Can a mother forget her
child? That’s the tender comforting word God has for his people in the reading
we heard from Isaiah. The passage continues of course, after the point we
stopped reading, and maybe as much as we read is enough. It certainly is a rich
banquet of word, of Gospel in the deep sense of good news, to just sit and reflect
on and marvel at God’s love for us, as the love of mother for child. But, the
passage continues and lets us in to God’s emotional attachment to humanity.
Just after these verses, God tells us, “I have engraved you in the palms of my
hands.” I did a little research on palm tattoos this week (I dread to think
what kind of ads I’ll start getting online soon…), and consistently sites I
went to made three points about hand tattoos: they’re painful, they’re very
hard to hide, and they fade quicker than other tattoos so need regular
retouching to look good. God has engraved us in the palms of his hand. God’s
etching of our memory into God’s hands is public, is bold, is extravagant, is
regularly re-inscribed, and is painful.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
God beautifully and painfully re-members us – Isa 49:14-15
8th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year A -- Holy Infant parish, on the occasion of reception of a catechumen and candidate for reception into full communion.
Sunday, February 12, 2017
God has changed the world that we might love like Him – Matt 5:17-48
Ordinary Time, Year A, Week 6; Holy Infant parish.
Suppose we were all good
law-observant Jews, and you heard these words of Jesus’ and decided to follow
them. The next day I have to go out of town, and I ask you if can look after my
ox while I’m gone. You’re a decent sort, and pretty well set up for ox-tending,
so you say, “sure!” Unfortunately, while I’m away, the ox catches what you
think is a bad case of flu. It gets sicker and sicker and then dies. I come
back, and I’m pretty upset about my dead ox, who wasn’t a cute pet, but really
essential to my ability to provide for my family (let’s say we’re all subsistence
farmers here too). I demand you pay me the price of an ox, something you
definitely do not have the resources to do, not without ruining yourself. “Hold
on,” you say, “that’s not fair, it wasn’t my fault, the ox just got sick and
died.” You remember that the law of Moses actually deals explicitly with this
situation, and you’d just heard Jesus say that he hadn’t come to abolish the
law. The law says that in this exact situation, all you have to do is swear an
oath that the ox’s death wasn’t your fault, and I would have no claim against you.
But, Jesus just said no oaths. None at all. And the law of Moses doesn’t say
you can swear
an oath if you like, it says, Exod 22:10-11, in this situation, you must. The
debt-collectors are at your door, and they’re telling you, “follow the law, the
law God gave on Sinai, if what you’re saying about the illness is true, and
swear the oath. If not, cough up.”
Sunday, February 5, 2017
God’s work in us lights up the world – Matt 5:13-16
5th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year C; Holy Infant parish.
Now, I know that in this
congregation we have quite a few scientists, engineers, physicians, etc., and
people whose gifts lie in different areas. But, I’m pretty sure that everyone
here knows the First Law of Thermodynamics.
Now, I don’t mean that you can necessarily recite it, but you know
it. The first law of thermodynamics
states that work is heat and heat is work.
Knowing the first law of thermodynamics really just amounts to knowing
that when you run your car engine, it gets hot.
Now, that’s not really its function (its function is to spin the gears
and thus wheels and move your car forward), but a side-effect (a pleasant one during
those chilly morning commutes we’ve been enjoying recently) is that doing that work
creates heat. You know the first law of
thermodynamics if you know that when you exercise, you’ll start to warm
up. Doing the work of contracting and
extending your muscles to move around creates heat. A room full of children running around won’t
just be noisy, it’ll warm up. And when
things get hot enough, they start to give off light. Think of sparks on a bandsaw. Or, think of those light bulbs, which are
designed to give off light and, incidentally give off heat. The work there is the electrons in the metal
of the filament moving backwards and forwards, changing direction over a
hundred times a second. These tiny
particles buzzing around do enough work to heat those coils and produce enough
light to light up this Church.
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