LOVE AND LIKE
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this Eight Friday in Ordinary
Time is, “Love and Like.”
I put a “Quote for the Day” on my blog. I have a bunch of
quote books and grab one and look for a quote that grabs me.
The one I found and put on my blog for today is: “We like
someone BECAUSE. We love someone ALTHOUGH.”
Once more: “We like someone BECAUSE. We love someone
ALTHOUGH.”
Then sometimes I ask some questions. For today's quote I asked:
Is that your experience? Then I asked 2 further questions that I would be interested in hearing answers for: “Name
5 people you love and then list 3 things they do that bug you about them? Name 5 people
you like and then list 3 things they do that bug you?”
It hit me: Would it be harder to name faults and annoyances
in those we like compared to those we love?
Looking around the room, it looks like all of us have had a
lot of experience. Some people are easy to like; some people are difficult to
take.
My niece Monica once told me. She’s over 50 now. “There’s
one in every office.” I asked her, “What
do you mean by one?” “You know,” she said, “someone who is a royal pain you
know where.”
Is that true? Does every office, every parish, every
neighborhood, every group, have one person whom we just don’t like?
I’m a member of a religious community in the Catholic
Church: the Redemptorists. I’ve been stationed in New York
City , New Jersey , Washington
D.C. , Pennsylvania ,
Wisconsin , upstate New
York , Ohio , and now Annapolis . Looking back
I’ve said to several people, I’ve always been blessed to have at least one guy
in each place where I have been stationed who was a great guy - in other words,
someone I liked. Thinking about my quote for today: is the reverse true? To be
honest, I’ve never sat down and thought about answers to that question.
There have been difficult people - some strange rangers - that I have lived with. There have been more than one in a few places. One of my books is entitled, How To Deal With Difficult People.I've jokingly told guys I lived
with, “Thanks for the help in writing that book!”
SOME OBSERVATIONS
For starters there are two types of people: those who are easy to like and those who are difficult to like.
I like the saying, “There are two kinds of people: those who
cause happiness when they enter a room and those who cause happiness whenever they
leave a room.”
As priest I’ve been to more different nursing homes than
most priests in the United States. Having lived on the road for 8 ½ years and
given lots of parish missions - part of our parish mission was to visit
nursing homes in the afternoons. From that experience I realized there are two
kinds of people in nursing homes - or anywhere - those who are an easy visit -
and those who are a difficult visit. By difficult I don’t mean dementia or
aging. I mean they have a difficult personality, attitude, or overall ambiance.
I saw that as a little boy on our street in Brooklyn. There were two kinds of older people: those who
when your spaldeen (pink rubber ball) went into their front yard, they were happy to get it for you and say something like, “Hope you’re having a great game!” and
those who are grouches and make it difficult in retrieving your spaldeen.
Then and there without knowing it, I made my first conscious
life decision. It was not to be a grouch when I get old.
Today’s first reading has this sentence. We’ve heard it
a hundred times. It’s why I am preaching on this theme of Love and Like. The sentence
is this: “Above all, let your love for one another be intense,
because love covers a multitude of sins” (1 Peter 4:8.)
because love covers a multitude of sins” (1 Peter 4:8.)
It doesn’t say: "Above all, let your liking of another be intense,
because liking covers a multitude of sins."
Liking is easy. Love can be difficult. Forgiveness can be
difficult.
That’s what our faith teaches and preaches.
So getting back to my earlier question and wondering: I
would think it would be easier to find things that bug us and things we don’t
like in those we love - more than in those we like.
Next, I would think - but I’m not sure - but I would think -
it would be more difficult to pick 3 things we don’t like - 3 things that bug
us - about those we like - compared to those we love.
CONCLUSION
Today’s gospel - Mark 11: 11-26 - talks about a fig tree. We see variations of this story in Matthew, Mark and Luke.
Today’s gospel - Mark 11: 11-26 - talks about a fig tree. We see variations of this story in Matthew, Mark and Luke.
I found in The Parables of Jesus, a book by Joachim Jeremias, a
piece on gardening that I never noticed before. [Cf. pages 119-120.] He says that in Israel the fig
tree is unique compared to other trees and bushes and plants. At times in the
year, a fig tree really looks dead. Then comes a time you can look into its
very thin branches - which are translucent - and see the sap rising. What looks dead - is about to come back
to life.
We’re getting older - maybe we look dead to some folks who
are young - but don’t count us out. We can always start producing fruit.
Grouches can change and surprise everyone. I’ve see that happen to at least 3
priests. Maybe they changed because they started to love more than to just like or dislike others - and love covers a multitude of sins.
Amen.
Amen.
1 comment:
It seems to be
You are so easy to like
You are so very like me
But him on the other hand
I must often need to extend a great deal of love
For unlike me he is so very far from the Promised Land.
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