Monday, January 22, 2018

January 22, 2018

BOOKS

Some get rejected in a split second.
Some get the once over - a hesitation.
Some are shuffled like a deck of cards.
Some never leave the shelf.
Some books are judged by their cover.
Some get opened. Some become us - 
the page turner  - the chapter gulped.
Some are bought and brought home.
Some make the next cut. They are read.
Some gather dust and then brought
in a shopping bag for a book drive.
Read me. Read me. Read me.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018


January 22, 2018 

Thought for today:


“Family faces  are  magic  mirrors.  Looking at people who belong to us,  we see the past, present and future.”  

Gail Lumet Buckley, “The Hornes: An American Family, Knopf, 1986

Sunday, January 21, 2018

January 21, 2018 

Thought for today: 

“Millions  long  for  immortality 
who do not know what to do 
with themselves on 
a rainy Sunday afternoon.” 


Susan Ertz
January 21, 2018

PULLING A LIGHT STRING

A couple in a car - coming up a dark street
at 2 AM - made an offhand comment - as
a slight light went on - in the house next to
their house,  “I wonder if we caused that.”

No. It was a closet light. She had pulled
the chain on that closet light - to get a pillow
and a blanket. She was going downstairs.
They had a fight and neither could sleep.

He was wondering what happened to the love
we had 20 years ago. Was it put in a box and
then put on the top shelf of that closet and then
we pulled the chain and the light went off.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018


Saturday, January 20, 2018



A CONVERSATION FOR FOUR

[The following is a reflective homily I wrote yesterday - picturing what Peter, Andrew, James and John, meeting 10 years after they met Jesus - what they might be saying.]


It happened after it all happened.

Roughly…. around 10 years - after everything so far.

What? Well, let tell you something about people you have heard about - at least by name.

Peter and Andrew just happened to be home that Sabbath - as well as James and John. The four of them decided to walk to a mountain - some ten miles away. They brought their tents with them.  They climbed the mountain - and they began talking about everything - that had happened.

It’s good to talk about everything - every once and a while.

“Little did we know that when that Stranger came along that day and said, ‘Come after me, and I will make you fishers of others’ - that he caught us - for life.”

They looked down from that mountain - from a neat spot - a place they loved to go - when they  were kids. Everyone has favorite places.  This was the place  they chose to camp for the night. It was almost evening as they looked down at the lake glistening and gleaming with light - light all across the lake. The lake was like a big gray blanket on a beach.

“Look at Galilee. If it wasn’t for him calling us - we would probably have spent our life on the edge of that water there - fishing for fish - and wow did he catch us - so we could catch others.”

“It’s good to be back home again - to be with family - friends - to compare notes - and to tell the stories - and then next week we’ll be back on the road again.”

“Look at that lake. From here we can’t tell what’s underneath the surface. We don’t know how many fish are swimming in Galilee’s waters tonight.”

“I was mesmerized by his eyes and his words at first - then  his parables and his stories - then the way he treated people.”

“My dad, Zebedee,  stood there in that boat  along with the men we had hired and yelled out -  when he saw us let go of our nets - and start up the road with Peter and Andrew and the Stranger.” “Where are you going?”

And we yelled back, “We don’t know. He just said to ‘Come after him’ so  in time we’ll let you know.”

“It’s been a good ten years now.”

“The first few years we walked with him. We saw miracles. We saw love. We saw jealously. We saw betrayal by one of us.  We saw him arrested and killed. John, you were the only one of us, who stood there under the cross when he died. The rest of us were scared - really scared."

And Peter said, “I denied knowing him. Three times I did that. Three times.”

And Peter got very quiet after  saying that.  Andrew knew how embarrassing that was to his brother. He saw Peter wipe some tears off his face with his sleeve and then Peter said, “And he forgave me 3 times.”

"He died."

"We thought that was the end."

"We thought we’d soon be back to our nets."

"Then we experienced his resurrection."

"Then we experienced new life."

"Then we began telling the stories we remembered - what we saw and what we heard." 

“We heard and experienced that water can turn to wine - and wine can turn to blood - and our thirst for God could be satisfied in and through Christ.”

“And along with bread becoming his body - we were in his presence every time we broke the bread and fed the hungry and visited the sick and those in prison.”

“Remember the day they dragged that women to him - to stone her  - for being caught in adultery. I was scared with that mob that day - for her - and for all people caught in adultery.”

“I was scared too, but I sought of smiled, because remember that day when he told us - especially us men - that adultery doesn’t always happened in bed - that it can happened in the bed of our minds.”

“I remember that afternoon we caught him talking to that woman at the well - and we didn’t know what that was all about - till he told us. Wow, could he see through people - and some knew it - especially crazy people in synagogues and crowds.”

