Monday, February 11, 2019



HEALING PLACES, 
HOLY PLACES 


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 5th Monday in Ordinary Time is, “Healing Places, Holy Places.”

Churches are holy places - as well as healing places.

LOURDES

Today we celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.

Lourdes is certainly one of the planets great holy places and healing places.

What are your holy places?  Where are your healing places?

Father John Barry - who taught us in the minor seminary - once said in the classroom, “If you ever get a chance to go to Lourdes, go.” Then he added, “And make sure you got to the baths there.”

In 1996 I got my chance on a trip to Ireland and then France with my two sisters and my brother-in-law.  Each of us got a spot to pick in France. My sister Peggy - a nun - picked Lourdes - maybe because today - February 11 - her birthday.  My sister Mary picked Bordeaux. Her husband picked Paris. I picked the most important Marian Shrine in the world: Chartres.

Each - was a healing place - a neat picture of St. Alphonsus in Bordeaux and Montmartre - the church of the Sacred Heart  -  Sacré-Cœur - overlooking Paris. Chartres was on my bucket list. And my sisters to their loss wouldn’t go into the baths when we visited Lourdes.




VARIOUS HOLY AND HEALING PLACES

The title of my homily is, “Healing Places, Holy Places.”

Today’s two readings can be healing places.

Many people sit with their Bible - which puts them in a holy place and a healing place.

The first reading is the beginning of the Book of Genesis. It tells us of the creation of the world. [Cf. Genesis 1: 1-19.]

Where are your Holy Places: the Maryland Shore, the mountains, the oceans, the sky at night, looking out the kitchen window at the morning sunrise?  Where are your healing places: the bathtub, a good shower, your marriage bed - whether your spouse is living or dead [memories] swimming, exercising, walking, a good book, shopping,  a rocking chair, a nap, sleep, a good meal out with family or friends, Thanksgiving Dinner, seeing a baby or baby-sitting a grandkid?

Where are your healing moments with Jesu?  The people in today’s gospel [Mark 6: 53-56] - just had to touch the tassel of Jesus’ cloak - or the hem of his garment as we heard last week - and they were healed. How do you touch Jesus: in communion, in the bread, in the readings, in the adoration chapel, at Mary’s shrine, in prayers?

My mother on the way home from work - taking care of an older woman who was younger than she was - but basically bedridden, my mom would get a whole loaf of fresh rye bread - uncut - stress on the fresh - and she would put on a pot of tea and eat the whole loaf - with cold butter - cold, cold butter on freshly baked rye bread.  It can be very healing after a long day of work - especially with my sister Mary.


Food, friends, bread, wine, communion with each other - what a great Mass of healing for anyone!

CONCLUSION:

The title of my homily was: “Holy Places - Healing Places.” Lourdes, Chartres, Fatima, the Grand Canyon, Lake Louise, all can be great holy places  - wonderful healing places - to visit, so too your favorite chair at home or bench here in church.



February  11, 2019 



Black History Month Thought for Today:  

Many and most moments go by with us hardly aware of their passage. But love and hate and fear cause time to snag you, to drag you down like a spider’s web holding fast to a doomed fly’s wings.” 


Walter Mosley (When the Thrill Is Gone)

Sunday, February 10, 2019



FEELING BIG  AND  FEELING SMALL -
WOE  AND  WOW!

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 5th Sunday in Ordinary Time is, “Feeling Big and Feeling Small - Woe and Wow!”

That’s a theme that I noticed in today’s readings.

It’s a theme that shows up in Jesus’ comments - about life - from time to time -  and it’s a theme that is central to spirituality.

Let me see if I can catch this theme - this message - this teaching - with words and images - anecdotes and examples.

Last week someone told me what they wanted in a sermon. They want,  “Something to chew on, to digest, to think about - and work on - something to wonder about - to agree or disagree about - to nuance -  during for this new week of life.”

What do you want?

Woe! Wow! 

That’s a challenging call to every preacher.

GOOD PREACHING

For starters let me begin by saying, “In good preaching, you are not supposed to notice the preacher.”

You ought to be into the content and the message.

If you’re thinking about the preacher: “AAAAAAhhhh!”

Back in 1960, in Los Angeles, Adlai Stevenson, introduced a candidate for the Presidency of the United States. He said, “Do you remember that in classical times when Cicero had finished speaking, the people said, ‘How well he spoke’ - but when Demosthenes had finished speaking, the people said, ‘Let us march’?”

Woe!  Wow!

Father Jack Lavin used to mention at breakfast - once and a while - a story about Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen. Being a priest I’ve often thought about that story.

Home Masses in parishes were starting to show up around the country. I know I did a bunch of them. Well, Bishop Sheen was in a house in a poor neighborhood in Rochester, New York, where he was the local bishop. He had on his ornate bishop’s outfit and pointed hat. After the Mass a poor lady said, “He made me feel so small, so poor, so out of place.”

Woe! Wow!

I’m not faulting him.  I want to point out that I  remember the feelings I  had when doing home masses in full vestments. Something didn’t seem right when doing that. A mass at a kitchen table is different than a mass in a Cathedral.  A mass in a cathedral is different than a mass in a small chapel  - like the one we have at St. John Neumann.

