Homilies

  • Sunday Homily, May 7, 2017, 4th Easter

      Cathy

     

    Say Rosemary & Cathy, "Happy Kentucky Derby Weekend and welcome in."

     

    Readings:

    Acts of the Apostles  2, 14, 36-41  Let the whole house of Israel know.

    Psalm 23,  The Lord is my shepherd.  (Beautiful, consoling)

    1 Peter 2, 20-25, By his wounds have you been healed.

     John 10, 1-10,  Whoever enters through the gate is the shepherd. 

     

     

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    Welcome back to Dallas, Ann, and to our community.  You are one of our best all time friends.

     

    The Three Best

    Whenever I go on a trip like the one Rosemary & I just did with Viking on the Elbe River in Eastern Germany, I get questions.  Like, ‘What was the best thing?’  I would like to talk briefly about 3 best things that struck me, a Berlin chapel, a church door, and a concentration camp. 

     

      Tower bombed

     

    This bell tower is all that is left of the old gothic Kaiser Wilhelm church in central Berlin.  It is preserved as a remembrance.

     

    In the heart of Berlin there used to be a large gothic church called Kaiser Wilhelm Church.  It was bombed badly in the war and all that is left is a large, beat up bell tower.  Bullet wounds and bomb damage from bottom to what is left of the top.   The bell tower has been preserved as is to remind.

     

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    Interior of the Kaiser Wilhelm chapel .   The blue ambiance comes from bricks with glass circles tinted blue, very moving.

     

    Next to the tower a chapel has been built, very plain, a grey box on the outside.  After looking at prewar pictures of the old church, just for the heck of it, I decide to go inside the rather plain chapel.  I am stunned by the simple beauty.  The curved front wall is made of cement blocks with round blue bottle like glass.   A gold, ascending, larger than life-sized Christ hangs right in the middle.   Simple wooden pews.  The blue and gold ambience was stunning. 

    The half destroyed bell tower and the stunningly moving chapel symbolize for me the story of Berlin.

      Wilhelm 2

     

    View of interior from right aisle.  The bell tower in union with this simple chapel symbolize the old and the new Berlin.

     

    Second best experience.  Wittenberg and the church where Martin Luther posted 95 theses, exactly 5 centuries ago on October 31.

    All my training about this event gave me a misconception.  Namely, that Luther was out to start a church revolution.   Nope.

     

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    Wittenburg, Church door where Martin Luther posted his 95 theses 500 year ago this year.  It was a university bulletin board.

     

    The story goes like this.  Luther was a professor at the Wittenberg University.  The church door was a bulletin board.  Professors would post theses which the students were expected to debate the pros and cons of.   Everything was hand written in Latin.  Luther even titled his material as Disputation on the Power & Efficiency of Indulgences.  Disputation is the key word and implied debate of the pros and cons.  It was only later that year or the next that Rome got wind of them and a year later excommunicated Luther and the ideas went viral.

     

      Wittenburg 1

     

    Wittenburg town center.

     

    3 samples of theses:

    #21.  Those indulgence preachers are in error who say that a man is absolved from every penalty and saved by papal indulgences.

    27.  They preach only human doctrines who say that as soon as the money clinks into the money chest, the soul flies out of purgatory.

    32.  Those who believe they can be certain of their salvation because they have indulgence letters will be eternally damned, together with their teachers.

      Church

    St. Mary's Church, Wittenberg.  This is not the Luther church which was more of a college chapel. 

     

    I spent three years, ’62-’65, studying philosophy at Spring Hill College in Mobile.  There were a hundred plus Jesuits engaged in this process.  We debated theses and we debated in Latin.  I took all my philosophy exams in Latin, written and mostly oral.   We had the church position and we had the adversaries.  We were expected to be able to verbally ace those adversaries.  Luther was probably one of our adversaries. 

     

      Women

     

    A small number of the survivors of Ravensbruck. 

     

    This was so déjà vu for me.  I could feel exactly what was going on, no revolt, just debate.  Somebody copied those theses, got them to Rome, and some priest, bishop, or pope over reacted, excommunicated Luther, and a revolt took place among the people.  Could this be taking place today?

     

    Ravensbruck 2

     

    Revensbruck compound & barracks.  100,000 plus women were concentrated here.

     

    Thirdly, Ravensbruck concentration camp for women.  For years I have read about the camps, in particular Ravensbruck.  This camp was set up for women and it was this camp where medical experiments were performed on the women. 

