Saturday, October 26, 2019



IF  I  WERE  A  TREE?

If I were a tree, what kind of a tree would I want to be?

Would I want to be a redwood tree and last at least 923  years?

Would I want to be an olive tree and last 1000 or is it 2000 years in the garden of Gethsemane?

Would I want to be a palm tree giving palm oil and gracious shakes and shimmies  to all looking at me down at  a beach?

Would I want to be an apple tree sending forth apple blossom scents  in the spring and handing out delicious red apples in the fall?

Would I want to be a Christmas tree - all decked out with the finest of ornaments, with gifts left at my feet, indoors, on a rug or a neat wooden floor -  being the background  for dozens of photos and the cause of a 1000 smiles - but by the way, I’m dead?

Would I want to be a banana tree bringing delicious bananas to the breakfast table and be the cause of swing to dozens and dozens of frisky monkeys?

Would I want to be the tree of the cross - being a back and then the death bed for Jesus - becoming the symbol for Christianity?

Would I want to be a mighty oak tree - a sign of hope and a symbol of  strength for an old man sitting on a nursing home porch?

Would I want to be a weeping willow tree - near a small pond on the side -  of a side road - in the suburbs?

Would I want to be a Japanese cherry blossom tree that thousands come to see every spring in Washington D.C. - telling us countries can share beauty and life with each other.

Would I want to be a fig tree  caught by a farmer for doing nothing - but given a 2nd chance - but now am  living under the gun needing to produce?

If I were a tree, what kind of a tree would I love to be?


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

[This was a fun reflection on the  parable of the Fig Tree in today’s gospel Luke 13: 1-9 - for the 29th Saturday in Ordinary Time.  I know a few people who know all about trees - and types of trees, but I’m treeologically illiterate - so here was an attempt to bring in something about different trees.]

October 26, 2019


OVERHEARD  FROM KIDS 
ON  THE  NEXT  TABLE 

“Like what?”
“I do.”
 “Me too.”
“This is better.”
“Oh yeah.”
“I understand.”
“I like.”
“I did that one.”
“I’ll kill you.”
“Cool.”
“Yeah, give me one.”
“I’ll never go there.”
“Yeah, yeah.”
“Unbelievable.”
“So boring.”
“I know what class she’s in....”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

October  26, 2019 -


Thought for today:

“Few people can be happy unless they hate some other person, nation or creed.” 


Bertrand Russell, 
Autobiography, 1961


Friday, October 25, 2019











DIG  DEEP  INTO  ANYWHERE

To read, to know, the history
of the place where we come from,
one has to dig deep into the
soil of the place we’re looking at.

Our shovel, our mind, our eyes will
hit blood and rock and injustice.
Little will be written, if anything. That’s
the stuff written of kings and the rich.

Yet, our roots, our stories, our tears, can
still be  found in  soggy dirt with bogged
down pieces of skull. Our ancestors were
here and praise God, we can dig here. Amen 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

October  25, 2019


Thought for today: 

“The Church must be reminded that it is not the master or the servant of the state but rather the conscience of the state.”  


Martin Luther King, Jr. 
Strength to Love, 1963


DIVISION

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 29 Thursday in Ordinary Time is, “Division”.

TODAY’S GOSPEL

Today’s gospel - on first hearing - evoked an, “Oh no!” from me.

Oh no - here’s Jesus - saying, “Do you think that I have come to establish peace on the earth?  No, I tell you, but rather division.”

Then Jesus  talks about division in families: three against two and two against three.  A father will be divided against his son and a son against his father, a mother against her daughter and a daughter against  her mother, a mother-in-law her daughter-in-law and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law.”

Down through the ages did scribes - monks  -  printers - doing the Book of Kells or the Lindisfarne scriptures - or the Guttenberg Bible - or any transcriber of the Gospels - say the same, “Oh no!” upon coming to this wall of words - a wall that divides people from people.  Did they say, “What about those other words Jesus told us about forgiveness - for example forgiving 70 times 7 times and bringing peace to the rooms we enter?”

STEPPING BACK

Stepping back, sitting back, pondering these words of Jesus, after saying, “Oh no!”  I said, “Oh yes, there is plenty of family division - church division - political division.”

Next I said, “You were taught  all these Gospel texts were put there to deal with stuff in Christian communities two and three generations after Jesus.

Next I said, “And we need to deal with division - and disagreements - and inner fights - just as every generation of Christians have to.”

I love to quote the saying, “The greatest sin is our inability to accept the otherness of the other person.”

I like it when the pope follows my opinions.  I don’t like these folks who don’t like Pope Francis.  And I would like this pope and the next pope to make significant changes in the church - as long as they are liberal..

And I realize there are lots of people who will have problems with me when I’m made pope.

WHERE I NEED TO CHANGE

I need to walk in other’s shoes and figure out where they are coming from when I discover they differ from me.

I need to talk to others who will challenge me to see where I am coming from.

I need to read, talk, dig into - so as the figure out the why of divisions.

We were just talking the other day about two Redemptorists and one guy says about a guy who was a whiner - he couldn’t accept Vatican II.

CONCLUSION


So there’s differences and divisions -  and we all need to deal with them. Amen. 

We need to learn to meet with each other - as you’ll hear in the 2nd Canon for reconciliation which I’ll use at this Mass.


Thursday, October 24, 2019

October 24, 2019



MEMORIES

Like a favorite sweater -
memories warm us when
we are cold - but at some
point we take that sweater off.
It goes into a closet or a bottom
drawer and memories come off
dates and places and drop out
of site into closets and bottom
drawers, but some days we are
cold….

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019