Quote for Today September 8, 2012 "Women and elephants never forget an injury." Saki [Hector Hugh Munro 1870-1916] Questions: Do elephants really remember? Do men ever remember? Do elephants forgive?
Does anyone forgive and forget? Do men cry?
Friday, September 7, 2012
COMPARISONS:
THE OLD AND THE NEW
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 22 Friday in Ordinary Time
is, “Comparisons: The Old and the New.”
Today I’d like to briefly reflect upon three things:
comparisons, the old and the new.
We think and deal with all three every day.
All three have their pluses and their
minuses.
All three have an, “It all depends.”
TODAY’S GOSPEL
I thought about all three as I read today’s gospel [Luke 5: 33-39].
The Scribes, those who could write, the educated, and the
Pharisees were always finding fault with Jesus didn’t like his “new!”
They compared what he was saying with their “old”.
They weren’t happy campers.
So Jesus gives a great comparison. Look at people faces at a wedding and look
at people’s faces when it’s a religious season of fasting. Compare faces.
My disciples are celebrating life. I’m the bridegroom and this is a time of
celebration.
Then he talks about new cloaks and old cloaks.
You don’t cut a piece off a new cloak to patch an old cloak.
Nope! Old goes with old and new with new. You find that out when you wash
either.
It’s the same with wine: there’s new wine and there’s old wine. There’s new
wineskins and there’s old wineskins. Don't mix them up - otherwise you'll have leakage. Old people in old skin must have laughed when Jesus said this!
I don’t know wine, but I’ll accept what Jesus is saying.
THE NEW AND THE OLD
How are you with the new and with the old? For starters the
answer has to be, “It all depends.”
For the sake of transparency, I’m old. I’m 72. Do us old folks tend to favor
the good old days and keep saying, “It ain’t like it used to be”?
I prefer a new car to an old one. I’m not into collecting
antiques.
I like the new High Definition TV monitors. I don’t like the
new translation of the prayers into English.
When I go out to eat, I like what I like. I remember going on vacation in the
late 60’s with my mom, dad, and my sister Peggy. We went out to a restaurant
every evening - 6 nights straight. 6 nights straight I got veal parmesan. I
like veal parmesan - and I was comparing how it came out in 6 different
restaurants.
Somewhere along the line I also discovered Cobb Salad - so if I see that on the
menu, that’s what I’ll get. Cobb Salad has a plan: bacon bites, bacon bites, bacon bites, hard boiled egg slices - ummm!
Some people when they eat out get the same thing every time; some people
listen to the waitress or waiter giving the house specials - and often risk
taking something they have never had before.
COMPARISONS
A beautiful woman walked into a room and I said to her husband, “Who’s better
looking: this gal or your wife?” He
paused, smiled and said, “No comparison.”
Perfect answer.
Let me go deeper than skin.
Comparisons can crush. Comparisons can challenge us to move
it and be more creative.
We can miss out on a decent veal parmesan meal or Cobb
salad, because we’ve tasted better.
We can sit there in traffic or at a dull sermon, because
we’re comparing what we’re experiencing with the best or a traffic free trip. Do people with long faces - non-looking like they are at a wedding faces - crush themselves because they are comparing being in the present moment with a non existent other moment? A wedding is not a funeral. Be where you is, because if you be where you ain't, then you ain't where you is.
CONCLUSION
The title of my homily is, “Comparisons: The Old and The
New.”
Take a few moments when you have a few moments to reflect
upon these 3 realities: comparisons, the old and the new.
Compare your life to the life Jesus calls us to. Compare
both. Feel the call to the New and go for it. And in time, the New will become
old hat. Amen.
TROUBLE
Quote for Today - September 7, 2012
"Oh, a troubles's a ton, or a trouble's an ounce, Or a trouble is what you make it, And it isn't the fact that you're hurt that counts, But only how did you take it." Edmund Vance Cooke [1866-1932], How Did You Die? Stanza 1
Thursday, September 6, 2012
THE WORLD WAS
MY CLASSROOM*
If Jesus lived to 90, what would he have been like? If Jesus
lived to 90, how would the story unfold?
