Sunday, February 4, 2018


ATTITUDE

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 5th Sunday in Ordinary Time [B] is, "Attitude."

Today's first reading from the book of Job - triggered for me a topic and theme for this homily: attitude.

Here's Job in a very dark moody mood - seeing life as drudgery and doom. He doesn't seem like a happy camper. He sees himself as a hireling - not running his own business. Everything is happening at him. He sees himself as a slave longing for the shade. He has sleepless nights - restless till the dawn. Notice the word "misery" and if you've seen that movie - you know what misery is like. And listen to that last sentence in today's first reading again: "Remember that my life is like the wind; I shall not see happiness again."

I wouldn't want to have a job working next to Job. I wouldn't want to see him walking into the room in the morning - or afternoon - or evening for that matter.

SO SOME THOUGHTS ABOUT ATTITUDE

We know what attitude is and what it means - but to put it into words - we could do that - but we might not be that clear with words - but we still know what attitude is - especially a bad attitude.

In fact, for starters - in talking about attitude - the adjectives "good" and "bad" - might be a good place to start.

A good first question is right there: When it comes to the big picture - our life - judge yourself - do you think you have a good or a bad attitude?

When you walk into a room - what's the first gut or belly take - people get about you?

Do they say, "Here comes an angry person?" Or, "Here comes a happy person?"


Or do people look you in the eye or look at your face - and try to get a read on you. Are they thinking, "What kind of a mood will he or she be in today?"

If the saying, "Action speaks louder than words" is true, so too is this saying of John C. Maxwell, "People may hear your words, but they feel your attitude."

I sense we all have an overall attitude - that we show or those who know us - get it - got it - good or bad. Then we have changing attitudes - depending on the day - the weather - traffic - and a dozen other things.

Then we have specific attitudes toward specific issues, persons, places and things.

We might hate so and so because she is always telling us about what she's going to cook for supper tonight - or how well her children are doing in college or sports or what have you. Enough already.

We might have a great attitude towards the environment. We hate it when people dump their Starbucks containers in the park - but we have a poor attitude towards the poor.

So, attitude. It's a tricky thing.

TODAY'S GOSPEL

Here we are still in the First Chapter of the gospel of Mark. After healing Peter's Mother-in-law who was sick, who then feeds Jesus and his disciples, a lot of people show up with their demons and their diseases.

They want healing. And Jesus heals them.

When it comes to healing - it would be smart to go to Jesus for healing of any destructive attitudes.

I found a helpful distinction. It comes out of some research by Stanford University. A psychologist, Carol Dweck found that people's core
attitudes fall into one of two categories: a fixed mindset or a growth mindset.

"With a fixed mindset, you believe you are who you are and you cannot change. This creates problems when you're challenged because anything that appears to be more than you can handle is bound to make you feel hopeless and overwhelmed."

That's the first category. I have to think about that - because at times I have said, "Once we hit a certain age, it's hard to change." Then I add, "Sorry, expect the same." "Expect Deja  vu."

This Carol Dweck gal is saying, "No necessarily so." She continues, "People with a growth mindset believe that they can improve with effort. They outperform those with a fixed mindset, even when they have a lower IQ, because they embrace challenges, treating them as opportunities to learn something new."

I assume we have to accept this second mindset - the growth mindset - if we come to Church, if we accept Jesus in our life - because Jesus is always proclaiming, "Change!" "Repent." "Grow." "Change your heart and not your garments."

Jesus gave us the Beatitudes. That's 8 attitudes to put into practice.

PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE

Today's gospel has an interesting secret that seems to be one of Jesus' key spiritual practices.

Mark tells us that "Rising very early before dawn, he left and went off to a deserted place, where he prayed."

Where is your deserted place? It could be this Sunday Mass. It could be talking a walk. It could be fishing? It could be a prayer chair in your bedroom or back porch.

For my dad, it was the cellar. For my mom, it was the right hand corner of a couch in our living room - with her small rubber banded prayer book  in the top drawer right there. A friend of mine - changed his garage into a chapel.  A few people in the neighborhood found out about it and used it. It could be the Eucharistic chapel here. It could be this church or St. Mary's when it's open.

Attitudes can change - mindsets can move from fixed mindsets to growth mindsets if we take the time to pray.

But it has to be prayer - it has to be communion. It has to be more than me. It has to be  God and me, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit with me.

This doesn't mean we won't be interrupted. Here's Jesus interrupted in today's Gospel, but we have to have the attitude, I need to find the time for Sabbath, for Holy Places, and then do it.

CONCLUSION

If you don't want to have the Job attitude we hear about in today's first reading, find hideouts, find time for God - for the rest of your life.

And when with God, pray for and decided to be a happy camper on this planet - on this journey  called “Life!”


And remember Victor Frankl’s comment that we have freedom right here. He said, “The last of the human freedoms is to choose one’s attitude. Choose life. Choose  beatitude as our attitude.
February 4, 2018










Black History Month Thought for today: 


“It is the duty of the younger Negro artist...to change through the force of his art that old whispering ‘I want to be white,’ hidden in the aspirations of his people, to ‘Why should I be white? I am a Negro—and beautiful!’” 


Langston Hughes (The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain, The Nation)
February 4, 2018

SHOE LACES


I confess that I treat some people
like shoe laces - not noticed till they
open - and ooops - till they break.
These everyday things I don’t notice.
And I go, “Uh oh! Oh no. Not again.
Ugh! Now what?  I need new laces.”

I confess to doing that - but confession
is not enough. I have to do more than
voice some blurts. I have to tie my laces
carefully. I have to pause and say to my
laces, “Thanks for a good tightness today.
Thanks for walking with me today.”



