14th Sunday, Ordinary Time, July 5, 2020

 

Rosemary's Blessing

Lord,

May we never take our freedom for granted

and help us to strive so that this same freedom

may be experienced by everyone in our country,

especially the poor and the oppressed,

and eventually by all humankind.

Andrew Greeley   A Book of Irish American Blessings and Prayers  

 

 

Thanks to the Team

Music,  Ben & Shonda

Readers,  John & Mary Jane & Buddy, the candle blesser

Gospel & Homily, John Cade

Eucharistic Prayer, John Cade

The Magic Zoom makers, Mike & Richard

Final Blessing, Rosemary

 

Statue of liberty (2)

 

 

 

Download Readings Week 14

 

 

Please Remember these special people:

For Cindy facing a procedure Monday morning;   For our Bill;  For Esparzas, Frank & Mary, who lost their son Jim to sepsis;   For all the medical personnel struggling to treat the tsunami of sick people, in particular, locally, Cindy's staff at Presby, Dallas and at Frisco Presby, the mother of Harper and Betsy, Kendle, working in labor & delivery;   For Joe Hogan with cancer;  For Loretta's aunt Alicia;    For Sydney;  & For Sir Charlie & Jan;  Shonda's mom;   for Michelle;  

For Jackie's mom;  For a friend, a neighbor, & a doctor, Karen, with brain cancer; For Rick Turner searching for a kidney donor, Type O neg; For Meredith, cancer free.;    For Hue;  For John O'Donnell;    For Dee, and for her daughter, Lisa; For John Schanot's continued health;  For Anthony & Sabrina;    For a young man who is suffering from depression;  John Cade's mother in law, Kalliopi Piskiouli and Lambrini;  for Virginia Mattingly

 

 

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Richard & Mike, this Sunday's producers.

 

 

Birthdays:  Brent, 64; Paul Bieda, 59, Kim, Carol Eshelbrenner

Anniversaries:   Jan & Sir Charlie, 58th

 

Bieda

 

Sir Bieda, Is this what happens when you retire??

 

 

Community Finances, July 5, 2020

Expenses: $500.00 

Outreach   $100.00   (often for Souls Harbor, Legacy, etc.)

Thanks, Folks, for doing what you can.

 

 

Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.  Winston Churchill

 

 

John Cade's excellent homily

 

Homily: I want to thank Stack for making known to us the beauty and power of a Biblical verse in today’s Responsorial Psalm, “The Lord is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in kindness.” I now know that this same description of who God is, is also repeated in the Law of Moses, in the Prophets, and in other Psalms.   

  • In Exodus Ch 34 we hear that when Moses received the 10 commandments the Lord came down over Mt. Sinai in a cloud and said, The Lord the Lord, a merciful and gracious God, slow to anger and rich in kindness.”
  • In the Book of Numbers Ch 14, when the Israelites didn’t obey God’s commandments and just grumbled about life being difficult, God wanted to wipe them out, start all over and make Moses the head of an even greater nation. But Moses cried out quoting God with what he said about himself on Mt. Sinai, that ‘The Lord is slow to anger and rich in kindness.” 
  • At least three psalms repeat this description of God.

Psalm 86 says, “You, O Lord, are merciful and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in kindness.”

Today’s Psalm 103 says, “Merciful and gracious is the Lord, slow to anger and abounding in kindness.”

Psalm 145 says, “The Lord is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and of great kindness.”

  • The Prophet Joel Ch 2, says, “Gracious and merciful is God, slow to anger, rich in kindness.”
  • Finally, the funny little story of the Prophet Jonah. He was told by God to go to Nineveh and preach to the people that they better repent or in 40 days they would be destroyed. In Ch 4 Jonah says to God that the very reason he didn’t want to preach destruction to Nineveh and tried to run away, was because, “I knew that you are a gracious and merciful God, slow to anger and rich in kindness.”

 

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Mike checking out the production.