If Jesus lived to 90 what would have been his observations? How
different would his comments, his teachings be from what he told us at 33?
We don’t know the answers to these questions, but we can
know what he knew at 33 by reading the gospels.
One thing I think Jesus would say would be, “The World Was
My Classroom,” so that’s the reason - for this theme for this homily.
I love to read the gospels and then ask what happened, what
did Jesus see, to trigger what he just said.
I think he walked his world, worked in the family carpenter
shop, did village and home repairs, went to the synagogue, stepped back in the
market place and observed what he observed, learned what he learned.
He must have seen a pearl merchant searching for fine pearls
- found one - sold all he had and bought that pearl at any price.
So too the man he saw who found a treasure in a field -
pooled all his money - and bought that field.
He must have studied grapes and saw that one farmer pruned
his vines - and had greater grapes and greater wine - and another vine grower
didn’t prune and his yield was nothing like the first vineyard owner.
He must have heard about a vineyard owner who hired workers
all day long and paid each one the same amount - because everyone needed a
days’ wage like every worker does.
He must have had a sense of humor when he called Matthew a
tax collector to give up everything to follow him - and Matthew did. In fact,
he threw a party for Jesus to meet his friends - and this really taxed people
and their take on Jesus.
He must have sat down near the sea shore and watched how
hard working fishermen were - and said, “These are the types I’m going to need.
These are the types I’m going to call. They know where the fish are and they
are the ones who try, try and try again - even when their nets come up empty.
He must have heard about a woman who lost a coin - searched
everywhere for the lost coin, finally found it and threw a party in celebration
- without worry about the cost in coins.
He seems to have liked parties and celebrations, bread and
wine - lots of bread - lots of wine.
He must have seen some people praying to be seen and heard -
and some people who loved hiding in the back or behind pillars - so as to be
near Our Father.
He must have heard about lost sheep and lost children and
lost lives.
He must have walked by a cemetery and then walked by the Pharisees and said to
himself, There is no difference. Both are dead, It’s just that these ones - who look like white washed tombstones - haven’t
been buried yet.
He must have seen mothers and fathers giving their
lives - giving their body and blood in
sacrifice - for their children.
He must have seen a rich man dressed up big, big time - a
man who didn’t see the poor man at his gate - and then Jesus laughed when he saw the birds
of the air or the flowers of the field - and laughed - because birds of the air
and the flowers of the field as far more beautiful - than all those best
dressed folks strutting down Fashion Street.
He must have realized when he watched folks in the market
place, “I’m sure there are people who are like merchants. One is stingy, exact,
a penny pincher, and the other is totally generous - and there’s a message in
here somewhere. Amen. He must have said
many, “Amens” as he realized, "The World is My Classroom. Amen! Amen! Amen!"
Quote for Today - September 6, 2012 "As Gregory of Nyssa pictures it, He entered paradise bringing with Him His bride, Humanity, whom He had just wedded on the Cross." Jean Danielou
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
NEXT QUESTION
Quote for Today - September 5, 2012 "That is not the question." A line in Shakespeare's play, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Act. 1, Scene 1, line 227 Question: Could you say to someone when they ask you a question, "That is not the question"? What would happen next? How many times have you been asked a question and you know or you sense or you guess the other is really is trying to get at something else?
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
DEMONS
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 22 Tuesday in Ordinary Time is, “Demons.
TODAY’S GOSPEL: THE DEMON
Yesterday we began the Gospel of Luke as our weekday gospel
reading. Here we are at the beginning of Jesus’ public ministry in Luke. Yesterday
we had the coming out of Jesus in the synagogue in Nazareth Today’s scene has
Jesus going into the synagogue of Capernaum.
