Sunday, December 21, 2014

THE POWER TO CHOOSE

Scriptures:  2 Samuel 7:1-5, 8-12, 14, 16; Romans 16:25-27; Luke 1:26-38

A man relates a simple story: “One spring afternoon,” he says, “my five-year-old son, David, and I were planting raspberry bushes along the side of the garage.  A neighbor joined us for a few moments.  Just then David pointed to the ground. ‘Look, Daddy! What’s that?’ he asked.  I stopped talking with my neighbor and looked down. ‘A beetle,’ I said.  David was impressed and pleased with the discovery of this fancy, colorful creature.  Then my neighbor lifted his foot and stepped on the insect giving his shoe an extra twist in the dirt.  ‘That ought to do it,’ he laughed.  David looked up at me, waiting for an explanation a reason.  That night, just before I turned off the light in his bedroom, David whispered, ‘I liked that beetle, Daddy.’ ‘I did too,” I whispered back.”  The man concluded his story by saying.  “We have the power to choose.”
In today’s first reading, King David decides that the time has come for the God of Israel to have a fitting house to dwell in among the people.  After all, here is David living in a cedar house and the Lord’s ark is still in a tent.  But the response back from God was, “seriously?”  “Should you build me a house to dwell in?” (2 Sm 7:5)  The message seems very clear, that no temple built with human hands could be a suitable dwelling place for God.  Rather, it is God who will build David’s “house” — that is, God will establish David’s lineage and his heir shall inherit a throne that will last forever.[1]
Enter the Archangel Gabriel — the messenger of life.  Sent to Mary to announce she will give birth to a son, who is the rightful heir to “the throne of David his father … and of his kingdom there will be no end.” (Lk 1:32-33)
The picture you see on the screen is a painting by Henry Ossawa Tanner that hangs in the Philadelphia Museum of Art called, “The Annunciation”.  It shows Mary as a young girl sitting on her disheveled bed, and there is this light in front of her.  It must be right after the angel has spoken to her, as Mary is just sitting there, looking at the light with her mouth open, dumbfounded.  The look on her face says, “seriously!?”
This is quite a different portrait of Mary that we may be more accustomed too.  You know the gorgeous Annunciation paintings of a serene Mary, robed in Renaissance attire, glowing with a halo and accompanied by cherubs in a resplendent room whose windows show a Tuscan landscape.  The reality is quite the opposite.  What God is asking is incomprehensible!  Especially in a village where everyone knows everyone else, and they can count to nine!  Mary has just experienced the truth: that it’s a fearful and messy thing to be encountered by God, to be confronted with a call to mission, and to stand at the crossroads of a choice.  We have the power to choose.
As a Jew, Mary knew well the ancient stories of how Moses tried to duck his calling by saying he was not an eloquent speaker and tried to pass the calling off on Aaron, how Isaiah protested his call to be a prophet by saying he’d be a lousy one, and Jonah ran the other way when told to go to Nineveh.  They all wanted to be close to God but not that close.  We have the power to choose.
So Mary, sitting on her disheveled bed with hair undone trying to recover from what was like a slap in the face, realizing fully what is meant to say yes to God and fearful of the consequences.  She knew what it wound up costing Moses, Isaiah, and Jonah.  She knows what is may cost her and her husband to be with child out of wedlock, which makes her ‘yes’ all the more generous and heroic.  This is a Mary Moment to contemplate.
The Mary Moment is one we all know: that sudden stop-in-your-tracks experience.  It may be the sudden loss of a loved one or friend, a flash of self-disgust as we repeat that same sin that we just confessed, a close call accident, or just one of those fleeting moments when we realize that life is more than the “Real Housewives”, facebook, fashion, and sports.
Mary Moments confront us with such opportunities to choose, to realize that we can be better persons.  Moments to recognize there are people who live on the edge, are poor and suffering who need our concern and care.  There are bad habits we need to deal with, an addiction that calls for attention, a relationship that needs healing.  We need to embrace the holiness we secretly desire, no matter how much others make fun of us.
Can we say yes?  It’s not easy.  There will be a cost—Mary knew it, hence her fear—yet there will be indescribable peace and joy.
Perhaps this week, in light of this familiar Gospel, seen with fresh eyes, we can reconsider, perhaps even ask Mary to intercede for us—that perplexed and fearful as we sit on the edge of our beds, we too may find courage to say “yes” to surrender to:
Live simply,
Give generously,
Care deeply,
Speak kindly,
To walk by faith and not by sight,
To utter fearfully but firmly, “Be it done unto me according to your word.”[2] (Lk 1:38)



[1] Living the Word. Laurie Brink, O.P. and Deacon Frederick Bauerschmidt © 2014. World Library Publications.
[2] Sick, and You Cared For Me Edited by Deacon Jim Knipper © 2014 “Be it done unto me according to your word” by Fr. William Bausch

Sunday, December 14, 2014

REJOICE AWAYS?

