Monday, January 8, 2018


REENACTMENT

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this feast of the Baptism of Jesus is, “Reenactment.”

One of the things we do in religions as well as life is reenactments.

At Gettysburg and the Civil War battlefields of Virginia - there are reenactments of the battles fought there.

Here in Annapolis - the Annapolis, Historic Society - put on 4 Script Plays of stuff that happened in town and around here during the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War.  Bob Warden of our parish - and on that committee - made sure that stuff happening in St. Mary’s got into the script. I got the chance to be 5 different Redemptorists - one of which was Father Seelos - and I starred - just kidding - on stage at St. John’s College.

We read letters and newspaper clippings etc. etc. etc. from that period. It was an education for me - not being from Annapolis. Every time I go by Parole I think of scenes from there in the play - as well as the small military cemetery on West Street - opposite and down a bit from St. Mary’s cemetery. I think of a Russian Sailor who is buried there - getting killed in a bar fight in town. A Russian boat docked at Annapolis - during the Civil War.

REENACTMENTS

So folks do reenactments all over the world - small ones - like the renewal of marriage vows - and big ones like anniversaries of the signing of the Magna Carta or the Declaration of Independence.

I saw in the paper the other day that the 200th anniversary of Emily Bronte is happening this year or so.

Well, we Catholics have the Mass. We have Holy Week. We have Christmas. Do this in memory of me.

The teaching and theology of the Mass is that not only is it a reenactment - it also puts us into the Upper Room - and Christ is in the bread and the wine - as he was at the Last Supper.

This teaching is heavy duty stuff. It’s an amazing act of faith. I hope you have heard us priests and deacons say that an important way of reading and hearing the Scriptures - is that they are talking not only about what happened in the life of Jesus - but also what was happening in the Early Church.

Much of what is being stressed and argued about is put there from the life of Jesus to deal with stuff from the years 60 to 100.

So when we read John 6 and hear about people walking away from Jesus when he told folks this is his body - which he is giving to them for eternal life and they say, “This is hard to believe” and they walk away. Well it was also hard to believe in the Johannine Community and folks walked away then as well. And it’s tough for people like Bill Maher on Television when he publicly makes comments about the Mass and I assume the faith he was brought up on.

BAPTISM

Well, I was taught in the seminary about the baptism of John and how Christ entering into it - the feast we are celebrating today.

He didn’t get baptism for the removal of Original Sin in himself - but for all of us - just as God the Father helped the Israelites move from the sin and slavery of Egypt and head for the promised land.

As I stood there at the River Jordan in Israel in January of 2000 I thought of all this - especially watching a group of Protestants being baptized in the Jordan. I remember our guide, Father Doyle a Franciscan Scripture scholar, saying it probably didn’t happen here - at this spot of the Jordan, but down there - closer to the Jordanian Border - but we can’t get close to that spot, because of possible problems.

I remember him saying that John the Baptist was reenacting the first crossing of the Jordan way back and Baptism was being dipped into that history again - and he was calling Israel to renewal  - and for all of us to hear that we are the beloved children of god.

CONCLUSION

For most of us our parents did this for us, when we were baptized.

We do this every Easter.


We can do this every time we come into this church - going by the baptismal font and dipping - baptizo - in Greek - our finger into the water and making the sign of the cross in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Amen.
January 8, 2018 

Thought for today: 

The past  is  never dead. It’s not even past.” 

— William Faulkner [1897-1962], in Requiem for a Nun.
January 8, 2018


GROUND

Genesis 2: 7 “… the Lord God formed Adam
out of the clay of the ground and blew  into
his nostrils the breath of life, and so Adam
became a living being.”

I stand there - all alone - looking around.
Then I pause to look down to the ground.
Sometimes it’s dirt. Sometimes it’s a hard
cement  sidewalk. Sometimes it’s red brick.

Sometimes it’s pebbles. Sometimes macadam.
Sometimes it’s the green, green grass of home.
Sometimes it’s clay or mud, the earth from
which our God has formed and sculpted us.

Your word became flesh - fleshy  us - and then
you breathed your life into us. Here we are, 
of the earth - and of our God - and you raised us
up to stand tall, on the face of the earth, O Lord.

So Lord, Creator, form me out of mud.
Sculpt me out of clay - but please God, 
don't let me become a person who is like 
hard cement, red brick, macadam or cobblestone.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018

Sunday, January 7, 2018





GIFTS  AT  THE  STABLE

[This is a story I wrote for our kids' Mass this morning here at St. Mary's. It is total fiction.]

The Angel Gabriel’s Church in Rio Flaco, New Mexico, came up with a neat way of celebrating the feast of the Epiphany.

As you know Latino kids get their Christmas gifts not just on Christmas Day, but many more gifts on the Feast of the Epiphany.

