Wednesday, April 4, 2018



STOP!

He hadn’t talked to his dad 
in 7 years - and 7 months. 
He saw a sign on the wall of the  bus. 
The red light was long enough 
for him to read  some words 
from Martin Luther King, Jr. 
“He who is devoid of the power 
to forgive is devoid of the power to love.” 
He didn’t have his dad’s phone number. 
Mom had died  7 years and 7 months ago.  
He got off the bus at the next stop 
and took a cab to his father’s house. 


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018

April 4, 2018  



Thought for today: 

“Let  no  man pull you so low as to hate him.”  


Martin Luther King, Jr.

Tuesday, April 3, 2018


April 4, 2018


NAIL BITING

If someone says to you,
“Stop biting your nails!”
don’t listen to them.

Everyone bites their
nails, especially when
they are nervous.

I guarantee you: there
never will be a NBA,
a Nail Biters Anonymous.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018



THE ASCENSION:
TWO COMMENTS

INTRODUCTION

Since the Ascension of Christ is mentioned in today’s gospel [John 20: 11-18], let me say two things about the Ascension  this morning. So the title of my homily for this Tuesday within the octave of Easter  is, “The Ascension: Two Comments.”

FIRST COMMENT: THE ASCENSION - WHEN DID IT TAKE PLACE?

Today’s gospel brings out  that Jesus says to Mary, “Stop holding on to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father.”

Some folks might even remember this scene and other scenes about Mary and Jesus from the musical and the movie: Jesus Christ Superstar.

Then we read other post resurrection comments when Jesus touches and holds his disciples.  Remember when Jesus, the Risen One, asks Thomas to put his hand into Jesus cuts and wounds [Cf. John 20:27.]

So I have heard some theologians wondering if Jesus ascended to the Father right after the resurrection and then came back during those 40 days after Easter - then he ascends to the Father again.

That’s my first thought - put out there in the form or a wondering.

We can understand Jesus feeding people or walking the roads of Galilee, but understanding what happens after death is quite tricky. Bread and roads we have done; death not yet.

Does death and then resurrection put us into different time and space realities  than we are in right now? The answer to that has to be “yes” but what it’s like, we have to wait till our death to find out.

SECOND COMMENT: WILL THERE BE A MAJOR NEW THEOLOGY IN THE FUTURE?

In the last century, there was a major change and understanding of the resurrection, I heard some theologian say that just as in our time the theology of the resurrection evolved - so too in the future a whole new understanding of the Ascension will happen.

We Redemptorists would know that about Easter and the Resurrection - because one of our priests, Father F. X. Durrell came out with his church changing book, The Resurrection: A Biblical Study, [1960].

When we were kids, Lent sort of ended on Holy Saturday morning.  Then the Liturgy shifted us back to Holy Saturday evening and the Easter Vigil.  

It was after that we saw and smelled the RCIA, the Easter Vigil, Easter, the Resurrection  being as important as it is - as Paul told us loud and clear in 1 Corinthians 15: 1-19 -  that we wondered how we had slipped into the mind set we were in for the longest time.

With that in mind and as an experience, is there a whole new world of the theology and philosophy of the Ascension just sitting there.

Time will tell.

But I don’t know who the experts, the writers, the scholars on the Ascension are, but let’s hope they will show up.

When - maybe this century?

We’re only 2000 years into Christianity….

Who knows what has to be developed more: Pentecost, the Second Coming, as well as the Ascension.







April 3, 2018



Thought for today: 

“The tragedy of life is not death but in what dies inside a man while he lives - the death of genuine feeling, the death of inspired response, the death of the awareness that makes it possible to feel that pain or the glory of other men in oneself.”  

Norman Cousins, in Saturday Review, October 2, 1954

Monday, April 2, 2018


DAVID’S  TOMB:
KEEP  SEARCHING


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this Monday in the Octave of Easter is, “David’s Tomb: Keep Searching.”

This homily is about David’s tomb - from today’s first reading: [Acts of the Apostles 14, 22-33]

If you have nothing to do and you like to look things up on your computer, look up “David’s Tomb.”

I remember standing there in a small room in Jerusalem. Our tour guide pointed to a dark blue cloth covered a sarcophagus or casket or burial box, and said, “This is said to be the burial place of David.”

I immediately said to myself, “No way. You’re kidding.”

David’s dates are disputed - but it’s helpful to simply say “David was from around 1000 years before Christ.”

This morning I read in today’s first reading, “My brothers, one can confidently say to you about the patriarch David that he died and was buried, and his tomb is in our midst to this day.”


That brought back the memory of being at that blue cloth covered  box in Jerusalem that I saw in January of the year 2000.

So I looked up this morning in Google and a few other spots on line, “David’s Tomb.”

Various places for his burial are mentioned  - as well as doubts about the place I saw in Jerusalem.

Keep digging.

DID YOU KNOW

Did you know that Grant’s tomb is empty?

But we know where our loved ones are buried. But not all.

Keep digging.

I’ve gone searching for one of  my father’s sisters in a graveyard in Portland, Maine. I had found the other two sisters.

I had been there once, but I couldn’t find it when I went looking for it about 4 years ago.

Keep digging.

BURIED WITHIN US

I like another idea about burials better: the ones inside us.

Those we love are buried within us - in various ways.

Keep digging.

My sister Mary loves the book, It Didn’t Start with You.

Why we walk and talk the way we  walk and  talk - keep digging.

Our grandparent’s values and faith - are buried within us.

This should make us hesitant - so keep digging and talking to each other about what our moms and dads were like - and grandparents as well.

I am trying and working on this with my sister the last few years.  We’re trying to resurrect why we are the way we are - not just getting our DNA - but hopefully we have small museums of old letters from way back, etc. etc. etc.

In the meanwhile, save your letters and write your memoirs.

CONCLUSION

Christ has died. Christ has risen - Christ will come again.

David has died - please God he’s risen with God.

Praise God and please God, we’ll find David in the scriptures and glimpses about what he was like.

Praise God  and please God, we’ll keep finding Christ buried within us and not just in the scriptures.

And hopefully when we visit the sick, turn the other cheek, forgive 70 times 7 times and do another thousand things, we’ll dig and realize we are discovering how Christ is buried and where he is buried and has risen in us. Amen.

April 2, 2018



Thought for today: 

“None knows the weight of another’s burden.” 


George Herbert, Outlandish Proverbs, 1640