Tuesday, November 30, 2021

The strength to stay present (Cynthia Bourgeault)


   Hope wills us with the strength to stay present, to abide in the flow of the Mercy no matter what outer storms assail us. It is entered always and only through surrender; that is, through the willingness to let go of everything we are presently clinging to. And yet when we enter it, it enters us and fills us with its own life — a quiet strength beyond anything we have ever known.

--Cynthia Bourgeault, Mystical Hope

Image source: https://turningthepage.co.nz/the-gentle-art-of-letting-go/

Monday, November 29, 2021

Our spirit can stay with those we love (Henri Nouwen)


   I realize how deeply the death of a [loved one] touches us. We suddenly realize that some of the most intimate ties are broken and that we are called to let our [loved ones] move away from us and their place in history. 

    And still, I also believe that absence might lead to the awareness of a new presence. Lately, I have found much comfort in the words of Jesus: It is for your good that I leave, because unless I leave, my Spirit cannot come. Jesus’ leaving meant that he would become more intimately present to us, that he would unite himself in a new way with us. Because of his death we can say: Not I live but Christ lives in me. I have a feeling that this is not just true of Jesus, but in and through Jesus of all people who leave us. In their absence we can develop a new intimacy with them, and grow. We even can become more like them and fulfill their mission in life until the day comes that we too have to leave so that our spirit can stay with those we love. In this way, mourning can slowly turn into joy, and grief into rebirth. 

--Henri Nouwen   

In November we remember All Souls...

Image source: Giotto di Bondone (1266-1337), The Ascension, https://www.ncregister.com/blog/were-the-apostles-sad-at-the-ascension 

Sunday, November 28, 2021

Tomorrow shall be my dancing day (Christmas Carol)


Tomorrow shall be my dancing day;
I would my true love did so chance
To see the legend of my play,
To call my true love to my dance.

Sing, oh! my love, oh! my love, my love, my love,
This I have done for my true love.

Then was I born of a virgin pure,
Of her I took fleshy substance
Thus was I knit to man’s nature
To call my true love to my dance. (Chorus)

In a manger laid, and wrapped I was
So very poor, this was my chance
Betwixt an ox and a silly poor ass
To call my true love to my dance. (Chorus)

Then afterwards baptized I was;
The Holy Ghost on me did glance,
My Father’s voice heard from above,
To call my true love to my dance. (Chorus)

Into the desert I was led,
Where I fasted without substance;
The Devil bade me make stones my bread,
To have me break my true love’s dance. (Chorus)

The Jews on me they made great suit,
And with me made great variance,
Because they loved darkness rather than light,
To call my true love to my dance. (Chorus)

For thirty pence Judas me sold,
His covetousness for to advance:
Mark whom I kiss, the same do hold!
The same is he shall lead the dance. (Chorus)

Before Pilate the Jews me brought,
Where Barabbas had deliverance;
They scourged me and set me at nought,
Judged me to die to lead the dance. (Chorus)

Then on a cross hanged I was
Where a spear my heart did glance;
There issued forth both water and blood,
To call my true love to my dance. (Chorus)

Then down to hell I took my way
For my true love’s deliverance,
And rose again on the third day,
Up to my true love and the dance. (Chorus)

Then up to heaven I did ascend,
Where now I dwell in sure substance
On the right hand of God, that man
May come unto the general dance. (Chorus)

To hear John Rutter & the Cambridge Singers perform the Christmas carol Tomorrow Shall Be My Dancing Day, click on the video below:



Image source 1: Giotto, Nativity, detail, Scrovegni Chapel, Padua, https://www.byunewtestamentcommentary.com/what-on-earth-are-swaddling-clothes/
Image source 2: Giotto, Nativity, Scrovegni Chapel, Padua, https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e3/Giotto_-_Scrovegni_-_-17-_-_Nativity%2C_Birth_of_Jesus.jpg
Video source



Saturday, November 27, 2021

Salvation history (Fr. Patrick Michaels)


We are always celebrating
salvation history.

