Monday, June 12, 2017


2ND CORINTHIANS


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 10th Monday in Ordinary Time is, “2nd Corinthians.”

At this time of the Church Year, the 10th and 11th weeks in Ordinary Time,  the Church gives us 2 weeks - 12 readings - from 2nd Corinthians - every other year.

TODAY’S COMMENTS

Let me give some a broad view of the Letter today.  I like to do that for myself - when we start a new book of the Bible on weekdays. Hope it’s helpful for you. We’re also  beginning the Gospel of Matthew today - starting with the Sermon on the Mount - but I’ll save that for another day - especially since I’ve done that several times.

The first observation would be that  2nd Corinthians is a combination of letters from Paul. Not everyone holds that. I use the Jerome Biblical Commentary for my starting research. In that Commentary Jerome Murphy O’Connor wrote the piece on Second Corinthians. He says that the best theory as of now is that 2nd Corinthians is a combination of 5 Letters of Paul. The letter has too many different tones for it to be one letter.  Things just don’t fit, for it to be one letter.  In most ways, this is should not be a big impact reality.

Next  it’s dated from around 55. I always like to know the dates of documents. Remember the gospels are from 60 to 100 - more or less.

The next issue would be to figure out what’s going on in the church at Corinth.  If you’re here for weekday masses, then listen to the 1st reading with that question in mind.

There seems to be some infighting going on in that community.

One fight seems to be a fight between two groups - those who stress the Law and those who stress the Spirit.  We see that going on at various times in the New Testament. It seems there are those who are the Jewish Christians. That’s their background. And there are the Greek Christians who have a different stress. Paul, from Romans and other Letters tell us he is more on the Spirit   side of fight.

Next - it would be a nice exercise to compare the Paul we hear in 1st Corinthians and the Paul we hear in 2nd Corinthians. At times he is  hot, angry, and more emotional, in 2nd Corinthians. In 1st Corinthians he is more cool, calm and logical. The message I would take from that is that some people we live with, work with, interact with can be more moody than others.  I have lived with priests whom the rest of us have to step back to see where they are at the moment.

6 TEXTS IN 2ND CORINTHIANS THAT STAND OUT

I ran through 2nd Corinthians to see what texts might stand out.  Here are a few for now.

We’re clay pots - but we hold a treasure within. Hopefully we have worked with clay at times.  So we know the difference between a bowl and what goes in a bowl. We know the difference between a bottle of expensive perfume and a bottle of cheap after shave lotion. The contents is what counts - unless we are saving very valuable vases and pots.

We’re tents - that will get folded up - while a house is being built for us in heaven.  Hopefully, we have all camped - and saw the difference between living in a tent compared to living in a house.   We were watching a TV program last night about these vast tent cities in Turkey for refugees out of Syria.

Next, Paul has no love - which in First Corinthians - he says is patient. Well in 2nd Corinthians he tells us that there are phonies in our midst - counterfeits - who are trying to impress people, but they are fake apostles. Spot them and avoid them.

Churches have money collections. So what else is new.

Paul had a great vision and revelation - right up to the 3rd heavens in his life. Hopefully, we’ve all had God-like experiences.

And lastly Paul tells us that he had a thorn in the flesh. Don’t we all?



June 12, 2017


ANESTHETIC

His words had become an anesthetic.
She had heard them too many times.
She stopped listening once she got
the point he was heading for and she got
there ahead of him every time. He was
enough for her - so she would say her,
“Oh yeah …. Oh yeah!” - but she was
into her next - and he was not part of it.
Divorces happen long before the divorce.


© Andy Costello, Reflections  2017
Painting:  L'Absinthe, 
The Absinthe Drinker
[1875-76] by
Edward Degas It's 
in Musée d'Orsay, Paris.




Sunday, June 11, 2017


A  TRINITY:   
MOM,  DAD,  ME - 
ALL THREE 

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “A Trinity: Mom, Dad, Me - All Three.”

BERNARD PIAULT

Bernard Piault, begins his book, What Is The Trinity?,  this way.  “In his booklet on examination of conscience Fr. Lebret suggests that we include in our self-examination the fault of ‘never meditating on the Trinity.’  Nothing is easier for the Christian to answer him, the theologians and parish priests, ‘Examine your consciences yourselves; do you ever talk to the faithful about the Trinity?’”

Guilty as stated. I rarely speak about the Trinity. Well, I do at least once a year - today, the feast of the Holy Trinity.

And every year I feel inadequate, because speaking about the Trinity is speaking about God - mystery - and God as a Trinity - is so much more mysterious.




Yet  every year every other priest or deacon in the world tells folks about the images of the shamrock - [3 leaves - one shamrock];  or the triangle - [3 angles, 3 sides, one triangle].  Then they tell the story of St. Augustine - who wrote a big fat book on the Trinity.  While meditating on the Trinity - while walking along the beach - he spots a kid - going back and forth with water with his pail to fill a hole he dug in the sand.

