Monday, October 19, 2020

 October 19, 2020

                        ON  PAGE  67

 
It moved.  I thought it was a period.
It moved and ran down the page.
From time I see these tiny bugs
in old books. Do they have hearts,
hands and feet? What do they eat?
Did it think I was looking? Did it think
I was going to squash it. No way!
I too like to read books just like you.
 
 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

Sunday, October 18, 2020

 

CYRUS:

A CHERISHED MEMORY

 

The title of my thoughts for this 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time [A]  is:  “Cyrus:  A Cherished Memory.”

When we studied the Old Testament in the Major Seminary - when we came to Cyrus – probably when we came to today’s first reading from Isaiah 45 – Pete Ellis described Cyrus as a good guy.

I still remember that sense of who Cyrus was – according to Pete Ellis – when I first heard it in 1963.

Good stuff – a good cherished memory – stuck to his name – once more when I heard it last night.

Cyrus -  590 to 530 – around then and around 60 years of life – is the guy who let the Jews back to Jerusalem – out of their Babylonian Captivity days – in 538.  

Babylon – Nebuchadnezzar – is the country and the general and king – who attacked and destroyed Jerusalem in 570 or so.

He was a bad memory – along with all Babylonians and as the psalmist – in Psalm 137 -  put it – bang their babies heads against the rocks.

Cyrus was a cherished memory.

So that’s the title of my thoughts: “Cyrus: A Cherished Memory.”

When we hear the Redemptorist Cherished Memories read out at evening prayer down through the years I’m sure two things happened:  we hoped we will make it and we wonder what they will say about us.

We hope we will be cherished – at least by the people we lived with and by the people we served.

Cyrus did a lot of conquering – and one of his policies was to try to let a place keep its gods and its culture.

Isaiah calls him the anointed one of Yahweh.

Well historians said he did that for the various places he conquered.

He did for Babylon what he did for Israel.

The statue of one of the gods of the Babylonians was Marduk.  Cyrus took him by the hand and said, “You’re still it”

He did this in various places.

Isaiah says that Yahweh took Cyrus by the hand and helped him bop off Babylon.  That one wasn’t too difficult – because Nabonidus was very unpopular.  When Cyrus army attacked the Babylonians – their soldiers took off and ran the other way.

Since the Israelites had no statues, Cyrus had their sacred vessels restored. They had been looted back in 587.

Last night when reading up on this stuff, I noticed the following:

Two centuries later Alexander the Great [356 – 323 B.C.] came to the grave of Cyrus.

It was a small stone building.  It had a plaque that said: “I am Cyrus, the son of Cambyses.  I founded the empire of the Persians and was king of Asia.  Grudge me not this memorial.”

When I read that, I got the thought, “A cherished memory is our greatest memorial.”

May that be our legacy – to be cherished - not in stone – but in the memory of those who knew us – that we were good and decent to each other.

 

 

 October  18, 2020

From Norm Constantine - a first time in my blog - but on the masthead since June 2007!

Reflection

I have been thinking about what it means to be a Catholic as I try to figure out how to help Father Costello update his Blog. I am not having any thoughts that make any sense nor an I figuring out how to help Father Andy.

Everything seems to have changed. I do not know what I am going to do,



 October  18, 2020



Thought for Today

 

“Learn to say ‘no’;  it will be more useful  to you than to be able to read Latin.”


                                                                                   Charles Haddon Spurgeon


 October  17,  2020



ECHOES



If we echo our parents all our lives,
without realizing it 99% of the time -
then when we get together with 
our brothers and sisters at a funeral
or a wedding or family gathering,
     our parents long gone,
we ought to be listening to each other
and hear our parents perhaps for the first time.

 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

 


 October  16,  2020



WAS  GOD  SURPRISED?

 

Was God surprised when they beat
on Jesus?  Was God surprised when
they spit on him and cursed him and
crucified him? Was God surprised
when the Son came home with broken
hands and thorns still stuck in his
matted hair and bloody skull?
 
Jesus talked about banquet halls and
homecoming celebrations. When the
Father saw him coming up the road,
did he wince and ask, “What were
they like?” And what did Jesus answer?
Did he cry? Did he say, “Like fig trees
they need more time. They need more time.”

 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


 October 17,  2020


Thought for Today

 

 “The one thing harder than sticking to a diet is keeping quiet about it.”

 

Someone