Tuesday, January 28, 2020

January 28, 2020



EXPERIENCING  IT

you have to watch it change;
then you can really know it.

To stand by the rails
and watch a ship slide and
glide away from land and shore ….

To pick potatoes or apples,
strawberries or blueberries,
raspberries or grapes ….

To put together – paper
and string and ribs of wood -
and then to go fly a kite ….

To admit it was a mistake,
to fill out the papers,
to get a divorce ….

To take bread, to take wine,
to be ordained to say,
“This is my body. This is my blood.”

To bring a child into our world,
to teach her gentleness, gratitude,
grace, greatness  and geography ….

You have to experience it;
you have to watch it change;
then you can really know it.

© Andy Costello, Reflections



January   28,  2020 

Thought  for  Today 




 “From silly devotions and from sour faced  saints, good Lord, deliver us.” 

Saint Teresa of Avila

Monday, January 27, 2020


January 27, 2020

NEAR  MISS

I shot a gun once, in fact, twice.
I missed both times. The guy who
was showing me how to shoot a rifle
put a bottle – it was green – on a log –
with a hill as a back drop – just in case -
just in case I was  a really bad shot. I was.
All my life I’ve been trying to say things –
but it seems every time I miss. Yet I hope:
I hope I had some near misses – at least
2 things I’ve been trying to say.

© Andy Costello, Reflections


January  27,  2020

Thought  for  Today 



“Incense is prayer
That drives no bargain.
Child, learn from incense
How best to pray.”

Alfred Barrett


Sunday, January 26, 2020




16 PEOPLE  IN  A ROOM

Irritant – angry – dictator 
interrupter  - silent – successful
observer – generous – magnetic –
swift – stuck – impatient – lazy –
forever hurt – poet – Christ ….
Which one am I today?
Which one am I today, O Lord?

© Andy Costello, Reflections


January  26,  2020

Thought  for  Today





 “When you’re my size in the pros,  fear is  a sign  you’re not stupid.”

Jerry Levias

Saturday, January 25, 2020





THE   CONVERSION 
OF  ST.  PAUL 


INTRODUCTION 

Today, January 25th we’re  focusing on the conversion  of St. Paul. 

Today’s first reading - Acts 23: 3-16 - gives us one of  the two versions of his conversion that are in the  Acts of the Apostles.  We could read either. [Cf. Acts  9: 1-22.]

We don’t know what day it was that this actually happened – but January 25th is as good as any.

Any day is a good day to get new insights, change, convert, grow.

DETAILS

Saul’s name changed to Paul. Paul’s brain changed.  He had been against  Christians – arresting them – chaining them – dragging them to Jerusalem - having them imprisoned – having them killed.

He was there for the stoning to death of Stephen the deacon.

His thought patterns changed.

He realizes his wrongness.

He describes it as a blindness.

He realizes what he was doing.

He gets baptized and becomes a great voice that adds new  Good News to the history of religion in our world.

He does what today’s gospel [Mark 16: 15-18] challenges us to do: “Go into the whole world and proclaim the gospel to every creature.”

Paul  is still doing this.  People are still reading and hearing and thinking about his messages.

Today’s a good day to say: I have to think about this.  He made quite a change.

To me that’s one of life’s big questions. Can a person change?  We’ve all experience people we wondered about.  We inwardly asked: Can he or she ever change?

Saul – Paul did. Buddha and Augustine changed?

Every Lent – on Ash Wednesday – every Christian hears the words: Change and believe in the Good News – or Remember you are dust and into dust you shall return.
 
WHAT PAUL GIVES US

Besides messages in the Acts of the Apostles, his letters give us messages that people have received and in this way - now with Christ in their lives - they end up becoming new in new and newer ways. 

HOMEWORK

We could do some homework.

I think a good practiced is to take a book of the Bible for the year.  It’s still January.  One of these years pick a letter of Paul – read it and then line up say 1 key message in that letter that is worth making one’s own.

Like picking Galatians.

Like I like Galatians 6: 2: "Bear one another’s burden. In this way you'll be fulfilling the Law of Christ."

CONCLUSION

Then at the end of the year you'll hear someone say, "Wow you’ve changed."