Monday, August 17, 2015

August 17, 2015


WEDDING RINGS

Her wedding ring, the
diamonds were cut hard,
sharp, bright and glued tight.
His wedding ring, the 
round ring was made of
tungsten - tough, solid, lasting,
if ever a ring was made.
That was why they choose
that metal and her stones.
Then placed on ring fingers
just after the vows - the kiss,
the clapping, the prayers,
the going down the aisle,
then banquet, the dances,
the meal, the cake, the tears,
the honeymoon. Then time
and life happened - jobs -
moves - kids - schools -
ups - downs - agreements -
disagreements - changes -
more changes - wrinkles -
all the time the fingering and
the twisting of rings at 3 years
then 13, then 33 and 53 - 
till death do we part - 
but now she wears his ring 
round her neck still filled 
with joy - filled with tungsten 
and diamond memories.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015
WHOEVER  EATS THIS BREAD 
WILL LIVE FOREVER 


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time [B] is, “Whoever eats this bread will live forever.”

That comment from Jesus is in the opening words of today’s gospel from the 6th Chapter of John.

“Jesus said to the crowds: ‘I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world.”

Our gospel readings for the 17 -18 - 19 - 20 - and  21st Sundays in Ordinary Time, Year B, this particular year - are all part of the 6th Chapter of the Gospel of John.  It’s a long chapter like many of the chapters in John.

This is the year of the gospel of Mark. It’s on a 3 year cycle. But Mark is only 16 chapters, so they stuck John 6 in in order to have enough Gospel texts so they can stretch Mark out to the end of Church year.

I hear priests say it’s tricky preaching on the Eucharist - the Bread - for 5 straight weeks.

TODAY

Today I want to look at a human feeling and thought and wonderings about forever. 

I want to look a little bit at aging, death, term limits. 


We all know our birthday. It comes around every year. We all know  that we also have a death day. But we don’t stop  to look at it, or want to look at it - because we don't know what day it is - obviously.

The title of my homily, “Whoever eats this bread will live forever.” It obviously hits and sits right there next to the question of forever.

Is there a forever?

Jesus chose bread as the forever solution.

I’ve noticed that people who come back to Church - often come back because they miss the bread. They miss communion.

And let me tell you, the 6th Chapter of John is central for all this.

I suggest the following:  sometime this week - when it’s quiet - and you have space - take your Bible - dust it off - if you have to dust it off - and open it up to the 6th chapter of John - and read it slowly.

It’s a long read. It’s a full meal. Take and read. Take and eat.  Take and chew. Take and digest. Take and be nourished with the word of God.

HOW TO READ THE BIBLE

As you know, there are various ways to read the Bible.

One of the ways I was trained on how to read and interpret the Bible was to picture the audience it’s aimed at.  So the gospel of John is aimed at a group of people - not in front of Jesus around the year 30 - but for some Christians - followers of Jesus - from around the 90’s and the turn of the century.

I read that it’s aimed at people who are struggling with the reality of what Jesus is saying: “Want to live forever, eat me up!”  “Want companionship! Take and eat.” “This is my body. This is my blood.”

Then next Sunday we’re going to hear the sad sentence - from the last part of this 6th Chapter of John, “As a result of this, many of his disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer accompanied him.”

Notice that word “accompany”. It has the prefix “con" or "com” and the root word for “bread” - “pan”.  They no longer ate the bread with him - and the bread that is he.

I went to a family wedding last week. It was wonderful because I got a chance to be with my family and attend a wedding not as priest - but as an uncle. I sat back and watched everything. 

It also caused me to do lots of thinking - and wondering. The outdoor setting was beautiful - and it was a perfect day. I was aware that the Catholic Church wants weddings indoors - and in a sacred place. I am aware that there are many outdoor sacred places - but our Church wants marriages in churches.

I wasn't asked to do it - but not for that reason. They wanted the person who performed and helped with the ceremony to do it - and he did a good job. 