 

My household of three persons are, for the most part, keeping the quarantine, so there aren’t as many opportunities to see God show up in person through the mercy and kindness of others, though I see plenty of it on the news.  Here’s five instances I saw this verse, this definition of God, show up in others, all just this week:

  • I was struck again by the graciousness and kindness of our Mass team. The tech squad, e.g., brings some of their own computers, and other electronic stuff I wouldn’t understand, and patch it all together to ‘make community happen’ through this online Mass.
  • I went to get about a twice-a-month treat for me and Mama (what I call Kalliopi)—original chicken from KFC. I order the smallest bucket they have, 8 pieces which covers the protein part of two meals.  When I got to the window, the guy says, I have a recommendation—when you want the 8 piece, order the 10 piece special; and it costs less.  He did not have to tell me this little secret. 
  • Our AC guy came to perform a semi-annual check-up on our AC system. When he tested the unit’s cold air production he found it wanting and said he thought we’d need a pound of Freon @ $200/lb. But he stayed longer watching the gauge, and eventually said with a smile, “Well, waiting later, now it’s reading okay, so no added Freon is needed.”  He did not have to extend the time of his check-up.
  • Joey brought us some of the bulk vegetables she gets from an organic farm near Austin every week. She did not have to drive across town to bring us such a treat.
  • Finally, when Joey came, Leo was with her wearing a t-shirt that said on the front in big print, “A little kindness can change the world.” Hello!?  That inspired to recall how often others show up—in so many ways—wearing that Bible verse definition of God: The Lord is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in kindness.

When was the last time you saw this verse show up in another person, or in yourself?

 

 

 

Einstein 1

 

Similar Posts

  • Sunday Homily, October 15, 2017, 28th Ordinary Time

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    Welcome, Our Dearest Michelle.

     

    Readings:

    Isaiah 25,, 6-10,  On this mountain  the Lord will provide for all peoples.

    Psalm 23,  I shall live iin the house of the Lord all the days of my life.

    Phlippians 4, 12-14, 19-20,  I know how to llive in humble circumstances.

    Matthew 22, 1-14,  The king throws a wedding feast for his son. 

     

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    Welcome in, say our Dearest Tori & Zoe, and The Great Gilbert.

     

    Two beautiful readings this morning, Isaiah 25, and Psalm 23, The Lord is my Shepherd.

     

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    Our Dearest Candle Lighter of The Week, Emma.

     

    Isaiah observations:

    Who:  Any idea which Isaiah this is, 1, 2, or 3?   We had Isaiah 1 last week talking about the vineyard.  That was chapter 5.  Pretty easy to guess, Isaiah 1.  But, this is chapter 25.

    It seems out of character for Isaiah 1, who criticizes the people.  More like Isaiah 2, which John Cade loves and which we will read this Advent. 

    Remember Isaiah 1 is pre-Babylonian Captivity, around 555 before Christ.  This selection is a marvelous vision of peace and sensual satisfaction, one of my favorites.

    Yep, it is still Isaiah 1, all the way to chapter 39.  Basically he is saying that a great day will come, after you people have paid for your sinful, selfish ways. 

     

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    Does it get more beautiful than this, Beautiful Scene, Beautiful Couple.

     

     

    On this mountain the Lord will provide for all peoples, the Lord will wipe away the tears from every face.

    This morning, Folks, I would like to talk about this line in the context of our lives.

    Last week after having been privileged to take part in the beautiful wedding of Paul and Carrie on the very edge of the South Rim of Grand Canyon.  And after having the joy of sleeping in for a couple of mornings when the temperature was in the 30’s both outside and inside through our wide open glass door.  And after having spent one whole day just walking around and doing nothing, a very rare event in our lives. 

    After being moved by all this, we turned on the radio in our rental car early Saturday morning to begin our 3 hour drive back to the  airport in Phoenix.  Just catching up on current news.  I was immediately depressed and even angry, which is pretty rare for me. 

