Saturday, November 2, 2019



ALL  SOUL’S  DAY:
GRAY  GRANITE  GRAVESTONES


INTRODUCTION

Today is All Souls Day.

The title of my homily is, “All Soul’s Day: Gray Granite Gravestones.”

“Gray Granit Gravestones”  I like the sound of those words - obviously.

We see gravestones and graveyards  all the time as we go up and down the roads of life.  What thoughts and feelings do they trigger? And sometimes we unearth our thoughts - when going by  gray  graves.

I would assume by having this feast every year - here on November 2nd - the Church wants us to look under some stones and see what this feast means to us.

I was wondering how many people will drop into graveyards today: All Soul’s Day. How many people will travel to a gray granite grave stone with family names carved into it - and pause to pray - pause to remember.

I would assume the church wants us to do this.

I would assume for starters grave yards should trigger gratitude.  I love Groucho Marx’s old line, “If your parents didn’t have any kids, chances are you  won’t either.”

Well, we’re here and our parents had us and we are grateful - thankful for the gift of life.  And if we’re at a family plot or old town cemetery - there will be other family members buried there - to thank and think about.

A FEW OBSERVATIONS ABOUT GRAVEYARDS

Stone is better than wood.  How many Western movies have wooden cross markers for where someone is buried?  Stone is better than wood.  Those wooden markers - crosses - etc. are not going to last like stone lasts. So too wooden crosses along highways.

More and more people are being cremated and their remains are kept at home or are simply dropped into the ocean or a  bay - without  a marker. No comment - except the comment - that a graveyard with a granite stone is different than the ocean - and does different to our psyche and memory.

Next, we live at great distances from where some of our ancestors are buried.

If possible get to their graves - or close your eyes - and go there in spirit.

Some people have portable grave yards.  Some use a prayer book and have in that prayer book the significant death cards of a lifetime. And that prayer book gets fatter with time and aging.

I like the modern practice of flyers with pictures - handed out in funeral parlors.  Some give a brief photo-biographical look-see of a deceased person.  I have a lot of them in zip lock  bag. They are  from funerals I did in the parish I just left in Annapolis Maryland.

I would suggest getting a neat box to keep death cards and flyers in and go through saved pictures from that cardboard box casket or zip lock bag or those cloth shopping bags. Do that from time to time - like today - alone or at good moments - like granny baby sitting and show them to kids and grandkids. Who’s who?  Who has been who in our life?

I believe the theology of Easter and the Resurrection has certainly been developed since F.X. Durwell’s book on The Resurrection came out in 1960.  I grew up with morning Mass in our church  in Brooklyn with every Mass in black vestments  - and they had the same readings and prayers every time. I was an altar boy all through those years and saw the dramatic changes in the liturgy and morning Mass from those days till today.

We express our faith - our hope - and our beliefs in Christ in a much more glorious and a colorful  way today.  Lent used to move us from Ash Wednesday to Good Friday.  Now Lent moves us Holy Week - to Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter - and keeps on moving us to Ascension,  then the Descent of the Holy Spirit and on and on and onwards.

CONCLUSION   

A tiny significant change was calling today, “All Souls Day” - not “Poor Souls Day”  - because all those who die  in Christ we hope and believe are rich and cleansed - and given a fatted goat to eat and celebrate in heaven with family and friends and all those who have gone before us.

November 2, 2019 -



DON’T   FORGET 
THERE  ARE  WINDOWS 

Windows began I’m sure for air,
for seeing who’s coming towards
the house - for light - for sound -
for knowing the weather in an
instance - so don’t forget the
windows. They are not just for
moms to peek out - to look out
as they wait for their kids and
grandparents for their kids to
show up once and a while for
a chat - to see the grandkids
and to see how all are doing.

Wait, there are more comments
to make - more things to say
about windows.  Do people
renting or buying a place to live
think about what windows can
see: other people, other homes,
other sights - like water …. parks ….
mountains …. harbors .... as well
as the sound of trains in the
distance - as well as dogs and
birds? Then too there is night and
the stars - the fog and the mystery.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


 November 2, 2019

 Thought for today: 

“In sickness  the  soul  begins  to  dress  herself  for  immortality.”  


Jeremy Taylor, Holy Dying, 1651

Friday, November 1, 2019


November 1, 2019

GOOD

Genesis begins by telling us about 
so many things that are so, so good. 
Stars, water, earth, cattle, fruit-trees, 
seed-bearing plants, light, darkness, 
birds, fish, lots of different fish, snakes …. 

I like to look around and play God and 
say “good” to peanut butter, red doors, 
erasers, the texture of cinder blocks, a free 
ball point pen, t-shirts, fluorescent tubes, 
and a lot more: Good …. Good …. Good. 


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


November 1, 2019 


Thought for today - All Saints Day

“Can one be a saint  if  God does not exist?  That is the only concrete problem I know of today.”  