 --Fr. Patrick Michaels,
Scripture Class,
November 29, 2018

Image source: Some of Fr. Patrick Michaels’ handmade ornaments on the Jesse Tree, 2017. Each ornament illustrates a different story in our salvation history and is accompanied by a text from Scripture and a prayer. https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?vanity=mountcarmelmv&set=a.1654353261292756

Friday, November 26, 2021

Sunday Gospel Reflection, November 28, 2021: The days are coming when I will fulfill the promise I made...


Where do you find hope?

    In the time of the prophet Jeremiah, Israel is long gone and Judah will soon disappear as well. Yet the Lord looks forward to restoration: The days are coming when I will fulfill the promise I made to the house of Israel and Judah, he says. The Lord wants his people to know that one day Judah shall be safe and Jerusalem shall dwell secure, manifesting God’s divine justice. Even at the darkest moments, we are called to hope. Our readings in the first weeks of Advent look forward to the end times, when all will come to fulfillment; we are called to step back and think about how we are participating in progress toward salvation. In Luke’s Gospel, Jesus acknowledges that there are dark times ahead: on earth nations will be in dismay, and people will die of fright. Yet Jesus’ followers know better than to be overwhelmed; rather, they must stand erect because their redemption is at hand, knowing the Lord is with them, always.

    When fear takes hold of us, it’s hard to hold to our hope. But, in fact, we need precisely to pass through the struggle to find redemption, opening ourselves to the experience and remembering throughout all of our travails the one who loves us and stands with us and came for our salvation. We are never alone; God’s grace is at work in us even when bad things happen. God sent his Son to die on a cross so that he would be with us forever; we must, as Paul tells the Thessalonians, strengthen our hearts, to be blameless in holiness before our God and Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus. No barriers – and certainly not fear – should keep us from growing in the love we have been baptized into. Indeed, we must increase and abound in love, seeking the paths of the Lord, as Psalm 25 reminds us. We are called to grow in our relationship with the Lord, remaining open to learning every day how much God loves us, and where we fit into God’s plan. God is allowing our world to unfold, and God is carrying us through, until we stand before him, ready to meet him, unafraid. We, for our part, must hope in his love, confident that all the paths of the Lord are kindness and constancy toward those who keep his covenant. God will fulfill God’s promise, and we will one day dwell in his perfect love – that is our hope. In the meantime, let us remain confident in his love, and increase and abound in love for one another and for all as we wait for the fulfillment of God’s promise.


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

Thursday, November 25, 2021

As we express our gratitude (John F. Kennedy)


    As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter words, but to live by them.

--John Fitzgerald Kennedy,
November 11, 1963

Image source: https://www.countryliving.com/food-drinks/g2059/thanksgiving-quotes/
Quotation source

Let God and the world know you are grateful (Mary Oliver)


Be still, my soul, and steadfast.
Earth and heaven both are still watching
though time is draining from the clock
and your walk, that was confident and quick,
has become slow.

So, be slow if you must, but let
the heart still play its truest part.
Love still as once you loved, deeply
and without patience.
Let God and the world
know you are grateful.
That the gift has been given.

--Mary Oliver, The Gift      

Blessings to all on Thanksgiving
from Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Mill Valley!

Image source: https://evolutionmgt.com/gratitude-thanksgiving-season/

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Thou, O Lord, are more than they (Alfred, Lord Tennyson)


Our little systems have their day:
They have their day and cease to be;
They are but broken lights of thee
And thou, O Lord, are more than they.

--Alfred, Lord Tennyson,
excerpt from In Memoriam
A.H.H. OBIIY MDCCCXXXIII

For Tennyson's complete poem, click here.

