Monday, September 2, 2013
Guest Post: Preparing for the rest of my life, and beyond
I have a guest post on the Holy Cross Vocations blog about my final preparations for Final Vows.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
WwtW: Jesus welcomes the weak and humble to join the pilgrimage, heading heavenwards
Ordinary Time, Year C, Week 22.
First
Reading: Heb 12:18-19, 22-24a
Context. The
origins of this “letter” are shrouded in mystery: we don’t know who wrote it,
who is was intended for, or whether it was even a letter (it may well have been
a homily.) Its central theme is the
priesthood of Christ, crucified and exalted: Christ did what Jewish cult could
not do – provide permanent cleansing from sin, through the New Altar of the
Cross. We are called to follow our “forerunner” on his pilgrimage,
bringing us home to heavenly rest. The sections of the letter we’ve been
reading over the past few weeks deal with quite how we’re to walk this walk: we
heard of people who endured trials for the sake of the heavenly city they could
not see but, by faith, were assured of inheriting. We must follow this pilgrim band, who have
Jesus as their head.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
WwtW: God beckons us all to come feast at His table
Ordinary Time Year C, Week 21.
Isaiah
66:18-21
Context. This reading comes from part of the book of Isaiah called
“Third Isaiah.” It comes from a time
very soon after the end of the Babylonian Exile. The people have returned to their land after
two or three generations of exile in Babylon.
They are rebuilding physically, structurally and emotionally, and
there’s dispute about how best to do this, including about how involved
non-Israelites can be. The dominant
message is of hope and comfort, but the author also has a vision for how the
People are to live in the Restored Land.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
WwtW: God perfects our faith through the division and strife we encounter when we live as peace-makers
Wednesdays with the Word (OT C, 20). A new series for this blog! I've started a Bible Study at my parish, looking at the coming Sunday readings. We meet Wednesday mornings after Daily Mass. I'll be posting the notes I make for them here afterwards. I regard producing these notes as the first 1/3 of homily writing: contextualizing and understanding the scriptures. The next third is what we ask together as a Bible Study: how do these readings renew us in our awareness of God's action in our lives? Given the reality of God's grace, how are we to respond? The next third, which I'll get back to next month after what seems like a long summer off, is packaging that Good News into an engaging homily
Gospel (Lk 12:49-53)
Context. This is part of Jesus’ long journey to Jerusalem
(9:51-19:48; Wks 13-31). For the last
few weeks, we’ve been reading a section (12:1-13:9; Wks 18-20) on vigilance in
the face of eschatological crisis. To
ready themselves for the end of the world, disciples have been invited to some
pretty extraordinary acts: being liberated from possessiveness (even with
regard to one’s basic bodily needs), and serving as a table-slave in the Household
of God. We now come to a reading that
looks at the consequences of this.
Monday, July 22, 2013
Our Commitment is an Invitation for our Fellow Christians to Fulfill their Vocation
This week's bulletin column provided an introduction to the Constitutions of the Congregation of Holy Cross.
Staff changes in a parish occasion a long
process of getting to know each other.
You’re getting to know your new priests and me, your soon-to-be-deacon,
and we’re getting to know you. You have
an advantage, though: you know our family.
These parishes have been served by generations of religious of the
Congregation of Holy Cross. If our bonds
of religious profession are serving as they should, meeting us should be like
meeting the extended family of old friends.
Monday, July 15, 2013
The Light that Faith is
This week's bulletin column was my presentation of Pope Francis' first encylical, Lumen Fidei, to the parish.
You have been called by name. That’s the conviction of Pope Francis, who recently
released his first letter to the Church as Pope, called Lumen Fidei – “The light of faith.”
You have been called by name: the God who made heaven and earth beckons
you, counts every hair on your head, offers a hand to pull you up when you’re
wounded, offers His only Son so that He might be more perfectly in relationship
with you. “Faith,” the Pope tells us,
“is our response to this.”
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
First Bulletin Column at the new parish
Here's a bulletin column I wrote for Holy Cross -- St. Stan's parish, introducing myself and thanking them for their welcome.
Dear parishioners,
Firstly, thank you for the wonderful welcome
I’ve received! For those I haven’t had
the pleasure of meeting yet, I’m part of the new clergy team serving these two
parishes. I just finished my seminary
studies back in May and over the coming year you will see me go from seminarian
to deacon (in September) and then priest (in April). I’m very excited to be beginning my ordained
life in these parishes, becoming part of life here and gradually helping more
and more to animate that life. Some
churches have signs up during construction saying “Please pardon our mess while
we refurbish” – I think such a sign should probably be hung around my neck for
at least a year! As grateful as I am for
my seminary formation, it is with, for and from you – the People of God in this
place – that I will learn to be a priest.
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