Archive for the ‘Homily’ Category

2016 Christmas Letter from Fr. Brando

Sunday, December 25th, 2016

My dear Good People,
Greetings of joy and peace in God who is always with us!

A heavily wounded four year-old child rescued by medical officers in Aleppo, Syria asked the doctors whether he is going to die. The doctors groped for words to answer his question. However, they were overtaken by the boy’s whimpering caution: “If I die, I will tell God everything!” All the doctors could do is hug him and pour all their expertise to save him.

With so many harrowing events around the world and even in places close to us, we are thrown into states of insecurity and pessimism. In places where tragedies like wars and natural disasters occur, it can be so difficult to continue hoping for goodness in others. Those who are displaced and have to move away from their homes, however, can only force this hope in themselves. They have to carry with them a sustained belief in humanity despite the overwhelming pains and trauma inflicted on them and their helpless children. Providentially, such a belief in humanity is re-affirmed by the warm welcome they receive in our community. The two families who found refuge in our parish have regained strength and optimism as they continue to move on. They find life in this beautiful city of Toronto. I am utterly proud of our community of good people for giving them a new road in life. We have served them God’s mercy and compassion in the flesh.

The touch of home we have given to the aforementioned families is even more heartwarming considering that we also have our own struggles. I am one with the families going through difficult times like those losing their loved ones, suffering from any kind of illnesses, coping with financial challenges, or grappling with marital and other relational issues. I am one with all those who may find this Christmas season hard to celebrate. Rest assured, I keep you all in my prayers and masses with the express request that you all deserve to enjoy the graces of peace and abundance brought by the new-born Christ. Likewise, we prayerfully echo to the world these glad Christmas tidings especially to our sisters and brothers ravaged by armed conflicts. Our prayers are our priceless contributions to the peacekeeping initiatives going on in these war-torn countries.

In our parish, I cannot be more grateful for the collective vibrancy we shared and put into all programs and activities throughout the year. I thank all the parish volunteers who, on top of their day-to-day preoccupations, are still able to share considerable slices of their time, talent and treasure. My heartfelt gratitude also goes to our generous parishioners. At this, I am encouraging everyone to take part of this communal zest inspired by our patron, St. Gabriel of our Lady of Sorrows. I humbly invite all of you to support our parish ministries and programs like making casseroles for the homeless and supporting our young people in their quest to grow in faith and service to other people.

Above all, being your shepherd, I am restless when my people are troubled. Your difficulties are my difficulties. Your joys are my joys. The Year of Mercy may have folded, but our parish community stands amid the boundless and unending mercy of God. Hence, I want to keep you close to my heart in prayer. I have a daily resolution to be your dedicated and committed pastor of our welcoming and beloved parish. I am ever humbled by the task of keeping you in the fold of our Good Shepherd, whose birth we celebrate this season. If the season’s light and joy elude us because of problems and grief, we need not be afraid to follow the boy who cried “I will tell God everything.” With the new-born Christ, I hug you all in prayer and promise with deep faith that God will rescue us all. Thank you for everything and may God bless you all!

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

Fr. Brando Recaña

Homily – December 18, 2016

Sunday, December 18th, 2016

Just a thought on our first reading from Isaiah. He was writing about a very political situation going on in his time. Syria, which is so much in the news today, entered into a pact with the northern kingdom of Israel against the kingdom of Judah. They were going to lay siege against Jerusalem. Ahaz was Jerusalem’s king at that time. Isaiah wants Ahaz to know that things will work out in the long run, but he has to trust God. Isaiah offers Ahaz a sign. ‘A young woman is with child, she’ll have a son and he shall be named, Emmanuel. The young woman was one of Ahaz’s wives and her son Hezekiah would be the one to follow his father on the throne. The royal line of David would continue in the kingdom of Judah. A sign that God is still with the people of God.

In our gospel Matthew puts a whole new spin on the promise of Isaiah. Matthew interprets Isaiah through the prism of the death and resurrection of Jesus. Jesus, Emmanuel, is not a product of human evolution but the intervention of our transcendent God into human history. This was the belief on the early Church, the eternal Word was made flesh and dwelt amongst, suffered, died and rose again.

For this wonder to take place God chose two young people from the unimportant town of Nazareth, Mary engaged to Joseph, a carpenter.

