Thursday, August 20, 2020

August  20,  2020


RED  RUBY  EARINGS


Nobody really noticed her red earrings –
that she wore the same ones –
every Tuesday evening for 14 straight years.

Her husband had bought them that Tuesday
– plus a love card – and even had written
some fluffy love stuff in that anniversary card.

He was going to take her out for dinner after she
picked him up at the airport  on that Tuesday
evening to the place where he proposed years ago.

You know the rest of the story. 
The suitcases in the hold were 
the only things that survived the crash. 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

August  20,  2020

Thought  for  Today



“The man who lives for himself and for himself is apt to be corrupted by the company he keeps.”   

Charles H. Parkhurst

Wednesday, August 19, 2020

August  19,  2020




TORNADO  WARNING


Till 10:30 AM there was a tornado warning.
We were told by phone to head for cover.
We were told to go below – to get out of
harm’s way, so most of those in the building    
headed for safety – headed for  the basement.

On the way down to a safe place, I stopped.
I was now on the first floor. I could look out
the windows. I could stop and watch the ocean.
The waves were like teenagers at a teen dance.  
The water – the scenery - was sort of dark brown.

It’s now 11:30 AM – I’m back  on the second floor.
Once more I’m looking out the window – at the
ocean. The water is still dark – but  the air is
different. It’s white. It’s bright. It’s light. It’s
definitely a different day now.  Different ….



 © Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


August  19,  2020



Thought  for  Today

“In  prayer it is better to have a heart without words  than words without heart.”

John  Bunyan

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

August 18,  2020





ABSTRACT   PAINTINGS

I walked into a big room in an art museum.
I had seen a notice about this special exhibit.
It was filled with his paintings – all abstracts.
As I was looking at his paintings – I could
hear different comments – from different
couples – usually by the male – and she
would agree. “I could be rich!” Translation:
“I could do this.” I looked at each canvas –
not getting the titles or the meanings. Then
I walked into the next room – portraits, pears,
fields, weather – and I said to myself,
“Now these are paintings.”  Wow, was I
surprised. They were by the same artist
in the room I had just left. Translation:
“I am poor. There are things I can’t do.”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

August  18,  2020



Thought  for Today

“Once  a  word is let out, a swift horse can’t overtake it.”

Tzu Kung, an even older
 quote and aphorism.


MEANING

The title of my homily – a short one – is meaning.

Meaning – understanding – figuring things out is one  of life’s biggest issues.

How many times do we ask, “What did she or he, mean by that?”

Today’s first reading - for this 20th Monday in Ordinary time -  has people asking Ezekiel, “Won't you tell us what all these things you are doing mean for us." [Cf. Ezechiel  24: 15-23]

Every time we preachers have to preach a homily, we read the scriptures for the day and we try to figure out their meaning.

If there is any book in the Bible where this question comes up the most, it’s the Book of the Prophet Ezekiel.

Down through the years I’ve heard commentators on Ezekiel say he was deaf and did his preaching with short skits or plays – to get a message across.

If we read the gospels, we meet people asking the question over and over again, “What does this mean?”

At some time in life it’s worth reading Viktor Frankl’s book, Man’s Search for Meaning [1946].

Here is a section of his book.  Understand this moment in a concentration camp, and then re-read the Prophet Ezechiel again.   Both men lost their wives.  I'm putting his long paragraph in poetic form to catch its power and beauty even more:

We were at work in a trench.
  
The dawn was grey around us; 
grey was the sky above; 
grey the snow in the pale light of dawn; 
grey the rags in which my fellow prisoners were clad, and grey their faces.

I was again conversing silently with my wife,  
or perhaps I was struggling to find the reason 
for my sufferings, my slow dying.

In a last violent protest
against the hopelessness of imminent death, 
I sensed my spirit piercing 
through the enveloping gloom. 
I felt it transcend that hopeless, 
meaningless world, 
and from somewhere I heard a victorious 'Yes' 
in answer to my question of the existence 
of an ultimate purpose.

At that moment 
a light was lit in a distant farmhouse, 
which stood on the horizon as if painted there, 
in the midst of the miserable grey 
of a dawning morning in Bavaria.

"Et lux in tenebris lucet" - 
and the light shineth in the darkness.

For hours I stood hacking at the icy ground. 

The guard passed by, insulting me, 
and once again I communed with my beloved.

More and more 
I felt that she was present, 
that she was with me;  
I had the feeling that I was able to touch her, 
able to stretch out my hand and grasp hers.  
The feeling was very strong:  she was there.

Then, at that very moment, 
a bird flew down silently 
and perched just in front of me, 
on a heap of soil 
which I had dug up from the ditch, 
and looked steadily at me."

Let me close with a jumping off from Descartes famous principle and change it to:  "I search for meaning, therefore I am."