Sunday, June 21, 2015
Two weeks off preaching
I have a couple of weekends (this and next) without any preaching commitments, as I transition to Notre Dame. In July, I have parish assistance gigs lined up for three of the Sundays and come late August, I'll be regularly preaching in one of the women's residence halls on campus.
Sunday, June 14, 2015
God gives surprising growth – Mark 4:26-34, Ezek 17:22-24
11th Sunday of Ordinary Time; last Masses at Holy Cross and St. Stanislaus parishes!
For some
reason that right now escapes me, I thought it would work fine to have this
past week be my last at the parish, and then move to Notre Dame and start
summer school on Monday. So, the past
week has been an odd mix of packing, moving and unpacking, physically as well
as trying to wrap up projects or at least package them neatly enough that they
could be handed over, to another member of our pastoral team, a parishioner, or
just offered up to God. Apart from my
formal teaching in the school, which wrapped up nicely, so many of my ‘projects’
here are in fact people’s lives, and lives don’t wrap up into nice neat little
packages. As I’ve been praying this week
with these scriptures, it strikes me that I’m leaving here with a lot of seeds
still in the ground. I say that about
these two parish communities, I say that about many of the individuals and
families who I’ve been privileged to serve in their more fragile, transparent
moments, and I say that about myself: my priesthood, my discipleship.
Sunday, June 7, 2015
God joins Himself to us – Exod 24:3-8, Mark 14:12-26
Corpus Christi, Year B; Holy Cross parish.
I have
a confession to make: over the Easter season, I really enjoyed sprinkling all
the water around on all of you at the start of Mass each Sunday. On the somewhat rare occasions we have
incense, I also enjoy wafting that vaporized medium of blessing towards the
altar and giving it to a server to receive that same blessing myself before
sharing it with you. I’m not sure,
however, quite how I’d do with all of this sprinkling of blood Moses was doing
in the rite that made up our first reading.
I’m not sure how well we’d do at retaining sacristans and cleaners
either, if we did all of that. If the
priesthood of the new covenant had inherited from the old the need to sacrifice
young bulls… well, I don’t think I’d do very well at that either. Praying with these readings, preparing to
preach today, the first thought that came to my mind was: well, that’s not the
question, “how good are you at sacrificing bulls?” The question is, “How good are you at
sacrificing yourself.” And the first
answer that floated to my mind was: “honestly, not very.” But, then I heard a deeper answer resounding:
“but Christ is.”