     

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    Communion on the South Rim.
     

     

    I have caught myself here a few times lately and have decided I do not want to be here.  So I returned to a decision I made to simply turn it off and focus on the beauty and how the Lord provides. 

    Let me give you 4 little examples on which I am still dwelling here at home.

    First, I was touched by the example of lots of the tourists around the South Rim.   There is a shuttle bus system on the South Rim, three routes, one east, one west, and one in the center.  The west bus and the center bus are new for me since I came here in the ‘90’s.

     

     

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    The South Rim Wedding.

     

     

    Rosemary & I took them all and occasionally they were full, especially the west bus.  One time I am seated and the aisle is full of standing people.  So I get up and offer my seat to somebody.  After I stand up I happen to look toward the back of the bus.  What do I see?  A half dozen other guys were all getting up.  Many of them were Japanese. 

    Rosemary even was bummed later in the day because some guy got up and offered her his seat.  “He must think I’m an old lady,” she grumps to me later.

     

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    The Stack Wedding Tree

     

    Two more neat events took place on our flight experience.  First, at our SWST gate there was a special desk with 3 ladies.  We were at the end of a long corridor and probably 200 passengers were waiting for flights to Dallas, San Francisco, & two others. 

    One of the girls started talking to the mass of people and then asked, “Anybody celebrating a birthday today?”  Across from us Isabella, a shy girl about 11 put up her hand.  The SWST girl got the whole gang to sing to her and then gave her a $25 gift certificate.  Then the SWST girl went through about a dozen trivia question with $25 certificates for the winners.  It was delightful.

     

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    The Best Team, Georgie, Buddy, & Leo.

     

     

    Then on the plane which had come in from somewhere like Jackson Hole, guess whom we saw, Patricia & Fred.   Guess what, the whole plane gave them a rousing round of applause for their 7th anniversary.  Patricia must have told the flight attendants.  Who else?

    Besides these events, blowing me away most of all, the wedding.  Beautiful place and beautiful people.  It was The Best.

    And just to show Paul & Carrie how appreciative I am and we are for the memories, and that I told them that I would give them a special gift when we got home, I have The Gift.  A young Shumard Red Oak, a Stack Wedding Tree. 

     

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    Only One Cupcake today??   Yep.

     

    Let me remind them, because they have probably already forgotten, the little tree says two things when you look at it.  First, are you having fun together?  From my experience, if you are having fun in your marriage, you won’t end up in my office. 

    Secondly, it says that this old geezer truly loves you.

    Thanks for The Memories.

     

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    Number 1 of 2 elevations.

  • Sunday Homily 11-9-08, Lateran Basilica

    Readings:  Ezekiel 47, 1-12; Psalm 46; 1 Corinthians 3, 9-17; John 2, 13-22

    Mass 11-9

    Why the Lateran Basilica?

    If you are like me, when you heard that today we celebrate the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica in Rome, you want to say, "What??"  "What has that got to do with me, with my life?"  I even got a call from our man Federico asking if we were having our Mass at the Lateran Basilica today.  It would have been fun.

    I do not remember doing any research on this celebration in the past.  This is due partly, I discovered, to the fact that the celebration always takes place on November 9, which does not show up on Sunday very often.  My research did give me an idea, however.  Namely, that we are exploring our roots today, like we search out our family trees.  Today we explore an ancient, prominent ancestor of our religious family tree.  Two observations: the meaning & the story.

    1.  First, the meaning of 'basilica.'  In Roman times a basilica was a large rectangular hall where the Romans met for business or meetings.

    From what I can discover, when a church or chapel is designated by Rome a basilica, it is an honorary title, like a priest being named a monsignor.  There are five or six levels of basilicas & churches.  On the most elemental level is the church or chapel, like St. Mark's or All Saints.  Then comes a minor basilica.  This could be like the Basilica of Guadalupe in Mexico City.  The first basilica in the U.S. is St. Mary's in Minneapolis and it is, I think, a minor basilica.  Above a minor basilica is the bishop's cathedral.  For instance, while Mexico City has the Basilica of Guadalupe, the Bishop's cathedral is in the Zocalo, the center of the city.  The cathedral may simultaneously be a minor basilica and it is where the bishop has his throne and special altar.

