Friday, October 18, 2019

October  18, 2019 


PIÈCE   DE   RÉSISTANCE 

Sometimes when we feel put down,
when our A Game is not happening,
we hope our smarts triggers a pièce  
de  résistance - which covers over
our feelings of being small, stupid
and of no consequence - but then
again - sometimes we just sit back and
let others rise and shine and give God or
themselves the glory - knowing our name  
is ballpoint pen inked in God’s Hand or
at least we feel good about ourselves
for being able to say something in 
French.  "C'est sensationnel!"  Wow! 

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


THE   GOSPEL  OF   LUKE: 
FIVE   COMMENTS 

Here are five  comments about the Gospel of Luke on his feast day.

It’s the longest of the four gospels:  19,482 words - and then add The Acts of the Apostles - another 18,450 words. I add Acts because it’s often attributed to Luke. Now that’s a lot of words from Luke in the New Testament.

Matthew has more chapters - 28 -  than Luke -  who has  24.  However, the chapters in Luke are longer.   Matthew has 18,345 words. That’s 1,037 words  less than Luke.   Mark is 16 chapters  and the shortest of the gospels - 11,304 words. John has 21 chapters and 15,635 words.  Obvious those numbers depend on the translation and the language of the text in hand.

So that is one point: Luke is the longest of the gospels and then add The Acts of the Apostles which many credit Luke as the author of.

Second point: scholars  stress the Gentiles - non Jews - are the target audience for Luke. Scholars - not all - many see Luke as a Gentile - perhaps from Syria. Suggestion: just read Luke and compare it to Matthew. You  should come up with the same conclusion about Luke’s audience - being non-Jews. Of course while reading Luke notice his concern for the poor - and judge whether he’s heavier than Matthew and Mark with this.

Point Three: Luke is good with geography and doesn’t make too many mistakes with mention of places in his gospel as well as in The Acts of the Apostle.

Fourth Point: Luke is one of the synoptics - the 3 Gospels being seen as following a similar pattern.  I read a commentator  saying Luke might have had the outline Matthew had for his gospel which we no longer have. However Luke has additional  stories and stuff - for example, the Emmaus story and the Infancy Narrative especially the  Mary stories. Then there are the unique parables of the Prodigal Son, and Good Samaritan etc.

Fifth and Last Point:  Luke is the most polished writers of the gospels. As you know the Sunday Gospels run on 3 year cycle: Matthew, then Mark, then Luke.  You listen. Which of the 3 are you most at home with and you feel is speaking your language? As they say on the weekend retreats here - Luke has the reader eating with Jesus - going to eat with Jesus or leaving a meal with Jesus.  Eat Luke up! Digest Luke. Let him become you.

This document is 426 words.

[Picture on top: Book of Kells, Folio 27v, Luke is the calf with wings.]


October  18, 2019 

Thought for today: 


“If you’re not a lion, be a fox.” 


Folk Saying

Thursday, October 17, 2019

October 17, 2019


TRANSUBSTANTIATION

Change - deep, deep inner change -
in all of us Christians day by day -
becoming Christ - being Christ more
and more and more, over and over again -
being true presence - becoming  really
present to those we’re with - being light,
being life, being love - to each other -
feeding the world - visiting the sick and
those imprisoned - clothing the naked -
letting people eat us up - our time and
our bodies in service to each other.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019

October  17, 2019



Thought for today:

“The history of scholarship is a history of disagreements.” 



Charles Evans Hughes
 [1862-1948], 
Speech to American Law 
Institute, May 7, 1936

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

October 16, 2019

QUID  PRO  QUO


Crud!  All I heard for three
weeks now are these three
words, “Quid pro quo!

Everybody on the news talk shows
used the Latin term, “quid pro quo”,
as if I knew exactly what they meant.

I did and I didn’t,  so I didn’t say
anything. I even used the term without
being sure of what I was saying.

I know it means, "Something for something."
"You scratch my back …. I’ll scratch yours."
"Nobody does nothing for nothing - no how."

Yet, I still don’t know what quid pro quo
means. I really don’t. So I’ll go with the
phrase: "There’s always a catch." Got it.



October  16, 2019 



Thought for today: 


“Today  the  ringing of  the  telephone  takes precedence  over  everything. It reaches a point of terrorism, particularly at dinnertime.”  


Nieles Diffrient, 
New York Times, 
October 16, 1986