Monday, July 31, 2023

The joy of discovery (Carl E. Olson)

   The parable of the treasure buried in the field and the parable of the pearl draw upon common but powerful experience: the joy of discovering what was previously hidden. Man, by nature, is a creature of curiosity, a seeker who believes there is something really worth seeking. And while his curiosity can be caught up for a time in natural wonders and pleasures, he always longs for more. He wants to discover who he is and why he exists. The answers to those essential questions can be given only by God. 

   But why does the man who finds the treasure bury it again? Because by law the treasure belongs to the owner of the field, which means the man must purchase, or redeem, the entire field. His decision is a radical one: he “sells all that he has and buys that field.” In doing so, perhaps he makes a new start, renouncing his old, self-centered way of life for the pursuit of what is good, perfect, and holy—the person of Jesus Christ. 

--Carl E. Olson 



Image source 1: https://ideanco.com/opportunities/the-art-of-curiosity/
Image source 2: Camille Corot, The Curious Little Girl (1860-1864), https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437991


Sunday, July 30, 2023

Embraced by unconditional love (Fr. Ron Rolheiser)


   Karl Rahner says that his fantasy of our judgment by God after death, is that the agent of that judgment will not so much be God’s light as it will be God’s love. For Rahner, the idea is not so much that we will be standing in an unrelenting light that sears and pierces through us, but rather that we will be embraced by a love so unconditional, so understanding, and so gracious, that, inside that, we will know instantly all that’s selfish and impure inside us even as we know all that’s pure and selfless.

--Fr. Ron Rolheiser OMI,
Facebook, September 28, 2022 

Image source: Eternal Light – The Last Judgment, https://www.instagram.com/p/Co0pEwtPbVP/, with additional pictures at: https://www.hanhoart.org/beast/2018/1/19/8xie8j0gjxvxv3uquogjmunb2q0bsm

Saturday, July 29, 2023

The only worthwhile discernment (Sinclair Ferguson)

    The only worthwhile discernment we possess is that which we receive in union with Christ, by the Spirit, through God‘s Word. Discernment is learning to think God's thoughts after Him, practically and spiritually; it means having a sense of how things look in God‘s eyes and seeing them in some measure “uncovered and laid bare.” 

--Sinclair Ferguson 

Image source: https://gospelstudy.us/how-do-i-ponder/, as well as at, https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/191811
Quotation source

Friday, July 28, 2023

God is discovered (St. Hilary of Poitiers)


  Through the comparison of a treasure in the field of our hope, Christ points to wealth that has been covered up, for God is discovered in humanity. 

   In compensation for it, all the resources of the world are to be sold in order that with the clothing, food and drink of the needy we may buy the eternal riches of the heavenly treasure. But we must realize that the treasure was found and hidden, for he who found it could certainly have carried it off in secret at the time he hid it; and carrying it off, there would have been no need for him to buy it.  

   The treasure was hidden because it was necessary to buy the field. The treasure in the field, as we said, signifies Christ in the flesh, who was found freely. Indeed, the preaching of the Gospels has no strings attached, but the power to use and own this treasure with the field comes at a price, for heavenly riches are not possessed without a worldly loss. 

Thursday, July 27, 2023

Sunday Gospel Reflection, July 23, 2023: Give your servant an understanding heart...

How can we discern as God discerns? 

    When, in the First Book of Kings, the Lord appears to Solomon in a dream at night and invites him to make a request, Solomon asks not for riches nor for prestige but for an understanding heart to judge God’s people and to distinguish right from wrong. Solomon knows that true wisdom is from God, and Solomon is open to the insights the Lord will share with him. In an important sense, Solomon is asking for intimacy with God, who will direct and lead him by helping Solomon to listen, both to others and to God. Like the psalmist in Psalm 119, Solomon clearly realizes that the revelation of God’s words sheds light, giving understanding along with a humble (or simple) awareness of God’s presence in his life. Thanks to his intimacy with the Lord God, Solomon learns to discern as God discerns. 