Scriptures:  Isaiah 61:1-2a, 10-11; 1 Thessalonian 5:16-24; John 1:6-8, 19-28

I would like to share a reflection by Joyce Rupp I received via email from a friend this week.
“Last week when I walked through London's Heathrow airport the terminal sparkled with Christmas glitter and glitz.  I paused at one of the elegant stores to admire a lovely silk scarf, priced at £233 ($365).  A bit stunned at the fact someone would pay that amount for a scarf, I proceeded to find the departure gate.  I sat down there and decided to continue reading Katherine Boo's Beyond the Beautiful Forevers, a powerful book filled with true stories of people living in Annawadi, one of Mumbai's worst slums.  Katherine Boo chose to live among these poorest of the poor for several years, listening to their stories and observing how they managed to get through each day.  The young children are waste pickers, sorting through stinking garbage to find items to sell for recycling.  Few receive a formal education. The tiny sheds the families live in are next to a sewage drainage lake.  Rats bite the children as they sleep.  It is a contemptible life but one, they reluctantly accept as their fate. 
 As I sat there reading, I paused to consider my own privileged existence, recognizing that even something as simple as being able to read a book sets me apart from the Annawadi children.  I thought again about that expensive scarf and felt a great sadness at the disparity between someone buying a £233 scarf and a child pleased to make a few rupees for a hard day's work in a dangerous, rotting garbage dump.”[1]
Rejoice! It’s Gaudete Sunday!  We are half way through Advent; we’ve lit the pink candle representing JOY!  Rejoice!?  Knowing there is such a social and economic disparity!  I’m torn.
Last week’s sermon talked about the often revealing view from the prophet’s mountaintop.  How the view can be more than expected gazing upon Heaven and earth, and the promise of God.  While Joyce Rupp’s reflection disturbs me I still can't get this Sunday’s theme of Rejoice Always out of my head and heart.
How does one rejoice always in such a challenging world?  Even John the Baptist, the messenger of hope, announcing the coming of the long awaited Messiah is having his very identity challenged and when he finally convinces them he is not the Messiah or Elijah, then his ministry is brought into question.  How is it that God consistently, throughout history, has tried to reveal himself and how much He loves us and we can, just as consistently, miss the signs He places before our very eyes?
Continuing her reflection, Joyce Rupp asks a common question when contemplating human suffering.
"What can I do?" I thought.  "How does my awareness make any difference for the "have nots" of the world?"  I am still thinking about that after returning home to face the Christmas blitz here with its glaring sales ads and savory enticements to buy all sorts of things for those who have immensely more than any child in the Annawadi slum.  I realize that each decision I make about what to buy, or not buy, affects the larger world in some way.  And I remember Pamela Chappell's song: "I can't change the whole world wide but I can change the one inside, and so I start from heart to heart, one person at a time."
Realistically, what does it mean to “rejoice always”?  First of all, it doesn’t mean that we cannot be sad about suffering or that we have to ignore the tragedies in the world around us.  We do encounter sadness in our lives, we see sadness in other lives, as well as great injustice.  St. Paul, who knows suffering well, as life in Thessalonica in his time was hardly paradise, wasn’t turning a blind eye to the reality of life.  Paul does recognize that suffering does not get the last word, because the object of our joy is God.
So Paul offers a remarkable phrase, which is part of a triad of Christian practices that becomes a formula for joy:  “Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.” (1 Thes 5:16-18)
  • Rejoice always: This is an attitude to be practiced every day.  Something like when I greet you to Mass.  As you turn the corner and saw the rose colored vestments you could not help but smile.  Something as simple as greeting a person with a smile, despite the challenges you may be facing become a flicker of joy for someone.
  • Pray without ceasing: Be in constant communion and communication with God.  As I was on the Habitat for Humanity site we heard the sirens, not knowing if it were the police, fire truck or ambulance it was amazing how quickly my mind and heart jumped to prayer, praying to cover any of the possible situations.  
  • Give thanks in all circumstances:  Even in the midst of suffering give thanks. It is easy to give thanks in moments of joy and success.  Yet it is in suffering that we most recognize our need for God, and in the midst of suffering we learn to grow deeper in faith.
“Where is the joy?  It comes from a loving trust in God, in the awareness that God is working through the compassion we feel, in the knowledge that God desires a just world where the poor are treated fairly, and in the trust that God will help those who heed His voice to help bring about justice.  So, there is joy.
John the Baptist’s message of hope is about bringing justice into the world, making things ‘right’ with God; preparing a just world, and repenting of greed.  So John the Baptist's message is not just a hopeful one, but a joyful one, as well.
So on this Gaudete Sunday, I say to you, Paul says to you, the church says to you, and Jesus the Christ says to you: ‘Rejoice always!’”[2]