“Yeah,” said Peter, pointing down the mountain towards Capernaum. “Remember that time we went into the synagogue  in Capernaum, that this strange looking guy with an unclean spirit yelled out at Jesus, ‘What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are, the Holy One of God.”

“He knew who Jesus was long before we really knew who he was.”

“I remember that night when Nicodemus came to Jesus and Nicodemus couldn’t drop his nets - but Jesus caught him in his net that night.”

“Remember that time - over there - near the Gerasenes - and he sent a whole herd of pigs - running wild - down the cliff into the waters and all those folks were furious.”

“I remember that time he told me where to cast my nets to catch some fish - and I told him the lake is empty tonight - and surprise - our nets were filled to the breaking point.”

It was late so they set up their small tents - said their prayers - and slept in the peace of Christ.

No they were not transfigured that night.

But yes they figured out and remembered that night some of the things that had happened to them up to now - how Christ had changed their lives - how they were becoming the Gospel long before it was written down.

The next morning they rose from the dead of sleep - with the dew of the grass all around them - on their robes and on their beards.


And they started back down the mountain - to the plains - and onto to the trails and road back home - to say “Goodbye to their families” and then - once again - they continued to bring the gospel to the world. Amen.
TO  WHOM IT CONCERNS -
THAT IS ALL OF US

[I am still receiving negative comments from our parishioners about my homily on January 14th.  There have been letters of support as well.  That was not my goal in any shape or form. I was objecting to the comments I heard about Haiti and Africa - as well as the comments made about Republicans.  I left out comments about democrats in my homily.

[I said loud and clear that I was not addressing comments made as politics - but as morality.  I actually figured out beforehand that could happen, so I addressed that loud and clear in my homily.  Wow was I right. 

[Then the letter right below this introduction came from Redemptorists in our San Juan Province. 

[For those who sent both anonymous letters and signed letters, read this letter and please realize I'm not being political. I'm being a Christian - and I hope you will be as well. Amen]


January 17, 2018

Mr. Donald J. Trump
President of the United States
White House
Washington, DC

Mr. President:

We are a group of Catholic Missionaries from the Congregation of the Redemptorists, Members of the San Juan Province which includes Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic and Haiti.

We are writing to you with the purpose of commenting on the negative impact of the derogatory words you used on Thursday, January 11, 2018 in the presence of some members of the U.S. Congress, describing Haiti, El Salvador and poor countries in Africa as "Shithole Countries".

The call of our Congregation is to evangelize to the poor, and this includes proclaiming the Gospel explicitly, in solidarity and promoting the fundamental rights of freedom and justice for the needy.

The love of our mission urged our brothers from Spain and United States to serve in Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic for a hundred years. That same love has led us to serve those people you despise, in Africa, Haiti and El Salvador. That mission and that service has enriched and blessed us abundantly.

Faithfulness to our call to be witnesses of the Redeemer in a broken world, is the reason we denounce your words as unjust, offensive and derogatory, we reject those words because they disfigure the image and dignity of men and women created in the image and likeness of God.

We reject your words which contradict the Gospel of Jesus Christ who saw the poor with respect and dignity. “Blessed are the poor for theirs is the kingdom of God”. (Luke 6:1)

Mr. President, on this eve of the Birth of Rev. Martin Luther King, Activist of the Equal Rights Movement and the Constitutional rights of all people, your words injure the hearts of those of us Americans who believe in the Constitution of the United States which affirms “All men are created equal”.

Mr. President, on the 8th anniversary of the earthquake in Haiti, which is still mourning the 200, 000 of its people who died, you spit on the sensitivity of its people.  A country who sent 800 of its soldiers to fight for the independence of the United States. 

If it is true that their expressions darken the horizon and sow anxiety in the feelings of our people, then we are encouraged by the words of Pope John Paul II to African-Americans on October 13, 1992 in Santo Domingo "I cannot leave out my message of closeness and avid affection to the population of African-Americans that with their human and Christian values and culture enrich the Church and society in so many different countries. To this purpose, come to my mind those words of Simón Bolívar stating that "America is the result of the union of Europe and Africa with Aboriginal elements. "That do not fit the prejudices of racism and if they did, America would go back to primitive chaos".

We conclude with the words of Jesus “when you are hated, excluded, insulted, and despise your name because of the son of man "Rejoice and be filled with joy, because the reward in heaven is abundant." (Luke 6:22).

Attentively,



Redemptorist Missionaries of the San Juan Province.
January 20, 2018 

Thought for today: 

“Even  God  cannot  change the past.”  

Agathon (c. 447-401 B.C.)