    Jesus shares a number of parables with his disciples in Matthew’s Gospel, wondering, Do they understand all these things? Jesus knows that they will need to draw upon the wisdom of the all of scripture – the old and the new – in order to cultivate a capacity to listen to God in their hearts. Jesus’ parables are not complicated; they speak of the profound love of God that defines God’s kingdom. When one discovers that kingdom – like a treasure buried in a field, or a pearl of great price – nothing else retains the value it once had, and one must able to discern correctly, ultimately selling all one has for the sake of that kingdom. Like the net thrown into the sea, in the end it is God’s discernment that counts; his is the net thrown into the sea, that he might assess the fish who live there. 

   Our discernment may not always be perfect; indeed, as human beings, we often choose poorly. But, as Paul reassures the Romans, all things work for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose. We are predestined to be conformed to the image of Jesus; it’s up to us to choose to accept that invitation, to conform ourselves to the love that is ours, embracing the intimacy to which the Lord calls us. In the end, we must discern whether we are ready to model the love Christ reveals to us, we who, through baptism, are conformed to him. Is there any discernment more important than this? 

This post is based on Fr. Pat’s Scripture class.
Image source: www.wordclouds.com

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Threshing Floor (Jonathan David and Melissa Helser)


Heard about a threshing floor
Where Gideon saw the Angel of the Lord
Wanna go there and be with You

Heard about a secret place
Where Moses went and saw Your face
Wanna go there, and be with You 

Take me home 
To the place where I belong
There's nothing that I want more 
[than the] presence of the Lord 

Heard about an upper room 
Where tongues of fire fall on you
Wanna go there, and be with You 

Heard about this garden where 
You and man walk hand in hand 
Wanna go there and be with You 

Refrain 

Heard about a threshing floor
Where Gideon saw the Angel of the Lord 
Wanna go there and be with You 

To hear Threshing Floor performed by Jonathan David and Melissa Helser, click on the video below: 



Image source: Ancient sun circle that was believed to have also served as a threshing floor, http://biblicalanthropology.blogspot.com/2015/04/threshing-floors-and-solar-symbols.html
Video source

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Understanding the mercy of God at work (Fr. Patrick Michaels)


   Difficult people give us occasion to understand the mercy of God at work in our lives. 

   Judgment comes easy. Mercy, charity, compassion – those take a little more work. 

 --Fr. Patrick Michaels,
Scripture Class, July 16, 2020

Image source: Peter Paul Rubens, The Tribute Money (1516), https://www.raydowning.com/blog/2020/3/19/holy-week-in-art-phaarisees-question-jesus

Monday, July 24, 2023

Practice, prayer, and patience (Dr. Holly Ordway)


   Just as yeast does not instantly make nourishing bread by itself, truth does not transform lives unless and until it is activated, given form and substance, and allowed time to develop. As we can see from these parables, to evangelize well, we need the proper ingredients – but also practice, prayer, and patience. 

--Dr. Holly Ordway 

Sunday, July 23, 2023

This parable is a promise (Ruth Fehlker)


    The first parable, that of the grain and weeds, at first seems a little off-putting to me. At first it sounds like it is threatening judgement day. The image used is that of a man who sows good seed, and his enemy who sows weeds among them. And I immediately wonder: what am I? Good or bad? Harvested or burned? But God knows we humans are almost never wholly one thing. We have within us both: the potential to bear fruit and the potential to waste our energy and talents. And for most of us both happens during our lifetimes. 

   So maybe it is worth a closer look: the translation does not show it, but the weed the story refers to is called darnel. When young it is impossible to distinguish from wheat. And by the time you can tell them apart, their roots are entangled, so that pulling the weeds would mean losing the harvest. Thus, the man decides to wait for the plants to fully grow and then take away the poisonous weed and burn it while the grain is harvested. That means this parable is a promise: God will wait for things to grow and bear fruit, in us and in the world. Judgement is wholly up to him, and he will never risk what is good and precious about us in order to throw out what is bad. 

