Tuesday, March 30, 2021

A VERY POWERFUL IDEA

Rufus Griscom is a serial entrepreneur and founder of Heleo, an online publishing platform. He sees bad ideas as a sort of tool for eventually discovering big opportunities. He says, “A lot of bad ideas backed by a passionate entrepreneur can work on a small scale. Then, adjacent to those bad ideas, there may be some very powerful good ideas. If you really care about it, there’s a decent chance that other people care about it too and you can get it to critical mass. Then, if it does prove to, in fact, be a bad idea, you can find something adjacent to it that is a very powerful idea.”[1]

As typical of the Lord’s prophets, the Servant in today’s first reading protests and laments about having toiled in vain. Yet their gloom quickly turns to surety of success in the Lord’s mission. For God’s errands never end in failure.

The Servant’s vocation in Isaiah reflects that of Moses, Israel, and Jeremiah. None who planned to be a prophet and all express reluctance when called. Put another way, if someone said, “I have wanted to be a prophet from childhood,” this would be red flag indicating they may be a false prophet! The sense of unworthiness, we hear in the statement, “I thought I had toiled in vain,” (Is 49:4) characterizes the prophetic experience. Thus, the servant is “a light to the nations, reaching to the ends of the earth.” (Is 49:6) Despite the toils, the challenges, the public embarrassments they continue with their calling for the glory of God.

This theme of glory can be found running adjacent to the laments in today’s Gospel also. Amid betrayal at the Last Supper and then Peter’s denial soon after, the Father is at work through Jesus’ passion. “Now the Son of Man has been glorified” (Jn 13:31). Jesus is making visible God’s presence on earth.[2]

There was much talk and remembering, on Palm Sunday, of the laments and debates surrounding the decision to close the Church for Holy Week last year. Yet in the solitude and seeming darkness of the past year, we now can sense the dawning of a new hope, a light, a very real resurrection of sorts for the Church. We are being called to be the light now! To be the light that draws others back to worship, to community, to be Eucharist in the midst of laments.

Today’s readings bring together the images of lament, hope, and praise. Holy Week invites us to sit amid the moments of darkness, while never losing hope and trust. Because “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it” (Jn 1:5) Amid the tragic events of Holy Week, where the perceived bad idea, of Jesus’ passion, becomes a very powerful idea of Jesus entering into his glory

[1] Harvard Business Review. “Embracing Bad Ideas to Get to Good Ideas” by John Geraci, December 27, 2016.

[2] Weekday HomilyHelps. Exegesis and Homily Suggestion by Edward Owens, OSST.


Friday, March 26, 2021

NO GOOD DEED GOES UNPUNISHED

There's an old saying that no good deed goes unpunished, and under some circumstances, there couldn't be anything truer. Some people try their hardest to make a difference in the world by telling the truth and doing the right thing, but there are times when that decision blows up in their face and they seem left with nothing but regret.

Jeremiah has been called “God’s unpopular messenger,” battered, ridiculed, and even scourged, for sharing God’s message with the people of Israel. They denounce his negativity and judgments, turning a deaf ear to his warnings. Yet, his attitude might be summed up in the words of the Trappist monk, Matthew Kelty: “I don’t care what God does. I know God loves me.” Thus, Jeremiah remains faithful despite arrest, imprisonment, and public disgrace. He simply knows that God will rescue him and vows to continue singing God’s praises, no matter what.

We know Jesus’ “good deeds” were also seemingly punished. Even with all the miraculous healings, he was challenged by the religious leaders and crowds at the temple. Jesus asks, “I have shown you many good works from my Father. For which of these are you trying to stone me?” (Jn 10:31) They excuse their lack of faith on religious grounds. Jesus takes up this challenge by quoting Scripture, yet his enemies refuse to be persuaded by the obvious logic and persist in their self-righteousness. Jesus withdraws to the wilderness where many come to him, seeing in him everything John said about him to be true (Jn 10-42).