Image source: Thomas Edwin Mostyn (1864-1930), Christ before Pilate, http://www.artnet.com/artists/thomas-edwin-mostyn/christ-before-pilate-YdS83DMCCJ0z51WpTiGcsw2
Poem source

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

He returned love for hatred (Leo Tolstoy)


   There is only one way to put an end to evil, and that is to do good for evil. We see that in Jesus. Some hated him, and he died like that. However, that hatred lost its power over him because he refused to respond in kind. Rather, he returned love for hatred, understanding for misunderstanding, blessing for curse, graciousness for resentment, fidelity for rejection, and forgiveness for murder. But that takes a rare, incredible strength.
--Leo Tolstoy        

Image source: John Valentine Haidt, Christ before Herod (1762), http://bdhp.moravian.edu/art/paintings/herod.html
Quotation source

Monday, November 22, 2021

In the end love will return (Franz Kafka)


   At forty, Franz Kafka (1883-1924), who never married and had no children, walked through the park in Berlin when he met a girl who was crying because she had lost her favorite doll. She and Kafka searched for the doll unsuccessfully. Kafka told her to meet him there the next day and they would come back to look for her. 

    The next day, when they had not yet found the doll, Kafka gave the girl a letter ‘written’ by the doll saying Please don’t cry. I took a trip to see the world. I will write to you about my adventures. Thus began a story which continued until the end of Kafka’s life. 

    During their meetings, Kafka read the letters of the doll, carefully written with adventures and conversations that the girl found adorable. Finally, Kafka brought back the doll (he bought one) that had returned to Berlin. 

    It doesn’t look like my doll at all, said the girl. 

    Kafka handed her another letter in which the doll wrote, My travels have changed me. The little girl hugged the new doll and brought her happy home. 

    A year later, Kafka died. Many years later, the now-adult girl found a letter inside the doll. In the tiny letter signed by Kafka, it was written: Everything you love will probably be lost, but in the end, love will return in another way.

--Unknown  

In November we remember All Souls...     

Sunday, November 21, 2021

Our Christ, the King (Sarah Hart)


Oh, we were wandering in the dark
We had lost our hope and way
And we were restless in our hearts
How we needed to be saved
And so to rescue all your own
You sent your only son
A light to fall, a peace to bring
The coming of our Christ, the King

The word made flesh, the light from light
A cry that pierced our endless noise
A child to speak into our pain
Restoring unto us our joy
To teach our hearts and heal our wounds
Replace our doubt with heaven’s truth
The broken, healed; the lost, redeemed
The beauty of our Christ, the King

Though heaven’s glory he had shown
All our praises turned to scorn
The gift of mercy that he gave
We returned with cross and thorn
Yet to the end, he loved us still
Surrendered to the Father’s will
The mercy of our Christ, the King

And though they laid him in the tomb
In the silence of the grace
No stone could keep the love of God
From the ones he came to save
And so in power and radiant light
He vanquished death and rose to life
Now with the heavens I shall sing
The glory of our Christ, the King

To hear Hymn to Christ the King performed by composer Sarah Hart, click on the video below:



Image source: https://www.fisheaters.com/customstimeafterpentecost11.html

Video source

Saturday, November 20, 2021

God most potent (Joel Clarkson)


    God has never ceased his creative mending of the world, which becomes most potent precisely when we feel things have most completely gone wrong.

--Joel Clarkson,
Heartbeats of Incarnation:
Creativity in Christ

Image source: https://reasonsforhopejesus.com/mend-broken-heart-reconcile/
Quotation source

Friday, November 19, 2021

My kingdom does not belong to this world (Bishop Robert Barron)


   Pontius Pilate is a typical Roman governor: efficient, concerned for order, brutal. Like the other rulers of the time, he perceives Jesus, quite correctly, as a threat: So you are a king? Pilate asks. Jesus says, My kingdom does not belong to this world.

    This does not mean that Jesus is unconcerned for the realities of politics, with the very this-worldly concerns of justice, peace, and right order. When he speaks of his kingdom not belonging to the world, he shades the negative side of that term. The world is the realm of sin, selfishness, hatred, violence. What he is saying is that his way of ordering things is not typical of worldly powers like Pilate, Caesar, and Herod.