     

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    Ravensbrook compound.  The camp is 60 miles north of Berlin.

     

    We drove straight north out of Berlin about two hours on a beautiful day.  When I walked onto the compound I felt I was walking on hallowed, sacred ground. The barracks have all been removed, but the official buildings are still there, the infirmary, the clothes sewing hall, and the men & women officers’ houses.  I stood on the morning assembly ground and could see it all. 

    As human beings we are capable of such horror and such beauty. 

     

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    Ravensbruck today.  The barracks have been removed, but the outlines are still present.  On the left are the work building and the infamous infirmary.  The picture is taken from the assembly area.

     

  • Sunday Homily, April 30, 2017, 3rd Easter

    Readings:

    Acts of the Apostles 2, 14, 22-33.  You who are Jews, listen to my words.

    Psalm 16,  Lord, you will show us the path of life.  

    1 Peter 1, 17-21,   Conduct yourselves with reverence.

     Luke 24,  13-35,   Two men on the road to Emmaus.   

     

      Spider 2

     

    "Hi, Everybody, Welcome in," say Buddy, Tori, and Harper.

     
    • Homily by John Cade
       
      What a good writer the author of Luke-Acts is. The story of the two followers of Jesus on the road to Emmaus has the power to grab us and make us feel like we were there with them.  We know about those who experience closeness with their loved ones after the loved ones have passed on. We’ve heard about people who talk with and have conversations with loved ones who are gone, or who see them in their dreams or even see them just walk in the door.
       
       
       
      Spider
       
       
       
      Could there be anything more fun to play with than a spider on the floor?
       
       
      These stories are not about miracles; they are about how humans try to be connected with loved ones who are no longer  here, and how we process a significant loss.
       
      I can’t tell you how many people have shared with me their experiencing a loved one’s presence after they had passed on. Is that a miracle? Or is life and connection itself the miracle?
       
       
      Elevation
       
      The Minor Elevation with Sunday's team.
       
       
      You heard Mike a few weeks ago talk about the miracle stories in the Bible being a way of talking about people who are heroes, or who are thought of as grand or powerful or loving.
       
      The story that the two guys on the road to Emmaus experienced Jesus as joining them is not a stretch—this is a human story. The story of Jesus is the story of a man from Nazareth who, following John the Baptist, discovered that he too had a message, a message that we are not disconnected; nor are we cut off from God, ever; that we are living in God’s kingdom, if only we open our eyes and ears and follow the Good News he taught.
       
       
      Communion
       
       
      Communion for Bill & Barbara.
       
       
      A song by Peter Mayer called Holy Now says in one stanza,
      When I was in Sunday school we would learn about the time Moses split the sea in two, Jesus made the water wine; And I remember feeling sad, that miracles don’t happen still; But now I can’t keep track, ‘Cause everything’s a miracle.
       
      Kevin-Buddy
       
      A buddy helping a Buddy.
       
       
      Wine from water is not so small, But an even better magic trick, Is that anything is here at all.  So the challenging thing becomes, Not to look for miracles, But finding where there isn’t one.
       
      When do you see the miracles in your own life?
      In your relationships with others? 
      When do you know that you yourself are a miracle?
       
       
       
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     And who let in these clowns?  John, Tom, Denni, & Jim.

  • Sunday Homily, April 16, 2017, Easter

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    Who let that rabbit in here??  Happy Easter, Everybody.  Welcome.

     

    Readings:

    Acts of the Apostles  10, 34-43.   You know what has happened all over Judea

    Psalm 118,  This is the day the Lord has made.  Let us rejoice and be glad.

    1 Corinthians 5, 6-8,   A little yeast leavens all the dough.

     John 20,  1-9,    The Resurrection

     

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    Chloe with Nora and Charlotte and their buddy, all say, "Happy Easter, Folks, welcome in."

     

     Resurrection

    I would like to talk about the Resurrection this morning.  I suspect that you, like me, consider this event a one time event from ancient history.

    However, on the contrary, I want to suggest that resurrection events are multiple and present tense.  They take place daily or, at least, frequently in our lives.  A resurrection moment is a moment of great positive feeling, great consolation, a Kilimanjaro moment, and a time when I say ‘It is good to be alive.’

     

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     Joanie  and the kids.

     

    Let me give you 4-5 examples. 

