Saturday, October 17, 2015

October 17, 2015

GOD

Don’t tattoo “God” on the skin
of your arm. Tattoo His name
on your soul. Then close your 
eyes and see the One - and be 
with the One who is keeping 
you and everyone in existence 
for ever and ever. Amen.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015

Friday, October 16, 2015

October 16, 2015

CONSEQUENCES

If you’re going to get a tattoo,
make it “CONSEQUENCES”,
and pinch your skin at that spot
each moment you’re about
to make a critical decision.


Andy Costello, Reflections 2015
October 15, 2015


TERESA  OF  AVILA 

Patron saint of what?
Prayer, with God? Yes.
Humor with God? Yes.
"Let nothing disturb you."
However, to me the best 
message from her life
is this: great things 
happen when I decide
to stop being invisible!


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2015
Painting of St. Teresa of Avila,
1612-1614
 by Peter Paul Rubens, 
October 14th,  2015



BLUE  MARBLE  EARTH

Gravity keeps us from flying off this
great big blue marble earth - so we
don't have to hang on for the ride. 
Instead we can stop to see the scenery,
the great blue waters - the plain plains -
the great grey granite mountains - and people, people everywhere. Check those noses and facial types. See those sizes - and shapes and height - and bellies and wrinkles. Notice those bugs and birds and beasts of all sizes, shapes and colors.
More: we have time to ponder and pray
and wonder about all these mysteries
around us - surrounding us - and then 
there are the questions: why God, why? Why did You make hippos and birds just sitting there on their backs - and all those different types of trees and leaves? Then there are the hundred, billion, trillion bits
of little stuff - invisible to the normal eye -
what's with taking care of all that? What
are You - some kind of super dooper engineer - or juggler extraordinaire?  

(c) 

Tuesday, October 13, 2015


WHY CAN’T  GOD 
BE  DIFFERENT 

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Why Can’t God Be Different?”

I think that’s a thought a lot of people have.

We started the Letter to the Romans yesterday and we will have it as our first reading at almost every weekday Mass for the next 4 weeks.

I’m looking forward to hearing Paul’s Letter to the Romans and see what it will says to me in these 4 weeks to come. I assume I’m in a different place than I was 2 years ago when we went through Romans for those readings. I’m interested in hearing what hits me in the next four weeks.

FAITH

So last night I went through today’s first reading from Romans. Chapter 1 verses sixteen to twenty five  - reading and wondering what would hit me.

I noticed right there after today’s text begins, one of the main themes of Paul’s Letter to the Romans. It’s faith.

And Paul gives us his insight into faith. Faith is accepting God as God is - not as we want God to be - or how we picture God to be.

Let me repeat that. Faith is accepting God as God is - not as we want God to be.

Sound familiar. It’s the same act of acceptance we need to make in every relationship - because in every relationship the other person is the way the other person is - not the way we think they are - not the way we want them to be - but the person is who they actually are.

Want peace? Get that.  Want peace? Accept that. Want an easier life? De-imagine who we imagine the other to be.  This should lead to listening - stepping back - asking questions - checking things out - and slowly learning how the other operates.

Get this and we make one key step towards family and marriage happiness.

Deal with each other the way the other is.

Sorry. That’s the way it is.

I’ve often think and come back to a statement I heard many years ago: “The greatest sin is our inability to accept the otherness of the other person.”

We want other people to be other than they are. I live with all these other priests here at St. Mary’s. Of course I often want them to be different than they are and I assume they want me to be different than I am.

GOD

We do the same thing with God.

Paul learned that faith is faith in the God, God is.

In today’s first reading he talks about all these other things we make God out to be - all of which are not God.  They are lesser than God. Our minds become clouded and darkened and we end up messed up - floating around following false Gods.

SONG BY PATSY CLINE

I recently listened to a CD of Patsy Cline’s country Western songs. I like her twang and sound and how she puts her whole self into a song. Plus I understand the lyrics - loud and clear. This afternoon I’m going on a 4 day high school retreat and Ginny and the kids play a lot of songs - the words of which I do not get in the slightest.

And I wonder about Patsy Cline - when will  kids discover your songs?

There it is, the human wanting of people to be different than they are.

I do it all the time.

Patsy Cline seems to have a broken heart in a lot of her songs - but they still give a lot to think about.

When I was preparing this homily I thought of her song, “Why Can’t He Be You.” The thought that hit me is quite complex and I don’t know if I can explain what I mean,   but let me try.

