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Sunday, December 4, 2022

The Second Sunday of Advent (Year A) - A Homily

 The Second Sunday of Advent (Year A)

 

A Homily - 2022.12.04

 

 

First Reading – Isaiah 11:1-10 ©

Responsorial Psalm – Psalm 71(72):1-2, 7-8, 12-13, 17 ©

Second Reading – Romans 15:4-9 ©

Gospel Acclamation – Luke 3:4, 6

The Gospel According to Matthew 3:1 - 12 ©

 

(NJB)

 

 

Listen!

 

Let your heart be filled with hope, filled to overflowing; let it flow.

 

Consider the words of the prophet Isaiah, reflect on the encouragement he shares with the people, speaking with one eye on the past and one eye toward the future.

 

Though Isaiah is in actuality a fictional person, and the writings attributed to him should be designated as belonging to a school of thought, these writings nevertheless represent the real concerns of real people dwelling in the midst of crises over numerous generations. The School of Isaiah serves as a beacon of hope and promises the people a return to the way of justice, to the way of peace, an end to the violence and conflicts that had come to be an ordinary feature of life in the land.

 

Hope is eternal and though God, the creator of the universe, though God does not intervene in the order of creation, the divine purpose is present in all times and places, in all things and beings. Through the eternal mystery of the divine will, God draw the whole of it to God’s own self

 

God’s promise is real and true; there is a way toward justice and peace, and the end of violent conflict, but do not take this to mean that God will not come to our rescue in this world.

 

God made us the world, and we in it, absolutely free, God will not interfere in the choices we make or spare us from their consequences. We are fragile creatures and we live by each other’s leave, and at each other’s mercy; God will not interfere with that but God has lit the way and provided for us that we may understand it. If we listen to our heartbeat, we can hear its rhythmic calling.  

 

God is not a king, a dread-lord…or even God, as we have come to believe…

 

Listen to the apostle; listen the teaching of the prophets, give some mind to our sages and our seers; consider the testimony of the patriarchs and judges as they are recorded in the sacred texts; their lives had one purpose, to furnish hope in the hearts of the people.

 

The path before our generation is also lit by the lamp of hope, it is the same hope shed by the divine for the same purpose, shared with us , who are the same people, so that in its light we may abandon fear and find ourselves free to love one another as Jesus taught us.

 

Faith is trust, it is marked by a willingness to believe in the that which we hope for; a world at peace, where justice is never justice without mercy, and where those called to govern, govern with humility. 

 

Be mindful!

 

For two thousand years the normative mode of the Christian tradition has (at least) attempted to root itself in historical realities, with greater and lesser degrees of success. The importance of understanding history cannot be underestimated, including, most especially, it limitations.

 

It should be celebrated by Christians everywhere that the deep and dedicated study of our tradition in the modes of textual and narrative criticism is what gave birth to the fields of literary criticism and modern historical criticism, from which was developed the fields of dialectics and de-constructuralism, as well as all modern and post-modern theory, without which we would be culturally bereft and have no understanding of the uses and limitations of history whatsoever.

 

Our stories and narratives about the life and mission Jesus, his arrest, torture and murder are a part of the testimony of our faith. These narratives allow us to locate in time, as a historical reality, the singular moment when for Christians the principle commitment to the teaching of Jesus took place.

 

Through our story we recall the rule of Tiberius, heir to Augustus, we recall the reign of Herod, and governance of Pontius Pilate. We recall the role that Pilate played in the killing of Jesus, we shout it out at every hour of every day, in every part of the world; at every mass that is held we say the words: that Jesus suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified and buried; this story is told unceasingly…it is the story that never ends.

 

It may be time to say something else.

 

As heirs to the ministry and teaching of Jesus we might consider forgiving Pilate, and Judas, and Herod, and the Sanhedrin for the role they played in that political murder.

 

Jesus forgave them, our story also tells us that.

 

Our theology tells us that he died for the sins of the world; we all have a hand in that, each and every one of us, all of us who have ever been and who will ever, so we can all take a little responsibility there, and let the poor players off the hook.

