INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily is, “Mom - Ents.”
It’s from the word “MOMENTS”
- with a dash after the first three letters MOM - then the ents.
My overarching theme is that on Mother’s Day - WE - including our moms - think about moms in
general and OUR own mom in
particular - or our mom - herself - thinking about her life as a mom.
KAIROS AND
CHRONOS
I want to point out in this homily that there are two
types of time according to the ancient Greeks. We learned this when we studied
the New Testament.
They are indicated by two Greek words for time: Chronos
and Kairos.
We might know “chronos” from Chronos - a brand name for a watch - or the word “chronology”.
Our St. Mary’s High School kids can make a retreat at the
end of their Junior year or during their senior year called the Kairos Retreat.
Chronos means ordinary time and Kairos means special time
- moments different from the everyday.
Not all days are the same. All have 24 hours - but all days
are not the same. Mother’s Day is different from the Wednesday in the week
after Thanksgiving or the third Thursday after Father’s Day.
Kairos moments are moments when time sort of stopped -
moments where we had a choice to make key decisions where we have the
opportunity to change or we experience a surprise that changes our lives.
On a Kairos Retreat the hope is that these 4 days - will
be a decisive time in a kid’s life. I always remember a comment a guy made in a
eulogy about a friend of his who died in his mid-forties of a sudden heart
attack. The friend was standing here in this pulpit and said that Tim’s life
changed wonderfully for the better because of a Kairos Retreat when they were
in high school.
A KAIROS MOMENT
FOR A MOM
It could be the moment when our mom heard she was going
to be a mom for the first time. It could be the moment we were born and she saw
for the first time who it was who was kicking her. It could be a moment when our mom thought
about her life - and she was overwhelmed with the blessing she was feeling at
the moment.
Our mom could sit down at a computer or with a pad and
jot down the 10 most important moments of her life - so called Kairos Moments -
so called moments when she changed. She could put them on a time line. She could rate the importance of each date -
1 being the highest moment.
EINSTEIN
When Albert Einstein was talking about the relativity of
time he could be quite complex - and lots of people didn’t get it. But when he
said when you’re with your boyfriend or girlfriend time can fly - but when
you’re in a boring class in school -
time can drag like a snail on its tail.
My favorite saying about the relativity of time is, “How
long a minute takes depends on which side of the bathroom door you’re on.”
One I made up this morning would go like this: “The
relativity of time: depends upon which relative we’re with.”
SO BACK TO
MOTHERS
So on Mother’s Day moms see this day different than
others.
I assume the number one sentence mom’s appreciate today
is a sentence of just two words: “Thank you!”
I assume the number one hope from all mothers has just
three words, “Make me proud.”
I assume the 4 main places that love Mother’s Day are
card shops, florists, restaurants, and gas stations. What am I missing?
EXERCISES
We were told if you hear something in a sermon or a talk
or you read something in a book, use it immediately - otherwise you might
forget it.
So I heard a wonderful exercise at a workshop I recently
went to. A poet in Washington D.C. talked about the Elevator Exercise. You take
your present age - and draw a building with that many floors. Put an elevator in it.
Next get into the elevator - and push the button for any
floor.
You might be 39 or 75, but you can get off on the 16th
floor.
Get off and walk around. Look around. Where were
you? See everyone. See everything. Jot down the surprises.
Grace Cavalieri - the poet - I think she said she was in
her 80’s - said it was a great way to come up with ideas for poems.
This morning I was thinking, “What would it be like to
sit down with your mom and take a lot of elevator rides with her.”
Let her walk around the 18th floor - when she
was 18 or 28 with you.
Have a spiral note book or a recorder and get the
details.
I did this with my dad before he died - yellow legal pad.
I did this with my mom before she died - this time with a
small tape recorder.
She took me to many stops on her elevator - and this was
before I had heard the elevator metaphor. I got her life on precious tape - at
the age of 82. She was still working at the time. I’ve mentioned this a few
times - but two weeks later she was killed in a hit and run accident on her way
to church - and I have her precious voice - with laughter and tears - her life
and her stories - on tape. I haven’t cried yet - which surprises me - but I
have cried at other deaths.
SUGGESTION
As a closing comment or suggestion, from experience I
know sitting with a mom or dad - Father’s Day is next month - get their story
on all its floors.
Record it. Jot it down - watch them smile. Watch they cry.
Simply take some elevator rides with mom or dad and ask them to tell you the 10 top mom - ents or mom - events of their life.
++++++oooooo++++++ooooo++++++
PAINTING ON TOP:
"Climbing Mother" by Brian Kershishik