    First, there is a bike ride the last Saturday every August in and around Wichita Falls, yes, the famous Hotter ‘N Hell.  After you have ridden the 100 miles and just before the finish line in town, you pass over a bridge leading up and then down to the finish.  Many a time when I am on top of that bridge, I am in tears, tears of gratitude and positive feelings.   I can say to myself, ‘It is so good to be alive!’

     

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    The Gerwers, Casey & Rob, and the kids.

     

    Secondly, another bike ride in July, for a week, 500 miles, crossing Iowa from west to east, from the Missouri to the Mississippi.    When I come down a hill and behold that enormous gorgeous river, I have a Kilimanjaro moment.  Tears again, gratitude, wonder. ‘It is good to be alive.”

     

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    Cody with Ben & Olivia.

     

    Thirdly, Labor Day every September we put together a group of 5-12 people and we head out back packing.   I started doing this with the Jesuits back in “89 and we have seen numerous beautiful parks.  For me The Beauty is Yosemite and especially our particular route on the east side, a route I call Matterhorn Canyon.

    There are 3 passes of 10 thousand feet.  Kilimanjaro moments each.  Equally positive are 2-3 special campsites.  ‘It is good to be alive in Yosemite.’

     

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    Harper with her daddy, Brian, and her granddaddy, Ted 

     

    2 more.  Every Fall and Spring many of us in the community volunteer at the Love for Kids picnic at Circle K ranch in Flower Mound.  2 weeks ago I am standing at the entrance to the pavilion to welcome the kids, who are all handicapped.  They come with their marvelous parents.

    At one point my attention was caught by a little blond girl about 2 years old seated in a pram.  She had her left hand over her eyes, her head was down on the little basket, and she was sobbing her eyes out.  She broke my heart.  I think she might have been scared by all the people. 

     

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    Our Great Candle Lighter, Cole, at work.

     

    Bill Hammond has a story about a little boy about 3 who had a left prosthetic leg.  I noticed him coming in, for sure.  Bill says that later the boy & his family approached the horses for a sponsored ride.  The family told Bill they did know.  The boy did not even like to pet dogs. 

    The little boy, however, was so excited once he got on the horse that the horse walkers toured the boy around not one time, but two. 

     

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    I think we have the Zurchin clan here, Tom  & Charlotte, Chloe & Nora with Denni, and Claire & Andrew.

     

    What are your resurrection moments?  When was the last one?

     

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    Carol with Karen, John, & Richard.

  • Sunday Homily, April 9, 2017, Palm Sunday

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    Says Our Dear Harper, "Welcome in, Everybody."

     

    Readings:

    Matthew 21, 1-11, Jesus enters Jerusalem, (the entrance)

    Isaiah 50, 4-7.   I gave my back to those who beat me.

     Psalm 22,  My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?

    Philippians 2, 6-11,   He emptied himself

     Matthew 26 & 27,    The Passion.

     

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    Palm Sunday procession beginning.

     

    Sorry, we have no homily today.  Long readings. 

     

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    The Wedding of Scott and Giana at The Windsor at Hebron Park.

     

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    Frank Costanza ring bearer.  Of all the weddings I have had the privilege of performing, Frank at 93 is the prettiest ring bearer I have ever seen.

     

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    Mr. & Mrs. Giana and Scott Booth.

     

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    The beginning of a new life.

  • Sunday Homily, April 2, 2017, 5th Lent

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    Welcome in, Everybody.

     

    Readings:

    Ezekiel 37, 12-14.   I will open your graves

     Psalm 130,  With the Lord there is mercy and fullness of redemption.

    Romans  8-11,   Those who are in the flesh cannot please God.

     John 11, 1-45,    Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead.

     

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    Can it get any better than this, Shonda & Bethany, Ray & David?

     

    Ezekiel 37, observations:  (Author, When, Message)

              Author: Ezekiel, for real.  He is unique because he was not only one of the Big 3 Prophets (along with Isaiah & Jeremiah), but he was also a priest working in the temple. 

              When: before & during the Babylonian Captivity, therefore around 555 before Christ.  His audience was the people. 

              CIMG7422

     Candle lighting, a family affair with Tori and Zoe, and big sister, Georgie, helping out. 

