“There are many who stay away from church these days because you hardly ever mention God any more.”
Arthur Miller,
The
Crucible, 1953
Thursday, January 9, 2020
January 9, 2020
DIRECTOR’S CHAIR
While watching the making
of the movie of another’s life,
sometimes we notice the other has
someone else in the
director’s chair.
It could be Mommy, Daddy, Spouse, trends, that are pulling the strings, arranging the scenes – controlling the lines, directing the action and the cuts.
“Writing comes more easily if you have something to say.”
Sholem Asch,
New York Herald Tribune,
November 6, 1955
Wednesday, January 8, 2020
BELIEF IN
MIRACLES
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily is, “Belief in Miracles.”
Today’s gospelhas the story of Jesus walking on water. It’s a classic miracle story and metaphor. So,last night in preparing this homily I decided
to think about miracles.So the title of
my reflection is, “Belief in Miracles.”
MARTIN
O’MALLEY
I
got an e-mail Christmas card from a friend of mine, Martin O’Malley. Great name.
I had told him I now live next to the ocean.
Some
of his roots are from Galway, Ireland and my parents are from Galway, Ireland. I
told him I like to stand down by the water and say to myself - pointing out into the Atlantic , “Galway, Ireland is right there.”
He
had said he did the same thing with his kids at the beach in Ocean City,
Maryland when they were kids.
Then
I told him about the statue of Mary on our property here that has Jesus doing
the same thing: pointing out to the water.
Did
Mary and Joseph take Jesus to the Sea of Galilee when he was a kid?It’s not that far from Nazareth.
He
slid into a follow up e-mail the following words, “The miracle is to walk on
land.”
I
wrote back to him, “Great quote. I’ll give you credit if it’s yours.”
THICH
NHAT HANH
He
wrote back, “Sorry. It’s from Thich Nhat Hanh – whom I met and love to read. Thich
said, ‘The miracle is not to walk on water. The miracle is to walk on the green
earth, dwelling deeply in the present moment and feeling truly alive.’”
Wow
is that classic Buddhist spiritual visioning.
I’ve
been thinking about that and surprise today’s gospel appears and I’m down for
saying a few words.
Last
night I looked up what other folks have said about miracles and how we see.
Jon Bon Jovi said, “Miracles happen every
day, change your perception of what a miracle is and you'll see them all around
you.”
Change
your attitude – open up both your eyes – and open up the third eye – the inner
eye the mystics talk about.
Have
that faith and you can stand on our beach and be in communion with all the
people on the waters and the land they lap and wave to all day long.
Have
that faith – have that way of thinking and seeing – and you can be in communion
during this meal with all people at 8 o’clock Masses in this time zone and all
people having breakfast, lunch and supper around the world at this time – the
constant daily miracle of the multiplication of the loves of daily bread around the world.
Have
that faith, that way of seeing, and every time you see visible signs of love,
you’ll see and sense the presence of the invisible God all around you- as today’s first reading from the First Letter
of John puts it. [Cf. .4:11-18]
Have
that faith – that way of perceiving – and you can write the song in the Rogers
and Hammerstein’s musical, The Flower Drum Song. “A Hundred Million Miracles”.
The
refrain is saying what I’m saying in this homily,
“A hundred million
miracles,
A hundred million
miracles are happ'ning ev'ry day,
And those who say they
don't agree
Are those who do not hear
or see.
A hundred million
miracles,
A hundred million
miracles are happ'ning ev'ry day….”
Notice today’s gospel
has that very same message when Mark tells us about those who don’t get it,
“They had not understood the incident of the loaves. On the contrary, their
hearts were hardened.” [Mark 6: 52]
But those who get it
see Jesus walking with them when on the water, in a boat, at a meal, at this
mass, when walking on this planet.
As the flower drum song puts it, those who get this
ability to see miracles see the miracle of children growing, the rivers flowing,
the sun rising, flowers flowering, stars staring and a little girl in China – standing up today and starting to walk for the first time.
CONCLUSION
As Albert Einstein put
it, “There are two ways to live: you can live
as if nothing is a miracle; you can live as if everything is a miracle.”
“The last years of his life had become so precious to him that, as he said, he would
willingly stand at street corners hat in hand, begging passers-by to drop their
unused minutes into it.”