Sometimes, the origins of
a word have little or nothing to do with what the word means now. “Malaria,”
for instance, means “bad air,” because people thought the disease was airborne,
and we’ve kept the word even though we now know that’s not how it spreads. But
other times, the origin of a word is really worth sitting with and wondering if
it can actually illuminate the concept for us. I think that a good example of this
is the word “educate.” Our English word “educate” comes from the Latin “to lead
out,” ex + dūcere. And I think that that’s actually a rather beautiful
image of what education is, the idea that education consists not of stuffing
people’s brains full of as many facts as possible (the so-called “banking model”
of education), but of leading them out of somewhere. The image, I think, is of
leading people out of somewhere that is narrow and confining. An educator walks
with students, equips them to walk on their own two feet, but keeps on guiding
them, not abandoning them, and leads them from a place of narrowness, of being
shut in, into a world that is suddenly larger, a world they can now navigate.
Sunday, December 29, 2019
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
God feeds us – Luke 2:1-14
Christmas; St. Joseph parish, Basilica of the Sacred Heart.
The image of the baby in
a manger. It’s on a huge number of Christmas cards, it’s part of our nativity
set here in church that we blessed at the beginning of Mass, it’s popular among
artists, it’s just part of Christmas for us. Which maybe means that we never
stop to think about quite how odd it is. I think that maybe one thing
that obscures that is that we use the word “manger,” which we pretty much only
ever use in relation to Jesus, rather than a more prosaic, but equally
accurate, term like “feeding trough.” I mean, I’m not going to claim to be the
expert here on neonatal care, but I don’t know how many of you ever put your
babies in your dogs’ food dish.
Sunday, December 22, 2019
God is with us – Matt 1:18-24
4th Sunday of Advent, Year A; St. Joe parish.
I used to be associate
pastor at Holy Cross parish, and while I was there, I taught the confirmation
class for the grade school kids. The first mini-essay I’d assign each year
would be to ask them to explain which virtue they most wanted to grow in over
the course of their confirmation prep. Each time I assigned that essay prompt,
a full half of them would choose courage. The rest, by the way, would be split
roughly evenly between faith, hope, and love. I was somewhat disappointed that
none of them ever chose prudence, which I think is something many twelve to fourteen-year-olds
could probably do with growing in… But, courage, that was the most popular
choice for virtue they most wanted to grow in. And they were able, in general,
to write about big bold displays of courage, but they concentrated in their
responses on little things, on resisting peer pressure, standing up for someone
being picked up, or defending what they believed was right.
Sunday, December 15, 2019
God makes the deserted bloom – Matt 11:2-11, Isa 35:1-6a, 10
Advent, 3rd Sunday, Year A; St. Joseph parish.
“Here is your God.” Behold, your God. These are some of the words we heard from the
Isaiah. He has more to say about God: that
He comes with vindication, with divine recompense, he comes to save you. It goes on, talking of all the miraculous
healing that will happen, all great cause for rejoicing on this Gaudete Sunday, the Sunday of
rejoicing. Advent is a lot about waiting
for the future. It’s also about remembering the past, building up our trust and
hope that Christ will come again by remembering that he came. But the readings
we heard today shift our focus from both past and future to present. “Here
Is your God.” Not, here’s the
spot where he will be, just hang on; certainly not, there’s where he will be,
but he’s distant now, so don’t bother Him.
No. Behold Him. Here is your
God. The cry might go up… “where?”
Sunday, December 8, 2019
God gives us the gift of being givers –Isa 11:1-10
2nd Sunday of Advent, Year A; Holy Infant parish.
We use cute kittens for
praising friends. If you were to ask anyone who prepared for the sacrament of
confirmation through Holy Cross grade school, South Bend, IN in 2014 or 2015
what the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit are, I’d hazard a guess that, before
answering, at least a few of them would recite in their heads: “We use cute
kittens for praising friends.” The reason is that in those two years, I was
teaching the confirmation prep class for the kids in our parish grade school,
and I knew that, as part of Bishop’s homily at their confirmation Mass, he
would ask the confirmandi to provide for him each of the gifts of the Holy
Spirit. So, I made up that mnemonic, in which the first letter of each word in
the sentence matches the first letter of the gift, to help them remember. We,
wisdom; use, understanding; cute, counsel; kittens, knowledge; for, fortitude;
praising, piety; friends, fear of the Lord. Only once on a quiz did I have a
kid claim that the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit were wisdom, understanding,
counsel, kittens, fortitude, piety, fear of the Lord. And that list of gifts is
important, because it’s a long-standing way of naming what it is God
strengthens in a Christian when they receive the sacrament of confirmation. The
-firm- part in the middle of the word “confirmation” means “strengthens,”
and it’s not primarily about the recipient of the sacrament strengthening their
commitment (though, if they do that, that’s wonderful); the sacraments are all
about God’s action, not ours, about God’s strengthening of God’s gifts to God’s
people.
Sunday, December 1, 2019
God stirs up our longing to run to Christ – Adv I collect, Isa 2:1-5, Rom 13:11-14
Advent I, Year C; Holy Infant parish.
Collect:
Collect:
Grant your faithful, we
pray, almighty God,
The resolve
to run forth to meet your Christ
With
righteous deeds at his coming,
So that,
gathered at his right hand,
They may be
worthy to possess the heavenly kingdom.
Through our
Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
Who lives
and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
One God,
for ever and ever.
--
Advent is for waiting –
if people know one thing about Advent, it’s probably that. We’re waiting for Christmas, which isn’t very
long to wait and we’re waiting for Christ to come again, without knowing how
long that will be. Regardless, we’re
waiting. So why did our opening prayer,
our collect, talk about running? “Grant us the resolve to run forth to meet
your Christ.” That’s what we prayed at
the start of Mass. Running: it’s a
fascinating and compelling characterization of what Christian waiting looks
like.
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