October 14th, 2012
In this week’s bulletin, an information meeting for parents of children receiving confirmation this year, a director is needed for the Christmas pageant, and World Mission Sunday.
Read more »
| Posted in Bulletin |
October 7th, 2012
It is not good for man; it is not good for anyone to be alone. In the figurative and poetic language of Genesis we hear of how God made man from the dust of the earth and placed him in this wondrous garden. God created all the plants, birds and animals on earth and the man named each one, which gave him a relationship to what he named. But when all was said and done there was still no helpmate suitable for man. Surrounded by all these animals there was still no one to whom man could relate. He was still alone and God knew this was not good. So Genesis poetically tells of how God cast man into a deep sleep, took out one of his ribs and formed woman and brought her to the man. I saw a plaque that told why God chose Adam’s rib. Not from his feet to be beneath him, nor from his head to be above him, but from his side to be his equal, close to his arm to be protected and close his heart to be loved. We are all meant to be in some form of relationship, it is not good for anyone to be alone. The inner life of God is a life of relationships between Father, Son and Spirit. God’s works of creation are all in relationship one with the other. The vastness of outer space and the vastness of inner space all involve relationships, whether they be galaxies or protons. We humans are in relationship to all that shares Earth with us; the earth does not belong to us, we belong to the Earth and what we do to the Earth we do to ourselves. Everything is inter-connected, every person is inter-connected.
| Posted in Homily |
God has given us the earth to be our homeland. Along with this gift, we are asked to show our thankfulness by caring for the earth and by sharing our own gifts with one another.
September 30th, 2012
There is a joke that asks the question, ’why is a round church better than a square church?’ The answer is, ’so no one can corner God.’ That’s what today’s scriptures are all about, the wrongness of our tendency to corner God’s love and truth.
I’ve used this example many times of someone singing the praises of someone else, how good and generous they are and then they blow it by saying, ‘and you know, they’re not even Catholics.’ As if Catholics have a corner on goodness, thoughtfulness and care for others. A young man, probably enthusiastically sincere, complained to Moses that Eldad and Medad were prophesying in the camp and they should be stopped. Moses knows better. Prophecy, the carrying of God’s message of love and peace to the world is not the special task of only a few people. Moses’ wish was that all the people of the Lord were prophets.
We find the same situation in the gospel. John complains to Jesus, “we saw someone casting out demons in your name and we tried to stop them.” John may have been a bit of a control freak, we’re the only ones who can do the works of Jesus. Jesus sets John straight when he tells him, “do not stop him, for no one who does a deed of power in my name will be able to speak evil of me. Whoever is not against us is for us.” God does not confine the gifts of his spirit to authorized channels only. Bishops and priests are not the only channels of God’s truth and love to our world. Scripture tells us that the spirit breathes where it wills, inside and outside the church. Who would doubt that the spirit of God worked in the life and actions of a man like Ghandi?
All truly good works come from and lead back to God. In today’s gospel Jesus is letting us know that anyone doing a good and mighty deed need not have official credentials. The true credential for doing good is our being just who we are, created and loved by a God who is able to work mightily through anyone of us. Perhaps the test for one doing good is God’s inclusiveness. Peter knew this. “Any person of any nationality who does what is right is acceptable to God.” Selectivity or exclusion were not elements in the way Jesus did things. John, who has asked the question about who belongs and who does not, receives an essential teaching concerning the mission of Jesus, all are welcome to do the works of God as God chooses them to do them. All truly good works come from and lead back to God. Not only must God’s truth be spread through all of God’s people; it may also be spread by those who are “not of our company,” those good and wonderful people who are not even Catholics nor Christian.
The fact that many of our young people no longer come to Mass is a sadness. Their Catholic faith seems to have no impact on the way they lives their lives, it has no attraction for them at all. But consider this, the missionary works of many religious communities could not happen if it were not for so many young women and men of college age and beyond who willingly volunteer one or two or three years of their lives working in the developing countries of the world. Where would we Passionists be without the generous support of our Passionist Volunteers who work with us in Honduras and Jamaica? They embrace the fundamental works of the church; they bring the love, the healing and the reality of God’s love for each of us by serving their brothers and sisters who are less blessed by this world’s blessings. God’s work is their work as the try to bring about Christ’s kingdom of justice, love and truth.
Think of the number of young men and women, many of them estranged from the church who are involved in environmental and ecological issues as they work for the healing of Earth and the integrity of creation. Think of the young men and women still involved in the Occupy Movement protesting the thievery and corruption of the financial institutions that run our lives. The words of St. James are so true in our day when we hear of the manipulation of markets and mortgages and the many Ponzi schemes that preyed on people’s greed, when we hear of golden handshakes given to financial executives who should be receiving jail sentences. “The wages of those who mowed your fields, which you kept back by fraud, cry out and the cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord.”
Scripture describes the kingdom of God as a kingdom of light and truth, a kingdom of holiness and grace, a kingdom of justice, light and truth. This is the kingdom whose arrival we pray for every day, the kingdom come. As we continue to celebrate this Mass we pray for all those good people who work to bring about the kingdom of God on earth, be they inside or outside the camp. And may each of us remember that God’s work must truly be our own.
In this week’s bulletin, recruiting for the senior choir and for altar service, the Eco-sabbath, and the Thanksgiving food drive.
Founded by St. Paul of the Cross, every Passionist takes a special vow to spend his or her energies in promoting remembrance of the sufferings of Jesus, the memory of the Cross, and reflection of the meaning of the Cross for the world.
Learn about Passionists and our insignia »
Companion for the Walk of the Stations of the Cosmic Earth
St. Gabriel’s Garden – Guided Sensory Reflective Walk