This time the crowd doesn’t get angry at him. The unclean demon in this man in
this synagogue acts up. He yells out that he knows who Jesus is: the Holy One
of God. [Cf. Luke 4:31-37]
To understand the Gospels more, to understand the scriptures
more, to understand life more, we better have an understanding of demons.
Making a very broad generalization, all cultures up to the
Age of Reason - accept demons - evil spirits - the evil eye - unknown forces -
that force or seem to push people to do dumb things - as well as hurt
themselves and others.
In today’s society, we don’t talk about demons like we hear
about them in the gospels. Yet if we read the papers, watch the news, we hear
story after story of hurtful things people do to other people.
And if we know ourselves, we know we sometimes do something
we regret . We resent doing something, but we did it. And we say things like,
“I don’t know what got into me.” “I was acting kind of crazy last night.”
People can become crazed, dazed, dumb. Sometimes they can do
something in a split second that ruins their life. They say, “Something
possessed me.”
THE MOVIE THE EXORCIST
I always thought that the movie The Exorcist [1971] did our faith a
lot of good.
Of course the firm story was a bit much too much with the head twisting and the
throwing up pea soup scenes - but if you watched the movie as a parable - it
had some scary and powerful messages.
The one that grabbed me was when the mother of Regan, Chris
MacNeil, comes to the priest and asks, “How do you go about getting an
exorcism?” I thought it was interesting that the mother is called “Chris” - a
name very close to the name “Christ” and the priest name is “Damien” very close
to the name “demon”.
Father Damien Karras who is also a psychiatrist - when asked
to do an exorcism says: “I beg your pardon? Well, the first thing I'd have to
get into a time machine and get back to the 16th century. Well, it just doesn't
happen anymore, Mrs. MacNeil since we learned about mental illness, paranoia,
schizophrenia. Since the day I joined the Jesuits, I've never met one priest
who has performed an exorcism. Not one.”
Even though exorcisms are rare, even though we have a better
grasp on mental sicknesses, chemical unbalance, a host of other understandings
of the human personality, there is still a need to articulate what the wisdom
in the scriptures have come up with.
In today’s first reading from First Corinthians 2: 10b-16, Paul says we can life a natural life
or a spiritual life. We could add that a
person can lead a demon filled life as well.
Faith and prayer can help. Counseling can help. Psychiatrists
can be very helpful - and often necessary.
And this man in today’s gospel reveals what the other
characters in the crowd don’t know or get. He says, “I know who you are - the
Holy One of God.”
CONCLUSIONS
So the Christian message is that Jesus is central. We know who he is and he can
help us every day. That’s our faith. Christianity is more the following -
connecting - with Christ - in a relationship - more that thinking our religion
is just us with a list of truths we follow.
Next, we are not a
Christian who refuses medical treatments - saying we’re relying totally on God
- so we will not use modern medicines.
If our children or our people are having mental problems -
we need all the help we can give them - and there is help at times.
And finally there are observations in the scriptures to this
day that can really help us. In a homily for today’s readings, entitled, “Evil
Spirits”, by Father Joseph Donders, gives a good example about what it means to
be possessed by an evil spirit - what it might mean.
He was working in Africa and he tells
about a 14 year old boy in Kenya
who got a bike. He was a poor street kid. He fixed it up a bit - but he needed
gears. He brought it to a bike repair shop. When he went to get his bike, he
didn’t have any where near the money to pay for it. The shop said if he didn’t
find the money in about 2 weeks, they would confiscate it.
To get money, he stole a radio from the school. He got
caught - couldn’t sell it - and when he handed the radio back to Father Donders
he says, “Father, don’t think I stole the radio!” The priest asked him, “If you
didn’t, who did,” He answered, “The bike.”
Then Father Donders said, “He was right. The bike became an
obsession, like an evil spirit mastering him.”
Grasp that, you’ll get a better grasp on
understanding the scriptures whenever Jesus and demons are mentioned.
PICTURE ON TOP: Jesus healing the man in the temple at Capernaum.