[1] Reflection - December 2014 by Joyce Rupp
[2] Sick, and You Cared For Me Edited by Deacon Jim Knipper © 2014 “Rejoice Always” by Fr. James Martin, SJ

Sunday, December 7, 2014

MOUNTAIN TOP VIEW

Scriptures:  Isaiah 40:1-5, 9-11; 2 Peter 3:8-14; Mark 1:1-8

“Yesterday,” President Roosevelt said on December 8, “the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked.”  He went on to say, “No matter how long it may take us to overcome this premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory.  I believe I interpret the will of the Congress and of the people when I assert that we will not only defend ourselves to the uttermost, but will make very certain that this form of treachery shall never endanger us again.”[1]
December 7th 1942, a day that will live in infamy.  We hear the story of Pearl Harbor every year at this time.  It has special meaning for the families who lost a loved one, a survivor, or those who participated in WWII.  Yet the magnitude of this event did not come into my full understanding until returning home one evening driving from the North Shore over the mountains on the Likelike Highway.  As I crested the mountain there was a moment where I could see all of Pearl Harbor.  The view from a mountaintop can be a whole lot more than you might expect.
Advent comes around every year and each year we hear the Isaiah prophecy.  Isaiah 40 is an invitation to the prophet’s mountain.  The invitation from Isaiah is to come up and to see and to hear; to come up and sit for a while and take in quite a view.   It’s a whole lot more than you expect, sitting here and taking in Heaven and Earth and the promise of God.  Isaiah prophesied an almost unthinkable message of hope to the captive Israelites.  For two generations they have been in exile and it is about to end.  God has forgiven Israel’s sins and is calling them back to the Promised Land.  “Make straight in the wasteland a highway for our God.” (Is 40:3)  “Go up onto a high mountain, Zion, herald of glad tidings; cry out at the top of your voice, Jerusalem, herald of the good news!” (Is 40:9)
Mark in citing Israel’s Sacred Scripture points to its fulfillment with John the Baptist’s message of faith; “A voice of one crying out in the desert, ‘Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths.’” (Mk 1:3)  John’s ministry is characterized by “a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.” (Mk 1:4)  Last week Msgr. Page mentioned, “Advent is not a period of waiting, that there is something we must do.”  “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!” (Mt 3:2)  Repentance involves getting one’s affairs in order with a view to reconciliation with God.  Mark’s description of John the Baptist’s appearance (not wearing fine clothing), ministry setting (the wilderness – a place outside the control of structured society) & his humility (“One mightier than I is coming after me.  I am not worthy to stoop and loosen the thongs of his sandals.”) highlights his role in salvation history as the forerunner announcing the coming of the long awaited Messiah.
Which highlights a question from our second reading, “…what sort of persons ought you to be”? (2 Pt 3:11)  Scripture tells us everything will pass away, and when this happens “the earth and everything done on it will be made known.” (2 Pt 3:10)  John the Baptist – the message of faith tells us, “Prepare the way of the Lord…” (Mk 1:3)  “Prepare” the key word for the Advent season.   Prepare for the fulfillment of God’s desire “not wishing that any should parish but that all come to repentance.”  Prepare a space for the Holy Spirit who can guide us to all we need to be prepared for the coming Messiah who desires for us to be with Him always & forever.  Accept the invitation to the mountaintop of Isaiah; listen for the voice crying out of the desert.  Spend some time with these prophets who know that all of Creation is shaped into a pathway from the wilderness to the Reign of God.
John the Baptist’s message of faith, calls us to the wilderness to discover whether we are in the midst of and aftermath of a Pearl Harbor attack, in the midst of a Babylonian exile spanning two generations, or in the midst of a personal desert experience, comes a highway for our God, a highway of restoration and rebuilding and redemption.[2]