     

    Message: Like the classic prophet, he condemns, warns, and consoles.  We pick up on the consolation end.  I want to read the first verses which lead up to our selection, because it is the fun dry bones story, about which we have the Spiritual.  It is a shame the richer story is not included.  This is metaphor.  The dry bones can stand for the people in captivity; they can stand for me.  Get out of that tomb!

     Sources: New Interpreter’s Study Bible, Good News Bible, St. Louis U. with Reginald Fuller, Daniel Westberg, Larry Gillick, Jesuits. 

     

      CIMG7420

     

    And if you cannot get it the first time, for sure, a little tongue influence will do it.

     

    Romans observation:

    One line says a lot, those who are in the flesh cannot please God. 

    This line was composed by a man who was totally convinced that our body is bad and needs to be beaten into subservience.  Subservience achieves spiritual maturity and superiority.  This writer was influenced by a couple of philosophical theories of the time, Manichaeism and Gnosticism. 

    The same thinking is still around.  We certainly practiced it as young Jesuits.  For me it does not work.

     

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    Hey, Mommy, how about let's fly.

     

    Lazarus and the metaphor of life

    This morning I would like to use the Lazarus story to show how life can be a gift we receive and also give.  It is probably well known to you that at the time of Jesus the people attributed to leaders, like Julius Caesar, the ability to heal and raise the dead.

    I would propose  that  we, too, are called to at least metaphorically receive life and to give life to others.  I would propose, too, that this is all around us, taking place frequently.  4  examples.

     

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    Offertory team forming up, Allen & Aggie, Tom & Denni.

     

    Take Bill Hammond.  Bill gives me new life in at least 2 ways.  First, twice a year he invites me to volunteer at the Love for Kids picnic at Circle R Ranch.  I come away from that picnic humbled and inspired by the kids and by the numerous volunteers.  New life.

    After the picnic this Saturday I have a big wedding.  Talk about a life giving event.

     

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     Communion cups at the ready.

     

    Bill also gave me new life a dozen years ago when he invited me to join him at the Hotter N’ Hell bike ride of a hundred miles.  Here I am now more than a dozen years later still riding.  And while I may be dead tired at the end, I am overflowing with life. 

    I mentioned that I get life from helping at weddings.  A week ago Renee Reddick gave me new life when she asked me to fly to Toronto to handle the funeral for her ex-husband.  As usual when  I receive these invitations, I balked, made excuses, and tried to get out of it.  Rosemary told me that I would hate myself if I failed to go.  So I called Renee back and told her I would get there the next day.  I was totally touched with life by coordinating that funeral Mass.

     

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    Blessing, Everybody.

     

    Finally, guess who called me to new life about 13 years ago.  Yep, Carol and Bernadette, when they invited me to consider sharing Masses with our community.  Talk about a rich life. 

    What gives you new life and to whom do you give life?

     

     

  • Sunday Homily, March 19, 2017, 3rd Lent, A cycle

    Readings:

    Exodus 17, 3-7,  Moses: “What shall I do with this people?”

     Psalm 95,  If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts.

     Romans 5,  1-2, 5- 8,   The love of God has been poured out into our hearts.

     John 4, 5-42,    The Samaritan Woman at the well.

     

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    Say Brandon and Mary, his mom, "Welcome in, Everybody."

     

    Exodus observations :

    What: After two weeks in the first book of the Bible, today we move to the second. The book basically tells the heroic struggle of Moses to get the Hebrew people out of Egypt, where they had gone because of the drought in their land some decades or centuries before. 

    Author: The book is about Moses, but he is not the author, as was thought for centuries. Instead, it is a compilation. 

     

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    My Dearest Genevieve, are you playing for us this morning?

     

    When:  Take a guess.  Yes, during and after the Babylonian Captivity, 555 before Christ.  Why now?  To help the Jewish tribe stay together.  Biblical commentators will say this is the most important book in the Bible.  Why?  Cultural history gives identity, especially one that goes from tragedy to triumph.  Plus, the writers, the priests-Levites, emphasized that God considered this tribe to be The Tribe.

    Today’ selection: an amusing story about how the Jewish people are bummed out with Moses for taking them out of the so called cushy slave life of Egypt into a desert with no water and no food.  

    Recommendation for Lent: Read Genesis and Exodus.  Interesting stories.

     

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    The best Music, Shonda & Ray.  Anybody know why Bethany is not with us this morning?  Yep, she finally had her baby!
     

