September 30, 2022
Thought for Today
"Poems are other people's snapshots in which we recognize ourselves."
Charles Simic
The Unemployed Fortune Teller, 1994
September 29, 2022
Reflections
SICKNESS
The only advantage of sickness is getting well.
What does that mean?
Well, when we are well, we're out of it, so we don't appreciate wellness till we are sick.
I've been feeling crummy for almost a week now. Ugh.
My voice went to 80%
My energy level is low.
I have not had a chance to do my hour on the treadmill - lest I start coughing big time. Then the cough gets worse - and I end up with a hacking persistent cough.
It's not aging. It's just a summer cough or allergies or a bug - or I don't know.
It's frustrating.
It's laziness coughing.
It's a downer.
It could be worse.
I don't have a fever.
I am able to work.
I went to Washington D.C. yesterday and enjoyed it.
Yet, I also did 2 funerals and 5 Masses in the last few day under the influence of a cough.
I'll try to remember this moment when I'm well.
Soon.
Hurry.
Please God.
Amen.
JOB
The
title of my thoughts for this short sermon is Job: The Book of Job.
Job:
the Book of Job – our first reading for these few days in the 26th
Week of the Year.
Job
has 42 chapters - poetry and prose
- stories and speeches.
The
Book of Job goes back into Jewish history – probably with roots in other early cultures.
There is probably a few ancient versions, Then it was rewritten – changed -
adapted, Then there was a more final version from around the 500 or 600. Other scripture scholars have other comments.
It
begins with Satan giving Job a test. Much of the book is loaded with questions
- tests – the very tests all people – go through – especially sufferings. Does God zap people? How come some people
have more sufferings that other people?
Different
characters give different answers – different reasons – different speeches.
God
is questioned. God is yelled at. God is described.
The
bottom line message seems to be that each of us is that we too are like Job and
we have our trials – and our questions.
Two
weeks ago on television, they had a 3 part documentary entitled: “The United
States and the Holocaust”. It was made
by Ken Burns and to me it was the book
of Job in documentary form.
It
had questions I hope there are answers for in eternity.
It
told of the 6 million Jews killed in Germany in World War II. I sat there and wondered once more about all the
little kids who were killed – gassed – stabbed – murdered. Jews, the
Handicapped, people who were gay, Some Catholics, priests, nuns – were
murdered. I found myself saying some of the things I heard in Job. “Not fair –
unfair.” Like Job, I was saying lots of words to bring to God and talk to God with.
Amen.
September 28, 2022
Reflection
PLAYING HURT
While watching a baseball game on TV, one of the announcers said, "You never tell reporters you're hurt."
Someone else said, "Cal Ripkin had to have played hurt many times - in order to have the record for consecutive games played."
I'm sitting here thinking about all this.
In the meanwhile I went to bed earlier than usual, because I could feel a sore throat coming on - and I had the 6:45 Mass in the morning.
I took some sore throat syrup around 3 AM. It was dated. It had expired two years ago. I needed relief. I didn't want to sleep hurt. It was ugly stuff. I got gobs of stuff roaring in my throat and inner nose.
Ugh.
I woke up needing water at various times.
I got up at 6, showered, got moving.
Still not feeling my best.
Yet I was able to do the Mass and a sermon I pulled together last night.
I went out for a walk. That helped.
I prayed, I played, I hurt.
Another day in the major leagues.
September 27, 2022
Reflection
CUTS AND SKIN
Cuts tell us we are human.
We bleed - red blood is our mighty Mississippi, our Hudson, our Nile, our Amazon, our Danube, our Mekong, our red rivers flowing through our body.
Cuts tell us that blood flows within.
Our skin is the largest organ in our body. We can tap our toes and feel it. We can wiggle our ears and feel them moving. Some can do that better than others.
We can scratch and pick and itch and pinch our skin.
Moles and lumps, splotches and pimples - pop up on our skin - in all sorts of places.
In the movie, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, the bride to her horror gets a zit on her face - on the morning of her wedding.
Surgeons cut our skin to get inside - or we hope they keep coming up with more non-invasive ways to get to our vitals - inside the packaging of our skin.
Cuts often happen without our being aware of them. We bump against something sharp. We bite a piece of loose skin on our lips or fingernails edge.
Jesus was nailed, beaten, crowned with thorns, and stuck with a spear,
Bleeding blood....
Jesus bled.
Jesus was cut.
And we know the experience, the metaphor, the hurt of being cut, speared, nailed, crowned with hurts from others - from others who want to cut us out of their will, their control, cut us out of their lives, etc.
Cuts tell us we're human.