Sunday, July 24, 2016

THE SECRET INGREDIENT

Pizza Night was a favorite night for me growing up. OK pizza night is still one of my favorite nights of the week, but it’s not the same as my dad’s pizza night.  Now, Judy and I visit to our favorite pizza place and watch them make our pizza.  Dad made his pizzas from scratch.  Pizza night then was more than a night, it started first thing in the morning, when he made the dough.  4 cups of flour, dash of salt, dab of olive oil, 1½ cups of water and a small packet of what he called his secret ingredient.  He’d split the dough between two bowls cover them with a towel and then we’d go do chores and play for the day.  When we came back to make the pies, the dough that looked barely enough for two pies had grown big enough to make four pies!  Dad would joke how it was his secret ingredient in that little packet.  Yep, yeast.
God could use this secret ingredient to help refocus our nation’s pledge to be “one nation under God”.  It’s possible!  Consider our first reading from Genesis where we hear this wonderful bargaining between Abraham and God.  Can we bargain with God?  Look at it this way.  “In any relationship there is the freedom to allow the other person to change us, to influence us.”[1]  While Abraham does get God down to ten just men, the idea is that God is willing to deal with the whole because of a few; all we need is a few to get it right!  All God needs is some yeast among his people.
G. K. Chesterton once said, “We are all in the same boat in a stormy sea, and we owe each other a terrible loyalty.”  We’re all caught up in God’s great sweep of love.  All it takes is a few enlightened people to influence a parish, a neighborhood, or a city, even a nation.  How!?
The Gospel today gives us the model prayer, though considerably shorter than Matthew’s account and the prayer we recite as part of this liturgy, Luke version can help us unpack how we can be God’s secret ingredient to spare our world from destruction.
When we pray this prayer we start with a very bold statement.  “Our Father, who art in heaven…” (Mt 6:9).  By our baptism, we are adopted sons and daughters of our heavenly Father.  It is a privilege, both a gift and a commitment that acknowledges our true citizenship and home as God’s children.
“Give us each day our daily bread” (Lk 11:3) “this petition captures the peasants view of time, neither yesterday nor the distant future is of concern, it’s only the needs of “this day, today,” the immediate present, which command attention.”[2]  When I visited Madagascar in 2013 I gained a real understanding of this truth.  Most of the people I visited were concerned with making enough to survive the day.  Yes they had dreams for their children’s future, but life was about getting the daily bread.  In our nation’s current state of violence, terrorism, and addictions better than ever we have very real reminders that tomorrow is not a guarantee. 
“forgive us our sins for we ourselves forgive everyone in debt to us, …” (Lk 11:4)  Do you know what the prerequisite is to having our sins forgiven?  This prayer tells us we can only receive what we our self give.  We must forgive others, even the ones who may have hurt us.  Put another way, we must give up the rights to our grievance because it is just a search for power; for superiority; a search to say, or a need to say, I gotcha!  You did me wrong and now you owe me.  We have to let it go!
We live in very turbulent times, the headlines are full of violence against police officers, crimes against children, division between races, and rampant addictions to drugs, sex and Pokémon. How do we turn the tide of these stormy seas?  Know and accept our role and responsibility as God’s secret ingredient.  Are you interested in knowing the recipe to achieve a more peaceful now!?  It’s all about establishing relationship, a relationship of trust.  It’s a recipe to being a conduit of grace, freedom, and healing for the world.
The first ingredient is our authentic self, knowing who we really are, “God created man in His own image … male and female He created them.” (Gn 1:27)  We need to develop an intimate relationship with “Our Father”, commit to a life of prayer, live the model Jesus our brother lived, a model of compassion, mercy, and self-giving love.  The second ingredient is living in the present moment.  Slow down enough to be in the now moments, be in the present moment with your family, the present moment with the friend, co-worker or even the stranger who just needs to bend your ear.  Don’t try to fix them or judge them, just lend them you ears and be in the present moment with them.  The third ingredient is forgiveness, always the first step to the path of reconciliation and a renewed relationship.
With these ingredients, we can be mixed into the greater community, having the same influence a tiny packet of yeast has on the dough.  We can become the secret ingredient that raises our community to new heights.  In the midst of the stormy seas, we can be the beacon to safe harbor; in the midst of the political rhetoric we can be a consistent moral compass guiding all too right relationship.  All we have to do is ask for the gift of the Holy Spirit, seek his wisdom, and knock on the door of opportunity to become God’s secret ingredient in the world.



[1]  Hungry, and You Fed Me, Edited by Deacon Jim Knipper © 2012. “So I tell you, ask and you will receive.  Seek and you will find.  Knock and the door will be opened.” by Fr. Richard Rohr, O.F.M.
[2]  Social-Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels by Bruce J. Malina & Richard L. Rohrbaugh © 2003.  Fortress Press, MN.

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