In this song she finds herself broken up with someone she wishes he didn’t break up with her. She’s now with someone new. This new guy brings her to the places she used to go with the first guy and she sings, “Why can’t he be you?”  This new guy brings her flowers, calls by the hour, nice, but she sings, “Why can’t he be you?” This new guy tells her he loves her so, but she sings, “Why can’t he be you?” Her friends tell her this new guy talks about how wonderful she is, behind her back, but she sings, “Why can’t he be you?”

She also sings that the first guy didn’t do any of these nice things - but she still loves him so.

She wants different. In fact, she wants both men to be different than they are.

Don’t we all?

I suspect a lot of people have a list of all the nice things they want from God and how they want God to act. Down deep, their prayer is: “My will be done.”

We see  others and the nice things they do, but it seems God doesn’t do these things we want.  So we sing, “Why can’t God be like I expect God to be?”

CONCLUSION


In Paul’s Letter to Romans God is God and God does as God does, and happiness is accepting God as God is. Amen.
October 13, 2015

THE BIG CLIMB

God, Our Father, was just sitting
there in this big gigantic easy chair.
So I climbed up and got myself
on his lap and sat there face to face.
I had a lot of questions and I wanted
a lot of answers. I wanted to look God
in the eye. I’d even rub him nose to nose
to get him to laugh - but he was sleeping.
His eyes were closed. His face muscles
seemed as if he was made of marble.
I wanted, I needed, this meeting. I tried
to open his eye lids - wishing my hands
were pliers - but they wouldn’t open.
I even quoted Jesus, his son,
“Unless you’re like a little child you
won’t get into the kingdom of God.”
So I got down from his lap and looked
for Jesus - and yes, I finally found him
even though his disciples were trying
to shush me away. He picked me up
and told the world “This is the way
to enter the kingdom of heaven.”*

© Andy Costello, Reflections
by the Bay, 2015
*Cf. Matthew 18:1-4


Monday, October 12, 2015

THE  LETTER  TO THE ROMANS



INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “The Letter to the Romans.”

Today, Monday, October 12 till Saturday, November 7th, we have on weekdays - for the first reading, The Letter to the Romans.

At times there will be feasts or what have you - and other first readings will be used. I also know at times other priests switch to other first readings. Yet in general, we have starting today, 4 weeks of The Letter to the Romans as our first reading.

Let us make good use of this opportunity. We have these 4 weeks with Romans every other year - for our first reading.  When it comes to preaching I have been finding myself preaching on the first reading more and more - because I’ve gone through the weekday gospels every year - forever. So I look forward to what Romans will bring us.

KEY DOCUMENT

We were taught that the Letter to the Romans was a key New Testament document - more important than others. Like the prettiest girl in the room, this letter stands out - in the midst of all these other books of the Bible.

The Letter to the Romans was very important to Augustine, Martin Luther, Karl  Barth, Karl Rahner, Ernst Kasemann, Vincent Taylor, Stanislaus Lyonnet  - and many more people who wrote about its substance and key concepts.

The more we come to weekday Masses - the more we become conscious of differences. For example, hearing Romans is quite different from hearing Corinthians and the other letters of Paul.

I hope as you listen to the first readings, you sense that.

Romans is more theory and theology than the other letters. It has less particulars - perhaps because Paul had not visited Rome before he wrote this letter - like he had in the other letters.

ROME IS THE BIG CITY

Acts 19:21 “… I must see Rome.”

Rome was the big city. And Paul became fixated getting there - and pondering bringing Christ to the world.  He knew Jerusalem was the capital of his Jewish roots. But Christ was for the masses. Get to Rome. Get to the center of the world at that time. Get to the new beginning Church in Rome.

The year was around 57 or 58 and Paul was in Corinth when he wrote this letter.

He first had to go to Jerusalem with some money for the Jerusalem church - but then he’d get to Rome - which he saw as the center of a hub - so he had to get there - to get the wheels spinning for Spain and other Roman colonies.

Paul was brought up and knew tried Judaism - with its stress on law and control.

He began to discover in Christ grace and freedom and mercy and love.

It took a while but in Christ he discovered the importance of letting go and letting God be in control.

AN EXAMPLE

I was listening to Canadian Public Radio the other day and they had on an interview with a former secret police guy in South Africa. He had been in on killings and beatings and control. 

After Apartheid he had a conversion to Jesus Christ - and now he drives a big food truck to the poor.  The interviewer asked, “I guess you’re doing all this to make up for your cruelty - to redeem yourself.”

And the man said, “No basically I’m doing all this because people need food - and our prayers and our hopes. I sinned. Jesus has brought me forgiveness.  Jesus has already brought us into his  kingdom and now we need to bring his life to everyone - especially those who want a dinner on their table.

CONCLUSION


Amen. So in the next 4 weeks - become more and more challenged by Paul's words and love for Jesus Christ and Christians.