Wednesday, April 15, 2020




SCRIPTURE  CLING

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily for this Easter Wednesday  is,  “Scripture Cling.”

We priests  are in the business of Scripture Cling.

We know what static cling is. Cloth sticks to cloth and sometimes to skin.

We try to make scriptures cling to life’s experiences and life’s issues.

When we read the scriptures for the next day – in order to come up with a homily – all kinds of past sermons – come clinging with the words – we just read.

These words and phrases have lots of scripture cling:

Salt - Salt of the earth,
Mile - Extra mile,
Cheek –Turn the other cheek,
Good – Good Samaritan,
Cross – Take up your cross.
Rule  - Golden Rule
Judge – Judge not – but Judge Judy is moving in.
Seven – Forgive 70 x 7 times.
Stone – Let him or her without sin cast the first stone. –
Caesar – Salad and Render to Caesar the things …..
Two cents – Put your two cents in..
Martha -  Martha and Mary
Water – Walk on it or change water into wine.

TODAY’S GOSPEL

Today’s gospel –Luke 24: 13-35 -  tells the Emmaus story – and we know it by heart – maybe using it as the talking that goes on at every funeral – people working their way and walking through the  stories of the person who died  to try to figure out the other person’s life.

I remember a high school retreat where the kids told me about a nun they nicknamed, Sister Mary Emmaus  - because in every religion class she brought up the Emmaus story.

There’s a great Community Life question: What scripture story, line, passage, clings to us. Tell us the story.  Which scripture passage do we own.

I remember Frank Miles -  a Jesuit – who told me he owned about 75 scripture texts.

He didn’t use the word “cling” but those 75 stories clung to him.

TODAY’S FIRST READING

Today’s first reading – Acts 3: 1-10 – triggers for me a story about Father  Matt Meaghan.  A guy named Louis E. Pirnak was being made a Redemptorist Oblate - up in our church, Most Holy Redeemer, Manhattan, Lower East Side. Father Matt was preaching at a Mass for the occasion.  Matt chose today’s first reading from Acts – saying Louis was very generous. “Silver and gold Louis had and he gave generously to the Redemptorists and to a lot of other people.”

Check out the organ in our chapel downstairs.  It was donated to San Alfonso Retreat House in memory of Louis E. Pirnak and Anna Pirnak.

I remember all this whenever I hear this first reading and the words from Peter to the crippled man,  “Silver and gold I don’t have, but what do have, I give you: in the name of Jesus Christs the Nazorean, rise and walk.”

CONCLUSION

Now that’s what I mean by "Scripture Cling."



April  15,  2020


POWERLESSNESS

Me:
The power of me
The power of she
The power of he
The power to be
The power to become
a  We
and together
to
discover the power
of knowing we are powerless
in the long run.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


April   15,   2020




Thought   for  Today 

“Do  not  be discouraged if your children reject your advice.  Years later they will offer it to their own  children.”

April 14,  2020







PRIEST

Lights on the
other shore ….
Like in The Great Gatsby
people eventually
wonder what’s going on 
over there ….
They get beyond thinning hair -
clothes – cars – champagne –
to deeper stuff.
Somehow I got
the job to tell them
what’s over there.
What do I know?
“God help me!”


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

April 14,  2020




Thought   for   Today

“With money in your pocket, you are wise, and you are  handsome, and you sing well too.” 

Jewish Proverb

Monday, April 13, 2020

April  13, 2020


RHODE ISLAND RAIN


It rained and rained,
feeling like it was raining 
non-stop for 3 days  - now ….

At some point  mumbling,
“Too much. Too much.”
“Enough! Enough!”

10 years ago we were
standing in ruin and rot -
with mop and squeegee  ….

Too many memories -
sloshing around our basement…..
holding ruined pictures and trophies …

Cursing prayers - bloop-bloop -
up out of the depths of all this water –
all this rain – all this ruin.

A sacred place - a basement -
in a yellow wooden  building
was gone for good – for bad.

Not that far from a river
in a remembered moment
in Rhode Island – March 2010.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

April  13,  2020



Thought for today

“I  believe  in the incomprehensibility of God.” 

Honore  de  Balzac 
[1799-1850]