[1] http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/pearl-harbor
[2] Sick, and You Cared For Me“Fear not to cry out: Here is your God!” by Rev. David A. Davis © 2014

Sunday, November 9, 2014

COMMON GROUND

Homiletic Series:   The Lord is King and There is No Other.
Homily IV:            We Are God’s Building.
Scriptures:  Ezekiel 47:1-2, 8-9, 12; 1 Corinthians 3:9c-11,16-17; John 2:13-22

In his book More Than Houses Millard Fuller, co-founder of Habitat for Humanity International, writes: “A common meeting ground.  That, from the inception of Habitat for Humanity, is what I envisioned the ministry to be from all faiths and persuasions.  This hammer-and-nail ministry brings together all sorts of people for all walks of life.  Foremost among my desires is the ministry’s potential of being a bridge for Christians—all members of the Christian faith in all its various denominations.  Christian churches are so divided, and the divisions are on so many levels.  There is high church and low church, liberal theology and conservative theology, charismatic and non-charismatic, evangelical and mainline, Catholic and Protestant.  There is no agreement on communion: how often to take it or what it means.  Churches can’t agree on how preachers should dress, much less what gender preachers are permitted to be, or even what to call “preachers”!  The list of things that divide churches goes on and on.  I have always thought it was shameful that the Christian family could agree on so little.”[1]

Seventeen (17) years ago I was invited to visit this “common meeting ground”.  So taken by what I experienced that I could not help but immerse myself completely in the Habitat for Humanity movement.  As a leader within our local affiliate for thirteen (13) years, I have been blessed to witness the power of this “common meeting ground” where government agencies, businesses, civic groups, Mosques, Temples and yes every sort of Christian are able to gather for a common pursuit, to serve a family in need of a simple, decent, affordable home. 

I feel it would be a safe assumption that most of us understand the importance of a home for the health and well-being of our families.  I also know there are those here, in our community, who know all too well the uncertainty when displaced from secure living accommodations.

It is the latter that the Nation of Israel is feeling during the Babylonian exile in our first reading.  Ezekiel is given a different vision, a vision of hope.  “He witnesses a life-giving river flowing out of the threshold of the temple toward the arid East.  As the river flows, it brings life—freshening the salt waters of the Dead Sea, and causing living creatures to multiply.”[2]  We have to understand, to the Jewish culture of this time, the Temple was the “common ground”.  Paul picks up this familiar image and transforms it.  Familiar with the temples and public building of the city, Paul explains to the Corinthian believers that they too are edifices (a building, especially one of imposing appearance or size), built upon the one foundation of Jesus Christ.

It may seem strange to celebrate the anniversary of the dedication of somebody else’s church building.  The Basilica of St. John Lateran was given to the Church by the Emperor Constantine after he legalized Christianity.  This is the Basilica of Rome, which the Bishop of Rome, the Pope, presides.  This feast reminds us that our communion with the Church of Rome and her bishop is one of the things that unite us in the Catholic Church.  In the baptistery there is an ancient inscription that reads, “There is no barrier between those who are reborn and made one by the one font, the one Spirit, and the one faith…”

This feast reminds us further, that part of our faith is the Church is the temple in which God’s spirit dwells, US, as individual living stones and collectively as Church, the Temple of God.  So the feast challenges us to answer the Jewish question posed to Jesus in the Gospel, “What sign can you show us…?” (Jn 2:18)  What sign can you give, that proves you are the way, you are part of the one Church built on the foundation that is Jesus?

I believe we have been answering this question throughout our four (4) week series, “The Lord is God and There is No Other”:

·         Sermon #1: Living with conviction of heart.  We discussed how it must become painfully obvious to the casual onlooker that our true allegiance belongs to God.  That we are united and obedient to the lessons of the Gospel and the Church, even when social norms and distractions would tempt us to compromise our values.

·         Sermon #2: Being Models of Faith & Imitators of the Lord.  Here we discussed the bottom line, LOVE.  That the response to many of life’s hard questions is love and as imitators of our Lord we must have a passionate concern for each other, especially the immigrant, elderly, orphan, and the poor.

