The
first time I visited Durham was just over three years ago. I was serving at
Notre Dame then and me and another priest from my community had been assigned
to make applications to doctoral programs during that year, so we’d be able eventually
to serve as faculty members at one of our community’s universities. During ND’s
Fall break, Fr. Mark and I did a kind of road trip, to check out various
schools on the East coast that we might be interested in applying to. We went
out to Yale, Boston College and then down to Duke, where I had a wonderful
visit and became pretty convinced that this is where I really was called to do
my doctorate. That, of course, led to all kinds of worry. Initially, would I
get in? But just as importantly, was I sure I’d be able to thrive here as a
priest, and as a vowed religious of the Congregation of Holy Cross, while I did
these studies that I felt called to?
Sunday, October 28, 2018
Jesus walks along our way – Mark 10:46-52
30th Sunday in OT, Year B; Holy Infant parish. A shorter than normal homily, as we had a presentation of the status of our building plans too.
Sunday, October 21, 2018
Jesus pierces suffering – Mark 10:35-45, Heb 4:14-16
Twenty-ninth Sunday in OT, Year B; Holy Infant parish.
Someone
recently sent me a short video about a chef called Mark Brand. Mark is a person
who was at one point in his life without housing. He talks in the video about
how sometimes that meant rotating between friends’ couches; sometimes that
meant sleeping rough. He talks very honestly about how sometimes his life did
involve making bad decision concerning alcohol and other drugs, and other times
when he was able to choose sobriety for sustained periods, but had to deal with
people who assumed he wasn’t. Things changed for Mark. He now owns a couple of
restaurants. He has a permanent roof over his head, he employs people.
Sunday, October 14, 2018
God fills us to overflowing – Mark 10:17-27, Heb 4:12-13
Twenty-eighth Sunday of OT, Year B; Holy Infant
You’ve
all probably heard that familiar adage that a pessimist says a glass is
half-empty and an optimist says that it’s half-full. Well, as Christians, we’re not called to be
pessimists or optimists. We’re called to be something much more exciting; we’re
called to be people of hope. A person of hope doesn’t deal in these half
measures: hope proclaims that the glass can be filled. Christian hope is assured that God can fill
us up, that through the blood of Christ out poured, we can be filled to
overflowing with holiness and love. God
will fill us. That’s what Jesus means
when he says that “All things are possible with God.”
Sunday, October 7, 2018
Jesus brings us back to God’s creative love – Mark 10:2-12, Gen 2:18-24
Twenty-seventh Sunday of OT, Year B; Holy Infant parish.
“Go back
to the beginning… how did this all start?”
When something that was meant to be wonderful starts to taste bitter,
that can be just the question to ask.
What was it that so exited me and led me to take this job, to begin this
course of study, to play on this team, … to marry this person? How can I bring that initial fervor to life
again, in the more mature way that’s needed to deal with our more seasoned
problems or our creeping ennui?
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