    Next comes the papal basilica, which has a throne & altar that only the pope uses and which is used by others with the pope's permission.  Then a major basilica of which there are only 4 in the world, all in Rome, Mary Major, Paul outside the Walls, St. Peter's, and our subject today, the Lateran. 

    Finally we have at the top, an arch-basilica.  One only in the whole world.  The Lateran.  Why?  Age & historical significance. 

    McGraths 11-9

    2. The story.  In the time of the Caesars & Jesus the place where the Lateran is had two buildings.  One was a fort & residence for the special calvary that defended the emperor.  These guys chose to defend the emperor against Constantine around 300.  He, of course, won and destroyed their fort.

    Next to the fort was a palace owned by the Lateran family, the members of which worked as administrators in the government.  Constantine married a woman named Fausta and with her came the palace.  Constantine did not need it, so he gave it to the Christians to whom he granted freedom to worship in 313, a big date in Christian history.

    Legend had it that Peter had said Masses around the area and he had used a table that still existed 300 years later.  The Christians built a church where the fort was, placing in it the table Peter had used.  They used the Lateran palace as a residence. This church, therefore, became the first Christian church in the whole world.  It was not built over a tomb like St. Peter's or St. Paul's, but it had the table. 

    Around this same time along comes Constantine's pious mother, whom I mentioned recently, because she had discovered where Jesus' cross stood and built a church there, the Church of the Sepulcher. She also found what she thought were the steps in Pilate's house which Jesus had climbed for his trial.  She moved the marble steps to Rome and set them up in the Lateran, where they are today. This is around 313 A.D., the famous year. 

    Consequently, for the next 1000 years the popes lived in the Lateran Palace and used the church as their cathedral.  Want to know what happened at the end of 1000 years?  The Avignon Papacy: for about a century, 1300 to 1400, the popes lived in Avignon, France.  With two, sometimes three rival popes, this is a story worth telling, but another Sunday. 

    When the popes returned to Rome around 1400 they continued to use the Lateran Basilica as their primary church, the bishop of Rome's cathedral, but they lived at St. Peter's because the Lateran Palace had deteriorated badly in their 100 year absence.  The popes still reside at the Vatican Palace and still use the Lateran Basilica as their #1 Cathedral.

    The Lateran Basilica was sacked by the barbarians in the 5th century, destroyed by an earthquake in 900, burned twice in the 15th century, and last remodeled in 1730.  In the 10th century it was dedicated to John the Baptist, in the 13th century dedicated to John the Evangelist, and since it had also been dedicated to Christ, its official title as the mother of all churches in the world is the Lateran Basilica of Christ our Redeemer, John the Baptist, and John the Evangelist.

    So what?  What is this?  Churches or temples or sacred places go back to the dawn of our evolution as humans.  Outside Mexico City are the temples of Teotijuacan,'  whose builders not even the Aztecs of 1521 seemed to know (the year the Spaniards & Cortes arrived).  In Egypt up the Nile River are the temples of Luxor, near which was found the tomb of Tutankhamen.  These temples go back 2000 years B.C. 

    Churches used to be sanctuaries.  You could run there if the law was after you.  Today the sanctuary is more spiritual and psychological. We go into such a sanctuary to calm our spirit, to converse with God, to regain perspective on life.  Granted these temples can equally be found outside, like in Yosemite.  I find there the same peace and perspective.

    Tom 11-9

    I also think it is fun and fascinating to look back at our religious family tree, to get in touch with our Christian roots. 

    Today we celebrate an ancient ancestor in the Lateran Basilica.  It has been a sanctuary of peace for many of our ancestors. 