Today - if a priest is saying Mass in a home - he might just use a stole over a shirt.

The concentration would be on the consecration. The concentration would be about the Word of God being read to the people. The consecration is about Christ coming into our midst as a tiny baby or  appearing at our boat or kitchen table - wanting to be in communion with us - sharing our bread - being our bread - and asking  us, “What do you want from life?  Empty nets or a full boat?”

Woe!  Wow!

JESUS ON TASSELS AND ROBES

Jesus was off on tassels and externals. Jesus was off on show and showing off. Jesus was off on off with the tassels.

Jesus was off on not wanting first place and looking down on those in the back spaces or places.

Jesus was off on not screaming with our clothes and cars and wallets, “Hey world look at me!” He wanted us to look and see the beauty and the wow of every person. Are you missing the person who needs you - especially family members. Are you missing those who are trying to touch the tassel on your cloak - the ears on the side of your head - because they want you to listen to them?

Jesus was off on people not putting people down - but raising them up - here and hereafter.

To stand taller, some people stab people in the back and then stand on their body - to feel they are taller and bigger and better. This is not what it’s about.

It’s not about first seats in banquets.

Obviously,  we priests have to watch out about all this. We get the front seats at every Mass.

Woo! and Wow!

TODAY’S READINGS

In today’s second reading - Paul to the Ephesians - Paul says it’s not about him. It’s about Christ. Hey, I persecuted you guys.

In today’s first reading Isaiah says, “Hey you should hear the stuff that has come out of my mouth.”

“However, thanks to God, the Holy One, he has cleaned my lips.”

“He has touched my lips and cleansed my mouth - of the bad stuff that has come out of my mouth. He has sent me to proclaim his goodness and holiness.”

Then he prays, “Here I am Lord, send me!”

That should be our every day prayer.

The Psalm for today says, “My mouth is for singing!”  I have a tin ear and no musical sense - but I’ll give it a try.

Today’s gospel has a beginning story of St. Peter - our first pope, our first Papa. He’s a fisherman and has just spent the night fishing and caught nothing.

His boat is empty.

Jesus gets into Peter’s boat - moves away a tiny bit from the shore and does some preaching.

Did he see the empty nets?  Did he see the empty boat?  Did he see Peter’s life?

Jesus says, “Let’s go fishing.”  That had to surprise Peter.

Jesus said, “Launch out into the deep waters and lower your nets.”

Peter says, “We have just fished all night and caught nothing, but….”

But he does it.

A fisherman can learn from a carpenter.

And his nets are filling and flopping with fish and he calls to his partners and they fill both boats till they are almost sinking.

Woe!  Wow!

Then Peter does the comparison thing.

He just saw a “Wow” and he knows he’s a “Wooooooh” and a “Woe”

Slow down Jesus.

He says to Jesus, “Leave!”

Get out of here! I’m a sinful man.”

Jesus does do that.

He fills emptiness.

He is full of grace.

He calls this empty feeling man with grace.

He says, “Come follow me! I’m about to make you a fisher of people.”

CONCLUSION

We come to Mass to hear this kind of stuff. We come to Mass to realize I’m in the same boat as Isaiah, Paul, and Peter.  We look at our life and feel, “Woo! Woe is me! I’m a sinner, so God wouldn’t want me. But Christ came to call me to reach out to others - and bring them into Christ’s network.

“Wow!”

So that’s some stuff to think about and realize this week.

“Let us march!”

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

Painting on top:
Small Beetle-Big Bite
by Dwight Smith
February 10, 2019

LOCKED


The gate was locked.
I noticed that.

Sometimes I see
the same thing in faces.

I assume there is
a reason for all this.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019




February  10, 2019 





Black History Month Thought for Today:  

Abortion and racism are evil twins, born of the same lie. Where racism now hides its face in public, abortion is accomplishing the goals of which racism only once dreamed. Together, abortionists are destroying humanity at large and the black community in particular.”  


Alveda King

Saturday, February 9, 2019

February 9, 2019


SOMETIMES WE DON’T 
KNOW WHAT TO SAY 


Sometimes we don’t know
what to say - or what to do.

But still we go to the funeral home
and we still go to the funeral.

We too have lost our loved ones;
we too didn’t know what visitors said.

Yet we knew the Body of Christ
walked into those rooms and held us.

We know Christ’s love is still alive.
It's in the hearts of those who hold us.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


February  9, 2019 






Black History Month Thought for Today:  

"Did you know that the human voice is the only pure instrument? That it has notes no other instrument has? It's like being between the keys of a piano. The notes are there, you can sing them, but they can't be found on any instrument. That's like me. I live in between this. I live in both worlds, the black and white world.”


Nina Simone

February 7, 2019

Black History Month Thought for Today:  


“We are not fighting  for  integration,  nor are we fighting for separation. We are fighting for recognition as human beings ...  In fact, we are actually fighting for rights that are even greater than civil rights and that is human rights.” 


Malcolm X (Black Revolution)