It goes way back to the time of the birth of Jesus - when the Magi - or wise men  - or the 3 Kings - showed up in Bethlehem - each with a gift for the newborn Savior, Jesus Christ the Lord.

Jesus received as gifts, some gold, some frankincense and some myrrh - from these three visitors.

And kids - as well as adults - we have been hearing from way back when - that Jesus received these 3 gifts - and we've also been told what these 3 gifts symbolized.

Gold symbolized that Jesus was to become a King - but not the kind of king people were used to. The Magi didn’t know however, what kind of king this Jesus was to be. They didn't know he was to be a poor king - a servant king - a king who washed feet and fed the poor.

Frankincense  was used to leave a sweet smell - a sweet scent - a sweet aroma in a cloud of smoke. A barn or stable, an inn or a tavern, could smell pretty bad. People would take incense -  put it into a fire - and it would send a sweet aroma into a room.

Myrrh …. Now myrrh was a strange gift. It was part of the embalming process - which  symbolized that people were going to try to kill Jesus at some point. Maybe the Magi giver of this gift - figured this out from the way King Herod talked about this baby they were searching for - and who would be king some day.

So down through the years some parents in some places would give their children special gifts on the feast of the Epiphany. In other places this happened more on Christmas.

Well in the Angel Gabriel church in Rio Flaco, New Mexico, kids would bring a gift for Jesus that he would like if he were their age.

They would bring it to Mass on the feast of Epiphany and place it up front - on the floor and some gifts in the stable as well.

Other churches - like our church of St. Mary's  here in Annapolis - families would take a gift suggestion from a Christmas tree in the vestibule and that gift would go to a poor kid.

In the Angel Gabriel church in Rio Flaco, New Mexico, all this was done a bit differently.

All the kids in Rio Flaco were poor.

Rio Flaco - in Spanish - it means Skinny River - so most of the year even the River that ran through their town was poor - thin - and skinny.

One kid brought his old bicycle and put it up at the stable as a gift for Jesus.

Another kid loves Reese’s Peanut Butter patties, so she bought and brought a whole box - 24 inside - of Reese’s Peanut Butter patties.

Another kid brought a blue and red kite - and kites do well in New Mexico - with the high winds on certain days - days when the poor of Rio Flaco could see expensive hot air balloons in the sky.

The gifts, the Epiphany presents, were all surprises. You never knew what kids would bring to church for this celebration of the Feast of the Epiphany.

Dolls, fishing poles, basketballs, baseball gloves, Rubric Cubes, chocolate chip cookies, 2 hula hoops, a 2000 piece jigsaw puzzle with one piece missing. It was a big picture of a famous mountain in New Mexico - that’s in all lots of western movies, t-shirts, baseball caps, a cap pistol, number’s paintings, a guitar, a pretty good looking saxophone, and on and on and on. They were all lined up - up front - at the stable - all before Mass.

Well, the kids didn’t hear the sermon that Epiphany Mass.

Their minds and their eyes were on the gifts up front at the stable. They checked everything out - especially when they went up for communion.

After Mass - that day - everyone stayed. The kids all had to put their names on a small index card. Then the collection basket was passed around the church.  Each kid put their card with their name on it -  in the basket.

Then Mamma Rosacitta, the oldest person in Rio Flaco, 102 years of age, was brought up front. They would sit her in the priest’s chair.

The church became all silent - with the excitement in the big room.

Then  one by one she pulled out a kid’s name. It was handed to an 7th grader - who then read that kid’s name out loud  - so the whole church could hear it.

To the kids with the first, second and third call, it was if he or she won lottery.

The kid would come up and pick any gift he or she wanted - and everyone would clap.

The poor kids near the end didn’t have the best of choices obviously.

A very thin  girl got the box of the Reese’s Peanut Putter Pieces - 24 of them. Good thing she was generous, because her 3 siblings, 2 cousins, and then her friends got a patty, and that box was empty in 1 minutes after the drawing took place.

And oops - when it was a kid’s turn to pick - whatever gift he or she wanted - from what was still there - the kid would wink at Jesus.

Of course it was just a tiny statue of Jesus - but now and then a kid would say, “I think Jesus winked back at me.”

And kids and the people of the town of poor little  Rio Flaco would say, “As far as we know, this is the only town on earth - where such a thing happens every year on the Feast of the Epiphany.



EPIPHANIES
  
INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Epiphanies.”

Epiphanies:  Appearances, Manifestations, Showings, Seeings, Insights, Moments of Light, Figurings, Enlightenments, "Aha" moments, Revelations, Realizations, Apparitions’, The Curtain Rises, The Mask Comes Off, I finally see, I finally get it, Understandings, ….

Epiphanies….January 6th  or so.

Christmas - December 25th  - Mary and Joseph and the Shepherds see Jesus….

Epiphany - the Magi - the wise men - the 3 Kings  - the outsiders - the non-Jews - the Gentiles see Jesus….

Epiphanies. 

