Thursday, July 28, 2016

July 28, 2016

COBBLESTONES

As a kid I loved to walk on cobblestone streets.
They were some of my sacred places in
Brooklyn and in older sections of Manhattan.
I loved the way they were solidly set in place -
cobblestone after cobblestone after cobblestone,
cobblestone after cobblestone after cobblestone,
cobblestone after cobblestone after cobblestone,
cobblestone after cobblestone after cobblestone,
row after row after row - dark grey stones - sort
of like those block sized loaves of bread - in the
glass displays - kids' size high - in the bakery - 
and as I walked along on the sacred stones -
sometimes with my dad - I knew I was walking
with security and solidity, like the cobblestones.
My dad died on June 26, 1970. Like so many
cobblestones - he is buried underneath my life -
like the unseen cobblestones still underneath so
many black softer macadam covered streets.... 
Looking back I now know it was good to have so
much strength and solidity - underneath my life -
cobblestones with cobblestones - even though 
I can no longer see what’s below - but I know....

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Wednesday, July 27, 2016


THERE IS A TREASURE 
IN YOUR MIDST


INTRODUCTION

This morning I would like to reflect on the theme of today’s gospel, “There is a treasure in your midst.” It's the gospel for this 17th Wednesday in Ordinary Time.

There is a treasure in our midst. It’s the pearl of great price. It’s within our grasp. It’s in our midst. But are we aware of it. Or are we unhappy, always thinking happiness and peace is elsewhere?

One of the secrets of a happy life and a high energy life is to know what we want.

Do we know what you want? Do we have a clear vision of what we want in this life?

A DIVIDED HEART IS AN UNHAPPY HEART

If we are searching for 3 or 4 things at once, if we are undecided, if we don’t know our goal, then we can be killing ourselves and spending a lot of energy that is a waste.

There is an Argus poster that says, “If you don’t know what port you are sailing for, no wind is the right wind.”

There is a Russian proverb that states, “Chase two wolves and you won’t catch either of them.”

JESUS: KNOW WHAT YOU WANT

So Jesus is saying here, to put our hand to the plow and to know what row we want to hoe.

To know what we’re doing.

To find the treasure in the field

GYPSY POEM

I read a  poem once about a couple on a porch of a house looking down at the road below that went by their house. They spot a gypsy couple going by. They are talking to each other. They wish they were like the couple on the road, no worries in the world, free, not tied down, no mortgage payments killing them. And the gypsy couple on the road look up at the house and say, "Wouldn’t it be nice to be the couple there in the house. Wouldn’t it be nice to have a home of our own, no problems. We wouldn’t have to spend all our time and energy as gypsies, wandering down all these roads, Wouldn’t it be great to settle down like that couple in the house there in a home of our own. Life would be that much easier for us.

That poem is happens and is rewritten every day.  

GOSPEL OF THOMAS

I looked up my favorite book on the Parables - The Parables of Jesus by Joachim Jeremias - to see what he would say about the Parable of the Treasure in the Field - here in Matthew 13: 44-46.

Jeremias says that this story is also found in  the gospel of Thomas. Thomas tells the story about a man having a field with a treasure in it, but he never knew it. He died. He left the field to his son, who never found out that he had a treasure in his field. He sold it. The buyer - while plowing discovered the treasure.

There is also a Jewish tale about a man who had a garbage dump that had a treasure in it. However, he too was too lazy to find about the treasure in his garbage dump. He sold the field or willed it to his son without knowing about the treasure.

There are many similar stores in many cultures - that tell this story of hidden treasures in our midst.

Somewhere along the line, I’m sure you heard the story, “Acres of Diamonds.” It was a story and a speech given by Russell Conwell 6,152 times all around the world. He was in the Civil War. He was founder and first president of Temple University. The message was that there were acres of diamonds right under out feet.

ANCIENT HASSIDIC TALE BY JOHN SHEA

John Shea, a great story teller - features this theme of the treasure right under our nose - in various ways.

I’m sure you heard this story - told by John Shea.

There was a poor rabbi who lived in the city of Krakow. He lived on the street of the Lost Angel, in the last hovel on that street, with his wife and four children. Since he was extremely poor, he dreamed every night of riches.

He dreamt that underneath a bridge in the city of Warsaw there was a treasure. When he awakened in the morning, he excitedly told his wife and his children about his dream He then packed food and clothes, and set off for the long journey to find the bridge, to unearth the treasure and be rich. He traveled many days and long nights and finally he arrived in Warsaw.

It was just as the dream had pictured it, except for one thing. (There was a guard on the bridge, a sentinel who paced back and forth.) And so the poor rabbi, tired from his journey fell asleep in the bushes.