·         Sermon #3:  Hope Does Not Disappoint.  As believers we can have the audacity to hope beyond all hope, believe good will triumph even in the midst of trials and suffering.  That even death does not have the last word, as we await the resurrection, where we will be raised by our Lord as God has promised.

We are God’s building!  “Like living stones, let yourselves be built into a spiritual house…” (1 Pt 2:5) on the one foundation Jesus Christ, who is our “common ground”.



[1] Millard Fuller, More Than Houses © 2000.  Word Publishing, Nashville, TN
[2] Laurie Brink, O.P. & Deacon Frederick Bauerschmidt, Living the Word © 2013, World Library Publications, Franklin Park, IL

Sunday, November 2, 2014

TRUE COLORS

Homiletic Series:   The Lord is King and There is No Other.
Homily III:            Hope Does Not Disappoint.

Scriptures:  Wisdom 3:1-9; Romans 5:5-11; John 6:37-40

Can you feel it!  Autumn is here!  For true Floridians winter is here.

As many of you know Judy and I recently returned from our vacation.  At least every two years we make an October drive up the East coast to visit friends and family.  The highlight of our trip is the hope of catching the peak fall colors and prime apple picking season.

This year was the best fall colors we had seen in many years.  Our stop in Stockbridge, MA was absolutely spectacular and educational!  I relearned something about trees and the coloring of leaves.  Did you know that the beautiful colors we see in the fall are always there?  We just cannot see the color until the proper season. 

Leaves are nature's food factories.  Plants take water from the ground through their roots, take a gas called carbon dioxide from the air, and use sunlight to turn water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and glucose.  Oxygen is a gas in the air that we need to breathe and plants use glucose as food for energy and as a building block for growing.

The way plants turn water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and sugar is called photosynthesis, which means "putting together with light."  A chemical called chlorophyll helps make photosynthesis happen.  Chlorophyll is what gives plants their green color.

As summer ends and autumn comes, the days get shorter and shorter.  The trees "know" to begin getting ready for winter.  With less light the trees begin to shut down their food-making factories.  The green chlorophyll disappears from the leaves.  As the bright green fades away, we begin to see the true colors that always existed. 

Shorter days signify something else for us as Christians, the coming of a new season, Advent.  The darkest day of the year is approaching, we’ll hear of death more frequently in scriptures and yet there is something more that exists yet not seen, something the “foolish” those that lack faith, cannot seem to see. 

For those of us who live our faith with conviction of heart trusting in the grace, mercy and love of our God, our “…hope [is] full of immortality.” (Wis 3:4)  What gives us the audacity to hope such hope?  Because we believe “…God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us.” (Rom 5:8)  Paul says, in sending the greatest gift of all, his Son who would die for us, God set no conditions.  God’s love is given freely—all we need to do is accept it. 

I found it interesting how this year’s most popular Halloween costume was characters from the “Night of the Living Dead”.  How ironic, the church has been talking about the “culture of death” for a very long time.  The culture of death is very selfish.  Where living for self is resulting in broken marriages, because “I’m not happy” or the partner isn’t meeting “my expectations”; abortion is becoming the acceptable norm, because “it is my body” and I should have the right to choose; and a greater acceptance of assisted suicide, where it should be my choice to end my suffering.  What happened to the Christian value of offering our self to complete the other, joined as one with each other and the Lord til death do us part, or respect for and acknowledgement of the miracle of life, being co-creators with our God; or uniting our earthly sufferings to our Lords own suffering and living as a Christian witness as we bear our cross of suffering?

All Souls’ Day celebrates a message of hope.  Each of these candles you see represents a loved one of our community, whose earthly body experienced death this year.  As part of the 12:15 Mass each candle will be lit, to remind us of the hope that our loved ones have been raised to meet Jesus face-to-faced and they remain full of life.  We believe the human heart does not surrender to death, and has not, through all the fog and blinding obstacles that keep our true colors from view in this world. That we would be mindful that when Jesus emerged from his tomb and walked on the earth at the dawn of the day:  Easter, the greatest day in human history, gives All Souls’ Day its awesome core of truth against all the odds and ends of reality. 

The great Jesuit priest, Karl Rahner, who was acknowledged as the greatest theologian of the last century, has this to say about the dead:  “Though invisible to us, our dead are not absent.  They are living near us, transfigured into light and power and love.”[1]  

With God’s promise, we the faithful know “…hope does not disappoint…” (Rom 5:5), because our God will raise us up to shine in our true colors forever.



