PLEASE WRITE
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this Sixth Day within the
Octave of Christmas is, “Please Write.”
Last night I got that thought after reading today’s first
reading from the First Letter of John
2: 12-17
We heard in today’s first reading 6 times “I am writing”
or “I write to you.”
So an obvious message for a short reflection this morning
is, “Please write.”
THE OTHER NIGHT
On Thursday night I caught a Book TV program in which
Charles Gibson, the old Television guy, interviews David McCullough.
They began talking about how the writing of diaries -
memoirs - journals has sort of disappeared.
McCullough asked: “Do you want to last forever? Do you want to be historic? Keep a journal
and when you finish, get it into an archives and people will be reading you for
ages to come because you’ll be it - the only thing written.
Then McCullough - in talking about his research when writing his historic books on John Adams and
Harry Truman and others - how wonderful it was to read countless diaries and
memoirs and journals and letters, about the times and places and situations
people found themselves in.
Each diary takes one into a different era and a different
place.
What would it be like to be living in a small house in
Ohio or Indiana in 1790? If we read diary entries about that period, we’ll read
about what was going on in people’s lives and minds.
GOSPELS AND
LETTERS
Well, thank God people wrote down the sayings and stories
of Jesus - like today’s gospel from Luke about Anna the Prophetess - telling
everyone in the temple in Jerusalem who were awaiting redemption - here he is -
our redeemer.
And we noticed in Matthew the other day that the holy
family headed for Egypt - and Luke has them going back to Nazareth - and
because of that written discrepancy we know what kind of writing Luke and
Matthew were giving - especially that Jesus was seen as the New Moses - and had
to get him to Egypt - to connect Jesus with those writings.
And thank God we have all these letters from the Early Church that tell us what was going on then.
PLEASE WRITE
Get a good ball point pen and a good spiral pad and write
your life - whom you met - what you saw.
David McCulllough the other night said that John Adams or
someone in that time wrote, “I went into this room yesterday to think.”
He then implied in his writings we don’t do enough of
that ourselves.
I think we do - but we don’t write down what we think -
or we do on twitter and facebook - and it’s stuff we really don’t think out.
And to contradict myself, I keep reading that everything
on the internet lasts - but there is no access
- unless Robert Mueller and his team will be investigating us.