     

    Life Giving Water

    This morning I would like to mention 3 comments about John’s gospel that contemporary Bible scholars make.  Then, proceeding from the general observations, I would like to look at today’s gospel and especially the play on water.  Is it symbolic maybe?  Of what?

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    Hi, Kevin, thanks for all your help.

     

    Observation 1: 3 writers can be identified as contributing to the gospel of John.  The 3 authors worked over a period of 25 to 30 years, up to around 90.

     Secondly, the figures in the stories are literary creations, perhaps built around certain people.                                                                                                         

    Thirdly, the words that Jesus uses are not just recordings, but words composed by the writers to convey a message or a symbol, like water. 

     

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    Hi, Georgie, thanks, also, to you for all your help.

     

    Which leads to our selection from John this morning, the Samaritan woman at the well. 

    She is talking about ordinary well water.  Jesus is talking about symbolic water, living water that gives life to the spirit.  

    I would propose this life giving water takes all sorts of forms.  For example.

     

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    And thanks to you, Buddy.  It is so nice to have you with us.

     

    Remember the first time we had our penitential rite?  When Mike proposed the idea at a team luncheon I confess I was a bit skeptical.  I was thinking, ‘Nobody is going to want to do this.  More focus on sin.’  This is why I don’t like Lent, the endless focus on sin.  What does the ordinary Mass always begin with?  Focus on me a sinner. 

     Was I pleasantly surprised!  In fact, that penitential rite was pure water to my spirit.  I was humbled and touched. 

     

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    Let us begin.

     

    So, events can be life giving water, people can be life giving water.  Put them together and my spirit is moved. 

    Last week in Hilton Head we had Rosemary’s two sisters and husbands.  We celebrated a little Sunday Mass in the living room.  I was moved to tears.  I could hardly talk. 

     

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    Brandon, our Candle Lighter of The Week.

     

    Another event: our own Mass right here at Sigler.  You people are living water for me.

    What event brings living water to you?

    Who brings living water to you?

    And You?

    Sources:  Raymond Brown and John Shelby Spong

     

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     Our Candle Lighter at work, three whites and one purple.

  • Sunday Homily, March 12, 2017, 2nd Lent

    Readings:

    Genesis 12, 7-9; 3, 1-7,  I will make of you a great nation   

     Psalm 33,  Lord, let your merciful love be upon us, as we  place our trust in you.

     2 Timothy 1, 8-10,   Bear your share of hardship for the gospel.

     Matthew 17, 1-9,    The Transfiguration.

     

     

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    Post Hurricane, Spring on Hilton Head Island.

     

    On the Readings Genesis

    Traditionally the first 5 books of the Jewish Scriptures (Christian Old Testament) were called the Torah and all five were attributed to Moses as their author. Modern Biblical scholars say definitely not.

    In fact, Genesis and the other 4 books of the Torah (Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy) were most likely written in the 5th and 4th centuries before Christ, so during and after the Babylonian captivity (dated around 555 BC).

    The Jewish people had been defeated, their temple destroyed, and they were in captivity in Babylon. They knew that the southern tribes of Israel, when they were defeated and taken captive, had basically disappeared, being absorbed by intermarriage with their captors.

    To avoid a similar outcome, their oral tradition was written down to give the Jewish people a history and a strong identity. The emphasis was on a special covenant with God. This covenant included many laws and practices touching every aspect of their lives. They left no doubt as to what it meant to be an Israelite, a Jew.

    Today’s Lenten readings have connected the words spoken to Abraham in Genesis “you are blessed”, with the words spoken in Matthew’s Transfiguration story “listen to him.”

     

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     A riot of colors, red, white, and pink, everywhere.

     

     

    Homily:  

    To understand the context of the Transfiguration story we need to remember: Matthew wrote this Gospel for the early Jewish community, now Christian, living in Jerusalem. They would know well all the books of the law and the prophets, including the first, Genesis, and the last prophet, Malachi. 

    In today’s reading Matthew is referencing that last named prophet in the OT. (Read Malachi. 4:4-6)

    So, in the last paragraph of the last book of the OT—and the early Jewish Christians Matthew was addressing knew it well—Malachi reminds the Jewish people of Moses, the greatest leader of them all, who took them out of slavery in Egypt, led them to the promised land and gave them the law spoken by God, also on a mountain top.

    And Malachi says, “I’m sending Elijah the prophet to clear the way for the Big Day of God.”