Augustine asks the kid what he’s doing and the kid says, “I’m trying to put the ocean in that hole.”  And Augustine says with a smile, “Impossible” and the kid says, “I can fill my hole with the ocean sooner than you can put the Trinity in a book.”

Our God is a big God - a Trinity - and all of us have a hole inside our being that longs to be filled with God.

OBVIOUSLY THE TRINITY IS CENTRAL TO CHRISTIANITY

Obviously, the Trinity is central to Christianity.

The Christian communities hold that the One God is Three Divine Persons.

The Jews, the Moslems, and so many other religious communities don’t.

In fact, if a Christian Community does not state in their creeds and belief statements that they believe in God as a Trinity - 3 divine persons - they are not Christian.

So the Unitarians are not Christians - but one would hear of Jesus Christ at Unitarian Services.

Mormons theology is more complicated. “The first article of faith for the Latter-day Saints reads: ‘We believe in God, the Eternal Father, and in His Son, Jesus Christ, and in the Holy Ghost.’” After that -  if we delve into Mormonism we find out that they don’t have the same teachings and understandings about God as Trinity that the mainline Christian Churches have.

We Catholics believe that God is a Father, Son and Holy Spirit. We come into Church and make the sign of the cross using water, “In the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.” And during Sunday Mass we say one of the two great creeds: the Nicean Creed or the Apostles Creed.  Those creeds were hammered out in the early Christian centuries after many fights, heresies and councils.

IMAGE OF THE TRINITY FOR THIS HOMILY

The image for the Trinity that I would like to use this morning is ourselves for starters - the person inside our skin suit - me - the human  triad -  see me - you see my mom and dad and me.

The title of my homily is, “A Trinity: Mom, Dad, Me - All Three.”

There are over 7 and a half billion people on the planet.


Each of us has our mom and dad’s DNA.

Each of us has our mom and dad’s influences - whether or not we were adopted or what have you.

When understanding Christianity, I like to go the way of looking at people more than things - or plants or images, like shamrocks or triangles.

We are called to be family. We are called to be community. We are called to be one body.

Two of the great images of God are the ocean and marriage.

In both hopefully we discover God.

I think of two people who came back to God because of the ocean.  One was on vacation at Ocean City, Maryland and was hit by the vastness and the power and the eternity of God while standing on the beach one early morning - at sunrise. He was overwhelmed by God.  The second was a submariner who told me he came back to God while doing deep, deep thoughts about life, while deep, deep under water in the ocean. Both had gone to church earlier on in life. Both had given up on their Christian upbringing in their college years and beyond.

Oceanic feelings can give us oceanic reflections about God.

The other image is marriage.

How many spouses have brought their spouse to religion and God and faith?

How?  By example, by love, by love making, by sacrifice, by dying to self so the other can rise. 

How? By children, by grandchildren, by the mystery that I can’t control anything - or very little.

Take the names of the Trinity - the names of God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

I am me - but I am like my father.  I am me - but I’m like my mother.

I am born and at some point I cry and someone comes running.

My mom or dad gets sick or my child gets sick and I get running to God.

I learn speech and custom in family.

I read the book of Genesis and I see God has created paradise for his first two children: Adam and Eve.

I see parents trying to create paradise for their kids.

If I am blessed with brothers and sisters and fellow workers and classmates and team mates and neighbors I can learn about Christ my brother - and neighbor and friend.

If I am blessed with a family that eats together I can learn about the Mass as a meal - and I see parents sacrificing to put food on the table and preparing it.

If I am blessed with a family that forgives each other I can learn about the sacrament of forgiveness.

So too washings and anointings and leadership.

So too - hopefully - in my relationship with my Mom and Dad and if I have grandparents and siblings - I pick up spirit - hopefully a Holy Spirit.

The Holy Spirit is pictured as fire, the dove, wind.  Hopefully I pick up from my parents and family, the fire of enthusiasm, the dove of peace, the breath of fresh air that is another - especially a family member.

CONCLUSION

My homily has been entitled, “A Trinity: Mom, Dad, Me - All Three.”


Hopefully we all do our part to bring God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit, all three, to all the people of our family and our   world each day. Amen.
June 11, 2017



KNOWING  GOD

LEADER:  I don’t know You, O GOD.
      I don’t know You, O GOD.

ALL:          I don’t know You, O GOD.
      I don’t know You, O GOD.


LEADER:  I get glimpses of others
                  who they are and what
                  they need and what they
                  are about - but ….

ALL:          I don’t know You, O GOD.
                  I don’t know You, O GOD.