    Where do you find your sanctuary of peace and perspective?

    AUDIO:  http://mysite.verizon.net/reso7rjy/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/2008-11-09.mp3

    Picture 1: Mass with T.J. serving

    Picture 2: Bob & Jackie McGrath (54th Anniversary) and Maggie McGrath & Chloe Zurchin

    Picture 3: Tom Quinn and his granddaughter

     

     

  • Sunday Homily, January 10, 2016, The Baptism

    Readings:

    Isaiah  40, 1-5, 9-11,  Go up to a high mountain, Zion, cry out at the top of your voice.   (another excellent  reading, this time from Isaiah II)

    Psalm 104,  Bless the Lord My Soul.

    Pope Francis, Laudato Si:

    A Reading from Pope Francis’ Letter on the Environment:

    When we speak of the “environment”, what we really mean is a relationship existing between nature and the society which lives in it.

    Nature, the environment, cannot be regarded as something separate from ourselves, a mere setting in which we live. We are part of nature, included in it and in constant interaction with it. 

     

    Zoe 1

    Zoe say, "Welcome, Everybody, it is sunny and warm here."

     

    It is critical to seek comprehensive solutions which consider the interactions within natural systems themselves and with social systems.

    We are faced not with two separate crises, one environmental and the other social, but rather with one complex crisis which is both social and environmental.

     Strategies for a solution demand an integrated approach: combating poverty, restoring dignity to the excluded, and protecting nature and our entire environment.

    The words of Pope Francis.

    Luke 3, 15-16, 21-22, The baptism of Jesus.

     

    Angela 1

    Angela, too, says, "Hi, "Everybody, welcome in." 

     

    Baptism & Original Sin: traditional & contemporary theology 

    Traditional theology on baptism & original sin: 

    1. Why we baptized: purification & removal of original sin inherited by babies.  Baby was a sinner & would go to Limbo forever if not baptized before dying.     
    2. Original sin: the 1 sin of Eve & Adam, the eating of an apple, ruptured the relationship between God & Humans. 

     

    B & L 2

    Two of our more studious community members, Brandon & Leo.

     

    Contemporary theology on baptism & original sin: 

    1. Original sin: (first) 
    2. no original sin  
    3. Genesis story of the fall is allegory, not fact  
    4. from Darwin's Origin of the Species the idea has developed that in our human infancy, we needed certain behaviors to survive.  For instance, killing another person & stealing (like food), to survive.  As our ancestors formed communities, norms of social behavior emerged, for example, the 10 commandments.   
    5. St. Augustine, ca. 400: 

    –A major, if not the major influence on Christian/Catholic theology of original sin and human nature from his time to today 

    –After conversion from a rather lusty life at 32, he had a pessimistic view of human nature, different from early Christianity.  This is part of the background to why priests were supposed to be celibate.

     

    Brandon, Leo, & Candles 1

    Leo & Brandon, the Candle Lighters of The Week.

     

    –John Chrysostom, bishop of Constantinople (Istanbul), Pelagius, a British monk, & Julian of Eclanum, Italy, a bishop, all found nature good and fought against Augustine

    –Augustine used all means to vanquish his opponents with their positive view that nature was good, even to sending a gift of horses to the pope to influence his decision.  Augustine won.  

     Why we baptize today: (using the contemporary theology)

    1. To celebrate a new life
    2. To ritually & formally welcome the new person into a family, a community, and to a God famous for love and acceptance
    3. To cleanse after the journey

     

    Ladies

    Anybody know who these characters are?  At Juliet's Restaurant?

     

     

    The Beauty of Little Kids is for Real

    I would like to continue to talk about why we baptize little kids, at least here in our community.    I mentioned that what we are celebrating is new life. Moreover, we are welcoming the child into a family, a community, and a God who loves that child and thinks the child is the best, as good as it gets. 

    Sometimes we get distracted and don’t see this.  The child may be crying a lot or we may still think of the child as a sinner.  Appearances distract us and we judge negatively. 