Albert Camus, The Plague, 1947

Thursday, October 31, 2019


THE  LORD  BE  WITH  YOU

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 30th Thursday in Ordinary Time is, “The Lord Be With You.”

I couldn’t come up with a title for this homily. 

Possibles were:
·       “God” - just “God” - one word,
·       or  “Together With God”, 
·       or  “When I die, I want  a Copy of Paul’s Letter to the Romans in My Casket.”  

For now, I settled on “The Lord Be With You” as in, “The Lord be with you.”

AS YOU KNOW

As you know we’ve been listening to segments of Paul’s Letter to the Romans as our first reading since October 14th. We’ll continue with it  till November 8th.  We have it as our first reading every other year at this time.

As you also know it’s the most important of Paul’s Letters - as well as the longest - as well as  the most significant. 

It’s also the most complicated.

That’s what Ray Brown - the Sulpician scripture scholar - said in a commentary on Romans. He stressed,  “Don’t start with Romans.”  He adds, “It’s too complicated - so in spite of it being the most significant letter of Paul,  go with  1st Corinthians. [1]

N.T. Wright, says the same thing in his commentary about Romans as well, stressing “that anyone who claims to understand Romans fully is, almost by definition, mistaken.”  [2]  He makes that comment saying there has been so much written and said about Romans that nobody could know it all.

Ray Brown also adds that it has been a part of the cause for the split in Christian Churches.  It’s key in the Faith and Works controversy.  Protestants protested that Catholics think they have a bigger  part in their salvation - because they can get indulgences and do good  works. 

In other words Protestants put more stress  on God’s side in being saved and Catholics put more weight on our part of being saved.

I would assume it’s both!

What I’m saying is that Paul’s Letter to the Romans is significant especially on the issue of what happens to us when we die.  Is what happens after death in our hands - and how key to determining a next life is our behavior and in our control in this life - and possibly in life after death.

And Luther, Abelard, Calvin, Barth,  and so many other key scripture writers tackled the question of being saved from Romans, being made right for all eternity - being justified by Christ.  

And we all know that Augustine picked up Paul’s Letter to the Romans  in the garden  at the moment of his conversion.

WHO DOES WHAT?

The title of my homily is, “The Lord Be With You.”

I chose that because Paul in today’s reading from Romans begins, “Brothers and sisters: If God is for us, who can be against us?”

When it comes to eternal life, being saved, Romans - Paul in Romans - as we heard in today’s first reading, tells us Christ  is our savior.  If we stick with Christ, who can separate us from the Love of God?

Christ will raise us up when we die. God will be with us when we die.

Now this doesn’t mean we can be mean and God will still save us. We want to be happy here and hereafter - so being nice - makes life nice.

Sometimes we wear masks.

Sometimes we pull our tricks and we not being a treat.

Sometime we’re hollow and not hallowed.

I add those comments because today is Halloween.
SAN ALFONSO

St. Alphonsus - the founder of the Redemptorists - says three key things in this area.

First, he was off on, centered in, on salvation.  We were to be the Salvation Congregation - but the name was taken, so we became the Redemptorists.

Second, he said that the whole secret of salvation, holiness, spirituality is the practice of the love of Jesus Christ.  He has a whole book on this entitled, “The Practice of the Love of Jesus Christ.”

St. Alphonsus was a practical person.  Remember the old saying, “Want to get into Carnegie Hall? Practice. Practice. Practice.”

Want to experience the love of Jesus Christ?   Practice. Practice. Practice.

The third thing San Alfonso said, “The 3 secrets of salvation are: pray, pray, and pray.”

In other words to have the Lord to be with us, be with the Lord.

CLOSING IMAGE

As I read today’s gospel I heard  Jesus use the image of a hen gathering her brood under her wings.

I thought of death like falling through the sky - and we’ll be wondering when and where we will land?

I think of various movies when someone falls out of a plane and they have no parachute and someone with a parachute sky dives towards that person and grabs them - and then they open their parachute and that’s God holding onto us - and landing us onto the other side of death.

Isn’t that what Paul is saying in today’s first reading?

FOOTNOTES

[1] Raymond Brown, An Introduction to the New Testament, “Letter to the Romans”, Chapter 24, pp. 559 ff.

[2] N.T. Wright, “The Letter to the Romans, Introduction, Commentary, and Reflections,” in Volume X of The New Interpreter’s Bible,  p. 395.



WATER  FREEZING

Does water know when it’s about
to freeze? To become ice? To drop
down to 32 degrees and the whole
lake or ice cube becomes solid?
Does it know this? Does it want
this? Would it rather be boiling
water and become a cup of tea?
Or be the wonderful  warm water
in my shower - pelting my back?
Do we know the slow degrees in
change or do we only know afterwards?

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019