Friday, April 10, 2020

April   10,  2020 





UNDER  THE  CROSS

I stand under the cross wishing
I could hear Jesus’ words to Mary and John
addressed to me:
“Woman, this is your son!”
and “This is your mother.”

I stand under the cross wishing
I could say what the Centurion said,
“Truly this was the Son of God.”

I stand under the cross watching
the scene between the Good Thief
and the Bad, but their voices are about
saving oneself and being saved and
robbing paradise at the last minute,
aren’t my scene either.

I stand under the cross wishing
I could say, “I am thirsty” wishing
my faith was thirstier,  but it’s not.

I stand under the cross in the dark
seeing the spit and the blood on the ground,
wondering down deep if the echo of curses
in the air still being thrown at Jesus
are my inner sounds. I hope not. No Never.

I stand under the cross and hear,
“Father forgive them because they
don’t know what they are doing.”

I stand under the cross saying and praying,
“That’s me. You know me. Into your hands,
O God, I hand over my spirit. Amen.”


© Reflections, Andy Costello

SELF-RELIANCE


Somewhere along the line someone spotted a postcard - with our family name on it - along with our family coat of arms - along with our family motto.  They sent it to me.  

I wasn't in on the drafting of the shield, or the motto or the coat of arms.  I didn't even know we had a coat of arms.  My mom described where she came from in Ballynahown, Ireland, "Ireland has nothing." I saw the spot - on Galway Bay - as not that hot.

And my father used to say that he was within a rock's throw of where my mom was from. 

Asked to translating the Latin on the coat of arms, I said it means something like,  "Don't be searching for yourself, outside yourself." 

"Quaeseveris" is the only tricky word of the 4 words in the motto.  The quest, the seeking, the searching, the asking is at the heart of the motto.

"Quaeseveris" is the 2nd person perfect active subjunctive of the verb "quaero". It means questing,  as indicated, asking,  seeking, inquiring, requiring. 

I would like to translate it  as: "Be who you is, because if you  be who you're not, then you're not who you is."

Ralph Waldo Emerson calls this "Self-Reliance."

Here is Emerson's famous lecture on Self-Reliance. Just hit the triangle on the button.












Thursday, April 9, 2020

April  9, 2020


COMPASS

Walking - early morning - in the woods –
coming to patches of light and darkness –
depending on the steep of the low hills -
then deeper and deeper into the trees ….
I come to a clearing - a palace place of light….
The light seems to be forming halos around
all the trees in the forest - lessening the
darkness everywhere - north, east, south, west.
It was as if I was standing in a compass of light,
and I stood there  wondering if God the Father
had the particularity he had about Mary for the
tree 2,000 years ago chosen to be the cross of Christ.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


April 9, 2020



Thought for Today

“When I ask people for bread to feed the poor, they think I am a saint; when I ask them why the poor are hungry, they think I am a Communist.”  


Brazilian Bishop 
Dom Heldler Camara




Wednesday, April 8, 2020

April  8, 2020





AUTOBIOGRAPHY

There’s one book worth reading…. 
We don’t have to write it, but that 
book would be really worth reading. 

It’s our Autobiography. Then again, 
It would be really worth writing. Give it 
a title for starters. You can revise it. 

Where were you born? 
Where have you been? 
Where did you hope to go? 

Whom have you met? 
Best days? Worst days? 
10 top things than changed you. 

10 top things you have learned. 
10 top books you have read. 
10 top surprises that surprised you. 

10 gifts you never expected.
10 twists and turns.
10 persons who changed your life.

Sit down at your computer. 
Pick up your pen. Get a 
spiral note book and write. 

For whom? For yourself. 
Then picture yourself reading 
it in your old age. Wow God! 

It’s for yourself, but picture 
your great granddaughter, 
finding it 3 years after you’re gone. 


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

April  8,  2020




Thought   for   Today


“Every day and every hour, every minute, walk around yourself and   watch yourself, and see that your image is a seemly one.” 


Father Zossima in 
The Brothers Karamazov

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

April  7,  2020


SATAN  ENTERED  HIM



INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this Tuesday in Holy Week is, “Satan  Entered  Him.”

Those 3 words - right there in today’s gospel – in John 13: 27 – hit me.

“Satan Entered Him.” Those words  entered into me.

That’s something that happens to us when we read strong stuff – and if a sermon has salty stuff –  we’re can be aware of what’s enlightening us – what’s challenging us - and what is entering into us.

We all have this current fear that the coronavirus 19 might enter into us.

It’s an invisible enemy  that can kill us – so we fear it – and we take precautions – to prevent it from entering us.

Is that why those 3 words in today’s gospel – ‘Satan entered him”- hit me.

INSIDE JOB

Down through the years, e.e. cummings words, “Be of love a little more careful than of anything”  has entered  into me.

I’ve have also thought, “Be of hate or hurt a little more careful than of anything.”

So too prejudice – so too anger – so too greed – so too what I’m watching on TV - so too movies - so too attitude – so too the atmosphere we can feel in  the rooms  we enter.

Without knowing it – without choice – without voting for it – we become what we read, what we see, what we eat, what we breathe in.

I love Tennyson’s words in his poem Ulysses, “I am part of all that I have met.”

We speak English because that’s the language that entered into as a kid in the playground and the playpen. “Give Little Johnny a turn.”  “Stop being such a baby!” “Wash your hands!” “Do your homework.” “Say your prayers.”

THE BAD STUFF

In a reflection for today -  in Give Us This Day -  Immaculee Ilibagiza says, “On April 7, 1994, radio stations in Rwanda transmitted a fearsome message: it was time to ‘cut the tall trees’ and eliminate the ‘cockroaches.’  Upon this signal, Hutu militia began the wholesale extermination of their Tutsi neighbors and moderate Hutus.  In the course of a hundred  days nearly a million people were killed – mostly by machetes and other primitive weapons. Many of the massacres occurred in churches, where Tutsis had sought refuge. That such horror could occur in a predominantly Catholic country raised troubling  questions about the meaning of evangelization. Nuns, priests, and catechists were among the victims. (In other cases, shockingly, they collaborated with the killers.) Church leaders, whether Catholic or Protestant, were largely mute.” [p. 96, April, 2020]

That’s tough stuff that entered into me when I read that last night.

I remember watching in shock some of that on television when it was happening. It happened again  years later when I was reading Immaculee Ilibagiza book – Left to Tell.   It’s all about this.


When – how many times – and in what ways did that attitude of anger and envy and smallness and “Kill!” enter into the psyche of some Hutus of Rwanda?

CONCLUSION:  OUR CHOSEN CALL

Our chosen call as Christians and Redemptorists  has been to bring Good News to folks – after it enters into us.

The hope is that we reach out for Christ and eat him up - as well as his whole body in communion.

The hope is that his real presence and his love and respect for all enters into all of us.

The hope is that the Word becomes flesh and consumes us.

It’s the same hope we have when we listen carefully to each other each day when we come into each other’s real presence.

It’s the same hope we have when we hear the first reading at each Mass.

Today it was from Isaiah. We read him. We listen to him. Hopefully he enters into us.  

Did you notice the two images from today’s first reading – that we become sharp swords and polished arrows.

Unlike Judas we’re not in this for the money – but for the feast!