--Bishop Robert Barron, Gospel Reflection,
September 24, 2020

Image source: Follower of Hieronymus Bosch, Christ before Pontius Pilate (ca. 1520), https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/collections/objects/34742

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Sunday Gospel Reflection, November 21, 2021: The Lord is king; he is robed in majesty...


But what kind of king, exactly?

    We celebrate this week the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe, and our first reading from the Book of Daniel aptly prophesies one like a Son of man who will receive dominion, glory, and honor, while Psalm 93 speaks of a king robed in majesty. But what kind of power does Christ our King wield? In fact, the Lord wants not so much to wield power over us as to release power within us – the power of his love and mercy that we are called to share with our world. The dominion to which Daniel refers is in fact a responsibility to care for, rather than to lord over. Thus, the one like a Son of man will rule justly by calling forth love and mercy from within the people of God.

    In John’s Gospel, Pilate has his own idea of what a king should look like, and it certainly has nothing to do with the shackled man who stands before him. Pilate’s question to Jesus, Are you the King of the Jews? is meant as mockery. But Pilate does not realize that Jesus’ kingdom is unlike any Pilate has known; my kingdom is not here, Jesus replies.  Jesus’ kingdom is grounded not in taking but in giving, and will be ushered in with his death and rising, when he frees us from our sins by his blood, making us into a kingdom, as the Book of Revelation reminds us. It is when he sacrifices himself entirely that Christ enjoys true dominion. The kingdom of Christ our King, King of the Universe, is not of this world, though it is in our hearts whenever we are open to it; that kingdom will win people over by love alone, a love that rules our hearts, a love we come together every week to celebrate.


This post is based on Fr. Pat’s homily for the Solemnity of Christ the King, 2018.
Image source: www.wordclouds.com

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

If I could just relieve myself of my expectations (Natalie Merchant)


   I feel like every night is a dark night of the soul because I’ve not always been able to sleep. Your nights in the dark by yourself always seem to lead you to those questions: Why do I cling to my expectations of everything? If I could just relieve myself of my expectations, I would probably be a lot more satisfied. But it’s a battle, because I always feel that constant dissatisfaction also pushes me to work and try to change.

Giving up everything – my hungry ghost of hopefulness
Giving up everything – not haunted by not wanting this
Giving up everything – the fortune I was saving
Giving up everything – I mercy-killed my craving
Giving up everything – I’ve opened up my eyes for this
Giving up everything – see the whole magnificent emptiness

Gave what I want for how it is
for the stone inside and the bitterness
for the sweetness at the core of it

Giving up everything – the master plan, the scheming
Giving up everything – my cursed search for meaning
Giving up everything – the compass and the map I was reading
The hinterlands I’m leaving
I’m finally leaving behind

Giving up everything – the big to-do, the hullabaloo
The tug of war for some twisted truth
For the everlasting ache of it
No longer slave, not chained to it,
No gate, no guard, no keeper
No guru, master, teacher

See the slow-receding faces
dissolve to black, no traces

--Natalie Merchant

To hear Natalie Merchant sing Giving Up Everything, click on the video below:



Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Everything that frightens us (Rainer Marie Rilke)



   Perhaps everything that frightens us is, in its deepest essence, something helpless that wants our love. So you mustn’t be frightened, if a sadness rises in front of you, larger than any you have every seen; if an anxiety, like light and cloud-shadows, moves over your hands and everything you do. You must realize that something is happening to you, that life has not forgotten you, that it holds you in its hand and will not let you fall. 

--Rainer Maria Rilke 

Monday, November 15, 2021

What do you get from loss? (Stephen Colbert)


A divine punishment is also a divine gift.
--J.R.R. Tolkien,
October 1958

    There was a big break in the cable of my life at their death. I was personally shattered. And then you kind of reform yourself in this quiet, grieving world that has taken over the house.

    We’re asked to accept the world God gives us, and to accept it with love, with gratitude.