 

John the Baptist taught us to repent, and be forgiven, but Jesus taught us to simply forgive, and in so doing, accept the forgiveness that has been granted us, to drink from it, like a fountain overflowing with hope.

 

Jesus forgave those who killed him, asking God to forgive them, broken as he was hanging from the cross.

 

He pointed the way, and it is time we followed.

 

The promise of Isaiah, the school of thought to which both John and Jesus belonged, the promise which John sang out in the wilderness, the promise which Jesus proclaimed on the mountain,  that promise cannot be realized until we take it up and do our part. God is the author of our salvation, but we ourselves are the agents, and it is incumbent on us to proceed with the healing, if there is to be any healing at all.

 

Remember!

 

John the Baptist was a social critic, and to be a social critic that is the role of the prophet, he stood within the tradition and criticized its institutions. John was not alone in this, he dwelt on the fringe of society along with those who saw and experienced the same troubles as he did. He and his people were on the margins both figuratively and literally; they belonged to a community at Qumran in the desert, and Qumran provided the foundation for a movement to form. John preached a new path for the people, a new and intentional way of life; his little cousin Jesus came along after and showed us how it was to be done.

 

They were so controversial that they had to do their preaching away from the towns and cities. They took to the wilderness and the people followed them.

 

Now let’s get real:

 

Isaiah did not foretell the coming of John the Baptist. As stated, Isaiah was not a real-life historical-figure, but the school of Isaiah, those who wrote in his name, they offered their criticism of their tradition, and assured people that when they were gone others would come…others would come, others like John and Jesus would surely come…they foresaw that.

 

John did the same thing when he knew his days were numbered, he knew another would come after him. He might even have known that Jesus of Nazareth would pick up his work, but that fact is unimportant, because he knew that if not Jesus, then another would follow; sooner or later another would follow…this is always true.

 

The prophets are among us, they are preaching and teaching and pointing out the way. The prophets are present in every generation. The voice of the prophet is present in the heart of every human being; waiting, nascent, patient, desiring to be heard.

 

Do not believe that being baptized and being a Christian makes you special; being a member of group, belonging to an organization, coming from a certain family, having membership in a clan or tribe or identifying with any other proto-nationalistic nonsense does not make a person special; no matter how highly you and others regard that group.  

 

Being a Christian does not impart a special gift to anyone, only a special responsibility. Being a Christian means that you have accepted the sacred burden of speak with the voice of a prophet, to demand that the unjust be just, to kindle hope in the hopeless, and to be merciful toward the outcast.

 

This is the way: serving the good, loving justice and being merciful to all of those within your power, or whom you have the power to help; there is no other way.

 

Do not be distressed or afraid of the harsh language that you might sometimes encounter in the gospels. Do not be afraid of the fire, rather discover what it means, because in scripture, the encounter with fire is always a symbol of our encounter with God. The fire that never ends is the eternal fire that burns in the heart of God; it is the fire of creation. We know this because God, and God alone is arbiter of the eternal, and there is no eternality without God.

 

Our encounter with God, whether in fire or water, or sewage and vomit, our encounter with God by whatever means it occurs is a moment of transformation, of transfiguration for every person; the encounter might be painful depending on who you are or how ready you are to experience it, the encounter may be painful but it will not be harmful, because the divine purpose is destructive but restorative.

 

The fire of God refines, just as the power of love refines, and justice and mercy do.

 

Remember to be like John: preach the faith, love the good, walk humbly in the world, serve justice with mercy all the days of your life.

 

Spread the good news; God loves you.




  First Reading – Isaiah 11:1-10 ©

 

A Shoot Springs From the Stock of Jesse

 

A shoot springs from the stock of Jesse, a scion thrusts from his roots: on him the spirit of the Lord rests, a spirit of wisdom and insight, a spirit of counsel and power, a spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord.

 

(The fear of the Lord is his breath.)

 

He does not judge by appearances, he gives no verdict on hearsay, but judges the wretched with integrity, and with equity gives a verdict for the poor of the land.

 

His word is a rod that strikes the ruthless, his sentences bring death to the wicked.

