Some more stuff on Teresa of Avila...
Sunday, October 15, 2017
INTRODUCTION
The title of my reflection for this 29 Sunday in Ordinary
Time [A] is, “Inside Invitation.”
Today’s readings invite us to a mountain and to a wedding
banquet.
We’ve all been invited to weddings. Have you ever been invited to go backpacking
- to go to and climb a mountain?
So a homily on invitation. “You’re invited.”
RSVP - Please respond. Please accept the invitation.
From time to time we hear the words, “Start climbing!”
From time to time we hear the words, “Go Inside.”
But we rarely take
the time to figure out who it is who is saying that to us and what it
means.
“Come to the mountain.” “Start climbing.” “Go Inside!”
It’s an invitation to start climbing - start moving
upwards and inwards towards God.
It’s an invitation - to go inside ourselves - to go
inside God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Two years ago I went to Gibraltar. That was an invitation to both go up and go
down and to go inside. Gibraltar is both a mountain as well as an inside. It
has enormous caves. There are at least two big caves inside. One has lots of chairs and a stage for a symphony orchestra - as well as beautiful stalagmites
within.
OTHER PEOPLE’S
HOMES
Most weekends the Capital - our local newspaper - brings
us inside somebody’s home.
I look at that section of the paper maybe 20 weekends a
year.
Is there inside all of us a sneaky interest about what the inside of another’s
home looks like?
We go by a lot of houses in a lifetime - and sometimes we
get inside that front door. The psychologist and the detective inside us wonders
about the inside of the other person’s home and heart and mind. What’s going on in
there? What’s it like behind those
closed doors?
The first time we’re in someone’s home we try not to be
nosy. Yet sometimes we look at the pictures - the light fixtures - the color
of the fabric on the drapes and the chairs - the interaction between husband
and wife - and kids - aging parents at times. Interesting.
Sometimes we see a painting of someone on the wall and we ask, “Who’s that?”
Who’s who? Who are the people in our lives? Who are the
people in other people’s lives?
TODAY’S
READINGS
Today’s readings are all about invitation.
The first reading from
Isaiah is an invitation to go to a mountain - where everything is just
right. There are all kinds of tables set up - filled with rich food and choice wines, juicy,
rich food and pure, choice wines.
It can be the mountain inside our psyche that we all long
for - a place of peace - security - massiveness - the rock.
It’s the place where everyone is at peace with each other. There are no veils - no cloth walls people are hiding behind and from each other.
It’s the place that has no webs that trap or ensnare us. Death and violence and name calling and prejudice against each other have been removed.
It’s the mountain Martin Luther King Jr. talked about when he said, “I’ve been to the mountain.” This is the mountain where God is.
It’s the place where everyone is at peace with each other. There are no veils - no cloth walls people are hiding behind and from each other.
It’s the place that has no webs that trap or ensnare us. Death and violence and name calling and prejudice against each other have been removed.
It’s the mountain Martin Luther King Jr. talked about when he said, “I’ve been to the mountain.” This is the mountain where God is.
As Isaiah puts it, “This is the Lord for whom we looked;
let us rejoice and be glad that he has saved us. For the hand of the Lord will
rest on this mountain.”
I remember the two times we drove across the United
States. Our plan was to stop and camp out as soon as we saw the Rocky Mountains. We would rest and then head for them that day.
Four of us started out in a light blue car from the Bronx - went over the George Washington Bridge - and headed west on Route 80.
It was to be 32 hours of straight driving.
Finally, we finally saw the mountains in the distance - in the west.
It was almost dark. We pulled off the road and parked for the night. We went through a barbed wire fence. We set up two tents, talked and fell asleep pretty fast.
We woke up the next morning with the sound of cows all around us. We were in pasture. We looked to the west. No mountains. What we thought were mountains the night before were clouds in the distance.
Four of us started out in a light blue car from the Bronx - went over the George Washington Bridge - and headed west on Route 80.
It was to be 32 hours of straight driving.
Finally, we finally saw the mountains in the distance - in the west.
It was almost dark. We pulled off the road and parked for the night. We went through a barbed wire fence. We set up two tents, talked and fell asleep pretty fast.
We woke up the next morning with the sound of cows all around us. We were in pasture. We looked to the west. No mountains. What we thought were mountains the night before were clouds in the distance.
We got moving and finally saw the Rockies.
Then we had a dream two week vacation.
We were back packing - 10,000 feet up there.
Then we had a dream two week vacation.
We were back packing - 10,000 feet up there.
We came home 10 pounds lighter. Freeze dry food can do
that. We came home in much better shape than we started. All day hiking can do
that. We came home alive and filled with
new life. We went to the mountain.
We experienced today’s first reading in person.
That was the mountain image. Next comes the banquet image.
That was the mountain image. Next comes the banquet image.
Today’s gospel is an invitation to go inside a palace -
the kingdom of heaven - for a banquet - a wedding feast for the king’s son.