Being priest, I was seeing it as priest - and I wanted more God in the ceremony - obviously, so I was seeing the kind of wedding I've heard many a parent tell me about.

I've heard various folks say about weddings they were at: "There was no mention of God."


My nephew and his wife chose not to go that way.

Judge not. 

It got me thinking about what we as Church have done that various couples don't want a Church wedding.

Have we institutionalized religions that have lost an appeal? Have our mistakes and our sins triggered people from wanting a religious ceremony for their wedding. 

Or did this couple and many couples just think a beautiful outdoor wedding with green flowing willow trees shaking in the breeze - is a much more beautiful a scene than many a church?

It's time to celebrate.


So I let some of these thoughts go - and enjoyed being with family for the great reception that followed the wedding ceremony.

But the next few days I reflected on my need to be more faith filled. It got me thinking why do some kids not feel the need to eat Christ - to walk into churches to thank God with other Christians - and be in communion with each other and with Christ?

Central to my thinking is the importance of coming to Mass - on a Sunday basis.



I like being in communion with family and parish.

I am feeling sad that it seems the numbers coming to Sunday Mass is going down around here.

Being in communion with you and others is very important to me.  Thank you for being here.

I am glad that the Church is giving us this 6th chapter of John to get us in touch with some of this today.

A SECOND POINT

So that’s my first point: being together here in this church today - eating the bread, sharing this hour, sitting here at this table, being at this meal. It’s very important to our lives as followers of Christ - to be in this together in Christ.

The word Catholic means “Kata” the Greek prefix for “with” or “con” or “com” in Latin - and Holos - the Greek word for “whole” - the whole group.

My second point is that point I already started to get into - we eat this bread with the promise of living forever.

Jesus’ words triggered for me the question of death and after death question: Is there anything after death? Is there a forever? Or is this all there is?

I’m sure I’m thinking about this because this week I had 2 funerals - two women who died of cancer. One was 59. She had ovarian cancer. The other was 69. She had cervical cancer. The week before that I had 2 funerals as well.

I’m glad I went to a meeting last Wednesday evening about athletics and coaches for this next school year at St. Mary’s High School. Youth. New life. What’s next?

Jesus’ comment about eating this bread and living forever - triggered for me the words “fountain of youth.”

So I did some research on that.  I read that Ponce de Leon gets the reputation of searching everywhere for the Fountain of Youth - and you can find a place in Florida with his name on it - and you can drink that water.

I found out it’s not true - it’s all legend. Not bad if you’re running a place in Florida with that legend.

He died at 47 from an arrow wound - when fighting some native Floridians.

Then I read that’s a human thing - that is found in various legends and stories from way, way, way back - well into B.C. Before Christ.

Then I read about plastic surgery - being a 12 billion dollar industry here in the U.S. and all kinds of “staying young forever” exercises and foods and practices.

I read that 5 key foods are: Veggies like carrots and tomatoes, soy, chocolate, coconut oil, and eggs. I’m sure those industries would want that promoted.

Just read any magazine in the doctor or dentist’s offices and you’ll find many more suggestions.

Health…. Health …. Health…..

Exercise, exercise, exercise…..

MOVIES AND BOOKS ETC.

I also noticed references to various novels and movies that get into this issue of aging - going backwards and forwards - for example, starting at 80 and going towards our back in the womb again.

In high school I played the part of a 20 year older who reverted back to becoming a baby. The lines in Act 3 were easy to memorize as I sat there in my baby carriage.

As priest I’ve heard many person’s stories - so I was fascinated by the movie, Moonstruck, when Loretta’s mom, Rose Castorinia, played by Olivia Dukakis,  keeps asking everyone the reason why men cheat. That’s what her husband Cosmo was into. She is not satisfied with any answer till someone says, “They are scared of death!”

Is that all of us - at some point?  It’s my experience - for some people yes and for some people no.

I’ve always asked, “Am I?”

If that’s true, why wouldn’t everyone want communion - the Bread of life called “Jesus” - to eat him up and live forever.