Integrity is the loincloth round his waist, faithfulness the belt about his hips.

 

The wolf lives with the lamb, the panther lies down with the kid, calf and lion feed together, with a little boy to lead them.

 

The cow and the bear make friends, their young lie down together.

 

The lion eats straw like the ox.

 

The infant plays over the cobra’s hole; into the viper’s lair the young child puts his hand.

 

They do no hurt, no harm, on all my holy mountain, for the country is filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the waters swell the sea.

 

That day, the root of Jesse shall stand as a signal to the peoples.

 

It will be sought out by the nations and its home will be glorious.

 

 

Responsorial Psalm – Psalm 71(72):1-2, 7-8, 12-13, 17 ©

 

In his days justice shall flourish, and peace till the moon fails.

 

O God, give your judgement to the king,

  to a king’s son your justice,

that he may judge your people in justice

  and your poor in right judgement.

 

In his days justice shall flourish, and peace till the moon fails.

 

In his days justice shall flourish

  and peace till the moon fails.

He shall rule from sea to sea,

  from the Great River to earth’s bounds.

 

In his days justice shall flourish, and peace till the moon fails.

 

For he shall save the poor when they cry

  and the needy who are helpless.

He will have pity on the weak

  and save the lives of the poor.

 

In his days justice shall flourish, and peace till the moon fails.

 

May his name be blessed for ever

  and endure like the sun.

Every tribe shall be blessed in him,

  all nations bless his name.

 

In his days justice shall flourish, and peace till the moon fails.

 

 

Second Reading – Romans 15:4-9 ©

 

Christ is the Saviour of All Men

 

Everything that was written long ago in the scriptures was meant to teach us something about hope from the examples scripture gives of how people who did not give up were helped by God. And may he who helps us when we refuse to give up, help you all to be tolerant with each other, following the example of Christ Jesus, so that united in mind and voice you may give glory to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

It can only be to God’s glory, then, for you to treat each other in the same friendly way as Christ treated you. The reason Christ became the servant of circumcised Jews was not only so that God could faithfully carry out the promises made to the patriarchs, it was also to get the pagans to give glory to God for his mercy, as scripture says in one place: For this I shall praise you among the pagans and sing to your name.

 

 

Gospel Acclamation – Luke 3:4, 6

 

Alleluia, alleluia!

 

Prepare a way for the Lord,

make his paths straight,

and all mankind shall see the salvation of God.

 

Alleluia!

 

 

The Gospel According to Matthew 3:1 - 12 ©

 

The One Who Follows Me Will Baptize You With the Holy Spirit and Fire

 

In due course John the Baptist appeared; he preached in the wilderness of Judaea and this was his message: ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is close at hand.’ This was the man the prophet Isaiah spoke of when he said:

 

A voice cries in the wilderness:

Prepare a way for the Lord,

make his paths straight.

 

This man John wore a garment made of camel-hair with a leather belt round his waist, and his food was locusts and wild honey. Then Jerusalem and all Judaea and the whole Jordan district made their way to him, and as they were baptised by him in the river Jordan they confessed their sins. But when he saw a number of Pharisees and Sadducees coming for baptism he said to them, ‘Brood of vipers, who warned you to fly from the retribution that is coming? But if you are repentant, produce the appropriate fruit, and do not presume to tell yourselves, “We have Abraham for our father,” because, I tell you, God can raise children for Abraham from these stones. Even now the axe is laid to the roots of the trees, so that any tree which fails to produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown on the fire. I baptise you in water for repentance, but the one who follows me is more powerful than I am, and I am not fit to carry his sandals; he will baptise you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing-fan is in his hand; he will clear his threshing-floor and gather his wheat into the barn; but the chaff he will burn in a fire that will never go out.’