     

    Music 1

    The Best, Shonda, Bethany, Ray,  David.

     

    This is pretty common and I have two examples, one of which you ladies who went to the luncheon will recognize.  Rosemary shared it.

    It happened this way.  Rosemary was going to get something at Kohls this past week.  She gets out of the car in the parking lot and starts walking in.  Ahead of her a young guy with pants hanging low in the current fashion steps ahead of her. 

    As they walk toward the store, he is working at putting on a belt. 

    I admit that I don’t find this custom attractive when I see it in guys, which is exactly why young guys do it. 

     

    Team 1

    The Team cleaning up after communion.

     

    Anyway, he finally gets his belt on and they arrive at the entrance door about the same time, he in front, Rosemary behind. 

    Guess what happened.  The guy opened the door.  Then he stepped back and invited Rosemary to go in.  As Rosemary told me and probably told you ladies at Urban Rio, she was humbled and grateful.  She had misjudged the guy.

    A second event happened to us both this week.  We have a nice mail man, Doug, easy going, faithful, and friendly.  We are all on first name basis.

     

    Elevation 1

    Elevation.

     

    At Christmas we stuck a thanks note and a $20 in an envelope for him.  Guess what happened.  We get a hand written thank you note and card. 

    I was so touched.  In fact, I felt pretty miserly giving him only $20.  I was touched because I did not expect him to show gratitude in such a formal way.  Rosemary said it is a sign that his mother trained him well.  I remember my mother repeatedly saying to me, “Always thank every person who gives you something.”

    In one week here are two people who have caused Rosemary & me to misjudge them. 

    Babies and little kids can be misjudged.  That kid cries too much.  That kid screams too much.  Maybe the child is hurting.

     

    Offertory

    Offertory, Bill & Zaile, Lynda & Tom.

     

    This is why here I try to make our community especially welcoming and loving.  I want all these kids, Genevieve & Leo, Brandon, Cole, Harper, Emma & Zoe, Buddy & Tori, all of these and the others who come occasionally to know & feel that they are loved, welcomed, and treasured.  They are good, beautiful, and a gift to me and all of us.

    Misjudge anybody this week? 

  • Sunday Homily, April 8, 2007 – Easter Sunday

    Readings: Acts 10, 34-43; Psalm 118; Colossians 3, 1-4; John 20, 1-9.

    An Easter Story (Kids Only?)

    There is a little girl named Meredith. She had a dog named Amy who after a good life died when Meredith was 4. Meredith loved Amy and wanted to write a note to God to make sure He knew she had arrived.

    Her mother, being a good mom, wrote down what Meredith wanted to say, put the letter in an envelope along with 2 pictures so God could identify Amy, and sealed it with Meredith’s return address. Two stamps were applied because the letter had a long way to go. It was addressed: God, Heaven.

    A week or so later on a Saturday afternoon, Meredith returned home with her mom. On the porch was package wrapped in gold paper addressed to Meredith. Return address: God, Heaven.

    Meredith ran to her room and opened the package. Inside was a small book, When Your Pet Dies, Meredith’s letter and pictures, and on pink paper a handwritten note.

    Dearest Meredith,

    I am sure you will be happy to know that Amy arrived here safe, sound, and happy. Your pictures were especially helpful and I recognized her immediately. She is now with me all the time.

    You might also be happy to know that she is no longer sick and stiff. Rather her spirit is so frisky and playful that I cannot keep up with her.

    Since as spirits we do not have bodies and therefore don’t have pockets, I am returning your helpful pictures and beautiful letter. They may provide good memories some day.

    Thank you for such a thoughtful letter. I hope the book helps. Thanks also to your wonderful mom for helping you with the letter. Did you know I chose her especially for you.

    One of my angels is helping me with this letter. As God I enjoy hanging around heaven and wherever there is love. I bless you and love you more every day.

    Signed, God & one of his special helpers (who wrote this letter when God told her the words to write).