[1] Naked, and You Clothed Me.  Edited by Deacon Jim Knipper © 2013.  Clear Faith Publishing LLC.  The souls of the just are in the hand of God by Michael Doyle.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

“YOU-DID-IT-TO-ME”

Scriptures:  Exodus 22:20-26; 1 Thessalonians 1:5c-10; Matthew 22:34-40
                       
The Woman in the Street.  In the summer of 1948, as Sister Teresa wandered the streets of Calcutta, the stifling heat tempted her to return home.  The convent was nice and cool, as she wasn’t even sure what she was doing in the streets.  But then she spotted a woman lying in the road.  The woman was half-eaten by rats and ants.  She looked almost dead.  People passed by on either side, few taking notice.  Yet the small Albanian nun walked over and carefully lifted the woman, cradling her like a precious work of art.  It was the first time she had touched someone in the street.  The nun carried her to a nearby hospital, and when the attendants saw the woman, they apologized and said there was nothing they could do.  But sister wouldn’t accept that.  She refused to leave until they gave the woman a bed, and after much bickering, the hospital staff finally relented.  The obstinate nun got her way, as would become her custom in the following years, and helped the woman die with dignity.

People often asked Mother Teresa why she loved the poor so much, how she could honor dignity in such difficult situations.  In response, she liked to grasp their hand, slowly wiggle one finger at a time, and explain: “You-did-it-to-me.” In Blessed Teresa’s mind you could count the whole Gospel on just 5 fingers.[1]

In the first week of our series, “The Lord is King and there is no other” we must “live with a conviction of heart” that leaves a clear message to any onlooker: our true allegiance lies with God, with the realization that EVERYTHING belongs to God.  Today’s Gospel points to the centrality of love in our Christian understanding of God and of how we are to live in God’s presence, that we must “be models of faith and imitators of the Lord.”  Life is all about relationships, with one common denominator: LOVE.  Love of God, “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all you soul, and with all your mind…” (Mt 22:37) and “…shall love your neighbor as yourself.” (Mt 22:39)  This is the bottom line!  In all our discussion about matters of faith, religion, sin, rule and regulations, the bottom line remains the same, God’s command to love.

St. Thomas Aquinas wrote, “Nothing shows the truth of the gospel better than the love of those who believe” (Commentary on John 17.5).  It is love that has the power to convince others of the true message that Christians bear, but it has to be genuine.  So how do we know that our love is the kind of love that truly reveals God?  Our first & second readings hold some clues.[2]

In the first reading from Exodus the nation of Israel has been introduced to God’s covenant, the Ten Commandments, and other instruction on how the people are to live.  This section focuses on the legally helpless.  Godly love is always concerned about the weak, the defenseless, the marginalized—which include the foreigner living among us, the widow, the orphan, and the poor—all of whom are the object of Gods passionate concern.[3]  So! If the immigrant, elderly, orphan and the poor are God’s passionate concern, and we are striving to live as models and imitators of the Lord, where should our passionate concern be?

In the second reading Paul is praising the Thessalonian believers.  Paul speaks of how they “… became imitators of us and of the Lord, receiving the word in great affliction, in the joy of the Holy Spirit” (1Thes 1:6-7).  They became models for other communities and all believers.  So Godly love not only cares for the vulnerable, but does so both at personal cost and joyfully.[4]  Our world offers many opportunities for us to experience the joys and cost of discipleship.

There is a Chinese proverb that says: “Tell me and I’ll forget; Show me and I may remember; Involve me and I’ll understand.”   The task of discerning the path of genuine love is challenging.  Jesus calls us to live with conviction of heart and teaches us of the importance of defending the defenseless. The Church has a long history of models like Blessed Teresa of Calcutta and a host of saints that have shown us how to respond to call to service, its cost and joy.  If you are not already doing so, I invite you to get involved in a ministry serving the most vulnerable of our community; get yourself some person to person contact with the poor, just like Jesus and Blessed Mother Teresa.  The one on one contact, done as an offering of self and in genuine love changes us.  This is where I usually get the question, “but where do I start?”

Here is a suggestion: Take the following to prayer. 
1.    Abandon yourself to God’s will and vision, with conviction of heart.
2.    Ask God to reveal to you who are the most in need in our community that needs to be the special object of your passionate concern? 
3.    Who in my life has or is serving as a model of genuine love that you might like to imitate? Ask yourself, what am I already doing in my everyday life that reflects God’s genuine love?
4.    Intentionally seek these opportunities to be involved and act on God’s calling.