 

 

The Second Sunday of Advent, (Year A)



Monday, November 28, 2022

A Homily - The First Sunday of Advent (Year A)

 A Homily

 

2022.11.27

 

First Reading – Isaiah 2:1-5 ©

Responsorial Psalm – Psalm 121(122):1-2, 4-5, 6-9 ©

Second Reading – Romans 13:11-14 ©

Gospel Acclamation – Palms 84:8

The Gospel According to Matthew 24:37 - 44 ©

 

(NJB)

 

The First Sunday of Advent

A Holy Day of Obligation (Year A)

 

Listen to the prophet who says that the law of God, the creator of the universe, that God’s law is one for all people, and that the purpose of the law is to lead people to peace.

 

Here is the law:

 

Love God with all your strength, and all your heart, and all your mind; love your neighbor as yourself.

 

Remember this:

 

When the law makes reference to Zion it is not referencing a place. Zion is a metaphor, it stands for the center of our being, Zion represents our heart, each of us individually and the whole of us collectively.

 

Zion is the heart of hearts; in its deepest chamber is the holy of holies, the place where we encounter the divine, it is there that the creator of the universe has written the immutable law: to love your neighbor even as you love yourself.

 

It is there in there, in the temple of the living God that the invisible hand has inscribed the indelible command, to love one another as God loves us, and that we return God’s love through the service we give to our neighbors, our friends and family, and to the stranger in our midst.

 

Remember this:

 

It is in the other that God is presents God’s self to us.

 

Insofar as we uphold rule our salvation is complete and the savior’s work is done, the fear of death gone, it is then that pain and suffering lose their power in this world, having been met by love and compassion …and faith (which means trust).

 

When the rule has been fulfilled, we will have no need for anyone to come with power and authority to adjudicate between us. When the rule is followed there is peace among the people of God, both in the here and now and in the eternity…for all people in all places at all times, we shall be as one.

 

Consider the wisdom of the psalmist who says to each of us, to each and every one of us:

 

You were conceived in the womb of salvation

 

Listen! You do not have to seek that which has already found you.

 

Consider again the words of the psalmist and forget all the talk of securing cities, and ramparts and thrones. God has nothing to do with these things; they are stuff human beings dream of. Know that God, the creator of the universe, that the living God who dwells in each of us, that God is not a tribal deity.

 

The eternal God does not belong to one people, one nation, one world or one galaxy, God’s being is co-extensive with the universe, and there is no place where God is not.

 

God is infinite and eternal and beyond our comprehension, and yet God is with us and within us; God is the being through whom and in whom each and every one of us comes to existence.

 

Stay awake!

 

Listen to the apostle and remember that it is always dark somewhere in the world, and somewhere in the world it is always light.

 

It is easy to hide in plain sight, while it is difficult to work for the good and keep it private. Whether in private or in public, endeavor to live up to the expectations you have set for yourself regarding your relationship with the divine and know that God loves you

 

Act as if everything you do will be known by all, because it will in the end, in that place beyond time, when God is all in all; then there will be nothing hidden and all secrets will have been revealed.

 

Forget all about glory of God, the creator of the universe is not a nationalist, and promoting that image of God is to promote a god of fear, it is a false image of a lesser being. Rather, promote the God of love, beyond all tribalism, all national borders and all boundaries.

 

Reject the image of God as king, dread lord, and tyrant. Promote a God of humility, as Jesus was humble and taught us to be; live decently and free from the addiction of our desires…which only lead to suffering.

 

God is the creator of the entire universe, it is from God that everything flows; all seas, all planets, all stars, all galaxies; along with everything and everyone in them.

 

Consider these truths when you read the scriptures so that you may understand that God did not end the captivity of Jacob, they Israelites did; be mindful, this is not hubris, it is truth. It is far greater hubris to think that God loves a special people, a single tribe above all others, than to think that the Israelites escaped bondage under their own power…put away such hubris.

 

Know this!

 

God is never angry or indignant with the people, and yet God will not rescue anyone from the misery of this world; that is for us to do for ourselves, but more importantly it is for us to do for each other.

 

Consider the Gospel for today, and know that the future history of the world has not been written.

 

Any suppositions about our future on Earth is merely guesswork. Some guesses are more informed than others, we can speak in terms of possibility and probability, of patterns and trends but we cannot know anything about the days and nights to come; nothing is fixed, change is the only constant, and everything is uncertain.