    So, as Matthew set the scene, here’s the picture: On a mountain top—where else?—that’s where in Scripture all important meetings with God happened—Moses appears representing the law and Elijah appears representing the prophets, and Jesus is transfigured before Moses and Elijah and right in front of the 3 disciples, his face and clothes shining as white as sun light.

    That event, in Matthew’s story, is Malachi’s Big Day of God—the proclamation of Jesus as the new Moses, the new Elijah, the long-awaited Messiah. The disciples are told Jesus is the one to listen to now.

     

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    Hilton Head is 90% cleaned up.  A long way from how it looked at Thanksgiving.

     

    That’s our message too. (As it turned out there were actually four ‘Big Day of God’ events: Jesus’ Baptism, His Transfiguration, His Crucifixion/Resurrection, and His Ascension/ Pentecost.) An interesting difference in the Eastern and Western Christian churches: the Western Church was more influenced by the story of the Crucifixion/Resurrection. E.g., some Catholic saints displayed stigmata (e.g., Saint Francis, Padre Pio).

    The Eastern Church was more influenced by the story of the Transfiguration; Eastern Orthodox saints never reported stigmata; they were often described as transfigured by the inner light of grace (e.g., Saints Seraphim and Silouan).

    Remember how for several weeks Stack helped us reflect on the questions of who gives us light and to whom do we give light? Guess what? The Transfiguration story takes us right there again, showing Jesus all lit up, as something to see, as the one to listen to, the one to learn from.

    How do we shine as people of the light? One challenge is living like Jesus: accepting life as it comes to us, with its joys and delights, its pain and grief.

    Another is living like God of Psalm 103: being “merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in kindness.”

    Another is living like the people of this community do: Look around you: Name how these people shine for you? Name the ways they give light in your life. Look at yourself: how do you give light to others around you?

    Another is being more like the little children: accepting ourselves–even our innocence, being bold, living in the present, chilling, receiving and sharing with such ease.

    Can we do this? What do you say?

  • Sunday Homily, March 5, 2017, 1st Lent

    Readings:

    Genesis 2, 7-9; 3, 1-7,  Eating the apple.   

     Psalm 51,  Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned

     Romans 5, 12-19   Then everyone will receive praise from God.

     Matthew 4, 1-11,    Temptation in the desert.

     

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    Say Ben & Cody, "Welcome in, everybody." 

     

    Introduction: In the creation story from Genesis, the serpent deceives Eve; and Adam brings sin into the world. In our gospel reading, Satan is also a deceiver. Paul’s Letter to the Romans, ‘We are all made righteous through Jesus Christ.

     

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    Let the celebration begin.

     

    Homily: 

    Here is a Greek definition for the word ‘tempter.’  In Greek, it is dee-ah-bah-lahs. The tempter is diabolic, wicked.   In today’s gospel reading it is the world that is arrogant and wicked.  It wants from Jesus Christ, the Son of God, a miracle or two, or three.  The world receives Jesus’ answer.  ‘I am not of the world. I bring to you the Father’s love; for he has sent me to redeem the world.’ 

     

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    Cole, our Candle Lighter of The Week.

     

    The Lord doesn’t have miracles on his agenda, for a faith based on miracles is no faith at all!  I propose to you that the Scribes and Pharisees are the devil in this reading. They are the ones who say to Jesus, ‘give us a miracle, so that we might believe in you.’

     

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    Mike, our Homilist of The Week.

     

    Recall that it is the diabolic Pharisees and Scribes who want to trap Jesus by bringing to him, while he was teaching at the entrance of the temple, a woman caught in the act of adultery. ‘Moses said that we should stone her; what do you say.’

     

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    The Team.

     

     The spirit that flows forth from the legalistic way the Pharisees and Scribes teach and live the Law ignore love. Their spirit is unclean.  They are the hypocrites that put fear in the minds of others, instead of love.   They can be likened to a circus hustler, ‘Come see Jesus feed, with a loaf of bread and a few fish, the overflowing crowd in the Big Tent.’  

     

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    Leo and Genevieve, that little girl is crazy about her big brother.

     

    Their ignorance misleads the crowd, for the bread and fish of the Gospel are the Liturgy of the Word and Liturgy of Eucharist.  There is no miracle here, only love.

    When Jesus spiritually heals the sick and unclean in the Gospel; these are not miracles. Those who come to him desire to be forgiven; they are seeking to change their lives by welcoming and living his life-giving words. 