    It’s a gift to exist, and with existence comes suffering. There’s no escaping that. And I guess I’m either a Catholic or a Buddhist when I say those things… I didn’t learn that I was grateful for the thing I most wish hadn’t happened as that I realized it, and it’s an oddly guilty feeling. I don’t want it to have happened; I want it not to have happened. But if you are grateful for your life, which is a positive thing to do… then you have to be grateful for all of it. You can’t pick and chose what you’re grateful for.

   And what do you get from loss? You get awareness of other people’s loss, which allows you to connect with that other person, which allows you to love more deeply and to understand what it’s like to be a human person, if it’s true that all humans suffer. And so, at a young age I suffered something, so that by the time that I was in serious relationships in my life… I [had] some understanding that everybody is suffering, and, however imperfectly, acknowledge their suffering and to connect with them and to love them in a deep way that, not only accepts that all of us suffer, but that somehow makes you grateful for the fact that you have suffered, so that you can know that about other people. It’s about the fullness of your humanity. What’s the point of your being human if you can’t be the most human you can be? I’m not saying best… I want to be the most human I can be. And that involves acknowledging and ultimately being grateful for the things that I wish didn’t happen, because they gave me a gift.

    And in my tradition, that’s the great gift of the sacrifice of Christ, is that God does it, too. So, you’re really not alone: God does it, too.

--Stephen Colbert, in an interview with Anderson Cooper

To watch this interview in which Stephen Colbert and Anderson Cooper discuss grief, click on the video below:



In November we remember All Souls...

Image source:  
https://vocal.media/poets/broken-chains-1
Tolkien quotation source
Video source (Note: The majority of the Colbert quotation starts around 13:00.)

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Today well-lived (Kalidasa)


Look to this day!
For it is life.
The very Life of Life.
In its brief course lie all the verities and realities of your existence.
The bliss of grown.
The glory of action.
The splendor of beauty.
For yesterday is but a dream
And tomorrow is only a vision
But today well-lived makes every yesterday a dream of happiness
and every tomorrow a vision of hope.
Look therefore you this day.
Such is the salutation of the Dawn.


--Kalidasa, Salutation of the Dawn
(Sanskrit, 6th c. BC)

Image source: https://www.soulshepherding.org/contemplating-god-beauty-nature/
Quotation source

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Friday, November 12, 2021

Time lived as kairos (Henri Nouwen)


   To start seeing that the many events of our day, week, or year are not in the way of our search for a full life, but rather are the way to it is a real experience of conversion. We discover that cleaning and cooking, writing letters and doing professional work, visiting people and caring for others, are not a series of random events that prevent us from realizing our deepest self. These natural, daily activities contain with in them some transforming power that changes how we live. We made hidden passage from time lived as chronos to time lived as kairos. Kairos is a Greek word meaning the opportunity. It is the right time, the real moment, the chance of our lives. When our time becomes kairos, it frees us and opens us to endless new possibilities. Living kairos offers an opportunity for a profound change of heart.

--Henri Nouwen

Image source: C. Hudson, Cooking Lesson, available for purchase at: https://fineartamerica.com/featured/cooking-lesson-cynthia-hudson.html
Quotation source

Thursday, November 11, 2021

Sunday Gospel Reflection, November 14, 2021: My heart is glad and my soul rejoices...


Are you ready right now for the love of God to overtake you?

    It’s easy to see only references to the end times in this Sunday’s readings. The Book of Daniel speaks of a time unsurpassed in distress, while Psalm 16 invokes the netherworld, and in Mark’s Gospel Jesus speaks of the days after that tribulation. But in fact, in each case, it’s fidelity to God in the here and now, and his love for us, that truly matter. When we read what appears to be an apocalyptic text, we must remember that we are to stick with God’s kingdom, no matter how dismal things seem, and the only way to do this is to trust in the Lord, staying faithful to God and living for our hope. Daniel promises that the wise shall shine brightly, like the splendor of the firmament. The psalmist is aware of this: you will show me the path to life, fullness of joys in your presence, he sings. The psalmist is aware of God’s action in his life in the here and now, and he will continue to serve the Lord, trusting in confidence in God’s promises.