   In the second parable the image for the kingdom of heaven is the mustard seed, the tiny seed that grows into a large bush that draws birds to nest in it. I don’t know if you have ever seen a black mustard seed. They are really tiny and it’s easy to mistake them for a speck of dirt. That even a seed this small holds the potential for so much growth is simply amazing. And like this mustard seed, the kingdom of heaven starts out small, almost invisible. It is not something created by the great and powerful, it grows tall and draws people to it, because they can feel God’s love. 

   The third brief parable uses yeast as the image. I love this image, because I like baking bread. When I was little, I used to do that with my dad. And I love how in a yeast dough the mushy mess becomes something else in my hands. Something solid, something that feels almost alive and that smells amazing. It only takes a tiny bit of yeast, some work and some time to transform the whole thing. In today’s terms: if we manage to start somewhere, acting as if the kingdom of God is already here, the ripple effect will begin to change the world, will bring it together and create something wonderful and nourishing. 

   These are beautiful images. They speak of so much hope, they are there to encourage a community that feels small and helpless, like many early Christian communities did. 

--Ruth Fehlker 

Saturday, July 22, 2023

Friday, July 21, 2023

The mystery of it all (Alyssa Pasternak)


   This kingdom of God – this dream of God for creation – is like a mustard seed, a seed so small that if it were on my finger here, we could barely see it. And one day a person took that seed and planted it in the ground. And it began to grow, and to grow, and to grow until the birds of the air came and made their nests in the tree. 

   I wonder if the person planting the seed has a name, and what that person is doing while the seed is growing. And of the tree, and the nests, and this entire whole place… what could it really be? And have we ever drawn this close to a place like this? 

   In this visual mystery, with seeds in our hands, we come to see that the reign of God starts so small, and yet grows so grand. We draw close to God in the mystery of it all as we come to receive the reign of God, offered by Jesus to us today in a couple of sentences about some seeds.
   
   The spaciousness of this parable invites our participation, compels our participation. 

--Alyssa Pasternak

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Sunday Gospel Reflection, July 23, 2023: Those who are just must be kind...

What is the kindness of the Lord capable of? 

    The people addressed in the Book of Wisdom have a clear sense of God’s justice. Surprisingly, perhaps, this sense is not predominantly about punishment, but about clemency: your might is the source of justice, the author writes, your mastery over all things makes you lenient to all. God is ready to forgive those who disbelieve God’s power or who exhibit temerity, because God desires that we should be one with him and trust in his power in our lives. And if we are one with him, then we too must learn that those who are just must be kind, just as the Lord is, in Psalm 86: Lord, you are good and forgiving. 

    Matthew’s Gospel might, at first glance, seem harsh on this count: Just as weeds are collected and burned up with fire, we are told, so will it be at the end of the age. There will be wailing and grinding of teeth. These lines are a late addition, however, and to focus on them would belie Jesus’ message to the disciples in the three parables he shares with them. In each case – the parable of the weeds sown among wheat, the parable of the tiny mustard seed that grows in to a large bush, and the parable of the yeast – Jesus is clearly saying that the kingdom of heaven is greater than anything we can imagine, and those who dwell in it are not up to us to select. Notice that even the weeds are useful to the man who sowed them, as he uses them for fuel; God desires to save everything for his purpose! A mustard seed may not look like it can produce much, but be patient and the result will be much greater than the seed promises, just as even a small amount of yeast can leaven an enormous amount of flour. In each case, Jesus recognizes that God has invested so very much in creating us and God wants very much for each of us to fulfill our purpose – even if it requires being patient and waiting just a little. In the end, God’s forgiveness will gather in more sinners than we could ever imagine! 

    Leniency and mercy and forgiveness themselves have a purpose, that we might know depth of God’s love for us and then respond more profoundly to that depth. God has gone to extraordinary efforts to help us see this, and, in case we have difficulty, Paul tells the Romans, God sends the Spirit, who comes to the aid of our weakness, particularly in the context of prayer, interceding for us with inexpressible groanings when God searches our heart, ensuring our connection to God, who incessantly seeks ways to show us his mercy and forgiveness, that we might go forth and do the same for our world. 