QUESTION

Have you ever said, “I had an epiphany.”

Translation: “I saw something I never saw before.”  “I got an insight.” “Oh, now I get it. Now I see.”

It’s like someone tells a joke and some people get it and laugh. Others don’t get it. They scratch their head and sometimes they admit, “I don’t get it.”

Then - when they do get it - they go, “Oh…. Oh now  I  get it.”

If they really get it, they got an epiphany.

I knew an old priest and he loved to say to people, “How Long is a Chinaman.”

And they would always answer, “I don’t know.”

So he would say it again, “How Long is a  Chinaman.”

And the person would say, over and over again. “I don’t know.”

And he - with a devilish smile on his face would say it again, “How Long is a Chinaman.”

They still wouldn’t get it - till he shifted gears and would say, “It’s not a question. It’s a statement of fact.”  They wouldn’t get it till he would say, “It’s like saying, ‘Geronimo is a native America. How Long - that’s his name - is from China. He’s a Chinaman.”

It’s then they go, “Oh, Okay - now I get it.”

QUESTION

Have you ever had an epiphany of God.

When my brother got cancer - melanoma - at the age of 49 - the doctor told him, “You have 18 months to live.” It was Good Friday - 1984. And the doctor was right. He got all the treatments - chemotherapy - the works - but he died in 18 months. I just happened to drop in that Good Friday and I heard the bad Friday news. I asked him - in a one-to-one moment - “How are you going to handle this?”

He said, “I don’t know. I’ll let you know.”

Just before he died he said to me, “Remember when you asked me, ‘How I’m going to handle this?’ and I said, ‘I’ll let you know.’  Well, I found out, ‘Thank God for mom and dad. They gave us the gift of faith.’”

That moment was an epiphany for me. I too said, “Thank God for mom and dad - for giving us the gift of faith.”

I told my mom that and thanked her.

I also thanked whoever it was - their grandparents - their great grandparents - their great, great, great, great, grandparents. Was there someone way back when - who decided on God - decided on church - decided on letting it go and accepted God. Thank you.”

In the last few years I’ve noticed and I’ve thought about this gift called faith - that I’ve been given.

It was a given - but it has become an epiphany as I think of my brother and my mother - who was killed the following year in a hit and run accident.

Thank God for the gift of faith.

For starters, I think about it looking backwards.

I remember a sermon I heard a priest give.  He made a statement from the pulpit that went something like this.  Picture a little girl going to the bathroom on her own around 12 at night. She goes by her parents’ bedroom and she spots her dad kneeling down - with his back to her - and he’s leaning into his bed praying.

Then the preacher said, “That little girl seeing that scene by accident - is learning something that is much, much bigger than all the catechism lessons she will take - and all the Masses she’ll ever go to.”

Is that true? I don’t know. That’s something that can’t be proved - obviously. That can’t be measured.  It’s preacher’s exaggeration.

But you never know.

It got me to look back. I saw my dad with his prayer book - praying in the basement a few times. I used to have the 6 AM mass as an altar boy at OLPH Brooklyn and one time I had a side altar mass and I just happened to look out - and down the side aisle and there was my dad praying in a side bench.  I only saw him once.  I had assumed the was already half way to work by subway to the Nabisco Plant where he worked most of his adult life.

EPIPHANY - GIFTS

One of the messages of the Epiphany is that it’s gift day.

The 3 Magi - as the story - as the tradition - as the legend goes - brought gifts to baby Jesus - gifts of Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh.

In Latino and many other traditions this is the feast when kids get gifts.

For homework, this week, think about the 3 best gifts you have ever received in life - from your parents, whoever - your 3 best gifts.

I would say, Family, I would say Faith, I would say, Education.

When It comes to education I have discovered that I don’t have the math gene - but I got the imagination gift.

When it comes to sports, I have discovered that I wasn’t the best in sports, but I did get a great interest and enthusiasms for sports.

CONCLUSION

How about you? Today, this week, answer that question: what are the 3 best gifts you have received.  Next ask each other that question and listen to each other’s answers.  In fact, a good sign of listening is to ask another for clarification of the answers they have given.


Then say “Thank you” to parents, living and dead, former teachers and coaches and to God, and who have you, for the 3 top gifts you have been given. Amen. 
January 7, 2018 - 

Thought for today: 

"Have you ever had that moment when you looked back on something and said, 'Well, gosh, that seems obvious now... why didn't I see it then?' I like to call this the Face Palm Epiphany. Oh, hindsight, you magical, humbling thing."


Alethea Kontis
January 7, 2018


DEATH  AND RESURRECTION


Sure there’s a day and a year there
printed on your death card and chiseled
out on your granite grave stone - but
my sister Mary and I - we’re the last two -
we love to play Jesus now and then - and
resurrect you from the dead - telling your
gospel stories - mostly good news -
chapter and verse - thanks be to God.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018