But at times we put that invitation aside. Or we toss it
into the plastic bag garbage - even though we’re told, “Behold I have prepared
my banquet, my calves and fattened cattle are killed, and everything is ready;
come to the feast.”
Still we refuse the call, the invitation, and self-destruct
our lives.
We stay stupid. We go through the motions and we end up
outside the kingdom where we wail and whine and grind our teeth.
That’s what today’s readings are telling us.
We don’t listen to Isaiah or Paul or Matthew.
The second reading from Paul is telling us: whether things are fine
or things around us are poor - God still wants to fill us and feed us and bless
us.
ST. TERESA OF
AVILA
The title of my homily is, “Inside Invitation.”
The two words to hear inside our skulls is, “Go Inside.”
We go inside a church to hear those words - to hear that
invitation once again.
Take a look at that statue of St. Teresa of Avila - here
on our old high altar - left center.
It’s up there - because our founder of the Redemptorists - St. Alphonsus Liguori - went inside her stuff and found some of God like she did.
She’s holding a book? I wonder if there is writing on it
- to tell us what the book is. I know the book outside on the Seelos statue has
the name of the book he’s holding. How about this book? Is it her book El Castillo Interior or Camino
de Perfeccione.
Go inside her books. She said, “I love to open, I need to
open, a new book.”
Go inside. Start turning the pages.
It took her a while but she finally really went inside
God - inside the Trinity.
She said approaching God is like going to the waters.
The first approach is like going to a well.
Then it’s like going to a big water wheel - that moves
water - like the back of those big boats on the Mississippi.
Next it’s like irrigating the whole garden by sluices -
letting water - water everywhere.
Then - last - it’s like going outside and standing in the rain. When you get to Rome make sure you go to Bernini's statue of Teresa of Avila - in Ecstasy. It's in the Cornaro Chapel, in Santa Maria Della Vittoria.
Then - last - it’s like going outside and standing in the rain. When you get to Rome make sure you go to Bernini's statue of Teresa of Avila - in Ecstasy. It's in the Cornaro Chapel, in Santa Maria Della Vittoria.
In the meanwhile, if you spot a course being given by someone on The Written Works of St. Teresa of Avila, "go inside" her writings.
She said going deeper and deeper into God is like going into a castle - going from room
to room - till we finally get to THE ROOM - the 7th room - the main
room - where God is.
And the whole interior castle is like going into a
diamond - with more and more light - bouncing and glancing off the walls into
us.
Go inside.
CONCLUSION
The theme I’m pushing today is the theme in today’s
readings.
We’re invited.
Come to the mountain.
Come to the banquet.
Come to God - feel our hunger for God and let God fill
us.
October 15, 2017
DISTURB
Saint Teresa of Avila
famously said,
“Let nothing disturb you!”
“Let nothing disturb you!”
Well, I’m no saint,
but I hope a lot of things
disturb you.
I hope you yell when
someone dumps their
junk on our sidewalks.
Liars…. Liars …. Liars….
May your pants go on fire
every time you tell a lie.
I hope you scream,
“Wait a minute!” when bullies
start to take over the room.
More people need to stop abuse
and cover-ups and allowing the
uppity ups to get away with murder.
So, Saint Teresa, sorry to disturb you, but
if I read your story correctly, you surely weren't
scared to disturb the hell out of people.
© Andy Costello, Reflections 2017
Saturday, October 14, 2017
October 14, 2017
WALLS
WALLS
Walls….
Maybe that's what he's doing.
Maybe that's what he's doing.
If he’s that nasty and inwardly disturbed,
maybe he wants us to build walls
around him so as to hide from us
and we'll gladly pay for them -
but that's sick thinking as well.
It's not good for anyone to be alone.
maybe he wants us to build walls
around him so as to hide from us
and we'll gladly pay for them -
but that's sick thinking as well.
It's not good for anyone to be alone.
© Andy Costello, Reflections 2017
Friday, October 13, 2017
October 13, 2017
FRIDAY THE 13th
Why is Friday the 13th bad,
spooky or what have you? Why?
Was it the day Jesus died?
Was it the day Judas cried?
Is time that relative? Are some
days different from other days?
Of course…. But as to Friday the 13th,
carpe diem, live today to the full.
© Andy Costello, Reflections
2017
Thursday, October 12, 2017
October 12, 2017
BOOTS ON THE GROUND
MOON IN THE SKY
MOON IN THE SKY
Walk around, look around, and on the
ground,
we can see - all around - each other’s
footprints,
old shoes, boots, cracked Styrofoam containers,
and 1,999 other reminders that we are
here.
I don't think anyone left their boots
on the moon,
but we certainly left our footprints
and a flag
telling all around the world, “We were
here!”
Walk around, look around, and on the
ground
we can see all around each other’s
footprints,
shoes and socks, our DNA, our
fingerprints,
and
9,999 other things telling everyone we
are here. We look up at the moon. It’s
silver
light - it’s night time bright - but
unlike earth it's
dead, so we better keep healthy our down here.
© Andy Costello, Reflections
2017
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