This post is based on Fr. Pat’s Scripture class. 
Image source: www.wordclouds.com

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

You reap what you sow (Unknown)


   One day, a teacher asked her students to list the names of the other students in the room on two sheets of paper, leaving a space between each name. Then she told them to think of the nicest thing they could say about each of their classmates and write it down. It took the remainder of the class period to finish their assignment, and as the students left the room, each one handed in the papers. 

   That Saturday, the teacher wrote down the name of each student on a separate sheet of paper, and listed what everyone else had said about that individual. On Monday she gave each student his or her list. Before long, the entire class was smiling. 'Really?' she heard whispered. 'I never knew that I meant anything to anyone!' and, 'I didn't know others liked me so much,' were most of the comments. 

   No one ever mentioned those papers in class again. She never knew if they discussed them after class or with their parents, but it didn't matter. The exercise had accomplished its purpose. The students were happy with themselves and one another. That group of students moved on. 

   Several years later, one of the students was killed in Vietnam and his teacher attended the funeral of that special student. She had never seen a serviceman in a military coffin before. He looked so handsome, so mature. The church was packed with his friends. One by one those who loved him took a last walk by the coffin. The teacher was the last one to bless the coffin. 

   As she stood there, one of the soldiers who acted as pallbearer came up to her. 'Were you Mark's math teacher?' he asked. She nodded: 'yes.' Then he said: 'Mark talked about you a lot.' 

   After the funeral, most of Mark's former classmates went together to a luncheon. Mark's mother and father were there, obviously waiting to speak with his teacher. 'We want to show you something,' his father said, taking a wallet out of his pocket 'They found this on Mark when he was killed. We thought you might recognize it.' Opening the billfold, he carefully removed two worn pieces of notebook paper that had obviously been taped, folded and refolded many times. The teacher knew without looking that the papers were the ones on which she had listed all the good things each of Mark's classmates had said about him. 'Thank you so much for doing that,' Mark's mother said. 'As you can see, Mark treasured it.' 

   All of Mark's former classmates started to gather around. Charlie smiled rather sheepishly and said, 'I still have my list. It's in the top drawer of my desk at home.' Chuck's wife said, 'Chuck asked me to put his in our wedding album.' 'I have mine too,' Marilyn said. 'It's in my diary' Then Vicki, another classmate, reached into her pocketbook, took out her wallet and showed her worn and frazzled list to the group. 'I carry this with me at all times,' Vicki said and without batting an eyelash, she continued: 'I think we all saved our lists' 

   That's when the teacher finally sat down and cried. She cried for Mark and for all his friends who would never see him again. 

   The density of people in society is so thick that we forget that life will end one day. And we don't know when that one day will be. So please, tell the people you love and care for, that they are special and important. Tell them, before it is too late. 

   Remember, you reap what you sow. What you put into the lives of others comes back into your own.

--Author Unknown

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

The seed that fell on good soil (Finding God Among Us)

   The Seed that fell on good soil is like seeking Jesus with all your heart as He asked us: You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart (Jeremiah 29:13). 

    Good soil makes Jesus a priority. It means making time for Him, rather than trying to squeeze Him into your busy schedule. It means pursuing a personal relationship with Him as you would pursue a relationship with a love interest – getting to know Him, speaking to Him often, trusting Him, making time for Him, and treating Him with love, kindness, and respect. Seeking Jesus is an insatiable longing. The closer you get, the more you want to get even closer. This relationship spills over into the person you are, the way you treat others, and the way you live your life. 

   Is your faith falling on good soil?  

--Finding God Among Us

Image source: https://bloggersforthekingdom.com/prayer-garden/
Quotation source

Monday, July 17, 2023

Love deeply (Henri Nouwen)

   Do not hesitate to love and to love deeply. You might be afraid of the pain that deep love can cause. When those you love deeply reject you, leave you, or die, your heart will be broken. But that should not hold you back from loving deeply. The pain that comes from deep love makes your love even more fruitful. It is like a plow that breaks the ground to allow the seed to take root and grow into a strong plant. Every time you experience the pain of rejection, absence, or death, you are faced with a choice. You can become bitter and decide not to love again, or you can stand straight in your pain and let the soil on which you stand become richer and more able to give life to new seeds. 

