Thanks be to God? Do you see God in this reading? Because I
have to admit that when I first looked at the text I’d been assigned to preach on
tonight, the happiest thought that came to me was that at least I wasn’t being
asked to tell you to cut body parts off.
But we have to find God in this reading from James, because the people
we minister to are relying on us to help them point to and name the action of
God in their lives and if we can’t do that with sacred scripture, we’re in
trouble.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
God went to the cross for us – Jas 5:1-6.
Preaching on the second reading from today's Mass; Sunday Vespers, Moreau Seminary.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
God forges community from the cross – Jn 19:25-27
Continuing my Old College series on the the Seven Sorrows of Mary with the Crucifixion.
There stood by the
cross of Jesus his mother and his mother’s sister, Maria the wife of Clopas and
Mary Magdalen.
Then Jesus, seeing his
mother and the disciple he loved standing by, said to his mother:
“Women, behold your son!”
Then, he said to the
disciple:
“Behold your mother!”
And from that hour, the
disciple received her as his own.
~~
Goudou Goudou: that’s the word in Haitian Creole for ‘earthquake.’ Prior to January 2010, there was no Haitian Creole word for earthquake. Language was not the only thing that changed on that day that knocked Haiti down. Haiti was not doing well before the goudou goudou and it’s not doing well now, but things have changed. This summer I spent some time there and met some amazing groups of Haitians that, with outside support, have come together in the face of horrific disaster to work together to improve their community. I met people that never realized they were a community, with deep responsibilities to each other, until disaster hit. I would never want in any way to romanticize, sugar-coat or over-spiritualize what happened when the earth shook in Haiti. But from that very real cross, God forged community.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
God commands life – Luke 7:11-17.
The Widow of Nain; Sunday-length homily for preaching class.
What are you carrying? …
Is it heavy? Is it in your arms, or on
your back, or is a friend holding it for you right now? What are you carrying? I’m not asking you to answer out loud,
because I want you to think of something you wouldn’t want to tell this whole
group. Because most of us have something
that weighs us down. A memory, a fear,
an injustice suffered or inflicted, an incompetence or a deception.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Jesus expands our vision – Lk 23:26-31
Continuing the OC series on the Seven Sorrows of Mary. This week, the Way of the Cross.
As they led Jesus away,
they seized a certain Cyrenean, Simon, who was coming from the countryside and
they imposed on him the cross to carry behind Jesus.
A great crowd of the
people was following him including some women who were mourning and lamenting
over him.
Turning to them, Jesus
said: “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me.
“Weep rather for
yourselves and for your children,
“for, behold, the days
are coming in which they will say,
“‘Blessed are the
barren and the wombs that have not born children and the breasts that have not
nursed.’
“Then they will start
to say to the mountains, ‘fall on us,’ and to the hills, ‘cover us.’
“For if these things
happen when the trees are green, what will come to pass when they are dry?”
~~
It
wasn’t the first time Jesus had heard a woman cry out as he walked. Near the start of the great journey to
Jerusalem he undertook, a woman cried out, “Blessed is the womb that bore you and
the breasts at which you nursed!” Jesus
certainly does not deny the blessedness of his Mother Mary, but his response
expands that woman’s vision: “Blessed are those who hear the word of God and do
it.” The blessing of having the Word of
God be born in you is great, but Mary’s motherhood does not compete with or
eclipse, but begets the Church’s motherhood, and who is the Church but all who
hear the word of God and do it? Thus,
the word of God is born in us.
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Jesus waits with us before walking with us – Lk 2:41-49
Continuing the Old College Holy Hour Series on Our Lady of Sorrows
~~
Jesus’ parents used to
go each year to Jerusalem for the feast of Passover.
When he
was twelve years old, he had gone up to Jerusalem according to the custom of
the feast, and when the days of the feast were completed and the people were
going away, Jesus remained, the boy in Jerusalem, and his parents did not know.
Thinking
that he was amongst the fellow travelers on the way, they went a day’s journey
and were seeking him out among their relatives and acquaintances. When they did not find him, they turned
around and returned to Jerusalem to search for him.
After
three days, they found him in the Temple, sat in the middle of the teachers,
listening to them and asking them questions.
All those who heard him were amazed at his understanding and his responses.
Upon
seeing him, his parents were astounded and his mother said to him: “My child,
why have you done this to us? Look, your father and I have been seeking you in such grief.”
And he said to them: “Why
did you seek me? Did you not know that
it is necessary for me to be amongst the things of my Father?”
~~
There
was an ad that aired on British television in the run up to last
Christmas. It featured a young boy who
longed for Christmas to come sooner. We
would see him gazing listlessly out of a window as the leaves slowly changed;
we saw him mark off the days with tally marks on his wall; we saw him dress up
in a wizard costume and zap the clock with his wand to try to make it go
faster. Finally, we see him wake up, way
too early for his parents, on Christmas Day morning, eyes a-glimmer with
excitement. He takes a clumsily wrapped
box from under his bed, walks into his parents’ room, and offers it to
them. The caption comes up: “Lewis’s –
for gifts you can’t wait to give.”
Saturday, September 1, 2012
God has a loving plan for us – Matt 2:13-15
Continuing the Old College Holy Hour series on Our Lady of Sorrows.
When the Magi had left,
behold, an angel of the Lord appeared in a dream to Joseph, saying:
“Arise
and take the child and his mother
and flee
to Egypt and stay there until I tell you,
for Herod
is about to seek the child out in order to kill him.”
When he
had arisen, he took the child and his mother by night
and they
went away into Egypt and were there until the death of Herod,
in order
that what the Lord said through the prophet might be fulfilled:
“Out of Egypt I have called my son.”
~~
God
calls Joseph to become a refugee, to undertake a perilous journey to a strange
land and experience the alienation and marginalization of life on the edge of
society in Egypt. God calls him to rise from
death to life, but not to an easy life, and He doesn’t give him an easy road to
tread to get there. God doesn’t promise
us an easy life either; He promises eternal life.
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