Saturday, October 29, 2016


NOTICING  THE  LITTLE  GUY,  
THE  LITTLE  GAL,  THE  ANAWIM

INTRODUCTION

Today’s first and third reading trigger the thought of noticing the little guy. So the title of my homily for this 31st Sunday in Ordinary Time [C] is, “Noticing the Little Guy, The Little Gal, the Anawim”

This is a key theme in the Hebrew scriptures: Don’t forget the Anawim. A N A W I M:  Aniwim. It’s the Hebrew word, for “The Little People.” The little people are God’s People.

This would be a good homily, if this week, everyone here noticed people we never noticed before - especially the little people - especially people we don’t think important – people we walk by every day.

This would be a great homily – if everyone here began to notice people we never noticed before – especially the unnoticed – for the rest of our lives.

This would make my day. It would also might make the day of the person we noticed.

FIRST READING

God notices all people. God is concerned with all people.

Today’s first reading presents a paradox. It’s from the book of Wisdom. The author begins: “Before the Lord the whole universe is as a grain from a balance – a weighing scale in the market place - or a drop of morning dew come down upon the earth.”

What an amazing notice! This universe is vast. We have no clue how far and how many universes there are out there – and how far it goes.  Our universe doesn’t stop at our ceiling.

Spot a piece of dandruff on the shoulder of someone in front of you. The author is saying: “To God this vast endless looking universe is like that tiny, tiny speck of dandruff, skin that softly dropped off someone’s scalp to someone’s shoulder.”

Then the author switches his thought and says: “Even though everything is so small to God, God sees all. God has fashioned all. God loves everything and everyone He has made. God is a lover of all souls” God notices all!

A FOOTBALL GAME

We’re at a football game. The place is packed. People are everywhere. Whom do we notice? Whom do we see?

Parents notice their kid or kids on the field or in the stands. The rest of us might be spotting a running back or quarterback or cheerleader – or wondering where the beer man is.

God is spotting everyone. We are all God’s children.

We see those we know – sometimes. We see crowds. God sees every individual person – those on the field, those in the stands, the person in the ambulance reading the newspaper because he or she doesn’t’ like football, but is there in case of an injury.

God notices the little guy, the little gal, the Anawim.

THE SCULLY FAMILY

I grew up on 62nd Street in Brooklyn, N.Y. We moved to that street because a man named Mr. Tim Scully told my dad about a house there. He had gotten my dad a job at Nabisco. I’ve heard several times that Mrs. Scully brought my mom to Victory Memorial Hospital for my birth. I don’t remember that.  I also have heard a story that Mrs. Scully once checked my head after she heard  I had fallen on my head in the basement  - right onto a hard cement basement floor. My head was soft. She got me to the hospital.

So Mr. and Mrs. Scully were very much part of our growing up years.

We went to their house to watch TV - especially the ball games before we had TV. At Christmas time I remember they had electric trains that went around the Christmas tree. We didn’t. We never did.

Well, one of their grandsons, Jack Scully, was All American football player at Notre Dame. He was a big guy. Notre Dame could use him this year. He then started for the Atlanta Falcons for about 11 years. Well, whenever the Falcons played on television, I saw crowds in the stands, players on the field, lots of people with numbers – but I found myself always looking for Number 64. I noticed Jack Scully. I didn’t notice the guy who held the clip board or Ipad for the coach.

When God watches us everyday, God notices the little guy, the little gal, the Anawim. God sees everyone of us – especially the unnoticed by everyone else.

ART FINAN

A priest named Art Finan once gave a sermon at St. Michael’s Church in West End, N.J. His sermon was on today’s readings and every time I read these readings I remember what happened after that Mass – a Mass I wasn’t even at. I was having lunch with some people who went to that Mass and they were talking about the sermon that Father Art Finan had preached. He told them about the Anawim. I stole his sermon thought secondhand and you’re hearing it today. He said that the Anawim were like crumbs - the iddy bitty crumbs that fall off our toast onto a kitchen counter or onto the floor. The Anawim are the crumbs – especially those on the floor. We step on them.

God doesn’t. God is concerned with them. He sent the prophets to tell people to be aware of the unnoticed – the rejected.