Mother Teresa, with all the good deeds she was doing, was once told that her sufferings were simply kisses from God. She reportedly replied, “I wish he would stop kissing me.” Yet she loved, even when God seemed so far from her.

“O LORD … who test the just, who probe mind and heart” (Jer 20:12) there are so many things we don’t fully understand as we try to walk in the ways you have called us. A cynic might ask how we can possibly believe in love “despite all of the evidence” around us; the pandemic, unemployment, homelessness, violence, human trafficking, where’s God’s love?

In these final days of Lent, let’s consider our own level of faith, hope, and love. Can we love in the face of persecution? The times when we’re challenged by the cynic, questioned by our children who have fallen away, challenged by friends and others who only have the church scandals and flaws on their mind and in their heart. While it may seem that no good deed goes unpunished, here in our earthly sojourn. Know this, no matter how dark it may seem to get, by remaining faithful to God’s will for us, His love will always have the final answer.

Monday, March 22, 2021

DO YO WANT TO SEE JESUS?

[1]A Paramore teen recently walked the 54 miles from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama to commemorate when hundreds marched to fight for voting rights in 1965. Jones High School student Smith Charles’ journey comes on the heels of a renewed push for stricter voting laws. Charles and his mentor Brad Mason stopped at all four of the campsites visited during that five-day journey in 1965 when the group finally made it through. Charles said. “Walking on that bridge felt scary because you watch the movie, and people talk about the history. That’s the Bloody Sunday.” Charles continues, “It gives you a feeling of what a lot of people risked their lives for, some even dying for the cause.” He said, “I’m not going to lie right now, I feel like crying, it felt free, it felt good.”[2]

The 1965 campaign in Alabama, progressed with mass arrests but little violence for the first month.  However, that wasn’t the case in February, when police attacks against nonviolent demonstrators increased.  On the night of February 18, 1965 Alabama state troopers joined local police in breaking up an evening march in Marion.  In the ensuing melee, a state trooper fatally shot a 26-year-old church deacon, as he attempted to protect his mother from the trooper’s nightstick.[3] Alabama has its history, Florida has its history as do many other states across the nation.

You’d think, for all the progress we’ve made in race relations this world just does not seem to be any simpler nor just.  Violence dominates the world, national, and local news: racial violence, religious violence, domestic violence, youth violence!  When do we get to see Jesus?

Jesus’ response to the two Greek’s request to see him, is an interesting shift.  Recall when Jesus’ mother requested his aid at the wedding at Cana, his response was, “my hour has not yet come” (Jn 2:4).  When the religious authorities wanted to arrest him, they couldn’t, because His “hour had not yet come” (Jn 7:30).  Today, the response is, “the hour has come for the son of man to be glorified…” (Jn 12:23).  It is time to consummate the new covenant.  A covenant that will be written, not on stone tablets, not on scrolls, or in new laws, but on our hearts.  A covenant so intimate it will demand the rigors of our total commitment, a sort of death to self and an offering of self to the service of God and his people.

Throughout Lent the scriptures have focused on the tools and outlook necessary to make such a total commitment.  Shared were the tools of fasting and prayer; steps in seeking God’s wisdom, the need for self-reflection, and the undertaking of cleansing this living tabernacle in preparation to worthily receive communion.  Scholars commonly refer to Jeremiah’s new covenant oracle as “The Gospel before the Gospel” because it finds its fulfillment in the life, death, and resurrection of Christ. It is here, at this table, we most often seek to satisfy our request to see Jesus in the Body and Blood we share. Each time we gather for Mass, the priest, standing in the person of Christ, invites us into the paschal mystery. “For this is my body, which will be given up for you.” “For this is the chalice of my blood … poured out for you and for many.” (GIRM, Eucharistic Prayers)