    What is Your Easter Story?

    Download the homily as an mp3 file.

  • Sunday Homily, November 17, 2013, 33rd Ordinary Time C

     

    Readings: 

    Malachi 3, 19-20, There will arise the sun of justice.

    Psalm 98,  Lord, when your glory appears, my joy will be full.

    2 Thessalonians 3, 7-12,  Night and day we worked.

    Luke  215-19, Nation will rise against nation.

     

    Emma 11-17-13

    Emma says, "Welcome, Everybody."

     Introduction: 

    Before the Exile the OT prophets warned the Israelites of the punishment they were about to receive for not being obedient to the Commandments.  After returning from their exile to find their temple, homes and fields in destruction they were exhorted by the OT prophets to restore and rebuild and purify themselves before God.

    The written words of the very small book of the prophet Malachi anticipated the coming of a messenger to prepare their hearts to welcome and put into practice the life-giving and love-giving words and actions of the Messiah. 

    Our reading from St. Paul’s second letter to the Thessalonians continues this theme: the virtuous will be known by their words and actions.

     

    Leo 11-17-13

    Leo, also, says, "Welcome, Everybody."

    Homily:

    When our first reading begins with these words, ‘a day is coming,’ it is speaking of the Day of Judgment to separate those whose life and love giving words and actions have served God and neighbor from those who failed to do so.

    The Prophet Malachi implies that those who have served God and neighbor have done so naturally because they have been purified [by the Spirit].  Indeed, Jesus’ words in the Matthew gospel to those who have shown mercy and justice invite them to enter the kingdom of God prepared for them from the foundation of the world.

     

    Kevin A 11-17-13

    Kevin getting ready to help.

     

    They are told that they had clothed him when he was naked, given water and food when he was hungry and thirsty.  The just are perplexed; they ask him ‘when did we clothe you or visit you when you were sick or in prison?’ 

    The Lord replies, ‘when you did it to the least of those around you, you did it to me and for me through the Spirit.’ 

     

    Beginning 11-17-13

    And we begin…

     

    In today’s gospel his disciples ask Jesus when this Day of Judgment was coming. The gospels tell us that only the Father knows the day when his Son, the bridegroom, will come for his bride; but Jesus replies that those who have endured persecution and have chosen to be led by the Holy Spirit will recognize the signs in the heaven. Then they are to raise their heads knowing that their redemption is at hand.

     

    Mike 11-17-13

    Mike homilizing.

     

    Ten years ago I spent some time examining some early Christian writings that were not included in the NT.  I came across a writing that was done by a 22 year old, well educated, young woman named Perpetua living in the north African city of Carthage in the year 203 AD.

     She was writing about herself during the last days of her life. She had just finished the final stage of the catechumenate when she had been arrested for being a Christian.  [The Romans in Carthage needed some Christians to throw to the Lions on the Emperor’s Birthday.]

     

    Georgie 11-17-13

    Georgie also getting ready to help.

     

    Perpetua was baptized as she waited to be put into prison. Her father came to visit her, begging that she tell the judge that she was not a Christian.  She pointed to a pot near her asking him to tell her what it was.  Then she said to him that in like manner she could not be anything other than what she was, ‘a Christian.’ 

    With her head raised high, she identified herself as Christian before the judge.  She described prison as a dark hole, but she prayed for endurance with three others who were catechumen; including her maid, Felicity, who was expecting a child.  

     

    Cowboy Cole 11-17-13

    Cowboy Cole almost ready to ride in on his horse.

     

    On the night before they were taken to the arena to be thrown to the wild animals during the festivities these martyrs were given their last meal.  These four Christians called it their love feast; they were receiving the Bread blessed and broken.   By no other name did they want to be called.    Let us cherish the Christian name to which each of us has been called.