 --Henri Nouwen 

Image source: Wooden plow with iron moldboard, https://blogs.illinois.edu/view/7923/1939010121
Quotation source

Sunday, July 16, 2023

What is the community of Our Lady of Mount Carmel called to? (Fr. Patrick Michaels)


Last year, on the Memorial of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Patroness of our parish, Fr. Pat shared the following: 

    Our Lady of Mount Carmel was chosen as the Patroness of our parish because the original church was on Summit Avenue, on a hill, and that reminded people of Mount Carmel in Israel, which overlooks Haifa. Mount Carmel has had great significance throughout salvation history. Elijah defended the faith of the people of Israel there, and God defeated the baals; it is also there that Elijah waited for the rains to come after three years of drought. 

   After the Crusades, a group of men gathered on Mount Carmel to form a community of hermits, but they were repeatedly attacked by the Saracens. In 1251, Simon Stock prayed to the Virgin Mary for protection against them, and she appeared to them with the scapular. This scapular was not like the one that many members of the laity wear today (and that we see in our front window). For the men of Simon Stock’s time, the scapular was a large swath of cloth that became part of their habit, draped over the front and back and reminiscent of St. Patrick's Breastplate: Christ is before me and Christ is behind me and there is no time when Christ is not with me. 

    In the readings often chosen for this feast, Zechariah 2 speaks of a promise that the Lord will come and dwell among us and engage us in a relationship and be there for us. He will help us, support us, and guide us; we must open to him. In Galatians 4, Paul speaks of how the Lord came to be among us, born of a woman. Our Canticle from Luke 1 reminds us that Mary knew what it meant to have the Lord that close because she bore him, and, in John 19, at the foot of the cross, she knew that that would be an experience for all for years to come: that Christ would dwell in all who opened themselves to that relationship. 

   The Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel is about relationship with God and relationship with other. Our Gospel shows how Jesus continues that connection in community; it is at the cross, when Jesus confers his Mother to the Beloved Disciple, that the Church is born, when relationship is established, and when we are established in relationship with one another. This is what we as a parish are meant to be about. 

   Let us therefore continue to work at being a model of hospitality and a model of generosity, because the Lord God dwells within us and leads us to Jesus Christ, who speaks from our hearts and speaks to our world through us. 

--Fr. Patrick Michaels, Homily, July 16, 2022

This post is based on Fr. Pat’s 2022 homily for the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, which can be found at 14:00 on the following video: https://www.facebook.com/mountcarmelmv/videos/1145935259323187 



Source of images: Photos by Fr. Patrick Michaels, St. Simon Stock receiving the scapular from Mary and the Child Jesus, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, Mill Valley, https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=656378253194259&set=a.556998299798922

Saturday, July 15, 2023

A single seed (Bryan Thao Worra)

A single seed can turn into a forest.
A single heart can transform a nation. 

--Bryan Thao Worra,
Notes Regarding the Living Heart 

Image source:  Muir Woods, https://www.aarp.org/travel/vacation-ideas/outdoors/info-2020/muir-woods-national-monument-guide.html

Friday, July 14, 2023

A little seed planted in very rich soil (Henri Nouwen)

   The fruitfulness of our little life, once we recognize it and live it as the life of the Beloved, is beyond anything we can imagine. One of the greatest acts of faith is to believe that the few years we live on this earth are like a little seed planted in very rich soil. For this seed to bear fruit, it must die. We often see or feel only the dying, but the harvest will be abundant even when we ourselves are the harvesters. How different would our life be were we truly able to trust that it multiplied in being given away! How different would our life be if we could believe that every little act of faithfulness, every gesture of love, every word of forgiveness, every little bit of joy and peace will multiply and multiply as long as there are people to receive it... and that—even then—there will be leftovers! 

--Henri Nouwen     

Image source: https://jillchristensenintl.com/are-you-watering-your-employee-engagement-seeds-to-ensure-an-abundant-harvest/
Quotation source

Thursday, July 13, 2023

Sunday Gospel Reflection, July 16 2023: The seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest...


