Saturday, September 15, 2018



HOW WOULD YOU SCULPT OR  PICTURE OUR LADY OF SORROWS  OR THE PIETA? 

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “How Would You Sculpt or Picture Our Lady of Sorrows or the Pieta?”

Teachers and parents, aunts and babysitters, know that little kids love to draw with crayons or sculpt with clay. They don’t say, “I don’t know how to draw!” They just do it.

How would you sculpt or picture Our Lady of Sorrows or the Pieta?

Today is the feast of Our Lady of Sorrows - Mater Dolorosa - The Pieta. It follows the feast of the Holy Cross. Like the 13th station of the cross following the 12th station. The sorrowful mother is holding her dead son.

QUESTION

How would you sculpt the scene?

Michelangelo did 2 pietas. We all know the famous one in St. Peter’s. It’s in the back. When you come into St. Pater’s look to your right. There it is. It traveled to the United States for the New York World’s Fair in the 1960’s. It was the one that was banged up by a guy with a sledge hammer.

Then there is the other one that is tall and thin. It’s in Florence.

How would you  paint the scene?

There are all kinds of paintings of Mary, the Mother of Sorrows. There is the famous icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help

MY ART

I would sculpt Mary holding a globe and the globe would have people on it. It would be a globe of people. I might even build into the globe 14 television monitors  - each having scenes from around the world of people suffering. I would have about 5 minutes of tough world scenes on each TV monitor. I’d show car and plane crashes. There would also be TV news clips which feature stories about killings, torture, rapes, corruption, bishop cover ups, stealing. Just watch the 10 o’clock evening news.

QUESTION

Why is Mary so popular? Why are there so many pietas? Why are there so many pictures of Mary? Suffering is so universal. So real. So much pain.

QUESTION

How would you sculpt the Sorrowful Mother?


STATIONS OF THE CROSS

They are on the walls of every 
Catholic Church - all 14 of them.

One by one they appear on the  
walls of our mind and memory.

Accusations, falls, seeing family 
faces, being helped, nailed, death.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018


September 15, 2018 



Thought for today: 

“Be willing to be  a  beginner every single morning.”  


Meister Eckhart [c. 1260 - c. 1328]

Friday, September 14, 2018

September 14, 2018


ONCE  UPON  A  TIME

What a great opening 4 words for
every chapter of one’s  autobiography.

Once upon a time daddy took me
to a Brooklyn Dodger game ….

Once upon a time mommy got sick
and we were worried sick ourselves ….

Once upon a time I failed one subject,
so I forged my mom’s signature on my ….

Once upon a time we got caught in
a rain storm - and we didn’t have  a car ….

Once upon a time I got  the winning
hit in a big baseball  game ….

Once upon a time I gave up on God,
announcing, “I am now an atheist ….”

Once upon a time God didn’t give up
on me and declared, “I’m a you-ist….”

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018


September 14, 2018 

Thought for today: 

“A man has  many  skins  in himself, covering the depths of his heart.  Man knows many things; he does not know himself.  Why, thirty or forty skins or hides, just like an ox’s or a bear’s, so thick and hard, cover the soul.  Go into your own ground and learn to know yourself there.”  


Meister Eckhart [c. 1260 - c. 1328]

Thursday, September 13, 2018




TOKYO  METRO

Hopefully, there is always room
for more people in my life - that
I be like the Tokyo Metro  - those
Japanese subway cars - with
people pushing and cramming
to get into my life - that non-descript
person at my doorstep - whom
I not noticing as I rush by them
every day - that  person on my side
trying to touch the sleeve  of my jacket -
trying to catch my attention and my eye....
They are like, they are Jesus wanting
to be in communion with me because
he too wants to push his way into my life.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018


September 13, 2018 

Thought for today: 

“Selfishness  is  the only real atheism.”  


Israel Zangwill [1864-1926]