Saturday, September 1, 2012

EXPERIENCING  IT 




Quote for Today -  September 1,  2012


"Technology ... the knack of so arranging the world that we don't have to experience it."


Max Frisch [1911-1991], Homo Faber  [1957]



"Honey! I'm home!"

"Where are you?"

"Over here at the computer!"

"When will you be at home?"





Friday, August 31, 2012

UNDERSTANDING 
UNLIKE  GOSSIP



Quote for Today  - August 31,  2012

"It seems that the analysis of character is the highest human entertainment.  And literature does it, unlike gossip, without mentioning real names."




Isaac Bashevis Singer [1904-1991] in Isaac Bashevis Singer Talks ... About Everything, interview with Richard Burgin in the New York Times Magazine [November 16, 1978]


Picture on top - Isaac Bashevis Singer

Thursday, August 30, 2012

NUDNIK




Quote for Today - August 30,  2012

"When the writer becomes the center of his attention, he becomes a nudnik.  And  a nudnik who believes he's profound is even worse than just a plain nudnik."

Isaac Bashevis Singer [1904-1991] in Isaac Bashevis Singer Talks ... About Everything, interview with Richard Burgin in the New York Times Magazine [November 16, 1978]


Picture on top - Isaac Bashevis Singer

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

CHANGING  OTHERS



Quote for Today - August 29, 2012

"Change the environment; do not try to change man."

Richard Buckminster Fuller [1895-1983], Design Science [1969]



Comments:

This quote addresses a central question in life: wanting another to be different than they are.  Can someone change? Is conversion possible?  How do those who interact with me - want me to change? Jesus said to change one's heart - not one's garments. Does Buckminster disagree with that challenge of  Jesus? I believe the place to address this question is with oneself. Be specific. Name a way I have changed? For example, "When I walk into a room of people I would say something - out loud - without being quiet. Sometimes this ended their conversation or whatever they were talking about. Now I walk in and try not to interrupt the current conversation."


Tuesday, August 28, 2012


WRITE YOUR CONFESSIONS


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for is, “Write Your Confessions.”

Today - August 28th,  is the feast of St. Augustine. When his name is mentioned the word “confessions” pops up by association - that being the name of his famous book.

Confession meaning statements of religious belief - how one sees God in the details of one’s life - how one sees God walking with us in the unfolding or unraveling or the weaving or quilting party of one’s life.

Confessions could be announcing where I see God in the pages and stages of my life.

We’ve all heard the cliché that the devil is in the details - meaning making plans and making general statements - they are easy - compared to the struggle and the work to get the details and the specifics done.

Well confessions fit the opposite cliché: “God is in the details” and spelling them out is one of the meanings of making a confession of faith - or writing it out.

SURPRISE - A DISCOVERY IN A DESK OR A BOTTOM DRAWER

Wouldn’t it be interesting if your kids in rummaging through your stuff after you die, someone finds in a desk or a bottom drawer, our  Memoirs or Diary or Confessions?

Wouldn’t that be interesting? What would be their reaction to it - reading our take on life - our take on family - our take on religion - God - the ups and downs, the ins and outs of our experiences - doubts - difficulties - and expressions of great joy and wonder and celebration.

Augustine left us a lot of sermons and  three books: The City of God, On the Trinity and the Confessions. His book, his Confessions, is his book - his comments about life and how God finally overwhelmed him after a lot of meandering in sin and various religions and philosophies - and  he finally discovers how God has been leading him forward.

Every time I’ve read Augustine’s Confessions,  I’ve been moved by it - so too - so many people.

LISTEN AND READ AND WRITE

Read any good confessions lately, any good autobiographies, any good stories. Have you listened to anyone tell you their life stories lately? How about that of your parents if they are still around?

I always like to push from the pulpit for folks to write their autobiography, their memoirs, the value of jotting down the details of one’s life. Genealogy could be the first step - which can lead to confessions of faith.

I was able to sit down with my dad before he died - and write down about 40 pages of notes - on a yellow legal pad. I was able to tape my mom before she died. And way back in 1996 - while in Ireland -  I sat down with my father’s brother,  Coleman. They told me if I went over to see him - just the two of us - he would speak in English. He was in his late 80’s and I was able to get a few hours notes on my father’s life. The questions I asked back then were detail questions. The questions I have now - well it’s too late - except I like to talk to my sister Mary about what was going on in my mom and dad’s minds - Mary having been with them much of their lives.