When he awoke, he rattled the bushes with his arm, and the guard spun on him, “You there, come here!’ Being a simple man who would not run, he was also a simple man who could not lie. He said, “I have dreamed that underneath the bridge there is a treasure and I have traveled many long miles to find that treasure and be rich.” The guard said, “That is strange. Just last night, I too, have had a dream. I have dreamt that in the city of Krakow, on the street of the Lost Angel, in the last hovel on that street, where lives a rabbi and his wife and their four children there is buried behind the fireplace a treasure. And I leave tonight to find it and be rich.’”

CONCLUSION

The title of my homily is, “There Is A Treasure in Your Midst.”

I often wonder how many poets and artists and athletes there have been who  never knew they had a hidden talent.

Hopefully, we’re all in favor of schools that help kids discover talents and gifts deep within them.


My brother had a gift for being able to translate Russian Air Force Signals. When he was at Georgetown someone told him about a test they were giving - looking for researchers and surprise they discovered he that gift and he spent time in the Library of Congress working on tapes from the Aleutian Islands - sent to Washington - to be translated into United States Air Force signals. 

How about you?
July 27, 2016

HINGE

The three were talking and talking -
the kind of talking after the fourth glass
of wine or beer - late into the evening -
commenting about politics, religion,
the craziness of so and so - but,
“You gotta ….” And she, the fourth of
the group at the dining room table -
thinking, "The dinner food is still sitting 
there. It should be fridged." But she better
not get up and start moving the plates. 
She better stay with the three - but
they didn’t really see her - so she was
looking at the bright bronze of the hinge
holding the dining room door to the dining 
room frame. And she said to herself in 
her inner conversation, “That’s me. Yes, 
that’s me. I’m a hinge between my kids 
and Jack and I’m a hinge between Jill
and her family and mom and my sisters 
and I’m a hidden hinge holding these doors 
that open and close between us."

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

July 26, 2016
*
ROCKS AND THE INVISIBLE


Rocks hold the invisible.
They have their history -
but most of the time -
they don’t tell their story -
except in cemeteries
and on cornerstones.

They have been around
for a long time. They hold
hot and they hold cold -
sometimes for a long time,
but you have to be in touch
with them to find this out.

Rocks hurt, crush, break,
and can weigh us down.
No wonder they have been
used for weapons from the
beginning of time. Remember
what Jesus told us that day, 
“Let the one without sin, 
cast that first stone.”**



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016
*Painting on top: Charles
Burchfield, Sun and Rocks.
**Scripture text: John 8: 1-11



IN  PRAISE  OF GRANDPARENTS

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily on this July 26th  feast of Saints Anne and Joachim, the grandparents of Jesus, is,  “In Praise of Grandparents.”

My main comments will be about Joachim and Anne, some quotes about grandparents  - and conclude with the importance and significance of grandparents.




Notice St. Mary’s Church does its praise with two statues up here - of Anne and Joachim. They were short people. [Joke]

WHO ARE THEY?

Anne and Joachim are names given them in time - from legends and from traditions.

As you know we don’t know their real names from our Bible. They are not mentioned in the genealogies of Jesus in Matthew and Luke. And you won’t find mention of Joachim and Anne in the infancy narratives.

Obviously, Jesus had to have grandparents. That’s why I like the joke I love to use in the pulpit to see if people are listening, “As Grouch Marx put it, if your parents didn’t have any kids, chances are you won’t either.”

We do get the names, Joachim and Anne, from some of the apocryphal gospels and Infancy Narratives - legends and made up stories - to fill in the gaps about what we don’t know from the canonical or official gospels.

It was interesting to find out last night when looking up some of this stuff that there are about 150 surviving manuscripts of the so called, Gospel of James - which goes back perhaps to 150. We don’t have that document but copies of that earlier document - which go back to the 3rd or early 4th century and then after that.

In time - because they are connected so closely to Jesus - Joachim and Anne became models for grandparents and saints to pray to for help for being a grandparent.

In 1584 Joachim was mentioned in the Roman canon of saints.

They are also mentioned in Muslim traditions as well.

And you might remember that Luther in a violent thunder storm  - as he tells is - cried out in prayer, “Save me, Saint Anne, and I’ll become a monk.” He did - but others say he was thinking of that calling long before that thunderstorm.

A FEW COMMENTS ABOUT GRANDPARENTS

Those of you who are grandparents know the feelings and the joy in hearing the news that one of your kids is going to have a baby. It’s a different feeling - from the first time you were to be a parent yourself.

Becoming a grandparent also has its humor. “Welcome to your new job, babysitter, par excellence.” 