God made God’s plan known to Mary through the visit of the angel Gabriel. Her pregnancy would be unique, ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you – the child to be born will be holy; he will be called Son of God. The young and confused Mary surrenders herself to this mystery with the simple response,’ be it done according to your word.

Mary left home to be with her aged cousin Elizabeth who was pregnant in her old age. When she came home to Nazareth her pregnancy was showing. Image the gossip and scandal in the town. Joseph, to whom Mary was engaged and who loved her dearly probably asked her what happened, who was the father? He found it hard to accept Mary’s explanation. Who wouldn’t? He decided to break the engagement but that was not to be. Young Joseph had a dream and was let in on the divine plan. This was all the work of God. Mary’s child would be Emmanuel – God with us. The young and confused Joseph added his ‘yes’ to Mary’s and our Christmas event begins to unfold.

Mary and Joseph were still in their teens when God intruded into their lives. But both Mary and Joseph did three things in their encounter with God. They listened, they trusted and they loved. They listened to what God was asking of them. They listened to what was beyond their imagining that they were invited to work with God in something only God could understand. Then they trusted. That must have been the hardest, to trust, as God’s plan unfolded in their lives. They trusted when they faced the dangers and hardships as they traveled to Bethlehem and found there was no place to stay and delivered their son in a shelter for animals. They trusted when they had to flee to another country to save the child’s life.

Imagine the trust demanded of Mary as she stood by the cross and looked at the beaten and diminished body of her son and remembered the promise of the Angel, ‘he will be great and will be called son of the Most High and the Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David, his kingdom will have no end.’ Looking at the crucified body of her son Mary faced the exact opposite of these promised and yet she trusted.

Mary and Joseph listened, trusted and loved. They certainly love each other; otherwise Joseph would have taken off when he discovered Mary’s pregnancy. They certainly loved the son Jesus and they certainly loved God.

Cardinal Newman wrote of himself, ‘God has created me to do Him some definite service. He has committed some work to me, which He has not committed to another. I have my mission.” We all have something to do in life that no one else can do. It may be great, it may be very ordinary, but it is ours just as Mary and Joseph had their definite to God.

When Mary and Joseph were presented with their missions they listened, they trusted and the loved. When, in God’s time we discover our mission may we be blessed with the grace to listen, to trust and to love and do whatever God calls us to do.

Homily – December 11, 2016

Sunday, December 11th, 2016

As we come closer to the feast of Christmas the pace quickens. We’ll get caught up in the famous Christmas rush, only so many shopping days til Christmas. Remember the song, ”Slow down you’re going too fast, you’ve got to make the moment last.” All this Christmas rush brings out the worst in us. We get upset by the slowness of the service at the checkout counters. “What’s the hold up, why is that cashier so slow?” Why is that red traffic light taking so long to turn green? Why is this line so long? Why is this bus so slow?

We want instant service in the stores, instant gratification in our relationships, instant answers to the ‘whys’ of our lives. We want instant healing from an illness, instant answers to our prayers, instant faith to our doubts. We try to be patient with ourselves as we struggle with our faults and failing, try to be patient with the dullness of our prayer life. The list goes on and on.

Advent can be a season that teaches ‘patience’. The Jewish people wait patiently for that fullness of time when the Messiah is to come. Mary patiently spent nine months waiting for the birth of her promised son. Jesus lived patiently working in Nazareth waiting til it was time to begin his Father’s work. He patiently endured the dullness of his disciples as they struggled to understand his parables.

In our second reading James encourages the people to be patient for the coming of the Lord. It took a while for all the Apostles to realize that the second coming of Jesus was not as immanent as the thought and hoped. No one knows the day nor the hour. James puts before us the example of the patient farmer who trusted his seeds to the earth. He waits patiently as the warm, wet soil slowly brakes down the seed’s hard crust and lets the life force within begins to sprout and grow, first the stock, then the head and then the full grain in the head fit for the harvest. The farmer knows he can’t rush the process. He waits patiently for things to take their course.

What do we want? PATIENCE?! When do we want it? NOW!

Lots of luck.

Homily – December 4, 2016

Sunday, December 4th, 2016

Years ago I went to Vancouver to witness the wedding of a young man from the parish. In those days whenever I traveled I took two things with me – the holy oils and my golf clubs. Luckily I never had to use the holy oils but the golf clubs were another matter. After the wedding I spent some time with the groom’s parents. One day we went golfing outside White Rock.