He sent his son to reach out to them. He sends us to be for them.

JOE ADAMEC

A few years ago a Redemptorist priest named Joe Adamec died. I followed him after he got off the job as novice master for our students. I didn’t know that was going to happen when I once found myself dropping into our parish of St. Mary’s in Buffalo, N.Y. on my way somewhere.

Then, I found out at supper, it was Joe’s last night at St. Mary’s Parish there – before he left for Wisconsin to be Novice Master.

After supper, Joe asked me, “Do you want to see the parish?” I said, “Good.” It was raining. It was night. But he still gave me a great tour of the parish.  

The parish was in one of the toughest sections of Buffalo. Well, we went into bars and everyone said, “Hi Father Joe.” We went into this three story abandoned house. The roof had a big hole in it and I could see the night and the rain coming through. But I didn’t notice this guy living in a corner in some cardboard boxes. Joe knew he was there., “Hi Father Joe.”

9 years later I ended up taking Joe’s place as novice master and he went to our parish in Boston – that’s a small town in New England – that has people making lots of noise lately.

Years later, another priest, also named Father Joe, told me that he was covering two hospitals:  one for Father Joe Adamec and the other for this other priest for two weeks – so they could go on vacation. This second Joe, Father Joe Krastel - now here at St. Mary’s, Annapolis, told me that he goes to the first hospital, the one which Father Joe visited and it was the Haitian floor cleaners who kept asking, “Where’s Father Joe?”

Joe Krastel laughed, because when he covered the other hospital for this other priest, it was only the pretty nurses who kept asking where this other priest was.

Whom do we see? Whom do we notice?

MY DAD

I think of my dad. He had a fourth or fifth grade education.  One of his wonderful traits was his profound respect for all people – especially the little guy. I remember vividly him talking about the different men he worked with at Nabisco – those running the high lo’s, those running the elevators, etc. He would always be talking about these fellow workers with a rich smile on his face - people at work who fascinated him. Looking back, I loved that quality in my dad. He noticed the little people.

TODAY’S GOSPEL

In today’s gospel, Jesus notices the Little Guy – Zacchaeus – up a tree and invites himself into Zacchaeus’ home. The town knew who Zacchaeus was – and they didn’t like him. As we read the Gospel of Luke – as well as the other gospels, we’re often surprised at the people Jesus noticed. It’s often people nobody else noticed.

As people read our gospel: the gospel according to Jane or Sarah or Evelyn or Larry or Bernie or Walter, who are the people they read that we notice?

CONCLUSION

The title of my homily is, “Noticing the Little Guy, the Little Gal, the Anawim.”

This week, let’s notice one another – especially the Little Ones.

Noticing is the step before loving one another. We have to notice each other first.



This week stop a few times before you take your next step. Notice who is around – who is surrounding you. Is there anyone you’re not noticing? Is there anyone you’re treating as a crumb – those whom you think are crummy – and invite them down off the tree or up from the floor and invite yourself into their life. Amen.  

October 29, 2016


EMPTY

He seemed to be so full of
himself - brag, brag, brag -
that he was scared  to make
room for anyone else in his life.

She seemed to be so full of
emptiness - quiet, quiet, quiet -
that she was scared to make
room for anyone else in her life.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Friday, October 28, 2016

October 28, 2016

BREAD

Bread, broken, sliced, cut, shared….
Sitting here with you at this table ….
With you, with words, with wine ….
This is me…. This is my body ….
And even if you crucify me on some
bad Friday, I’ll make it a good Friday
with love, forgiveness, and resurrection.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Thursday, October 27, 2016

October 27, 2016



WHAT’S WORSE?

What’s worse? Going to your grandson’s
football game and they lose 41-0 or to
find out the team that beat them lost the
weekend before 41-7? You’re kidding!

What’s worse? Getting your car washed
and it rains on the way home?

What’s worse? Someone gives you a
5 pound box of dark chocolates and you
have to offer them to others because you
have serious and well established diabetes?

What’s worse? You quit a job you love
but they don’t pay enough. You get a new
job that pays you a  lot more - but then 
the first job calls and offers you a lot more
than what your new job pays you?