    Jesus likewise shares what seem to be threatening portents in Mark’s Gospel, pointing to the end times and the judgment that is to come, when angels will gather his elect. But in fact, if we are attentive to the Lord there is nothing to be afraid of – so long as we live our lives in full recognition that the Lord is significant in our lives, and that we trust first and foremost in him. Rather than trying to predict the exact time of Jesus’ return, we must instead think about what is possible now, what we can accomplish now, in the kingdom that has come, albeit not in its fullness. Jesus, the Book of Hebrews tells us, offered one sacrifice for sins, and so we live now in hope, celebrating the forgiveness that is ours.

    When we worry, it is impossible for us to focus on God’s love for us. But Jesus is here, and will reman here and accomplish things we never thought possible. Are we ready right now for the love of God to overtake us? Are we ready to embrace him, right here and now, to receive his love, to accept salvation? The Lord prepares us to open to him in the here and now, and he will be at our side, whatever comes. Get ready!


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

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

I dream a world (Langston Hughes)


I dream a world where man
No other man will scorn,
Where love will bless the earth
And peace its paths adorn
I dream a world where all
Will know sweet freedom’s way,
Where greed no longer saps the soul
Nor avarice blights our day.
A world I dream where black or white,
Whatever race you be,
Will share the bounties of the earth
And every man is free,
Where wretchedness will hang its head
And joy, like a pearl,
Attends the needs of all mankind –
Of such I dream, my world!

--Langston Hughes                  

Image source: https://www.ssawg.org/events/2017/8/17/federation-of-southern-cooperatives-land-assistance-fund
Poem source

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

Self-righteous (Fr. Patrick Michaels)


       If you believe in your own self-righteousness, there is no room for mercy in your life. You have no need of mercy.

--Fr. Patrick Michaels
Homily, September 15, 2019

Image source: James Christensen, The Widow’s Mite (1988), available for purchase at: http://www.christcenteredmall.com/stores/art/christensen/the-widows-mite.htm

Monday, November 8, 2021

It still hurts when you dance (Anne Lamott / Christopher Walken)

   Someday, you will be faced with the reality of loss. And as life goes on, days rolling into nights, it will become clear that you never really stop missing someone special who’s gone, you just learn to live around the gaping hole of their absence. When you lose someone, you can’t imagine living without, your heart breaks wide open, and the bad news is you never completely get over the loss. You will never forget them.

    However, in a backwards way, this is also the good news. They will live on in the warmth of your broken heart that doesn’t fully heal back up, and you will continue to grow and experience life, even with your wound. It’s like badly breaking an ankle that never heals perfectly, and that still hurts when you dance, but you dance anyway with a slight limp, and this limp just adds to the depth of your performance and the authenticity of your character. The people you lose remain a part of you. Remember them, and always cherish the good moments spent with them.


--Attributed variously to Anne Lamott
and Christopher Walken
(or perhaps Christopher Walken
quoting Anne Lamott?)

Sunday, November 7, 2021

It is not small to God (St. Gregory Nazianzen)


   Give something, however small, to the one in need. For it is not small to one who has nothing. Neither is it small to God, if we have given what we could.

--St. Gregory Nazianzen

Image source: Edouard-Louis Dubufe, Le Denier de la veuve / The Widow’s Mite, https://www.bonhams.com/auctions/26752/lot/149/?category=list#/

Saturday, November 6, 2021

The widow, orphan and stranger (Fr. Greg Boyle)





You go to the margins not to make a difference, but so that the widow, orphan, and stranger can make you different. 

--Fr. Greg Boyle,
Commencement Speech,
Le Moyne College

Image source: https://junkyardwisdom.com/2016/10/17/what-jesus-saw-in-the-widows-offering/

Friday, November 5, 2021

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Sunday, November 7, 2021: The Lord secures justice for the oppressed...


How can you be life-giving for our world?

