Monday, May 28, 2018


MEMORIES


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Memories.”

It’s Memorial Day - and  it’s Memorial Day weekend, so why not a few thoughts about memories?

DADDY STORY

I used this story before, because it’s one of my favorite stories. It’s also one of my favorite memories, It happened to me when I was a little kid.

I’m in the front room of our house in Brooklyn. We called it the Sun Porch - but it was indoors. My dad is sitting there in the corner - on a dark green -vinyl easy chair - reading the paper. I’m standing about 10 feet away looking at my dad’s collection of books - one of which is Best Loved Poems in the English Language.

I’m paging through it. Surprise I spot a dark red rose petal. It’s dry. It’s dead. I must of sensed it was very fragile - so I barely touched it.

I turn and head for my father - holding the book like one of the gifts at the  offertory procession at Mass. Showing him the open book with the dark red rose flower petal, I ask my dad, “Daddy what’s this?”

He asks, “What’s what?”

I said, “This rose petal.”

He looks at it and smiles his great smile, which different people told me that I got it as well.

He says one word, “Memories.”

That’s a very important moment and story for me. It’s life.  It gave me an important life lesson.

Every one of us has our red rose petals: a marine pin in a lapel on a suit jacket, a death card of a mom or dad or child, a baseball in  a box in a bottom drawer, an athletic trophy from our high school days, a two dollar bill signed by Bobby Kennedy, a wedding photo on a dresser top, a brick from our first house ….

Memorials …. Mementos …. Memories….

If it rains today - and you’re looking for something to do - get a pen and paper and find 25 rose petals among your possessions. Translation: find at least 25 mementos from your life.

TYPES OF MEMORY

There is a long term and short term memory.

There is also working memory - which is a combination of long and short term memory.

There is number memory - word memory - visual memory - emotional memory.

Animals have memories as well - long term and short term.

After humans, dolphins might have the best of memories - along with elephants and ravens. Yes ravens.  But I haven’t read enough of the research in all this.

And research is ongoing  - with lab rats, monkeys, humans.

PEAKS AND VALLEYS - INCLUDING DEATH VALLEY

When is our memory at its best?

Everyone over 67 talks about forgetting things - not remembering things.

We all know the experience of older folks repeating themselves - telling their war stories - as well as - losing it.

I was in a play in the second year of high school and I had the lead and had to memorize about 440 lines in 6 weeks. Did it.

Could not do that today.

I gave some high school retreats with a priest who could memorize the name of 100 kids in about 5 hours.  And he gave me his secret ….

My sister  told me that she had a photographic memory. In high school, she could see the page the information was on - in the book - that was inside her head - and she could it put it right down on test papers with ease.

My Aunt Kathleen remembered what people wore at every family gathering there ever was and she would let people know it  - which really endeared her to others - especially other women.

DEATH

We want to remember our dead.

On memorial day weekend we remember especially those who served our country and our world in the different branches of military service  - and who have died.

We pause and remember moments at funerals for veterans and burials in Veteran’s Cemeteries like Crownsville and Arlington.

At funerals when I’m stuck - and really don’t know the person who died I like to say I once  saw on TV - in a documentary on our evolution as human beings - that it was a big day when primitive peoples - didn’t just toss a dead body off a trail - and continue on hunter gathering treks thru the forests and mountain trails. No! At some point a group buried a loved one - said some prayers and words or incantations - and left a marker - to remember that spot when they happened down that trail again.

Someone said the 2 major issues of life are death and family.

And we think of death moments of family members - especially.

We bury our dead - their bodies, their remains, in sacred places called cemeteries. Tombs have markers, crosses, gravestones. At the end of a funeral sometimes people take home a flower and put a petal in a book and sometimes a little kid will accidently spot that petal and ask, “What’s this?

Memories.

CONCLUSION

We church goers believe that here is where our religion comes in.

We believe there is life after death.

We believe that Christ’s life tells us about life: loving one another, burying our complaints, and connecting with one another.

We believe that Holy Communion is with Christ - in all his members - as well.

We believe it’s important to say, “Thank you to those who were willing to lay down their lives for their friends.”

May 28, 2018

MEMORIAL  DAY

It was raining
that day
in the Veterans Cemetery ….
Rain rested silently
on top of the marble stones ....
It was row after row after row 
after row of names and numbers ....
It was worn out forgotten flowers ….
Then we got to our brother.
We stood there -
each remembering - in our own way -
the moments and memories
we had when he was with us.
Tears were bouncing off and
pinging our umbrellas.
Tears of rain began resting
silently and salty on our faces.
Iraq - another  war that was wrong  -
wrong - for US and for the Iraqis
Who says it doesn’t rain in the desert?
Who says mistakes are never made?


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018  



May 28, 2018 



Thought for today: 

“Life is the art  of  being well deceived.” 


William Hazlitt  [1778-1830]
Painting by Mia Bergeron

Sunday, May 27, 2018


BASIC  GOD  BLURTS


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “Basic God Blurts.”

On this annual feast of the Most Holy Trinity, God, One God, Three Persons, I thought I’d like to say we have basic God instincts in our life - whether we are aware of them or not. 

I notice them, I hear them, these Basic God Blurts - that people blurt out from time to time.

