Monday, February 3, 2020


February 3, 2020

THE  CALLING


Sometimes when doing something else -
a voice from this or that of a half dozen  
injustices we know are in our neighborhood -
can work its way up from a twist in our gut.

It’s then we know it’s time for us to rise –
to drop everything – to fold our nets and
to go fishing elsewhere. Expect excuses.
Buts butt in. But the call keeps calling.

When the scriptures say God hears
the cries of the poor, it means us:
we’re it. We’re the poor and we’re
the called. And they are calling us.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


February  3,  2020 



Thought   for  Today 

 “Won’t it be wonderful when black history and  Native American history and  Jewish history and all of U.S. history is taught from one book. Just U.S. history.”  


Maya Angelou

Sunday, February 2, 2020


February 2, 2020

JUST  IMAGINE

Just imagine if all the chatter
and all the thoughts in all the
minds of all the earth slipped
out accidentally – like toothpicks
in those tiny glass jars - all slipping
out at once and everyone could
hear everyone’s thoughts and
judgments.  Woo! Wow! Oh no!
Wouldn’t that be an utter, “Uh oh!”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


February  2,  2020



Thought for Today

 “I don’t want a Black History Month. Black history is American history.”   Morgan Freeman

Saturday, February 1, 2020



THAT  MAN  IS  YOU

INTRODUCTION

The title of my  homily for this 3rd Saturday in Ordinary Time  is, “That Man Is You.”

Around 1964 – 1965 – there was an insightful  spiritual reading book, That Man Is You – by Louis Evely.

I’m sure some of you here had a copy of that book. It was a best seller in the world of religious books.

I looked it up last night on Google and one can still buy a copy of it: used. Today's prices are from 6 dollars to 60 dollars to $851.90. Same book. I noticed that it was only $1.45 on its cover.

2 SAMUEL 12: 1-7A, 10-17

The title and the thought for that book comes out of today’s first reading from 2 Samuel 12.

You know the story; you heard the story Nathan tells David the king.  A rich man has lots of sheep; a poor man has one sheep – a lamb.

The rich man has guests and steals the poor man’s one sheep for a dinner for his visitors.

David upon hearing that story – screams – “Who is this rich man?  I’ll make him pay back fourfold.”

And Nathan  the prophet says, “That man in you.”

“What?”

Nathan explains: “You got it all and yet you steal this poor soldier’s wife – one of your own soldiers – Uriah the Hittite – and then you have Uriah placed in a situation where he’ll be killed in battle.” 

David gets the message and repents.

HOW TO READ THE BIBLE

Louis Evely who wrote the book, That Man Is You, says there is a secret here – a great way to use and read the Bible here.

Read the stories of the Bible and put yourself in the place of every person in a  story.

This person is me.

Be Adam. Be Eve.

Be David. Be Uriah.  Be Bathsheba.  Be David’s other wives.  Be the soldiers who saw all this.

Be Nathan.

Be the Pharisee. Be the Tax Collector.

Be the Lost sheep. Be the Good Shepherd.

Be the father, the older brother and the younger brother in the Prodigal Son story.

Be the good tree, the good grape vine, or the tree that isn’t producing figs or the vine that needs pruning.

It’s basically the apostles’  question at the Last Supper. Hearing that one of them is about to betray Jesus they ask, “Is it I, Lord?”  [Cf. John 13: 25.]

In prayer, in reading the scripture, we can ask of many characters, “Is this me, Lord?”

Louis Evely wasn’t a Jesuit, but that’s how Ignatius told people making the exercises – how to read and how to get the scriptures.

It’s what Shakespeare and the storytellers know.

I’ve been doing this for some 55 years now and it still works – especially when we put ourselves into the stories, into the parables, especially when we think about what it’s like to   someone we probably wouldn’t ever think ourselves to be.

You know the old American Indian metaphor: walk a mile in the other persons moccasins – or as Hawthorn put it in a story.  He told of a lady who walked around town going, “Tch. Tch. Tch” with her nose up in the air – till another lady said to her – sort of Nathanesque.  “You ought to go out and commit a really good sin and then maybe you’ll understand the rest of us.”

That’s like saying, “Walk a mile in someone else’s sins.” 

Those of us who are “Pro Life” people or verbal rock throwers – need to walk around town with that kind of attitude – walking a mile in someone else’s sins.”

February 1, 2020



BLACK  HISTORY  MONTH


It’s February – Black  History  Month.
Not a bad idea – in fact, it can be a
great idea – if …. that is …. If we ….

To take a whole month to focus on
and understand better who we are
as a people – neighbors with each other.

A day, a week, would not be enough.
The Chinese have a whole year …
“What’s this the year of?”  we ask in a
Chinese Restaurant? A year wouldn’t
work what a whole month can do.

So we have a month to concentrate
on who we are in the quilt called we the
people of the United States of America.

Customs, cuisine, culture – pride in who
we are – with our gifts, our diversity,
our sameness, our hopes and dreams
and a thousand other variables.

A whole month, year after year, to take
some good looks on what we might be
missing – to laugh, to cry, to hear, to
step back and know that history is all
the stories of all the people in our midst.

So this February 1st – we begin with
2 simple questions:  What do we want
to look at this Black History Month?
What do we want to celebrate together?

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020



February 1, 2020

Thought   for  Today

“Faith in God yields a double self-understanding. 

We experience ourselves as both gift and task. 

At some times we receive ourselves as funded from beyond; at other times we receive ourselves as enticed from beyond. 

E. B. White once reflected that people are torn by two powerful drives: the desire to enjoy the world and the urge to set it straight. 

These two drives cannot be successfully reconciled but greatness lies in the struggle to respond to both of them. 

To live out of God is to live in the alternating-rhythms of enjoyment and transformation. 

It is to relish the gift of ourselves as it abundantly arrives and to engage in the task of ourselves as it imperatively calls. 

Faith makes us a people of both Sabbath delight and Kingdom passion.”  


John Shea