Friday, February 15, 2019


EULOGY

If I could write my own eulogy,

what would I write? 

If I was sitting there hearing my eulogy,

what would the eulogist say?

If I was hearing my eulogy would I say

the old jokes? You're talking about someone else.

If I was hearing my own eulogy, 

what would I hope is not said?

Is the eulogy and the words at the wake,

the real final judgment?

If God gave my eulogy,

what would God say? 

Is there a final judgment?




© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019
February   18, 2019 

Black History Month Thought for Today:  


"Poetry is life distilled.”  

Gweldolyn Brooks



DEAD TREE  -  LIVE  TREE


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 6 Sunday in Ordinary Time is, “Dead Tree - Live Tree.”

When a preacher starts to work on a homily or a sermon he or she likes to come up with an opening story or an opening image - that everyone can picture - something everyone can feel and sense.

Today’s first reading from Jeremiah gives two diverse images: that of the dead tree and a live tree.

All of us have seen both - dead flowers,  dead bushes, dead branches, and dead trees - as well as their opposites.  Jeremiah describes a bush out there in the desert,  dead,  infertile, no longer producing life.

PSALM 1 AND JEREMIAH 17

Today’s Psalm has the same image: live tree near running water and dead leaves, blowing in the wind. It's from Psalm One - the first of all the psalms.

Jeremiah says to the people that  we have two choices in life: do you want to be a dead bush or a live tree? The choice is always ours?

Listen to these words again from Jeremiah:

“Cursed is the man who trusts in human beings,
who seeks his strength in flesh,
whose heart turns from the Lord.
He is like a barren bush in the desert
that enjoys no change of season,
But stands in a lava waste,
a salt and empty earth.

Blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord,
          whose hope is the Lord.
He is like a tree planted beside the waters
that stretches out its roots to the stream:
It fears not the heat when it comes,
its leaves stay green;
In the year of drought it shows no distress,
but still bears fruit.”

Which would you rather be? Obviously, we would all choose to be the living tree. We want 4 seasons? We want life? Who wants to be a deadbeat? The choice is always yours.

Jeremiah then, like any good preacher, gives the secret, the way to be the tree and the way not to be the dead bush.

The secret is basic: it’s trust. Down deep at the bottom of me, at the lowest levels of the soil of my soul, I have to ask myself, “What do put my trust in?” Or better, “Who do I put my trust in?” Is it God or others or stuff? So we have to do is to examine where we put our trust. What do I put my trust in?  Obviously, it’s in God - the Living God - who is living water - flowing deep within me.

TODAY’S GOSPEL

Today’s gospel uses a basic human experience: that of blessing something or someone or cursing something or someone. We are very familiar with each. We bless and curse every day.

It's Luke's version of the Beatitudes - but he only gives 4, but then he adds 4 Badattudes as well.

Blessing and Cursing are 2 very basic human behaviors. We praise the other person -  or we curse him or her. We praise a day or we curse a day. We praise a meal or we curse a meal. We praise a movie or we curse a movie. We dread or rejoice. We curse the other driver for crawling along in the left lane or not using their blinker or we praise them for letting us out into traffic in front of us.

CONCLUSION: SECOND READING

The title and theme of my homily is, "Dead Tree - Live Tree."

The Good News is found in today's second reading from 1 Corinthians 15:12, 16 - 20.

Even if we're dead, we can come back to life.

February 17,  2019




 GOING TO COMMUNION 
IN THE DARK OF NIGHT

Sometimes when I’m at church
I look at the backs of heads - and
wonder about what’s going on
inside the dark of another’s mind.

Sometimes when I’m at church
I look at faces - as another comes
back down the aisle - after receiving
Holy Communion - union with Christ.

Sometimes when I wake up at
two-thirty in the morning, I walk
down to the back porch and look
out into the dark night - past the stars.

Sometimes if it’s cold in the dark
night I get out of bed and walk into
my inner room - close the door -
and enter into deep communion.

Sometimes in these moments of
Holy Communion,  I know you know,
what’s inside my mind and behind
the smile on my face in the dark.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

February 17, 2019

Black History Month Thought for Today:  

Reading is important — read between the lines. Don't swallow everything.”  


Gweldolyn Brooks 

February 16, 2019



HISTORY

His story - her story - surrounds us.
Family history is all around us. 
Statues, gravestones, markers. 
mementos, scratches on furniture,
scars on skin,  glued vases all sit there.

Everything has a story and is part of one.
So the key questions are: "What happened?"
"Why here?" "Who were the key characters?"
"What impact did this have on your life?
"Did anyone write what happened here?"


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019



February   16, 2019 

Black History Month Thought for Today:  


People don't follow titles, they follow courage.”  



William Wells Brown