As you engage those who God has invited or pushed you to serve.  Remember always, “You-did-it-for-me.”




[1] Saints and Social Justice, A Guide to Changing the World. Brandon Vogt © 2014. Our Sunday Visitor
[2] Living the Word.  Laurie Brink, O.P. and Deacon Frederick Bauerschmidt © 2013. World Library Publications
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.

WHAT CAN A SIMPLE COIN REVEAL?

Scriptures:  Isaiah 45:1, 4-6; 1 Thessalonians 1:1-5b; Matthew 22:15-21
                       
“When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.  We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” 
These are the first two sentences to the Declaration of Independence (Preamble), which I felt fitting to share for this political season.  From my vantage point, it is a season of positioning for public support through carefully crafted messages, competing agendas, and promises to make this election “all about you”.  It is a season of party alignments and distancing, as candidates reveal their vision for local and national priorities.  For me, and with those of whom I have had political discussions, we find ourselves increasingly frustrated in the available choices while trying to maintain alignment with our Catholic Christian values.  It is exactly here, where, we enter the reality of scripture.
You’d think Jesus was running for office as His opponents approach.  An odd alliance representing opposite points of view yet approaching with the same agenda, get Jesus to self-incriminate himself in his response.  The Pharisees, whose power is in the synagogue opposed the paying of foreign taxes, first butter him up and ask the question, “Is it lawful to pay the census tax…?” (Mt 22:17)  In their concern for Torah practice, “Is it lawful…” equals “Is it in line with Torah…”  Jesus “knowing their malice” calls them out “you hypocrites” and without waiting for a response, asks to see the coin.  What can a simple coin reveal?  Jesus’ opponents are embarrassed by their possession of the unholy Roman coin, likely produced by the Herodian’s, which would immediately put them at odds with their collaborators in challenging Jesus.  Followers of the Pharisees avoided all contact with such an idolatrous object.[1]  By asking them to describe the coin Jesus highlights the embarrassing evidence.
This is the beginning of a four week series acknowledging “The Lord is King and there is no other”.  This means “living with a conviction of heart” that leaves a clear message to any onlooker where our true allegiance lies.
The story of Jesus and the Roman coin is sometimes used to argue that Christians should not worry about how our religious and political duties may conflict; how one can pay to Caesar what is due Caesar without worrying how it might take away from that which is due God.  Yet the division between the secular and sacred is often a blurry line.[2]
During the political season I regularly get asked by faithful people, “Why doesn’t the Church clearly tell us how or whom to vote?”  I believe she does.  In a way, the Church asks Jesus’ question of us, “show me the coin…”  From the beginning God has commanded us, “I, the Lord, am your God… You shall not have other gods besides me.” (Ex 20:2-3)  Jesus, himself, taught us the cure to anxiety telling us, “But seek first the kingdom [of God] and his righteousness …” (Mt 6:33).  He clarified forever the difference between kingdoms made on earth and the one created by God stating, “The Kingdom of Heaven is within you” (Lk 17:21).  In the gospel of the former tax collector, Matthew, Jesus shows us more than 50 times the way to this Kingdom that is not in a palace or above the sky or beneath the sea but “at hand” (Mt 4:17).
The Church calls us to vote by a fully informed conscience and scripture calls us to be discerning people concerning the possible conflicts between our political loyalties and our ultimate loyalty, which is to God.  In our discernment, we need to be aware of the possibility that our political leaders may expect more from us than they rightfully should; demanding an absolute loyalty that rightly belongs only to God.[3]  We have been formed and informed in the ways of the sacred and the secular throughout all of history.
What can a simple coin reveal?  How todays gospel can interestingly shed light on one of the raging debates of our own time.[4]  As Michael Leach quips:
“Paying taxes?  Petty change.
Following Jesus?  Priceless!”



[1] Social-Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels. Bruce J. Malina & Richard L Rohrbaugh © 2003.  Fortress Press, Minneapolis
[2] Living the Word.  Laurie Brink, O.P. and Deacon Frederick Bauerschmidt © 2013.  World Library Publications
[3] Ibid.
[4] Naked, and You Clothed Me.  Edited by Deacon Jim Knipper © 2013.  Clear Faith Publishing LLC.  “Is it right to pay taxes to Caesar or not?” by Michael Leach.