FOR STARTERS - HERE ARE A FEW

For starters here are a few.

  • “Oh my God!”
  • “Holy Mackerel.”
  • “Holy Cow!”
  • “Holy God.”
  • “Holy Moses.”
  • “Holy crud or crap, or etc.”
  • “Gosh!”
  • “Jesus Christ, for crying out loud….”
  • “God dang it.”
  •  “Holy Mother of  God.”

Or we hear variation blurts -  of the opposite:


  • “Hell no!”
  • “That’s a hell of a way to show appreciation after all I’ve done.”
  • “Go to hell!”
  • “May you rot in hell for all eternity.”
  • “May God  make you disappear!”
  •  “Drop dead!”
  • “I wish you never existed.”

QUESTION

What do you say when you’re angry or frustrated or you really want to verbally hurt another?

Does cursing help? Does cursing that brings in God - or the absence of God help?

What do you blurt out when you see an accident or a great football catch or a home run that wins the game? Oh my God, did you see that. Wow!”

What do  you scream when your horse or your son or daughter comes from behind and wins the race in the last two seconds?

We scream out blurts like, “Oh my God. Oh my God. We won! We won!”

FEAST OF THE HOLY TRINITY

Today is the feast of the Holy Trinity.

We Christians have been taught the great revelation about God - that God is three - and God is one.

That is quite a revelation.

God is a Father - Our Father - who loves us - knows us - who cares about us.

God is also Christ - the Son - who reveals to us himself as well as the Father.  Jesus told us, “See me - see the Father.”

This Jesus told us about the Spirit.

That’s Three who are One.

We heard the ending of today’s gospel from Matthew: “All power in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age.”
It took the Christian church centuries - heresies - splits - councils - to finally come up with a few basic creeds. We say two of them at our Masses: the Apostles Creed and the Nicean Creed.

Saint Augustine spent much time - 30 years - much energy - much probing - much prayer - to pull together his great book entitled, “The Trinity.” It’s 15 books.

I have never met anyone who has read that entire book yet. But people remember the simple story of the boy on the beach and Augustine a lot more. It’s told by preachers over and over and over again - especially on the Feast of the Holy Trinity.

Augustine is at the beach and he sees a little boy bringing a shell full of water from the sea to a hole in the sand. He’s going back and forth doing this. Augustine goes up to the kid, “Little boy, what are you trying to do?

The kid answers, “Oh I am going to bring the sea and put it in my hole in the ground.”

Augustine answers, “You can’t put the sea in that hole.  You can’t do that. It’s too vast.”

So the kid says, “Look, I can do that sooner than you can figure out the  Trinity.”

THE OCEAN

One of the two great metaphors for God is the ocean. The other is Marriage.

I lived in a retreat house on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean for 7 years - and many,  many, many a person told me they found God on the edge of the waters - especially at sunrise.

I didn’t spend much time at the Pacific - but I’m sure people meet God at the edge of the waters there as well - Sunset.

Hopefully in every trip to the waters - hopefully in every Marriage - everyone screams out, “Oh my God!”

However, as I lived on the edge of the Atlantic - after 6 months - I got used to it. I assume the same thing happens in marriage.

But there are times.

There are moments at the ocean - moments of sunrise - at 6:17 AM  - and we pray out loud, “Oh my God.”

Hopefully there are moments of renewal in every Marriage.

I see that on the day of marriages - being up close to wedding days - like inches away from eyes and words and faces.

I hope honeymoons - a zillion expressions of love - in married couples bring them into the presence of God.

I know I see those moments in the birth of a baby - and then the birth of the first grand kid.

I see those God moments when parents and grandparents see kids graduate from kindergarten, grade school, high school and college.

Oh my God.

NUMBERS

Life has numbers.

Little kids learn their ABC’s and 1,2,3’s.

God is complex. Life is complex. There are billions and billions of memories, DNA, cells, stars, vastness.

Yet God is as simple as a Father loving and holding a son or daughter or a wife holding her husband or the ocean hitting the beach over and over again for 5 billion years.

CONCLUSION

The title of this homily is, “Basic God Blurts!”

I see couples at the beach - walking and holding hands.

I see with my imagination.

I hear them saying, “We don’t do this enough. Oh my God, we need to spend more time walking and talking.”

I see couples coming out of the parking lot and holding hands as they walk to a church for the funeral of a close friend - their age - and they know now a widow or a widower - has to go it alone.

“Oh my God.”

I hope all of us pray deep prayers of appreciation for the gift of life - that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit is keeping me in existence.

I hope all of us when we get really scared - scared of death and hell - and what’s going to happen hereafter - and we blurt out in prayer.

Oh my God….



WORK  IN  PROGRESS 

At some point we realize -
we’re hoping - another reads
the story - the song - of my life.

We write it on the backs of
envelopes - but sometimes
we send it in a card or a letter.

Sometimes it’s a scribble;
sometimes it’s a song;
sometimes it’s all surprise.

At some point - we realize -
it’s not a #1 hit or a best seller -
yet we hope you read my story.

Or at least let me hear you
humming my song - the story -
the meaning of my life.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018  



May 27, 2018


Thought for today: 

“Nothing is more  unpleasant  than a virtuous person with a mean spirit.”  


Walter Bagehot [1826-1877]