So, if we want to see Jesus, we not only have to pay attention but join into his life, death, and resurrection.  Let’s just center our focus on the cup he had to drink.  In his book, Can You Drink the Cup, Henri Nouwen poses the question this way.  “Can you drink the cup? Can you empty it to the dregs?  Can you taste all the sorrows and joys?  Can you live your life to the full whatever it will bring?” He noted that he “realized these were our questions.  But why should we drink this cup?  There is so much pain, so much anguish, so much violence.  Why should we drink the cup?  Wouldn’t it be a lot easier to live normal lives with a minimum of pain and a maximum of pleasure?”[4]

Jesus wrestled with this same question, “I am troubled now.  Yet what should I say?  Father save me from this hour?” (Jn 12:27) We know and celebrate, with each Eucharistic feast, how Jesus held the cup, how he lifted the cup to his friends, and drank the cup to its dregs from the cross for us.  “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” (Jn 15:13)

Do you want to see Jesus? Look to the persecuted Christians around the world who courageously put their lives on the line for their faith.  They’ve drank the cup to its dregs.

Do you want to see Jesus? Look to our all-volunteer military, our community first responders, the healthcare professionals on the frontline of the pandemic, who willingly hold and lift the cup with the courage, often in harm’s way, yet they are willing to drink the cup to the dregs for our safety.

Do you want to see Jesus?  Look to your parents, family members, and friends who know, all too well, the four cups of the Passover. While we share in this Cup of Salvation, they have often held, lifted and drank the Cup of Sorrow, the Cup of Joy, and the Cup of Blessings, as they sacrificed their own desires and needs for us, for the care of their children and grandchildren, for aging and sick family members, or for other people in need.

Do you want to see Jesus?  Look to the Paramore teen, who walked to remember. Remember a nonviolent protest for justice and equality, to remember the people who risked everything, including their lives, for his rights and the freedoms he enjoys today.

The new covenant, written on our hearts, begs us to pay attention to, to be full participants in Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. Our worship is an invitation to enter into this paschal mystery. It challenges us to “be” the living image of Christ in midst of our ordinary lives. It invites us to hold, lift, and drink from His chalice, so when others say, “we want to see Jesus” they need to look no further than any one of us, who have offered ourselves completely to God’s  service and the service of all His children.


[1] Scriptures, New American Bible, Jeremiah 31:31-34; Hebrews 5:7-9; John 12:20-33

[2] https://www.wftv.com/news/local/, “‘I don’t give up’: Orlando teen retraces history walking 54 miles from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama” by Karen Parks, March 15, 2021.

[3] Web page : http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/index.php/encyclopedia/encyclopedia/enc_selma_to_montgomery_march/ 

[4] Can You Drink the Cup?. Henri J.M. Nouwen © 1996, 2006.  Ava Maria Press

Friday, March 19, 2021

MANHOOD

When someone is described as “not a man,” we unmistakably know two things about the person: He is a male and he is woefully short on some basic character qualities of masculinity.

Manhood is not so much about anatomy and age as it is about a particular type of character. If we did not all have a general idea that manhood is a definite and distinct thing, the statement, “He is not a man,” would have little meaning. But it has immediate meaning, and we take it as a strong rebuke upon the person.

So, what are the character qualities that mark healthy manhood? To be genuine, these qualities marking manhood must apply generally to men across diverse cultures, not just our own. Thus, revealing what God has placed in humanity and what God has made the man to “be”. As we seek to bring young men into healthy and authentic manhood, we must ask, “What are we shooting for, and what does manhood look like when done successfully?”[1]

This is where the silence of St. Joseph’s life in scripture becomes deafening. What do I mean? How many lines does Joseph speak in scripture? NONE! Yet his presence speaks louder than any words ever could concerning the characteristics of his manhood.

Today’s Gospel gives us great insight to the character qualities of manhood:

“Joseph her husband, since he was a righteous man…” He was faithful, God choose him, a quiet and humble man, who availed himself to the laws and precepts of his faith, and “yet [he was] unwilling to expose [Mary] to shame, decided to divorce her quietly.” (Mt 1:19) Even before they lived together, he was her protector. In his respect for her and the dignity of her calling he refused to subject her to further shame.