In a way my feelings of “too late” are sort of the very words of Augustine in his Confessions about loving God, “Too late I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new! Too late I loved you! And, behold, you were within me, and I out of myself, and there I searched for you.”

So there are questions I have of my parents - and it’s too late. If yours are alive and you can talk with them, talk with them.

CONCLUSION: PUSH, PUSH!

Back to the main point of this homily, Write Your Confessions.

I have made this suggestion  to various people down through the years. This is one more push. My dream is that someone took me up on it and after they die, their kids find in their stuff, their memoirs or confessions or autobiography.

And when someone has said to me, “I wouldn’t know where to start” or “I wouldn’t know how to do it,” I say, “Take someone else’s autobiography and see how they lay out their life.”

Take Augustine’s Confessions or The Seven Storey Mountain of Merton or Surprised by Joy by C.S. Lewis or any of the many autobiographies in any library or bookstore.

Augustine heard the words in the garden, “Take up, read. Take up, read.”  And he read the great text of St. Paul in Romans 13:11 - it was time to wake up - to put off the works of darkness - and to put on the Lord Jesus Christ.

I’m saying:  take up a ballpoint pen and get a good pad. Jot down the details of your life. Or do it on a computer. Then reflect deeper on the details and see God behind your story. Write them out and you’ll have your Confessions - like that of St. Augustine.

And surprise, after you die, maybe someone will discover them deep in a bottom drawer or deep inside a computer. 





LISTENING



Quote for Today - August 28, 2012

"Hear the other side."

St. Augustine [354-430], De Duabus Animabus, XIV, 2


Monday, August 27, 2012


PRAYER: KNOCKING 
SO DOORS WILL OPEN


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Prayer: Knocking So Doors Will Open.”

Tomorrow, August 28th, is the feast of St. Augustine.

Today, August 27, is the feast of St. Monica, his mom.

When Jesus talked about prayer, he said to ask, to seek, and to knock. [Cf. Matthew 7:7-8.]

Prayer is knocking on God’s door - and for us Catholics, Saints’ doors as well.

ST. AUGUSTINE

St. Augustine, if you read his Confessions, you find out that he knocked on many, many doors. He opened many books. He was with several women. He studied various religions and philosophies - for example, Manichaeanism and Skepticism, and finally full blown Christianity. He went to study in Carthage, Rome, and Milan.

ST. MONICA

If you read his Confessions you also find out his mother tried all kinds of prayers, all kinds of nagging or begging of Augustine, entering the doors of all kinds of churches - to pray for her son Augustine.

CONVERSION

Finally, as you know, he hears a voice and he opens up a copy of St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans and he’s converted.

He hears a sing song child’s voice in a garden, “Take and read. Take and read” and he read Paul’s call to change now - right now.

It was sort of like what happened - but in reverse - in another garden - when Eve and then Adam heard, “Take and eat. Take and eat.” And they ate the forbidden fruit.

Sometimes when we pray, we hear these deep inner urges to look at what we’re eating - and realize what’s eating us - what’s killing us -  and what’s giving us life.

MESSAGE

The message from the life of St. Monica has always been to keep praying, keep knocking, keep begging at God’s door - even if it takes 30 years as the life of St. Monica points out.

CONCLUSION

Prayer is knocking on doors.

Prayer is persistence and patience.

How many times have we prayed and prayed, knocked and knocked, nagged and nagged at a son or a daughter’s door and it seemed they would never open up. They always remained shut, closed and it seems they were always unwilling to hear our screams.

Yet we don’t give up, because  we known someone is in there - someone who won’t answering their door. Yet we won’t give up. Hold fast - as today’s first reading puts it - we hold fast to that door knob and shake it - till someone opens it up.

Praying is knowing the best is in there.

Prayer is knowing God is in there.

Prayers is knowing conversion, change is in there.

Sometimes all this takes 30 years.

Talk to St. Monica about all this in prayer. Amen.