CONCLUSION

The title of my homily is, “Whoever eats this bread will live forever.”

Chew on that during this Mass - especially when you come up for communion.

Take a look all the people around you - with faith - Christians say, “Because of Christ, we’ll be with him and each other forever.”

And for homework, read that 6th chapter of the Gospel of John. It’s for all us.


Sunday, August 16, 2015

August 16, 2015


BLIND PREJUDICE

If we were all blind,
how would we be prejudiced?
Voice? Accent? Scent? Touch?

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015

Painting, The Blind Leading
the Blind, Pieter Bruegel,
the elder, 1568

Saturday, August 15, 2015

August 15, 2015


ASSUMPTIONS

That there is life after death ….
Try thinking or doing life without that assumption.

That I’ll be around for quite a while….
Try thinking or doing life without that assumption.

That life is about giving and forgiving….
Try thinking or doing life without that assumption.

That my car will start and my tires are good ….
Try thinking or doing life without that assumption.

That Mary, the mother of Jesus, had Eve’s choice ….
Try thinking or doing life without that assumption.

That Christ is the fruit of that womb and is a choice to take and eat ….
Try thinking or doing life without that assumption.

That Christ assumed his mother Mary into heaven… and then you, you, you, you and hopefully me....
Try thinking or doing life without that assumption.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015

Painting on top:
The Death of the Virgin,
by Caravaggio

Notes:

Many people will be familiar with Caravaggio’s painting, ‘The Death of the Virgin’. When it was first painted for a private chapel in a Carmelite church in Rome, the Carmelites rejected the painting as unsuitable. It shows the Virgin not in the dignified death-bed posture associated with traditional representations of the Dormition, but lying dead on her back, with bare feet and swollen ankles. The apostles look on, and Mary Magdalene sits weeping between the viewer and the corpse. Some of the apostles are also weeping; but there is one who holds his hand up in a gesture that seems to show sudden recognition or realisation of something. For he has seen that, in this sorry state – in the death that comes to all of us – there is hope. This hope is not shown by an image of angels and Christ in human form, but only by a light that crosses the canvas and shines upon the belly of the Mother of God – on the body that bore God incarnate. This body, which is the body of a very ordinary woman, was chosen by God for his dwelling, and this body will not be left to the decay which, from the look of it, has already set in. We cannot properly articulate what the hope is that has been revealed to the apostles, but the viewer is invited to share the revelation. For because he became human from this woman, Christ promises all human beings, and all creation, a share in his glory.

Friday, August 14, 2015

ST. MAXIMILIAN KOLBE



Today - August 14 - we celebrate the life and death of Father Maximilian Kolbe - a Franciscan Conventual Priest - who died in Auschitz. 

3 prisoners had disappeared, so 10 men were picked to be starved to death.

One of them, Franciszek Gajowniczek, screamed, "My wife! My children!" and Father Max stood in for him and was killed.

His dates 1894-1941.

The painting above was done by a friend, Al Pacitti.



August 14, 2015


THE BITE

It seems unfair to find out it’s only
after we bite into the fruit that we
discover it’s rotten - it’s ugly inside.

There are hints - but not always -
“Knock on the watermelon and if
you hear a good  thump, it’s good.”


But that banana, that apple, sometimes
it’s a disaster inside, so get a knife, cut
the bad and then make apple or banana pie.

So sometimes disasters, divorces, happen.
And maybe come this fall, the Catholic 
Church will bite into all of this and we’ll 
all eat humble pie for the good of all.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015

Thursday, August 13, 2015

August 13, 2015




BLACK BIRD

They don’t get great press,
nor great coverage. They
are not in the fashion section
of The New York Times - being
mentioned for their color or plumage.
They are just there - like the
maintenance man in the school
or park - or your aunt or your
niece - who when asked - 
can baby sit in an emergency.
Necessary - not necessarily
nice or not nice - just a possible
choice or call when stuck. Oops!
Almost forgot ... sometimes
someone sings about them.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015