“…the angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, ‘Joseph, son of David’” (Mt 1:20) Joseph is reminded of his identity. His self-identity, his identity in relationship to his wife, community, Judaism (as a culture & religion), The Law, and to God’s will and plan.

The angel continues: “do not be afraid to take Mary your wife into your home.” (Mt 1:20) We lift Mary up for her faithfulness, trust, and courage for her yes, Joseph’s yes is equal in faith, trust, and courage.

“When Joseph awoke, he did as the angel of the Lord had commanded and took his wife into his home.” (Mt 1:24) Joseph’s obedience is always immediate and without question, recognizing he is under the authority of another, God. He learned this from his father, and Joseph will teach this to his son, Jesus. Jesus whose obedience led him to accept even death, death on a cross.

We find a key factor for the development of a man’s character in the second reading, as Paul recalls the story of Abraham, an old man with a barren wife. “It depends on faith, so that it may be a gift, and the promise may be guaranteed to all his descendants, not to those who only adhere to the law but to those who follow the faith of Abraham.” (Rom 4:16)

Honoring Joseph today gives us an opportunity to identify the Josephs we have known. The men, who put their fears and uncertainty aside to respond with courage and compassion, who live their manhood out in action, and does so conspicuously in the community. St. Joseph, head of the Holy Family, pray for us.

[1] Focus on the Family. “The Universal Qualities of a Man” by Glenn T. Stanton, July 18 2019.

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

TAKE THE INITIATIVE

The spirit and values which guides Hope CommUnity Center, in Apopka, are gospel mandates. Love, hospitality, solidarity, and service are at the core of Catholic social justice teachings and as people of faith require us to offer a concrete response to the people who are suffering and to uncover the root causes of their life-threatening distress. Hope CommUnity Center is committed to the deeper and difficult discussion about the root causes of this migration and the need to address the push/pull factors which influence the desperate decision of poor suffering people, especially children, to make this risk-filled journey. Hope’s spirit and values are reflected in all of our services with a vision of community transformation.[1]

The prophet Ezekiel’s powerful vision features water, a necessity people require every day, especially in a land sometimes plagued by drought (1 Kgs 17:1), where water is a sign of life. The water flowing from every side of the temple, God’s own house, highlights that it is a source of life for the people. The water flowing from the temple “empties into the sea, the salt waters, which it makes fresh” (Ez 47:8) suggesting that Israel is being given a new opportunity to live faithfully.

The Gospel, also, speaks of water, the waters at Bethesda as a source of healing—or at least rejuvenation. This story of the man, ill for 38 years, demonstrates how isolating illness can be, especially if a person lacks family support and has no one to assist him.[2] Jesus knowing asks, “Do you want to be well?” “I have no one to [help] me.” Jesus heals him, with the command: “Rise, take up your mat, and walk.” (Jn 5:6-8)

This healing is an incredible lesson for us to never lose hope and always trust in God. These powerful words enabled the man to take the initiative to reclaim his life.  They also remind us that along with our own initiative, we must trust in God’s will to lead us where we are meant to go, and just like the man at the pool, we may need to acknowledge we can’t always do it alone.[3]

There’s a couple more weeks to Lent. It’s the ideal time to take the initiative to allow the living waters of our Baptism, so often polluted by sin, to be refreshed in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Trusting in God’s mercy. It’s also a time to discern, who and how can I offer myself to aid someone, some organization, that provides a helping hand up to people in need. Going deeper, like the mission of the Hope CommUnity Center, to provide concrete action to support the healing of a person in need, thus enabling them to take the initiative to reclaim their life

[1] https://www.hcc-offm.org/, “Our Values”

[2] Weekday HomilyHelps, Exegesis by Sarah Kohles, OSF, PhD

[3] Ibid, Homily Suggestion by Eileen Connelly, OSU


Friday, March 12, 2021

SILENCE

So, I need you to trust me this morning. Close your eyes and listen very carefully. Resist the temptation to open your eyes before I ask you to open them. Did you hear it? The silence? I willing to bet some of you, in that 30 seconds of silence, did a couple of things. Within the first 10 seconds or so, some of you minds exploded with: Where’s the deacon going with this? Then to, why isn’t he saying something? 15 seconds into the silence, some of you may have started organizing your agenda for the day, and a small percentage just dozed off and these are the ones who were the closest to God and to my point.