     

    The Girls 11-17-13

    The Girls plus one, Emma, Zoe, Torri, and Buddy

     

     

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    Sunday Homily 2-21-10, Lent 1

    Readings: Deuteronomy 26, 4-10; Psalm 91, Be with Me, Lord, when I am in trouble; Romans 10, 8-13; Luke 4, 1-13

    Deuteronomy:

    What: This work is the 5th and last book of the Pentateuch/Torah.  The first 4 books are Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, & Numbers. 

     Deuteronomy has basically 3 speeches delivered by Moses before the people enter the promised land.  He reviews all they have endured the past 40 years and how Yahweh has shown his care and power to save them.

    Author: Not Moses.  Moses may have spoken some of the ideas in the speeches, but others have put the work together.  In fact, in chapter 34 the death of Moses is described.  Someone other than Moses probably covered this episode.

    Mass 2-21-10

    Date: Ca. 700 years BCE.   In other words, about a century before the Babylonian Captivity and just after the destruction of the northern kingdom, Israel, by the Assyrians (ca. 720 BCE).

    Our Selection, chapter 26: the end of the second speech.  Moses is reminding the people of how Yahweh cared for them since the time they were slaves in Egypt and why they must honor him for this as their one and only god.  Instead of being history, this presentation is more like a pep talk to people in trouble, like had been the case in Egypt. 

    Altar Helpers 2-21-10

    Have a Happy Lent

    In Eccliastes 3 it says, "there is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens;  a time to be born and a time to die, 
    a time to plant and a time to harvest, a time to kill and a time to heal,
    a time to tear down and a time to build."

    If you are a New Orleans Saints fan, after decades of grief, your time to celebrate has come.  And you have celebrated as only people in N.O. know how to celebrate.  We have all just passed through the season of Christmas.  We, too, have celebrated.

    Emily 2-21-10

    Today we enter another season, the season of Lent.  How do we have a happy Lent?  How do we make this a time to build and a time to be born, again? 

    When I was talking with Rosemary about this homily, she asked me if there was not a new way I could talk about this subject.  I thought that, no, there really is not a new way for me to talk about this subject.  Some of you have heard these ideas or something similar for maybe 20 years.  Please forgive me if I repeat some of the same thinking.

    My thinking always comes down to how do I, how do we have a happy Lent?  How can it be positive and not a negative, depressing, and dreaded event?  Two thoughts.

    One.  Despite what comes up in the liturgies and scriptures, we are not sinners on the road to hell or purgatory paying ransom for our endless sins. 

    Second.  These 5 weeks can be Maslow time.  Abraham Maslow, an American psychologist, ca. 1940 said that, "What a man can be, he must be."  After 4 stages of development, Maslow thought that healthy people arrive at a place of self-actualization. 

    I call this becoming a person fully alive.  "A person fully alive is the Glory of God."  This was said in ca. 200 by St. Irenaeus, a bishop of Lyon, France.  It is what we are about this season.

    How do we fertilize and how do we prune so that we are more fully alive on April 4?  Each person has their own recipe, their own path, and most of us know what our path is. 

    Want a quicky insight into yourself?  What are you addicted to?  What are you obsessed by?   There are the usual culprits, alcohol, fast food, TV, work, smoking, whatever.  You can be brain dead and know this.  However, we can equally use denial to avoid the obvious.  We are aiming at becoming more fully alive people.

    Communion Helpers 2-21-10

    I, for my part, plan to give up all alcohol, take French baths to learn French better, not go out at night, in fact, not leave the house at all for 30 days, and I will give up salads, spinach, and greens veggies, and Wednesday I will get rid of this crabby hip that is slowing my life down.  All this because the doctor orders it.  I will truly enjoy April 4.  A real Resurrection.

    How are you going to have a happy Lent?

    Sources: Wikipedia for Maslow & Irenaeus; Human Development, Philip Rice for Maslow

    Picture 1:  Mass with Tony and Kevin

    Picture 2:  Altar helpers

    Picture 3:  Emily and her mom, Julie

    Picture 4:  Communion helpers