Right in the middle of one of the fairways was the stump of a giant tree that had been felled years ago. This stump was at least 20 feet in diameter and was 10 feet high. From this supposedly dead stump another tree had grown to almost 20 feet high. It was quite a sight. Every year when we read this reading from Isaiah the memory of that stump and the new life that sprung from it comes to my mind. It is a symbol, a reminder that new life, new possibilities can come from even the most dire of circumstances.

Isaiah lived and wrote in a very troubled time. The people to whom Isaiah preached and wrote lived in the midst of political unrest plus the fear of foreign invasion. Religious indifference was rampant and religious observance was a sham. Isaiah compared it all to the stump of a cut down tree. But for him it was not a hopeless situation. He saw new life springing from what should have been a lifeless stump.

That new life springing from that lifeless stump would be blessed with the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and awe of God and all these would prevail in the lives of all who would be open to such gifts. In the new life springing from that lifeless stump there will be the unbelievable harmony between opposites – between wolf and lamb, leopard and kid, calf and lion. In that new life springing from that lifeless stump the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.

St. Paul tells us in his letter to the Romans that all the scriptures, and he was writing about the Old Testament, were written for our instruction so that by the steadfastness and the encouragement of the scripture we might have hope. This is doubly true for us, blessed as we are with the gospels and the epistles.

There can be times when our lives or relationships or our spiritual life can feel like a lifeless stump. Our health, our marriage, our job and financial security, our sense of anything religious – all these can seem life-less, we find no vitality, no excitement in anything. But the lessons of our scripture tell us just the opposite – did not the Christ have to suffer and so enter into his glory?’ There can be and there often are times in our lives when we just experience downers. But we know too that that’s not the whole story. We’ve been there before and things have turned around. We’ve not given up, we’ve worked things through and for the most part we’ve been better for it.

If we find that there are dead stumps in our lives may our gracious God give us the grace to see the possibilities for live and growth within them and have the trust to allow that grace and growth to come forth.

In all our times of struggle and doubt may we be grace to know the presence of God in our lives. This is the season of Emmanuel – God is with us.

Homily – November 27, 2016

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

I have to tell you I always find Advent to be a bit of a depressing time. The too many overcast days, the darkness that comes with the early sunsets and the wars and destruction of ancient cultures and the gloom of the Advent readings at Mass all seem to be too heavy

For me another downer is the ramifications of the U.S. elections on our country. There has been a rash of acts of vandalism against Mosques and Synagogues and even some churches and a rise in hostility to refugees and new immigrants. The political climate seems to be bringing out the worst in some people with a rise in the fear of the foreigner. All this as we await the birth of the Prince of Peace.

The truth is Advent is about the coming of God into our lives as God came into the lives of God’s people time and again in the history of the Jewish people. Advent is about the coming of God into human history with the birth of Jesus, son of Mary, in Bethlehem of Judea. Most importantly Advent is about the coming of Jesus into our lives every day as he intrudes into our comfort zones of the way we live our lives and relate to others. The Advent of our God tries to shake us up and challenges us to put on our Lord Jesus Christ in our dealings with other people. Jesus calls us as he called the people of his own time to stay awake, be vigilant and receptive to his coming into our lives in the challenges and opportunities that come our way in the ordinary living of our ordinary lives.

Jesus calls you and he calls me to be more accepting and understanding of family members and friends who try our patience. Jesus wants you and he wants me to be understanding and more forgiving of family members and friends with whom we disagree. Jesus wants you and Jesus wants me to be more accepting of family members or friends whose faith convictions or faith indifferences upset and confuse us. Jesus wants you and he wants me to be more sensitive to and aware of the struggles of the men, women and children who depend on food banks and toy drives to get through this Christmas time. Jesus wants you and Jesus wants me to live lightly on the earth and appreciate the impact our consumerism has on Earth.

More importantly Jesus wants you and he wants me to be people of faith and hope. Dark as our personal situations may be, dark as the season may be, dark as our times may be, blighted as they are with senseless wars and the destruction of so many lives, there is a light at the end of the tunnel and the light is Christ, the light of the world challenging each of us to so let our lights shine before others that they may see our good works and give glory to God.

Advent calls us to walk in the light of the Lord, follow the teaching and example of Jesus and not be overcome by the darkness of the season nor the darkness of world events. There is a light at the end of the tunnel – and our light is Christ.