Tuesday, September 1, 2020




SEPTEMBER  1st:
WORLD DAY OF PRAYER 
FOR THE CARE OF CREATION


INTRODUCTION

The title of my thoughts for today is,  “September 1st: World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation.”

THE MIND OF CHRIST

Today’s 1st reading from 1st Corinthians ends with the words, “Have the mind of Christ.”

What is the mind of Christ when it comes to our care of the earth?

Jesus  told us to watch and marvel at the birds of the air and the flowers of the field. 

However, I don’t think we can be definitive as to Christ’s thoughts about hydroelectric power plants and light bulbs.

Yet, I believe,  we can come up with opinions on what we think would be smart thoughts about caring for the earth in 2020 – of course.

So some thoughts about the care of creation in 2020.

SEPTEMBER  1ST

Calling this day “World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation” has been around since 2015 for us Catholics,.

However, I don’t remember speaking about  this in the past few years. 

So last night I did some home work and these are a few of my thoughts.

I like that the Eastern Orthodox wing of the Christian Churches began this idea.

Back in the mid-80’s at a big Eastern Orthodox assembly the issue of environment was discussed big time. Patriarch Bartholomew  ends up with the nickname, “The Green Patriarch.”

Around 2001 different European Christian communities picked up on this theme and did their best to make worldwide improvements  in how we care for creation.

Then in August of 2015 Pope Francis makes his move – by backing the idea of September 1st as a special day to look at the environment.

There were documents – called encyclicals from Eastern Orthodox leaders and then Laudato Si from Francis.

We can ask ourselves what have we picked up from this focusing on Green Theology etc.

I like the way for different years and different meetings, groups looked at specific areas. For example:  The Black Sea, the Danube, the Adriatic Sea, the Baltic Sea, the Amazon, the Artic, the Mississippi.

I like the way folks looked at water – not just for baptism, but for drinking, for agriculture, for recreation, for aqua filters, etc.

Then there have been calls to look at agriculture and nutrition, air and atmosphere.

SPECIFIC IMMEDIATE PLACES ON THE PLANET

Next I looked back to the late 1960’s and Monsignor Bob  Fox picking 4th street in Manhattan as a street to be cleaned.dd

On a Saturday, hundreds of people started on Avenue D near the East River and swept and cleaned their way to the Hudson River on the West Side.  They had trucks, brooms, shovels and plastic bags and they did it.

I also remember a specific lot – around 6th street – perhaps between Avenue B and C - where a building had sat. Now it was just dirt and an empty lot.  In this  vacuum of space were two old  rusty cars – toilet bowls – tons of garbage and waste – a couch.  A group cleared it – planted grass – put in some benches and a few cement card and chess tables, a vegetable garden, lights, trees and flowers – painting the back fences etc. and that lasted for my 2 years on the Lower East Side.

It was a model on what could be done.

I loved hearing about the Cayuga River in Ohio being cleansed.  There were newspaper articles that it was the river that had so much oil on it – that it once was on fire.

I like Gene Grohe’s pride that Lake Erie has been cleansed a good bit.


So too  Perfume Bay – Stink Creek – just before Coney Island. As kids when we went to Coney Island – when we went over this water on the subway – we would pause and yell out the open window, “Phew!” and make out we were choking. It has been cleansed a bit.

I noticed last night that finally that the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn might finally get  its $500 million clean up check.

CONCLUSION

So once a year now Christians ask that September 1st we concentrate on how we are caring for the earth.

So talk, pray, and act is the message.



September  1,  2020



IF  I   DIED  TONIGHT….


If I died tonight ….

If I died tonight I’d regret
about 10 times I didn’t say, “I’m sorry”,
about 3 times I didn’t ask, “Please forgive me!”
about 1,000 unanswered letters,
about 10,000 wasted hours,
about 10 books I didn’t finish writing,
about 1,000 books I didn’t read,
that only once did I got scream back 
from a sermon I preached,
and there’s more ….

If I died tonight ….

If I died tonight I’d rejoice
that I got to the Lake of Galilee,
that I the last thing I said to my brother
before he died was, “I love you,”
that I gave it my best shot 81%
of the times,
that I could hit a curve ball,
that I listened to people when then
asked to talk to me,
that I had a wonderful family,
that I lucked out in the people I met
and there’s more ….

If I wake up tomorrow …. there’s more.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


 September  1,  2020

Thought  for  Today



“The one who is afraid to throw the dice will  never  throw a six.”

Chinese  Proverb 

Monday, August 31, 2020


August 31, 2020




MOONLIGHT


It was a full moon. It was a dark night.
There were few clouds. Most was clear.

Someone yelled, “You have a camera.
“Quick! Get it! Get a picture of the moon.”

I tried – but my picture was all shake and shimmer -
and the blurry  light of the moon on the ocean.

I couldn’t capture the picture with my expensive camera,
so I had to settle for seeing it all - with just my eyes.

But I did let the moon and the whole dark
scene slide into my random access memory.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


August   31,  2020

Thought   for  Today

“Priest’s  Protest  at  Retirement

The  81-year-old parish priest of an Udine church in North Italy rent his vestments, smashed communion wine on the floor and ordered his bishop out of the chapel during a packed mass last week.

The spectacle was Father Angelo Quirini’s last performance  in a series of protests against Bishop Alfredo Battisti’s attempts to force him to retire.

Bishop Battisti’s announcement to the congregation during the mass that Fr Quirini was retiring had provoked the priest’s wrath.

His fourth and final protest gesture was to turn out all the lights in the church.  The astonished parishioners, left in the dark,  then heard him declare at the top of his voice from the direction of the altar, ‘Go, Bishop, while you still have the chance.’”

by our Rome correspondent
Found this last night in a box
of old letters.  Someone sent it 
to me as a newspaper clipping.  
It’s  listed “Catholic Herald” 
5/10/91, England.

Sunday, August 30, 2020


August  30, 2020

HAVES   AND  HAVE   NOTS

That’s us, all of us,
haves and have nots:
a sense of humor,
the ability to speak in both Spanish and English,
a wallet with several credit cards and many $20’s,
a car that smells new,
an 18 year old body,
some stories, some regrets, some envies, 
a unique laugh,
the ability to still run up the street in the rain,
a hurt from way back,
loneliness when going by a certain cemetery,
some humility from a really broken marriage,
a fake Rolex watch,
a trombone I used to play,
some really old baseball cards,
a red Hulu Hoop I used to be really good at.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020



August   30,  2020




Thought  for  Today

“After the [leader’s ] death,  his disciples came together and talked about the  things he had done.  When it was Rabbi Schneur Zalman’s turn, he asked them: ‘Do you know why our master went to the pond each day at dawn and stayed there for a little while before coming home again?’   They did not know why.  Rabbi Zalman continued: ‘He was learning the song with which the frogs praise god.  It takes a very long time to learn that song.’”

Martin Buber