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018


Saturday, February 3, 2018

February  3, 2018


WATCHING

You didn’t see me watching you -
watching everything you were watching -
whatever you were watching.

I watch babies. Their eyes watch
what’s happening around them - I think -
but I often wonder what they see.

Then - I think - I stop watching - others eyes -
trying to figure what they are watching - that is - till they are 85 years old in a nursing home.

I guess a lesson in all this is: to watch
what I’m watching - name it - now - in
between - my first and second childhood.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018




February 3, 2018

Black History Month Thought for today:



“I am an invisible man...I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids — and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me.” 


Ralph Ellison (Invisible Man)

Friday, February 2, 2018


PRESENT


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for is, “Present.”

Today we are celebrating the Feast of the Presentation - February 2nd.

We celebrate the day Jesus was brought by Mary and Joseph to the temple to present him to the Lord our God.

THE  present -gift - was presented to the Lord our God.

So I’d like to present a few ideas to look at on the theme of present - and presentation.

EXAMPLES

How many classrooms, how many meetings, have we been at when we said, “Present” when we heard our name called out? “

What a great morning prayer - to hear God call out our name - the first thing in the morning - and we say to God’s voice, “Present.”

What a great morning prayer - to call out to God, God’s name - the first thing in the morning and we hear God say back to us, “Present.”

What a great morning prayer:  to say to all those we are going to meet this new day of life, “Present!” and then to look directly into the center of the eyes of all those I’ll meet today, to say “Hi.” Translation:  “What’s going on inside your temple today. Tell me what’s happening? I’ll try to be present to you today.”

What a great morning prayer it would be,  to say to the planet, “Present”. I will try to be present to you today - to water my plants, to pay attention to you - to see trees and birds - flowers and green or brown earth of grass.
When we say first thing in the morning: “Present” - we’re announcing that we are present to God this new day of life and God is present to us, this new day of life - as well as to each other - and to the whole of creation.

Each day is a feast.

A mother - our mom - a day or two after finding out she was  pregnant with us - going into church and presenting us to the Lord - and praying for a healthy pregnancy.

And doing that for 8 months or so.

Pregnancy - presentation - we are the present - the gift of God.

Present. Thank you God.

Then we are born - and we scream our first scream.

Translation from baby talk or life talk, a scream, a cry, is saying,  “Present! I am here!”

Presentation: a baby is brought to church to be baptized, anointed, blessed, presented to the Lord - and to the Church and to the world.

I like crying babies - at baptisms and at Church.

Father Joe Krastel was telling me the other day - about his surprise - when he found out about babies and children at Heritage Harbor.

When do you go to get your share of babies babbling and crying?

I like to hear the sound of crying babies - because of calls at times to pray over babies who are still born - or who are about to die when born at Anne Arundel Medical Center.

Sometimes it’s a blessing. Sometimes it’s a horror that is present.

I remember a funeral Mass last year for a tiny baby girl that who only had 3 days of life.  The funeral was on a Saturday morning at 9 AM - at St Mary’s.  Her parents had her remains in a tiny box on a tiny table in the center aisle - up front - near where a casket would be.  They had next to her picture a small vase of flowers.

At 10:30 AM there was going to be another funeral. It was for the governor’s father.  However,  around 8:30 in came flowers - about 30 or 40 vases and bouquets of beautiful flowers - and they surrounded the little baby girl’s remains.

I told the father right after the funeral Mass to stand there with the flowers and someone take he and his wife’s picture. It was a beautiful scene. It was a scene of the beautiful. It had presence and presents.

HERE ARE  MORE EXAMPLES OF PRESENTATION AND PRESENCE.

At our first day of school.

At the day we won a spelling bee.

At the day we got our first basket in basketball.

At the day we were starting to really be present. It was our 3rd  birthday party.

At the day we graduated from kindergarten.

At the day we made our first communion, confirmation, graduation.

At the day we walked into high school or college or the day we came down the aisle to be presented by our dad to our husband to be. It was the day we were present to take and make vows to each other.

At the day we were handed our first child….

At the day we entered the military or police or our first job or what have you.

At the day we moved into Heritage Harbor.

Presentations - we were present for  a lot of them.  It’s called, “Life!”

CONCLUSION: MOVING INTO PRAYER

Thank you God.

Sorry God for the days - or years - I was not present to you.

Sorry God for the times I forgot I am a gift and those around me are gifts to me and I didn’t say “Thank you” for the gifts - the presents I have received.

Sorry God for the times I sat down for food together - but I was somewhere else - on the phone - elsewhere - anywhere but the place I was in.


Sorry Jesus for the times I forgot about your real presence in the Eucharist - the bread of life - as well as the real presence of you in the Body of Christ - the community  - in the hurting, in the hungry, in the forgotten, in those who are dealing with one specific station of the cross that day. 
February 2, 2018



SIGNS OF THE CROSS

I spot white wooden crosses along
the road - Route 301 -  where
someone died in a car crash or 
three wooden crosses reminding 
me of the 3 crosses on Calvary.

I see crosses in churches -
and on a wall in homes - usually that
of older people. The younger folks
haven’t reached a Bad Friday yet, one
that in time might become a Good Friday.

I see crosses in faces on the subway
or in the back seat of a car - going
down the highway. - maybe worrying
about mom in the hospital or hospice -
cancer - pancreatic - usually a killer.

I see crosses in my psyche, in my soul,
when everything is not going my way -
when I find out I can’t control my life -
when nobody asks or seems to care
what’s going on my hill called Calvary.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018