     

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    Could it get any better than this?  Zoe & Harper.

     

    God’s plan for us is not easy, therefore, ‘in everything we are to give thanks,’  Through the power of the Holy Spirit, Christ is alive to us, in good times and bad.  When we pray together each Sunday for our brothers and sisters who are physically sick or ill, we are praying for their care givers, their doctors, their nurses, their children, their parents, their friends. 

     

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    The Offertory Team, Ron, Ray, Bill, Bernadette, and Barbara.

     

    We pray that they all become stronger in faith. The physical illnesses experienced by those dear to us are so much easier to accept knowing that the Lord journeys with us and in us and through us as the Body of Christ in the world.  We give thanks to Fr. John for keeping them in our hearts each week.’  

     

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    Play station with Victoria and Zoe.
     

  • Sunday Homily, February 26, 2017, 8th Ordinary Time

    Readings:

    Isaiah 49, 14-15,  I will never forget you.   

     Psalm 62,  Rest in God alone, my soul.

     1 Corinthians 4, 1-5,   Then everyone will receive praise from God.

     Matthew 6, 24-34,    Do not worry about tomorrow, tomorrow will take care of itself.

     

    IMG_2415

     

    "Happy Mardi Gras, Everybody," say Cathy and Harper.

     

    Isaiah observations and reminders—

    Who, This is 2nd Isaiah.

    When, This is during the Captivity in Babylon, ca. 555 before Christ. 

    Subject, The writer, the prophet, is trying to lift the spirits of his fellow slaves.  He gives them exquisite news, using God’s words, “I will never forget you.”  A short but touching cameo of consolation and hope. 

     

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    And from Kevin, "Welcome in, Folks."

     

    Have a Happy Lent

    I admit that Lent is my least favorite seasons of the year, mostly because of the emphasis on penance I encountered as a kid and during my early years as a Jesuit.  We did penance in those days.  I don’t think it was spiritually and psychologically healthy. 

    Therefore, I would like to talk about how to have a Happy Lent.  A no dread zone.  And, I would add, a belief that God cares not a whit for us doing all sorts of penance.   

     

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    Tori, too, says, "Hi, Everybody."

     

    Consequently, I have two points based on being people fully alive.  The first point focuses on self nurture and has two suggestions.

    First, treat yourself each week of Lent.  Like take a special day off, go out to eat, like join us at Romeos or Juliettes, have some ice cream, and go for a drive (if possible with the traffic congestion).  In fact, because we have not had a day off since Thanksgiving, Rosemary, I, and Aviana are going to visit her sister in Hilton Head for a week. 

     

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    Hi, Vivian.  It is so nice to have you with us this morning.

     

    Secondly, spend some quiet time in contemplation, especially with a focus on gratitude.  I just read about a guy who survived the Burma death camps.  He said he was never a prisoner, meaning he always focused on what he was grateful for whatever torment was going on around him.

    The second half of this you will maybe hate me for bringing up.  But, here I go, exercise.  I want to keep you people alive, fully alive until you are ready to check out.  This really involves only 2-3 hours per week, 30 minutes a day for six days.  There are two types of exercise, cardio and strength. 

     

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    The Candle Man of The Week, Cole, at work. 

     

    Cardio involves walking, riding a bike, and running.  A 30 minute walk around the neighborhood has amazingly positive effects. 

    I can certainly vouch for how good I feel after I have done a spin class at the Jewish Community Center in the morning.  I do this Monday through Friday and it is marvelous.

     

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    Delivery day is here,  TODAY.   Do we have a doctor in the house?  
     

     

    Strength is for muscle and bone, and involves things like yoga, Tai Chi, and weights.  It also includes doing things like gardening (even mowing the grass?), taking the stairs, walking from the outer edge of the parking lot, dancing, and house work (like vacuuming).

    The goal in all of this is to be fully alive and happy until we arrive home. 

     

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    Offertory team, John & Connie, Scott & Lily

     

    So, how are you going to have a Happy Lent?

    Good article on exercise,  Download EXERCISE FOR LENT 2-

     

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    Bethany, when is my new play mate coming to visit me?  

  • Sunday Homily, February 19, 2017, 7th Ordinary Time

    Readings:

    Leviticus 19, 1-2,  17-18,  You shall love your neighbor as yourself.   

