Friday, January 25, 2019


January 25, 2019

COLD

Cold January day….
Dark, too dark on
both sides of the day….
Morning and evening ….
Grey cold controlling the
hedges on both sides
of our house ….

Winter sometimes can
be annoying - unwelcoming -
causing crankiness in my nose,
in my throat and in my soul.
Florida, Arizona, the Caribbean
would be so much easier
and comfortable and colorful….

Radiators, a fireplace, help,
so too tea, hot chocolate,
even chocolate chip cookies
in cold milk - so too
a big blanketed bed.
Better: this year, February
don’t show. Come March 15th.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


January  25, 2019 

Thought for today: 

“It is a test of a good religion whether you can make a joke of it." 


Gilbert Keith Chesterton

Thursday, January 24, 2019

January 24, 2019



IT  WAS  RAINING  AGAIN

It was raining again -
and I heard various people
complaining: “Enough!
Enough with the rain.
Enough with the pain.”

But ever since I read
about aquifers - those
big groundwater collectors
of water underneath us,
I welcome rain - lots of it.

I was hurting with hurting
people  again - and I heard
various people complaining:
Enough! Enough with the pain.
Enough with the rain.”

But ever since I heard about
our inner reservoirs - our inner
Living Waters - flowing from
Christ - those big absorbers
of pain within us - I’ll  be okay.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019



ST. FRANCIS
 DE SALES


INTRODUCTION

Today is the feast of St. Francis de Sales. He’s the Patron Saint of Retail Stores, “de Sales”. Joke. 

Here are a few thoughts coming out of the life of this saint.

Saint’s feast days are usually the day they died. However, St. Francis de Sales didn’t die on January 24. He died on December 28, 1622, but that is the feast of the Holy Innocents, so they moved his feast to today -- the day his bones were moved to his present tomb or something like that.

If his feast is moved again, he wouldn’t mind. That’s the kind of personality he had. In fact, that would be my thought for the day.

St. Francis de Sales was known for his calmness -- his gentleness.

FREDDY

That’s the message I found out about St. Francis de Sales some 58 years ago in the seminary.

In the major seminary we had this teacher, Freddy -- Fred Prenatt. We had him for one class in preaching every week for six years. I remember very little from what he said in class, but I remember him for something he would always say in confession and in sermons, “Omnia suaviter.”

And when asked where that came from, he would say, “St. Francis de Sales”.

And when asked what  “Omnia suaviter”  meant, he would say, “All things sweetly.”

For some reason I never forgot that. I ended up making it sort of a prayer and sort of a motto all through the years, “Omnia suaviter.”

Translated into Italian, “Con calme” or “Reposo”.

Translated into English, “Take it easy”, “Calm down”, “Count to 10”, “A drop of honey does more good than a barrel of vinegar.”

Translated into AA-ese, “Nice and easy.” I’m sure you have all seen that on a bumper sticker. It’s a good thing to remember whenever we are feeling road rage or church rage or classroom rage or shopping line rage or in the house rage.

Nice and easy.

Easy does it.

Omnia Suaviter, Con calme. Relax.

CONCLUSION

Relax. That’s a good message to remember from the life and spirit of St. Francis de Sales.

Take it easy.

Calm down.





January  24, 2019 

Thought for today: 


“Whom the gods would make bigots, they first deprive of humor.”  


James P. Gillis

Wednesday, January 23, 2019


WITHERED


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Withered!”

I spotted that word in today’s gospel - early on Mark - Chapter 3: 1-6.

I would like to reflect upon healing: helping the healing process and blocking the healing process.

TODAY’S GOSPEL

In today’s gospel we have this moment when Jesus goes into a synagogue on the Sabbath and he sees a man with a shriveled up hand.

And the Pharisees whose minds had become shriveled up kept an eye on Jesus to see if Jesus would heal the man on the Sabbath. He was doing that sort of thing. Now if Jesus did it, they would be able to accuse him of breaking the Sabbath.

Jesus wanted to heal both the man with the shriveled hand and the Pharisees.

Jesus likes to heal people who are withered -- especially, people whom others want to remain withered.

Is it I Lord? Do I do that Lord?

CONVENT

Take for example, a young woman who enters the convent. She enters full of life and discovers that the convent is full of death.

In fact, it’s hell. Everyone is stuck in the past. It stifles her. She suggests change. She is cut down. She begins to wither up. She wants to leave. They want her to stay -- to stay and wither some more -- to become like them.

GEORGE WALD

One of my favorite lectures was given by the Harvard biologist, George Wald. In the talk he said that there have been religions that chose death. He calls them religions of death.

Christianity and Judaism are not.

He quotes the great text in Deuternomy, “Today I put before you life and death, the blessing and the curse. Therefore choose life.”

JESUS

Jesus said that he was the life. He said that he was the way, the truth and the life. He said that he came that we might have life and have it to the full.

CONCLUSION: ME

Where am I?

This morning ask Jesus to heal you where you are dying, withered, where you feel like a withered rejected branch, on the vine. Ask Jesus, the Vinedresser, to prune you, to cut you, where you need to be healed.

This morning, also ask, where am I killing others, draining them, dragging them, suffocating them, hindering them from deeper living.

This morning ask, where and whom, I don’t want healed and why.

In AA one hears stories about people who keep on enabling another to be an alcoholic. There are also stories - better stories - about withered people being healed.


OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

PAINTING ON TOP: Crow on a Withered Branch by  Kawanabe Kyosa. 

January 23, 2019


THE  ESSENCE  OF  ANOTHER

From time to time we realize we
don’t know the essence of another.

We come to a wall around that person
built by themselves or by others or both.

We try to figure them out. We label them.
They are selfish! They are givers.

They are lazy - all lust - all envy -
all pride - all greed - all need.

Then we realize we don’t even
know the essence of the me I am.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019