How is God’s Word effective? 

    The prophet Isaiah knew that growth depends upon nourishment: the heavens send rain and snow to water the earth, making it fertile and fruitful. Seeds planted under such conditions can thrive. As Psalm 65 reminds us, the seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest. These images were used to remind the people of Israel of how the Lord continues to care for them, season after season, year after year, bringing life and filling them with hope for future success. The images also serve as a useful metaphor for God’s communication to God’s people: like the rain and snow that come down,… so shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth, the Lord tells Isaiah; my word shall not return to me void, but shall do my will, achieving the end for which I sent it. God’s word needs to be received by open hearts to it in order to be transformative, to nourish the growth of God’s people. In order to for that word to be effective, we must participate in God’s word, and in God’s will. 

   Jesus will similarly use the imagery of growth in Matthew’s Gospel when he wants the large crowds that have gathered around him to understand his message about the kingdom of God. Despite hardship and difficulties, Jesus explains, the Word of God is effective and will produce the fruit that is his kingdom. Indeed, the yield in some cases will be extraordinary: some seed will fall on rich soil, and produce fruit, a hundred or sixty or thirtyfold. God’s harvest is miraculous, so long as we allow the seeds that are planted in our hearts to thrive. Not everyone is open to God’s Word, as Jesus knows: I speak to them in parables, because they look but do not see and hear but do not listen, he tells his disciples. But blessed are your eyes, because they see, and your ears, because they hear, he goes on. The people gathered to hear Jesus have an opportunity to understand, but many are not yet ready; the seed is sown so that later they will remember the Lord’s miraculous Word and participate in his extraordinary harvest. 

    What produces openness in us? What makes us willing to let the Word of God keep speaking to us? Why do we allow ourselves to open further to what they Lord is speaking to us, that we might know the growth and transformation to which Jesus call us? Perhaps it is the promise that the kingdom of heaven will be even more extraordinary than we can imagine, more effective than anything we can produce, because it is grounded in the power of Jesus’ death and rising which effects our salvation, as Paul reminds the Romans: the sufferings of this present time are as nothing compared with the glory to be revealed for us. We are invited to participate in the kingdom on earth by living in faith for the hope that is ours, the glorious freedom of the children of God. When we surrender entirely to salvation its glory, we are allowing the Word of God to be effective, and our world will overflow with a rich harvest! 

This post is based on Fr. Pat’s Scripture class. 
Image source: www.wordclouds.com

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

I will give you rest (Henri Nouwen)


Dear God,

Speak gently in my silence.
When the loud outer noises of my surroundings
and the loud inner noises of my fears
keep pulling me away from you,
help me to trust that you are still there
even when I am unable to hear you.
Give me ears to listen to your small, soft voice saying:
“Come to me, you who are overburdened, and I will give you rest...
for I am gentle and humble of heart.”
Let that loving voice be my guide. 

Amen. 

--Henri Nouwen

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Monday, July 10, 2023

Nothing is so strong as gentleness (St. Francis de Sales)

Nothing is so strong as gentleness,
nothing so gentle as real strength.

   The Holy Chrism, used by the Church according to apostolic tradition, is made of olive oil mingled with balm, which, among other things, are emblematic of two virtues very specially conspicuous in our Dear Lord Himself, and which He has specially commended to us, as though they, above all things, drew us to Him and taught us to imitate Him: “Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart.” 