    In the First Book of Kings, the widow of Zarephath to whom God sends Elijah is destitute: there is only a little flour in my jar and a little oil in my jug, she tells him. A woman living alone with her son, the widow has no recourse; in a time of famine, the marginalized were the last to receive the community’s support. The desperation of her situation makes her dependent on the stranger in her midst, yet Elijah, in an extraordinary move, asks her to bring along a crust of bread, that he might eat. Because she trusts and cooperates, she is rewarded; she allows herself to be dependent on the Lord, the God of Elijah, who promises, The jar of flour shall not go empty, nor the jug of oil run dry, until the day when the Lord sends rain upon the earth. As Psalm 146 proclaims, The Lord secures justice for the oppressed, and gives food to the hungry. The Lord is merciful to all who have great need, but we too must play a role: there is no justice for the oppressed unless we stand up for justice for them – this is God’s work in us.

    Nine hundred years later, Jesus’ community is still struggled to secure justice for the oppressed. Speaking, in Mark’s Gospel, of the scribes, Jesus says, They devour the houses of widows, consuming the little people have and condemning the marginalized, those who live on the periphery of society. Jesus knows that the widow who puts two small coins into the treasury has put in more than all the other contributors. She gives everything she has without considering the cost to herself, trusting in the mercy of God, confident that God will take care of her, and Jesus wants to secure justice for her as well.

    God has always been concerned on behalf of God’s people. The Book of Hebrews reminds us that Christ appears before God on our behalf, making it possible to live as if death is not a barrier. Jesus came and will come again to bring salvation to those who eagerly await him; he will be particularly attentive to those who, like the widow, contribute from their poverty, trusting in God’s promise of salvation. Our job is to serve our world in any way we can; we must take responsibility for the people of our community, and secure justice for all who are in need, all who are marginalized, allowing the Lord to work through us, that all might have what they need.


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

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

Rooted in the heart of God (Henri Nouwen)


    When we love God with all our heart, mind, strength, and soul, we cannot do other than love our neighbor, and our very selves. It is in being fully rooted in the heart of God that we are creatively connected with our neighbor as well as with our deepest self. In the heart of God, we can see that the other human beings who live on this earth with us are also God’s sons and daughters, and belong to the same family we do. There, too, I can recognize and claim my own belovedness, and celebrate with my neighbors.

    Our society thinks economically:
How much love do I give to God, how much to my neighbor, and how much to myself? But God says, Give all your love to me, and I will give to you, your neighbor, and yourself.

    We are not talking here about moral obligations or ethical imperatives. We are talking about the mystical life. It is the intimate communion with God that reveals to us how to live in the world and act in God’s name.
--Henri Nouwen       

Image source: http://joemarino.org/ephesians-3-17-rooted-in-the-love-of-christ/
Quotation source

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

What do I do with all this grief? (Rainer Marie Rilke / Fr. Ron Rolheiser)


    The poet Rainer Marie Rilke once wrote these words to a friend who, in the face of a death of a loved one, wondered how or where he could ever find consolation. What do I do with all this grief?

Do not be afraid to suffer,
give that heaviness back to the weight of the earth;
mountains are heavy, seas are heavy.

    So too is life sometimes, and we need to be given God’s permission to feel that heaviness.

--Fr. Ron Rolheiser, OMI

In November, we remember All Souls...

Image source: https://qz.com/672131/a-sculpture-that-perfectly-captures-the-weight-of-grief/
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Monday, November 1, 2021

Role models of greatness (Sr. Joan D. Chittister)


    For centuries the church has confronted the human community with role models of greatness. We call them saints when what we really often mean to say is icon, star, hero, ones so possessed by an internal vision of divine goodness that they give us a glimpse of the face of God in the center of the human. They give us a taste of the possibilities of greatness in ourselves.

--Sr. Joan D. Chittister



Today we celebrate the Solemnity of All Saints!

Image source: John August Swanson, The Procession (serigraph, 2007), available for purchase at: https://www.johnaugustswanson.com/default.cfm/PID=1.2-22.html