     Psalm 103,  The Lord is kind and merciful. (Stanza 2, one of the best)

     1 Corinthians 3, 16-23,   You are the temple of God.

     Matthew 5, 38-48,    Love your enemies.

     

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    "Welcome in, Everybody," say Olivia and her dad, Cory.

     

    Observations on Leviticus

    What :  the 3rd book of the Bible and one of the 5 books of the Torah.

    Who:  a compilation of sayings accumulated over centuries, not Moses, as was thought for some years.

    Date: sometime after the Exile in Babylon, ca. 555 before Christ.

     

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    "Don't forget me," says Tori, "Come in, Folks."
     

     

    Subject:  rules about how to live, how to worship, and the penalties for transgressing.  This is based upon 2 beliefs:

    1. The world has been created good, but is vulnerable to sin.
    2. Enactment of proper ritual makes God present and ignoring proper ritual compromises the harmony between God & people. 

    Some unique rules:

    1. Cursing, death.   24.14
    2. Unkempt hair, God will smite you.  10.1
    3.  You will not tatoo yourself, 19.28
    4. Trimming your beard.  19.27
    5. Cutting the hair on the sides of your head.  19.27

    Today’s Subject:  the best line in the whole work, “Love your neighbor as yourself.”   19.18

    Sources:  Good News Bible, Wikipedia

     

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    The Offertory Team, Bill, Ray, Bernadette, and Richard.

     

    I want to help people.  That’s what I’m for.

    Ever hear of a guy named Clarence Griffith?  I read about him in the Dallas Morning News recently.  Three things are unique about him.

    1. He was born in 1913.  Know anybody that old?  104 years.
    2. When he was 94 he received triple heart bypass at Baylor, Dallas.
    3. Ever since his recuperation he regularly goes to console and help people in the Baylor cardiac waiting room.  He gets them coffee, food, and offers them support, praying with them or just letting them talk.  He says,  “That’s what I’m for.  I want to help people.”

     

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    Leo, our Candle Lighter of The Week.

     

    For me, Clarence Griffith has accepted that, “The Lord is gracious and merciful, never gets angry and is abounding in love.”  Moreover, he is making himself live that image.

    Last week we looked at infinite demand that was followed up with promises of hell.  A fear based program.

    This week we look at a different infinite demand equally challenging.  The demand is to get rid of fear in our relationship with God using that description, and to help others to do so.

     

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    The Team.

     

    This is one of the biggest reasons I have been and am a priest, and even a psychotherapist, to help others get rid of fear in our relationship with God.

    Which leads me to three demands presented by Matthew.  If you reflect upon it, these three are a result of knowing that our God is gracious and merciful, never gets angry and is abounding in love.

     

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    The Wedding, Patricia and John.

     

    First, Matthew says, using his favorite little figure of speech, ‘You have heard it said, but I say to you…’, when someone hits the left side of your face, offer the right and don’t resist the person who is evil. 

    Is this insanity or what?  Has it ever been tried?  Yes, you say, by dead people.   Impossible.  This is the message of the pacifist, a person mostly ridiculed by the rest of us.  Know any?  Sure, John Dear, once a Jesuit, Roy Bourgeois, once a Maryknoll. 

    I wonder what would happen if we really did this.  I confess I have not been able to get there. 

     

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    Congratulations, John, I am so happy when I am not the only one with tears up here.  Must be because you come from Australia.  Double congratulations.  
     

     

    Secondly, give to the person who asks from you.  Another tough one.  How do you feel passing the men & women begging at stop lights?  I, for one, feel horrible, even though I know they have a number of shelters, like The Bridge and Austin St. Shelter.   I can work in those places and know that we as a community help them, but I still feel horrible passing those people on the corner.

    Thirdly, love my enemy.  I really don’t have any serious enemies that I know of.

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    "I, Patricia, take you, John in marriage.  I promise to be true to you in good times and bad, in sickness and in health.  I will love and cherish you all the days of my life."

     

    Despite failure to live up to these demands, which are infinite, our God is still infinitely accepting, specifically gracious and merciful, never get angry and is abounding in love.   Moreover, relevant to our weakness, he says in the following line, “Not according to our sins does he deal with us.”

    104 year old Clarence Griffith is showing people this image of God in the Baylor hospital waiting room.

    Who shows this image to you?

    To whom do you show the image?

     

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     The Kiss.