   Humility makes our lives acceptable to God, meekness makes us acceptable to men. Balm, sinking to the bottom of all liquids, is a figure of humility; and oil, floating as it does to the top, is a figure of gentleness and cheerfulness, rising above all things, and excelling all things, the very flower of Love, which, so says St. Bernard, comes to perfection when it is not merely patient, but gentle and cheerful. Give heed, then, daughter, that you keep this mystic chrism of gentleness and humility in your heart… 

--St. Francis de Sales, Introduction to the Devout Life

Image source:
https://catholicphilly.com/2015/03/news/national-news/oils-consecrated-at-chrism-mass-central-to-churchs-sacraments-rituals/
Quotation source 1
Quotation source 2

Sunday, July 9, 2023

Meekness is possible (Pope Francis)

   Peace I leave with you: Jesus demonstrates that meekness is possible. He incarnated it precisely in the most difficult moment, and he wants us to behave that way too, since we are the heirs of his peace. He wants us to be meek, open, available to listen, capable of defusing tensions and weaving harmony. This is witnessing to Jesus and is worth more than a thousand words and many sermons. The witness of peace. As disciples of Jesus, let us ask ourselves if we behave like this where we live: do we ease tensions, do we defuse conflicts? Are we too at odds with someone, always ready to react, explode, or do we know how to respond non-violently, do we know how to respond with peaceful actions and words? How do I react? Everyone should ask themselves this. 

--Pope Francis, May 7, 2023 


Image source 1: Emil Nolde, Christ and the Children (1910), https://www.moma.org/collection/works/79494 

Image source 2:  https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/who-am-i-judge-popes-most-powerful-phrase-2013-flna2d11791260

Saturday, July 8, 2023

Friday, July 7, 2023

Embraced by God through the flesh of the Word (Henri Nouwen)

  There is no human being in the past, present, or future, in East, West, North, or South, who has not been embraced by God in and through the flesh of the Word. 

   The life, death, and resurrection of Jesus manifest to us the full intimacy of this divine embrace. He lived our lives, died our deaths, and lifted all of us up into his glory. There is no human suffering that has not been suffered in the agony of Jesus on the cross, no human joy that has not been celebrated by Jesus in the resurrection to new life. There is no human death that Jesus has not died, no human life that Jesus has not lived. In him through whom all has been created, all has been restored to the glory of God. 

--Henri Nouwen 

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Sunday Gospel Reflection, July 9, 2023: Come to me...


Are you ready to embrace a relationship with the Lord? 

    At the time of the prophet Zechariah, Jerusalem was considered to be God’s home, the center of the world’s destiny, the locus to which all people turned to find God. God calls that city his daughter, pointing to God’s desire for an intimate relationship with the people, a reason to celebrate: rejoice heartily, o daughter Zion, the Lord says, shout for joy, o daughter Jerusalem! God’s gift is one of peace, peace born of the Lord’s dominion from sea to sea, and from the River to the ends of the earth. The people could therefore, in the words of Psalm 145, bless God’s name forever and ever, in awe of a God who is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and of great kindness. God’s faithful ones are those who remain bound to the Lord in covenant, firm in the relationship to which he invites them. 

    Jesus similarly gives praise to the Father, Lord of heaven and earth in Matthew’s Gospel, which can be read as a kind of handbook of how to position ourselves in faith. The little ones are those, childlike, whom no formal learning keeps from knowing the Lord. They are open to revelation, to wonder and awe, and can enter into the intimacy of relationship to which Jesus calls them: Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest. We can rest peacefully in him with whom we are in relationship; the challenge is to remain meek and humble of heart, that we might recognize God’s gift of himself in Jesus, and Jesus’ gift to us. 

    For if the Spirit of the one who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in us, then he will give life to our mortal bodies also, Paul tells the Romans. With the Spirit, we have life, so long as we accept the relationship offered to us, a relationship that promises not only eternal life, but also an altered, transformed life here and now. To be in the Spirit is to act in concert with that relationship with God using the gifts of the Holy Spirit – it is to embrace that relationship with all we are and in all we do. For to know that we are loved by God and in intimate relationship with him is indeed a reason to rejoice! 

This post is based on Fr. Pat’s Scripture class. 
Image source: www.wordclouds.com

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Would you harbor me? (Sweet Honey and the Rock)

Would you harbor me?
Would I harbor you?
Would you harbor me?
Would I harbor you?
Would you harbor a Christian, a Muslim, a Jew,
a heretic, convict or spy?
Would you harbor a runaway woman,
or child, a poet, a prophet, a king?
Would you harbor an exile, or a refugee,
a person living with AIDS?
Would you harbor a Tubman, a Garrett, a Truth,
a fugitive or a slave?
Would you harbor a Haitian,
Korean or Czech,
a lesbian or a gay?
Would you harbor me?
Would I harbor you?
Would you harbor me?
Would I harbor you? 