The Responsorial Psalm we repeated today, makes it perfectly clear what God is expecting: “I am the Lord your God: hear my voice.” (Ps 81:11 & 9a) To hear God’s voice, we must be silent.

In our first reading, Hosea is making an appeal to the people of Israel, calling for their repentance, calling them to listen to the voice of God, and telling them what God’s response will be if the do. “I will heal their defection, … I will love them freely; for my wrath is turned away from them.” (Hos 14:5) Alas, “O Israel, will you not hear me?” (Ps 81:8bc-9) The fullness of God’s love is found in the silence.

Our world no longer hears God because it is constantly speaking. It seems to be an unending monologue; a dictatorship of speech, a dictatorship of emphasis where nothing is left but an infected wound of mechanical words, without perspective, without truth, without foundation. Modern civilization does not know how to be quiet.[1]

How do we listen to God’s voice today? God speaks through the Scriptures, the voice of the Church, wise women and men, and in the depths and silence of our hearts. Hearing God’s voice is the first step and perhaps the hardest step, because it requires silence.

Romano Guardini, in his book The Lord writes: “The greatest things are accomplished in silence—not in the clamor and display of superficial eventfulness, but in the deep clarity of inner vision; in the almost imperceptible start of decision, in quiet overcoming and hidden sacrifice. Spiritual conception happens when the heart is quickened by love, and the free will stirs to action. The silent forces are the strong forces. Let us turn now to the stillest event of all, stillest because it came from the remoteness beyond the noise of any possible intrusion—from God.”

Jesus reduces the noise of Jewish laws into: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength, [and] your neighbor as yourself. (Mk 12:30-31) Thus, the second step is to let the love of God in our hearts, a love that cannot be contained within, but overflows outward, to direct our actions in charity. All born in silence


[1] The Power of Silence, by Robert Cardinal Sarah with Nicolas Diat © 2017.


Tuesday, March 9, 2021

PAID IN FULL

A certain married couple endlessly quarreled. One day when they weren’t quarrelling, the husband asked his wife, “Dear, how is it possible that after we quarrel each time, you are able to stay so calm and collected the next day? You don't seem to be angry or upset with me anymore. How is it you can remain so collected when I am so upset wanting to shout at you?” The wife says, “Easy! I just clean the toilet.” “What?” “Yes, I just clean the toilet.” “But how is cleaning the toilet able to keep you calm?” “Well, I clean the toilet using your toothbrush.”

Getting even seems to be such a natural instinct. We see it in children. I have two children and revenge occurred regularly. He took my book, so she would crumple up his homework … She took my toy, so he held her favorite toy for ransom. It was so common, so natural! Even when we grow up, things don't change much. Before I left for the Navy, I remember a piece of advice given to me while in the Navy, that went, “Don’t get mad, don’t even; get ahead.” We want to take revenge when someone slanders us; when someone back stabs us; or someone despises us. Then, depending on the degree of the hurt, we tend to hang on to it, forever, until we feel repaid in full. It's funny when it's in kids, it's funny when its trivial things, it's not so funny when things are serious and get out of hand.[1]

In the omitted verses from today’s reading (Dn 3:26-33) Azariah confesses that Israel has sinned and now experiences proper punishment. Today’s verses pick up with his prayer asking God not to punish Israel forever, that he and his companions be received as an acceptable sacrifice, and he asks God to save them and so glorify God’s name.[2] God forgives and saves.