What’s worse? Your granddaughter has
twin girls and they name them after his
mom and her mother - both of whom
you can’t stand and don’t understand?

What’s worse? You don’t leave home
and you don’t mess up - and your younger
younger brother does - comes home -
is forgiven and he gets the hug and the
banquet and the dance and you feel you
never got nothing - no how - and never.

What’s worse? You work in the vineyard
from 9 to 5 - and the other guys and gals
only put in an hour or two and get the same
pay as you get? No way any of this is fair!



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

October 26, 2016

THE  OUR  FATHER 


It was the year 3016 and nobody seemed to
know the ancient prayer: the Our Father.

Nobody…. Nobody…. Nobody…. Nobody
was aware of the prayer: the Our Father.

Nobody was praying…. Nobody was aware of
the beauty of daily bread and daily forgiveness.

Nobody was aware of the Kingdom
and working to bring it about each day.

Nobody made holy, hallowed or called out
on earth or into the heavens, “Our Father….”

Then someone found a copy of this
ancient prayer and things began to change.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016
[I got this impression at a funeral lately.
I said, “Our Father” and nobody seemed

aware or dared to say, “Our Father….”]

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

October 25, 2016



GOING TO CHURCH,
GOING TO COMMUNION

He never went to church, okay,

he went for Christmas and Easter.

She always went to Mass, okay,

sometimes she also went on weekdays.

They were married many years ago and

because of her, he started going to Mass.

He became a regular, in fact going

two times a week when he retired.

She stopped going to church.

He couldn't figure out why.

Both need to sit down at a table and

go to communion with each other.



© Andy Costello, Reflections 2016



THREE THINGS I KNOW


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this 30th Tuesday in Ordinary Time is, “Three Things I Know” or “Three Things I Learned.”

When I read today’s readings - a scripture passage hit me: but I don’t know where to find that scripture passage, so maybe I read it in some other book and it isn’t in the Bible. I don’t know.

Someone said somewhere, “Three things I know….”

So I looked up that phrase last night in a Bible Concordance as well as on Google and found possible possibilities.

The Book of Proverbs - chapter 30 has some numerical proverbs. Maybe that’s what I was remembering.

For example it has this text: “There are 3 things beyond my comprehension, 4 indeed, that I haven’t figured out: how an eagle makes its way through the skies, how a snake slides its way over a rock, how a ship makes its way through high seas and how a man deals with a younger woman.”

For example, “the earth trembles at 3 things - 4 which it cannot endure: a slave who becomes a king; a complainer who has had too much to eat, a jilted girl wed at last, and a slave-girl who supplants her mistress.”

LISTS

Next I found mention of making lists. Some people like lists; some don’t.

How about you?

If you like them, here’s an exercise various folks can do today. Jot down 3 things you know. Have other family members or office workers do the same thing and then compare what each has come up with.

I also noticed that this simple exercise can be done by coming up with 5 things I’ve learned or 7 things or 10 things I learned or know.

TODAY’S READINGS

Today’s readings triggered this thought so here are 3 things I learned from them.

From the first reading and then thinking about marriages that I know, I learned that those with a good marriage know what it takes to have a good marriage - and today’s text would not cause problems for them.

Today’s gospel triggered the thought that one knows when to use mustard - when mustard is used and how mustard makes a difference. So too compliments. They are the mustard or the mayonnaise on the sandwich called “conversations”.

Today’s gospel also tells us bread doesn’t rise without leaven - so too a Christian life - without the bread of life - without being Christian leven.

MY 3 LEARNINGS OR 3 THINGS I KNOW

The title of my homily is, “Three Things I know.”  They are the things I learned about life.

I’m asking you to do your homework on this - so I did my homework last night. Here are 3 things I know.  Tomorrow my list might differ. The value of doing this now - putting them down on paper - pushes one to do some thinking.

So my 3 would be:
·       Nice makes things nice and nasty makes things nasty - so it’s nicer to be nicer than to be nasty.
·       We might be using the same words - and our dictionaries might be the same - but words coming out of our mouth are different than those same words coming from another.
·       There are consequences - and there are consequences from those consequences and on and on and on.

CONCLUSION

That’s homework for today: jot down 3 things you know - 3 things you learned.