To hear Sweet Honey and the Rock perform Would You Harbor Me?, click on the video below: 



Image source 1: https://www.refugekc.org/blog/refugee-jesus
Image source 2: He Qi, Jesus the Refugee
https://www.bobcornwall.com/2016/12/jesus-refugee-lectionary-reflection.html
Video source

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

A celebration of freedom (A Prayer for the Fourth)

Liberty can no more exist
without virtue and independence
than the body can live and move
without a soul.

--John Adams

 

  Glorious Lord, on this day, we celebrate our nation’s birth and the symbol of freedom it represents to many. We acknowledge that you have been the author of this nation and that it is your great faithfulness that has brought us this far. We continue to trust that your hand will guide her into her purpose and destiny. 

   Right now, we take this time to thank you for the many freedoms and blessings that we have been given: 

    We thank you for the freedom we have to worship you and share the Gospel without fear of death.   

   We thank you for the opportunity to work, study, and play. 

   We thank you for food to eat, clothes to wear, and a roof above our heads. 

   We thank you for men and women who have sacrificed their lives on the battlefield to secure the freedoms and blessings that we now enjoy. 

   We thank you for teachers who work tirelessly to educate the next generation of our nations’ citizens and leaders. 

   We thank you for friendships that enrich our lives and for families and loved ones who love us unconditionally. 

   Most of all, we thank you for freedom from sin and for the grace and power to live for you. 

   Through Christ our Lord, Amen. 



Image source 1: Hank Willis Thomas, Emily Shur, Eric Gottesman and Wyatt Gallery, https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/12/lens/norman-rockwell-paintings-hank-willis-thomas-emily-schur-for-freedoms.html 
Image source 2: Norman Rockwell, Freedom to Worship (1943), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_Worship_%28painting%29  
Prayer source


Monday, July 3, 2023

The heart of wonder (John O'Donohue)


May you awaken to the mystery of being here
And enter the quiet immensity of your own presence.
May you have joy and peace in the temple of your senses.
May you receive great encouragement when new frontiers beckon.
May you respond to the call of your gift
And find the courage to follow its path.
May the flame of anger free you from falsity.
May warmth of heart keep your presence aflame and anxiety never linger about you.
May your outer dignity mirror an inner dignity of soul.
May you take time to celebrate the quiet miracles that seek no attention.
May you be consoled in the secret symmetry of your soul.
May you experience each day as a sacred gift,
Woven around the heart of wonder. 

--John O’Donohue, Eternal Echoes 

Sunday, July 2, 2023

Why, Lord, is it so hard for me to make you the only one? (Henri Nouwen)


   O Lord, who else or what else can I desire but you? You are my Lord, Lord of my heart, mind, and soul. You know me through and through. In and through you everything that is finds its origin and goal. You embrace all that exists and care for it with divine love and compassion. Why, then, do I keep expecting happiness and satisfaction outside of you? Why do I keep relating to you as one of my many relationships, instead of my only relationship, in which all other ones are grounded? Why do I keep looking for popularity, respect from others, success, acclaim, and sensual pleasures? Why, Lord, is it so hard for me to make you the only one? Why do I keep hesitating to surrender myself totally to you? 

   Help me, O Lord, to let my old self die, to let me die to the thousand big and small ways in which I am still building up my false self and trying to cling to my false desires. Let me be reborn in you and see through you the world in the right way, so that all my actions, words, and thoughts can become a hymn of praise to you. 

   I need your loving grace to travel on this hard road that leads to the death of my old self to a new life in and for you. I know and trust that this is the road to freedom. Lord, dispel my mistrust and help me become a trusting friend. Amen. 

--Henri Nouwen

Image source: Robert Leinweber, Peter’s Denial, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Robert_Leinweber_001.jpg
Prayer source