Those of you who are grandparents, know it gives great new meaning to your life - and deeper understandings of your kids who made you a grandparent.

SOME QUOTES

I looked up “Quotes about Grandparenting” and here are a few.

There is the Italian saying, “If nothing is going well, call your grandmother.”

Ogden Nash said, “When grandparents enter the door, discipline flies out the window.”

Pam Brown said, “Becoming a grandmother is wonderful. One moment you’re just a mother. The next you are all-wise and prehistoric.”

Marcy de Maree said, “Grandma always made you feel she had been waiting to see just you all day and now the day is complete.”

Lewis Mumford, “Every generation revolts against its fathers and makes friends with its grandfathers.”

SIGNIFICANCE

Grandparents are a marvelous support system - when so many families are struggling with balancing two jobs - many schedule stresses - divorces - financial problems and what have you.

Grandparents are the keepers of the stories.

Grandparents give cookies, checks, hugs and presence at so many family events - graduations, baptisms, and soccer and lacrosse games.

CONCLUSION



Saints Anne and Joachim bless our families and our world. Amen.

LORD IT OVER

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this feast of St. James  is, “Lord It Over.”

In today’s gospel, I spotted the phrase, “Lord it over.” I thought it would be a good theme to think about for a homily.

The whole text was,

“But Jesus summoned them and said, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and the great ones make their authority over them felt. But it shall not be so among you. Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you shall be your servant; whoever wishes to be first among you shall be your slave. Just so, the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.” [Matthew 20: 25-28]

And the text uses for the word "lord" a variation of the Greek word, "Kurios", which we would be familiar with as in "Kyrie" in the "Kyrie eleison".

It’s a warning and a message to all of us - especially if someone ever said to us, “Who do you think you are, God Almighty?”

Or, “Who are you, King Tut? or "The Queen of Sheba?”

YESTERDAY’S SERMON

Yesterday, in the Sunday sermon I preached, I talked about,  “How does God work?” or - “How do we see God?”

I wanted folks to think about and to see and to realize how they see God.

How do you see God? All powerful? Can do everything? Can solve everything?

Obviously, that’s how many see God. That description is in many of our prayers and texts - for example, our opening prayer for today, but I noticed the word is used for kings and queens more than for our God in our Bible.

 In fact, Jesus - God - was killed by us.

There’s a message there.

And Jesus said when he was arrested, “Don’t you realize God the Father could send 12 legions of angels down now and destroy those who want to destroy me?” [Cf. Matthew 26:53.] 

THE REVELATION: WEAKNESS AND SERVICE

The New Testament message is that our God is weak - as seen in Christ Jesus.

The New Testament message is that the call to us is not to be served but to serve - to treat others like Lords and Kings and Queens.

The New Testament message is that it’s all about service and we’re it.

The New Testament message is that God appeared as a little baby in Bethlehem - in a cave - in an animals’ crib - and ended up being a carpenter’s son - an itinerant preacher - a foot washer - a healer - a man who preached and walked around lots of little towns in dry, dusty, arid Israel.

Don’t we get ticked when someone tries to Lord it over us?  Don’t we get ticked when so and so puts us or others down when they have the title of head - boss - chief - priest - or what have you? [Cf. Mark 10:32.]

I think we’ve been around Jesus too much that we don’t get his big theme that he’s here to serve us and is not into worship. Smile! Aren’t we at Mass to do just that?



I once saw on TV, “Steambath” an off-broadway play by Bruce Jay Friedman - where God is a Puerto Rican attendant or janitor at a steambath. His name is Morty. The people on stage slowly realize they have died and they are moving around in the smoky steam.

How’s that for an image of Purgatory - and did the author possibly think “Carwash” as a cleaning process as well - after death?

CONCLUSION

So my message for today is to be like God, to be Lord, and that means, for us Christians, to serve - till as  earthen vessels we crumble.


Monday, July 25, 2016

July 25, 2016

CUTTING  THE  STRINGS

Where’s the scissors?
Use a knife.
Cut the stings.
Remove the wrapping.
Open the box.
Discover the surprise inside.

It can happen every summer
when a kid goes to camp.
It can happen every school year
when a kid enters a new class
or a new school. It can happen
when watching a puppet show
and someone realizes deep within,
“Wait! I’m not a puppet.”

But the puppetry people scream,
“Life is never: No Strings Attached.”
We have moms and dads,
brothers and sisters,
teachers and principals,
pastors and TV commentators,
bosses and managers.
coaches and staff,
rules and regulations
and they pull the strings around here.
Didn’t you know that?

Where’s the scissors?
Use a knife.
Cut the stings.
Remove the wrapping.
Open the box.
Discover the surprise inside.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016