In general, the beginning is a very good place to start, but there
are some stories with which it’s best to start at the end. I think this
parable, which is confusing and strange in a lot of ways, is one of those.
Sunday, September 22, 2019
God looks upon our faith – Luke 16:1-13, Amos 8:4-7
25th Sunday in Ordinary Time; Holy Infant parish.
Sunday, September 15, 2019
God seeks out the lost – Luke 15:1-10
24th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C; Holy Infant.
Have you seen the
AT&T ads about times when just OK is not OK? There’s one about a carnival
worker who claims he did an “OK job” assembling a thrill ride, and so the fair
goers swiftly walk away. There’s another about a tattoo artist who says, “Don’t
worry, your tattoo is going look OK.” And when the tattoo-recipient asks him if
he’s meant to sketch it first, the artist replies, “Stay in your lane, bro.” Well,
I’ll admit that sheep care is not exactly my lane, but I think I’d do a pretty
OK job at it. I mean, if I managed to keep 99% of my sheep, I’d view that as a
pretty good batting average, actually. I’d probably do a pretty OK job at
looking after the 99, and sell some wool to make reasonably OK sweaters now and
again. If one wandered off, I’d probably say to myself something like, “Oh,
don’t sweat the small stuff.”
Sunday, September 8, 2019
God, and God alone, is enough for us – Luke 14:25-3
23rd Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year C; Holy Infant parish.
When most of us hear this
gospel reading, I think we’re more shocked by Jesus’ command to hate their
family than to take up their cross. And I think that’s because we’ve domesticated
the cross. And I’ll get back to what Jesus says about family, but we need to
start with the cross.
Sunday, September 1, 2019
Christ has brought us to the holy mountain – Luke 14:1, 7-14; Heb 12:18-24
22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C; Holy Infant parish.
If you looked in last
week’s bulletin or online at what the readings would be for this week, (and I
definitely do recommend reading the readings before Mass if you can) you might
have noticed that what we just heard from Luke’s gospel was chapter 14, verse
one and verses seven through fourteen. If you’re anything like me, that
immediately gets you fascinated to find out what goes in verses two through six.
What are we skipping? What we’re skipping is Jesus healing a man with dropsy. The
Greek term Luke wrote that we translate “dropsy” means basically “water-logged.”
The understanding of this disease was that it was an insatiable thirst. Someone
suffering from this disease would keep feeling thirsty even though they were
perfectly well hydrated and would take on more and more fluid until they swelled
up. And I know, we have lots of medical personnel here who could talk all about
modern understandings of this, and how it relates to edema… what matters is how
Luke understood the disease.
Sunday, August 25, 2019
Christ leads us up the mountain – Luke 13:2-30; Isa 66:18-21
21st Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C; Holy Infant parish.
I don’t know how many of
you have climbed a mountain. If you haven’t, spoiler alert, it’s quite difficult.
And I’ve never done any of what they call “technical climbing,” where you
actually need ropes and harnesses and things, but I have made it to the top of
Pike’s Peak, one of the many 14,000-foot-high mountains in Colorado. If you
want to walk it, as I did, you start at an altitude of around 7,000 feet, and
over the course of walking 14 miles, you ascend the other 7,000 to make it up
to 14. Between 11,000 and 12,000 feet is what they call the tree line. That’s
the altitude above which no trees grow. One of the many realizations I had on
that walk was that the trees are probably a good deal smarter than we are. Air
that low in oxygen is really hard to walk through. The whole climb took me
about seven hours, but the last mile, over which we climbed almost 1,000 feet,
took me an hour. Now, Pike’s Peak also has a Cog railway that you can take to
the summit, as well as a road. You can drive up. And at the top, is a little café
and gift shop. All I remember about the café is that they served chili, and, at
that moment, the chili was the best thing I’d ever tasted.
Sunday, August 18, 2019
Christ leads us through conflict to ultimate peace – Luke 12:49-53; Heb 12:1-4
Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C; Holy Infant parish.
I think it would have been
understandable for the people listening to Jesus to have said yes. “Yes, I did
think you were here to bring peace.” I thought that, because, isn’t that what
the angels sang when you were born? Well, the angels wished peace on earth, but
they didn’t say it would be the first thing Jesus would bring. And Simeon, who
prophesied in the Temple when Jesus was just a few days old, prophesied that he
would be a “sign of contradiction,” and told Mary “a sword will pierce your
heart too.”
Sunday, August 4, 2019
God raises us with Christ – Luke 12:13-21; Col 3:1-11
18th Sunday in OT, Year C; Holy Infant parish.
There’s a scholar called
Sakari Häkkinen who studies Jesus’ parables by traveling to subsistence rural
villages, in East Africa and the Middle East. He goes to those villages, and
tells the stories Jesus told, and asks them what they think. Part of the reason
he does this is that when we read these stories with Western eyes, we miss
things. When we read these stories with several layers of remove between the
work we do and food on our plates, we miss things. If we don’t know food
insecurity, if we don’t look at the sky and feel in anticipation either
fullness or emptiness in our stomachs, we miss things. That’s not to say that
the cultures in the villages that Häkkinen visits are identical to the villages
in which Jesus would have preached. But they might have some insight that we
don’t.
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