Friday, February 5, 2016

FOUR  WOMEN

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Four Women.”

Today we celebrate the feast of Saint Agatha.

Ten years ago or so I read that the Church celebrates 4 great women in these 4 colder months: Cecilia [November], Lucy [December], Agnes [January] and today Agatha [February].

Cecilia - is the patron saint of music,
Lucy - is the patron saint of eyes and light,
Agnes - is the patron saint of gentleness
Agatha - is the patron saint of breast cancer and earthquakes

They are all Italians - but way before Italy became Italy.

·       Cecilia - Born Rome - dies in Sicily.
·       Lucy - From Syracuse - Southeast Corner of Sicily
·       Agnes - From Rome -
·       Agatha - From Palermo - Sicily

THIS HOMILY

This homily I want to ask the question: “Who are your favorite four women?”

Today’s gospel - Mark 6:14-29 - we have these women: Herod’s daughter and Herodias, who is Herod’s second wife - who was his brother’s Philip’s wife.

Intrigue and slippery sin and nasty manipulations and lust run rampant in Herod’s history.

There is better history - closer to factual - about Herod’s life - than there is about David’s life.

David benefitted from a lot of re-writes. I even heard a Rabbi talk about David not necessarily being the one who killed a giant of a man named Goliath. There is evidence in the scriptures about someone else being the actual killer - but the story is transferred to David.

The Bible is loaded with stories about a lot of people.

So too Christianity.

So too our lives.

FOUR WOMEN

If you were asked to come up with your four favorite women saints or holy people, who would you come up with?

Here’s a possible four: Mother Cabrini, Mother Teresa, St. Theresa of Lisieux, Saint Teresa of Avila.

If you were asked  to list four women who did outstanding things for others, would anyone list these 4? Dorothy Day, Rosa Parks, Barbara Jordan, and how about the British Nurse, Edith Cavell shot by the Germans Oct. 12, 1915.

Wouldn’t it be something if Dorothy Day made it to sainthood - for her tremendous work with the poor?  I heard that when this said in the presence of Cardinal Spellman, he said, “Over my dead body.”

I can’t but think about the impact her canonization would have - her having had an abortion. Wouldn’t that give great hope to countless women and men?

How about 4 women writers, or 4 women painters, or 4 women world leaders, etc. etc. etc.

How about 4 women in our own lives: our moms or grandmas or neighbors or some parish woman. I would certainly add my sister Peggy, who had a great life as an IHM Scranton Nun.

CONCLUSION


That’s your homework. Discuss all this with yourselves and each other. 
February 5, 2016


BLAME, BLAME, BLAME

Once again I’m playing the blame game -
even naming names. I do it all the time -
but there always seems to be one name 
I leave off the list. Of course, it’s my name.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Thursday, February 4, 2016

February 4, 2016


IT’S  ALWAYS SOMETHING

It’s always something.

The right front tire just doesn’t feel right.

The air conditioner is not getting
any air to the back of the van.

Someone left the bathroom window open
and let in this dang mosquito. Uuuuuum!

Mrs. Mary Manana is late again.

I was nervous, so I started biting my
nails and I bit some skin to the blood.

The pear looks like it has acne.  

The mellon doesn’t have a “thunk” sound.

The butter is too soft. I like cold butter.
Somebody around here left it out again.

The movie was good but there was one
scene that I didn’t think was plausible.

The dinner was perfect, but how come they
never have chunky blue cheese dressing.

The concert was good, but they didn’t
play, “Yellow Rose of Texas.”

Someone always ruins everything by
saying, “It’s always something.”






© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

February 3, 2016

MUSIC

It’s not good if you don’t have
a favorite song - a song you
start to sing when you hear it
on the elevator or on your car radio -
a song that grabs you in the gut.
A few words or the melody really 
moves you or connects you with 
a memory.... Wait - pause - start to 
hum and see if your song appears 
on your lips or in your belly.






© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

February 2, 2016


POTATO  CHIPS 

Too - too - often - potato chips -
slip between our lips without
our tasting any one of them.
We don’t savor the salt flavor
of each chip - the salt that
sticks to our tongue. Too - too -
often our years slip by so quickly
and unconsciously - without our
even tasting the delicious salt on
each decisive and significant moment
of our lives and we toss the empty
bag of time into a plastic trash can
and we grab a fresh bag of chips.
There’s nothing worse than stale
potato chips - dreams that fell to the
floor - which are swept away the
next morning - another day - too -
too - often never savored or tasted.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016
I learned this theme about not being
mindful from Thich Nhat Hanh,
the Vietnamese Buddhist  monk.



In the Google search engine, type in "Mindfulness Thich Nhat Hanh" and you'll be able to watch and hear Thich Nhat Hanh teach about mindfulness.

FAITH  BUCKET  LIST

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this feast of the Presentation is, “Faith Bucket List.”

FIRST: JUST BUCKET LIST

Let me look at the phrase, “Bucket List” first. It's rather recent.

So I did a little research last night and there are several examples of the phrase, “Bucket List” before the 2007 movie with that name - starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman.

Most connect the phrase with a list of things to do before we kick the bucket.

The movie made the phrase popular and a lot better known.

Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman in the movie, “Bucket List” play two men in a cancer ward - who are terminal - so they take off to accomplish all the wishes on their bucket list of dreams to accomplish before they die.

I’m sure you have used the phrase or have been asked the question by someone who used the phrase. We all have things more or less that we would like to do before we die.

I said to myself, “This can’t be that brand new an idea or a phrase.”

I’m sure it’s in Shakespeare and in many a poem.

Sure enough I remember reading about the Make-a-Wish Foundation. That goes back to 1980 - in Phoenix Arizona. It too spread around the world as well: to help fulfill a wish that some kid has before he or she dies.

And obviously a nursing home could be labeled at times, “House of Regrets.”

TODAY’S GOSPEL READING

In today’s gospel reading for the Feast of the Presentation of our Lord in the Temple,  Luke reports about  a wish Simeon has before he dies.  He wants to see the Christ - the Anointed One.

He was told in a revelation from the Holy Spirit within him - this would happen - before he died - and sure enough we have his  prayer in the temple that day when Mary and Joseph brought the baby Jesus up to the temple in Jerusalem  to be consecrated and blessed. His prayer is the “Nunc Dimittis” - Now you can dismiss your servant, O Lord.


His wish is fulfilled before he dies.

FAITH BUCKET LIST

The title of my homily is, “Faith Bucket List.”

Let me now jump to faith related wishes in our bucket of life wishes.

Here are some possible faith related wishes:
  • That a daughter or son comes back to the faith  - the faith we brought them up in.
  • That grand kids be baptized.
  • That so and so be reconciled with so and so.
  • That they feel forgiven by God for a mistake they made 50 years ago.
  • That their spouse die before them, so he or she won’t feel the pain of loss that the one who remains will  feel.
  • That their faith in life after this life increases so they won’t fear that death is the end of everything, forever and ever.


That's a few I have heard, what are you faith related hopes?

CONCLUSION

I would think that our “Faith Bucket List” is the stuff of prayer and connection with God.

I’m sure at many Masses we present ourselves - our families - our neighbors - our world - to the Lord - for the Lord’s help and blessings.

Monday, February 1, 2016

February 1, 2016




WHAT  WORKS  FOR  YOU?


What works for you?

Is this how life works?

First we do lots of things
that we hope will work for us.

Next we come up with what
works and doesn't work 
for us without realizing it.

Next we become conscious
of what works for us and
that’s how we do life
for the rest of our life.

Is it as simple as that?

So once more,
“What works for you?”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016