So, it’s very natural, for Peter to ask, “Lord, if my brother sins against me, how often will must forgive him?” (Mt 18:21) In his human thinking he wanted to know, what's the extent? What's the limit? Surely there must be a limit! There must be some kind of a ceiling to these things because it can't just go on! Do I forgive “as many as seven times?”

Thank goodness God doesn’t treat us the way we often treat one another—especially when it comes to his forgiveness. In fact, each time we muster the courage to come him seeking forgiveness, God is delighted. He forgives our debt, a debt we cannot pay and He withholds not even a smidgen of His unfathomable mercy. God forgives and saves.

God sets us free, with the expectation that we do the same for those who have offended us. To live as we pray in the Lord’s Prayer, “forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.” (Mt 6:12) As we move to the Liturgy of the Eucharist, I encourage you to listen anew to every word prayed, watching every movement. Allow yourself to enter into this drama of life and salvation. For this is the price, PAID IN FULL, for us and our salvation.


[1] Gospel Light Christian Church. “How Shall I Forgive” posted August 18, 2019.

[2] Weekday HomilyHelps. Exegesis by Terrance Callan, PhD.


Friday, March 5, 2021

GOD’S FAVORITE

Sibling relationships are complex and influenced by a variety of factors including genetics, life events, gender, parental relationships, and experiences outside of the family. Parental favoritism is often cited as a source of adult sibling rivalry.[1] Showing favoritism is not a new issue in relationships. History tends to repeat itself, from generation to generation, and yet the pattern of life continues as showing favoritism is not a new issue in relationships.

“Israel loved Joseph best of all his sons” (Gn 37:3) and his brothers, due to extreme jealousy, betrayed Joseph. The plan starts with: “kill him” to “throw him into a cistern” to let’s make something on the plan and “sell him”. History repeats itself again, in the Jewish family, in the Parable of the Tenants Jesus invites his opponents to open their hearts and serve the kingdom of heaven. But the tenants refuse to cooperate with God’s plan. They mistreat and kill the landowner’s servants and his son. They’ve deluded themselves into thinking, having done so, they can claim the vineyard for themselves.

Jesus asked his opponents, “What will the owner of the vineyard do to those tenants when he comes?” (Mt 21:40), As they figure out who they represent in the parable, their motivation, much like Joseph’s brothers, reveals why they wanted Jesus arrested, why they would eventually abuse him, and why they will kill Jesus. Why, because they could not put aside their misguided agendas, their defense of “the Law” as they see it, and choosing to serve their own needs and desires instead of accepting God’s invitation to serve His kingdom.

There’s a reminder here for us. What is our motivation for action? Maybe we find ourselves acting in the same ways as we attempt to cling to possessions, power, to save face or a favored status? St. John Chrysostom wrote: “For what good is it if we abstain from birds and fish, if we devour our brothers and sisters?” Even the good deeds we do, if motivated and done for self-satisfaction, can fall short of accepting the invitation to build up the kingdom of God. Christian and human relationships are complex and influenced by a variety of factors including life & faith experiences, values, traditions, and so on… There are just so many ways we can, intentionally or unintentionally, mistreat, abuse, and kill each other; physically, mentally and spiritually.

Lent is a moment of grace, a promise of hope, it’s a time to examine ourselves and our motivation for action seriously. The Eucharist always reveals to us the good fruit produced by one act of total self-giving. This perpetual feast is motivated by God’s “ardent desire of being always with us which induced Him to perform this continual miracle, the abridgment of all miracles by which His immense love put Him in a state of being no longer able to be separated from us.”[2]

We are now the tenants leasing the vineyard, for a time. We are entrusted to tend to this vineyard, to produce good fruit, and who “will give [God] the produce at the proper times.” (Mt 21:41) This is the vision of the kingdom, where we are all God’s favorite.


[1] Verywellmind, “How to Handle the Stress of Adult Sibling Rivalry” by Elizabeth Scott, MS, May 6, 2020.

[2] Consecration to Jesus, Through Saint Joseph, by Dr. Gregory Bottaro & Jennifer Settle © 2019.