulars of all this] came up with an alternative translation - that becomes the official translation - the one we now have. It seems to me that the key value was to get it as close to the Latin as possible.

To me - I am stressing me here - this is my opinion -  the reason why we priests stumble and mumble some of the new Mass prayers - is because it’s a clumsy translation.

I didn't mention all this from the pulpit in this sermon - because I don't like the bully pulpit.


And I don't usually go with the blog bully pulpit.

However, I want a church where we are free to give our opinions and to have peers disagree. I believe a blog is a fair place to try to state and then to clarify some of these personal thoughts.

I wait for the day our new Roman Missal will be put on a shelf in the sacristy.

Then, either the old books are brought back, or the new translation is used or an even better translation into English - for our English speaking world is broadcast.

To make a very small point, take the creed.

The Latin word "Credo" means "I believe".  After Vatican II that was switched to “We believe”.

That was a significant change in Church thinking and believing.  We are the Church. It’s not just the Pope or the Bishop or authorities - it’s a WE.

Well, it seems, the Latin purists didn’t like that change in the Creed from I to we - in language and maybe in thought - as well.

I believe - or better I assume - the above - because I believe some of it was done in the back room - from on top - from decree.  I would have wanted the ICEL - the International Commission on English in the Liturgy  - that replaced the ICEL group that was “fired” to have to sit up front at a big table with microphones and be questioned.

My first question - if I could be in this interview session - would be, “What Latin to English dictionary did you use?”

If anyone answered that question, I would say, “Why that dictionary? Are there any other dictionaries you are aware of?”

I would want to know and ask what questions that “Special Secret Committee” on the English language translation from the official Latin text asked.

I would want to know if anyone asked: “Should we bring in writers, language experts, poets, translators, culture experts, etc.?”

I would want to know if anyone on this committee heard of Ernest Hemingway - and his style of writing: short sentences, short words.

This is my beef. This committee stuck on the rest of us this tongue twisting translation. I state once more: "IN MY OPINION."

I want to know if this committee had anyone who said regular mass in an English speaking parish. Did they? Were their test runs? Were there feedback possibilities?

I heard a bishop say that some bishops fought this Second ICEL group. It was no contest. Minds were made up. You couldn’t win. “The boys on top want it this way. Sorry.”

I read Bishop Trautman of Erie, Pennsylvania complain, complain, complain about this “horror” as it was happening.

WHO’S LISTENING?

So for one key way to rebuild our church, I would list as # 1 - that we be a listening church.



I look at the Pope’s ears. They are big and they look like they work.

He’s coming to the United States this week and he’ll give lots of speeches and there will be excerpts in our papers and on our television sets.

We'll hear Catholic social doctrine. We'll hear that  we need to be a welcoming church. We have to be a forgiving church. We have to be an understanding church.  We have to be a church of mercy.

I want us to be a LISTENING CHURCH.

I know this pope listens.

I want him to hear my  complaint about the New Translation of our Mass and various other things. I would want him to hear my questions. We have to say Mass every day and every day when I say Mass I say to myself, “Enough already. We can do better than this. We have done better than this.”

I hope he knows that the German Bishops and the German Church have resisted this nonsense translation from the Latin.

We didn’t. Ugh!

I want a pope who hears beefs - especially my beefs.

Don't we all?

People ask me what I think about the pope coming to the States.

I say out loud, “I hope he listens.”

I know he does. In the conclave, when he was elected pope, a friend of his - Cardinal Claudio Hummes of Brazil - came to him and said, “Congratulations!” Then he added, “Don’t forget the poor.”

Pope Francis said he heard that and that’s one of the key reasons why he chose the name Francis.

CONCLUSION

So in this homily I’m saying: want to rebuild the church, listen to each other.

Husbands, wives, children, families, parish, priests, people, rich, poor, let us listen to each other.

As we heard at the end of today’s gospel, “My mother and my brothers [and sisters] are those who hear the word of God and act on it.”
September 22, 2015


DUNES

Dunes like so many people
silently resting there without
saying anything - mystery -
a rusty red wooden wire fence
blocking others out - simply
saying, “No comments” - yet
the wild grass and wild flowers
sprouting up in the hump of the
dunes keep saying, “I’m here -
hanging on - for dear life.”  


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015



Monday, September 21, 2015

WANT  TO  KNOW 
WHERE  POPE  FRANCIS 
GETS  HIS  MESSAGES? 


CHECK OUT THIS SCENE AGAIN 
AND THEN WATCH THE WHOLE MOVIE.



THE CALLING OF 
SAINT MATTHEW



INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “The Calling of St. Matthew.”

A LA ROMA

Three years ago - there we were on a Mediterranean Cruise. There we were in Rome for one day. There we were in the Piazza Navona in Roma.

We just looked at the  fountain of the 4 rivers in the big plaza. Very elaborate Italian extravaganza - in the big plaza - which goes back to the 1st century. It was the spot Domitian’s stadium was built. The stadium stood there till the 15th century when it was paved over. Once we heard it had been a stadium - then the big oval shape of the piazza made sense.

What next?

Right near there - we spotted this French Church - St. Luigi - or St. Louis. It was a French Church - from the time of the Medici’s.

We went in and to our surprise it was posted that the church had  3 Caravaggio paintings.

They were down front - off to the left in the Contarelli chapel. The center and what I thought was obviously the best of the three paintings, “The Calling of St. Matthew.”  Then facing each other was “The inspiration of St. Matthew  and “The martyrdom of St. Matthew.”

I didn’t think the Martyrdom of St. Matthew was his best. In modern times art specialists have found an earlier  painting.

Those of you who know Caravaggio paintings know of his use of darkness. This - as in some of Rembrandts  - gives him the opportunity to feature light - as on faces.

An interesting thing about these Caravaggio paintings in that side chapel is that you have to put coins in a machine to get some moments of light.

I stood there studying the 3 paintings over and over again - putting coins in as we go.  I also added some prayers.

The two old ladies I was with loved the paintings as well.

[HOLDING UP THIS BOOK SAY] “On the other side of the church - heading towards the door - I spotted this book for sale: The Bible of Caravaggio - Images from the Old and New Testament.”

Of course I bought it. Of course I have read it several times. Of course I have used it for sermons. Of course I have treasured it and kept it in great shape.

MESSAGE

A message for us is the ways God has called us - the ways God has called us out of darkness into the light.

In the painting of the Call of Matthew Jesus stands there in the shadows and points towards Matthew. “You. I am calling you.” 

Matthew - in the painting then points to himself as if to say, “Who me?”

I love that Caravaggio has Matthew being called in a tavern.

I love that Matthew in his gospel has Matthew inviting Jesus into his home,

Point to yourself and hear Jesus calling you in the tavern, in your home, in all the places of your life.

If you have some blank pieces of paper and a ball point pen at home, draw moments in your life when Jesus has called you - when Jesus points to you like Caravaggio has Jesus pointing at Matthew.  Be creative.

I hold that one’s primary bible is our own life.

I hold that one has to read that Bible first - in order to understand the big bible.