LEADER:  I sometimes understand
                 myself but often I have no
                 clue about why I do what
                 I do - but ….

ALL:         I don’t know You, O GOD.
                I don’t know You, O GOD.

LEADER: So Father, come looking for
                me to return, your prodigal;
                so Mother, find me your
                lost coin, your lost sheep.

ALL:         I don’t know You, O GOD.
                I don’t know You, O GOD.

LEADER: So, Lord Jesus, come knocking,
                come slipping through walls,
                arrive at my village, come into
                my synagogue, because ….

ALL:         I don’t know You, O GOD.
                I don’t know You, O GOD.

LEADER: So, Holy Spirit, come as wind,
                come as fire, come as gentle
                dove and land on the roof of our
                house and whisper because….

ALL:         I don’t know You, O GOD.
                I don’t know You, O GOD.



© Andy Costello, Reflections  2017


Saturday, June 10, 2017

June 10, 2017


COOPERATION

Some days - everything cooperates.
Red roofs, grey rock, white walls,
green leaves, blue skies and blue
waters - are all in sync together.

Some days - everything cooperates.
Tomorrow? No, I don’t want to go there.
Yesterday? No, I don’t want to go there.
Today? I  just want to do today, Lord.

Some days - everything cooperates.
What’s wrong or right with this picture?
Ooops! There are no people in it.
Nope. I don’t want to go there either.

  

© Andy Costello, Reflections  2017
Picture; Dubrovnik, Croatia


Friday, June 9, 2017


HEALING  TECHNIQUES 

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 9th Friday in Ordinary time is, “Healing Techniques.”

Today’s first reading, from the Book of Tobit, has a very unique healing technique or method.

Tobiah’s father is blind because of bird droppings. Raphael, the angel, offers to rub the fish gall into Tobit’s blindness. His cataracts shrink and peel off from his eyes. And he is healed. He is able to see the light of day.

I don’t know about you, but that sounds like a weird, strange and different medical or healing technique.

And if you have been coming to Mass every day this week and you’ve been listening to the First Reading - you have heard some strange readings from the Book of Tobit.

This reading for today is one more example of a strange reading.

SICKNESSES

All of us have need of healing from time to time - inwardly and outwardly - of physical, spiritual and psychological hurts.

Live long enough and we experience various wounds and hurts.

What have been your health issues, questions, problems, or what have you?

Have you ever been seriously wounded?

The Bible talks about the incurable wound.

Don’t get one of those.

THE BIBLE ON HEALING

Medical researchers step back at times and look at how other cultures, places and times deal with specific medical problems.

The Bible is one great archaeological site for research into how people try to get healing. It talks about healing techniques from long ago.

The one in today’s first reading - the use of gall for healing - has often intrigued different folks.  Surprise. Look it up. People around the world still  use gall and bile for healing.  Doctors up till the 1800’s used fish gall for the healing of eyes.  One interesting component is that there is a bit of pain involved in the process.

Come to think about it, every once and a while we read about researchers using stuff from fish and sea life for healing. We also read about the use of plants and herbs and roots and seeds for healing.

We can fish through the Bible and get stories about healing processes from way, way back.

How about the use of leeches, marijuana, fish oil, and mold (from which Louis Pasteur came up with penicillin).

How about alcohol?

How about Jesus using spit or saliva in healing someone. That might draw an “Oooooh!” - but come to think about it, when we cut our finger, we often immediately put spit on the cut.

HOW ABOUT PRAYER

And if we look at healing practises from around the world - but especially from the Bible - we see people praying. We see the question of faith being brought into the desire for healing.

We also know that some religions won’t allow for the use of medicines.  They want to rely only on faith.

I love the saying, “Pray for potatoes, but pick up a shovel.”

I would stress, “If sick, pray for healing, but find a good doctor.”

We pray for doctors and nurses - but we also still anoint people with oil - something that medicine men and women have used down through the centuries.

CONCLUSION: A  QUESTION AND A COMMENT

Let me conclude with a short question and a short comment.

The question is the doctor’s question: "Where does it hurt?"

It’s important to get a good diagnosis - before we choose a prognosis.

The second step is the Kojac comment: “Talk to me!”

Pain and hurt can sometimes get us to talk to one another.

In fact, people often joke about old age being an organ recital.



It’s good to talk to others about who the best doctor is - or about some of the problems of aging.  It’s also good to practice some silence  -if all we do is talk about our health. 
June  9,  2017

WHAT’S INSIDE?
HEY, YOU NEVER KNOW….


We don’t like it when another
thinks they know what’s on
the other side the wall.

We hate it when another
thinks they know why we did
what we did.

We inwardly scream when another
puts down our autobiography
and they are only on page 23.

We love it when Christ
comes through our walls
and says, “Peace be with you.”


© Andy Costello, Reflections  2017