 

There are thousands of ways in which the plans we have laid, or the hopes that we cherish can come undone: lightning will strike, a tornado will blow, a meteor fall, a volcano explode. A person in the fullness of life may trip and fall, hit their head and die, leaving all their deeds and all their hopes and dreams behind them, it can happen without warning…it happens everyday

 

God has promised to bring an end to suffering, injustice, hunger, illness. We can believe in this promise, but those promises are not of this world. These promises concern the world to come, a world in which human beings are not subject to the vicissitudes of the material condition, or the hungers of the flesh…they express a hope that does not belong to the worlds of time and space.

 

I cannot speak of that world, I will not pretend to because I have never seen it…no one has.

 

Our belief in a loving God, our hope in the words of the prophets, our trust in the Gospel, these allow us to believe that the world of God’s promise is real, but anyone who pretends to know for certain is overstating their case, or simply lying…they are either con-men or the conned and they are not to be trusted with anything.

 

This is what we have been taught, and we should stick to it:

 

We can live our present lives as if the actuality of God’s promises were real, we can believe it even though we cannot see it; this is the secret of the way.

 

If we care for one another we do not have to wait for the end of time; we can experience something of the promise in the here and now.

 

In those moments, which may be transitory God is with us…God is always with us, but in those moments when we are working with God to bring about that better world, then God is with us in a special way, it is then through the synchronicity of our beating hearts that we experience the mystery of sacramental union.

 

 

First Reading – Isaiah 2:1-5 ©

 

The Lord Gathers All Nations Together Into the Eternal Peace of God's Kingdom

 

The vision of Isaiah son of Amoz, concerning Judah and Jerusalem.

 

In the days to come the mountain of the Temple of the Lord shall tower above the mountains and be lifted higher than the hills.

 

All the nations will stream to it, peoples without number will come to it; and they will say:

 

‘Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the Temple of the God of Jacob that he may teach us his ways so that we may walk in his paths; since the Law will go out from Zion, and the oracle of the Lord from Jerusalem.’

 

He will wield authority over the nations and adjudicate between many peoples; these will hammer their swords into ploughshares, their spears into sickles.

 

Nation will not lift sword against nation, there will be no more training for war.

 

O House of Jacob, come, let us walk in the light of the Lord.

 

 

Responsorial Psalm – Psalm 121(122):1-2, 4-5, 6-9 ©

 

I rejoiced when I heard them say: ‘Let us go to God’s house.’

 

I rejoiced when I heard them say:

  ‘Let us go to God’s house.’

And now our feet are standing

  within your gates, O Jerusalem.

 

I rejoiced when I heard them say: ‘Let us go to God’s house.’

 

It is there that the tribes go up,

  the tribes of the Lord.

For Israel’s law it is,

  there to praise the Lord’s name.

There were set the thrones of judgement

  of the house of David.

 

I rejoiced when I heard them say: ‘Let us go to God’s house.’

 

For the peace of Jerusalem pray:

  ‘Peace be to your homes!

May peace reign in your walls,

  in your palaces, peace!’

 

I rejoiced when I heard them say: ‘Let us go to God’s house.’

 

For love of my brethren and friends

  I say: ‘Peace upon you!’

For love of the house of the Lord

  I will ask for your good.

 

I rejoiced when I heard them say: ‘Let us go to God’s house.’

 

 

Second Reading – Romans 13:11-14 ©

 

Our Salvation is Near

 

You know ‘the time’ has come: you must wake up now: our salvation is even nearer than it was when we were converted. The night is almost over, it will be daylight soon – let us give up all the things we prefer to do under cover of the dark; let us arm ourselves and appear in the light. Let us live decently as people do in the daytime: no drunken orgies, no promiscuity or licentiousness, and no wrangling or jealousy. Let your armour be the Lord Jesus Christ.

 

 

Gospel Acclamation – Palms 84:8

 

Alleluia, alleluia!

 

Let us see, O Lord, your mercy

and give us your saving help.

 

Alleluia!

 

 

The Gospel According to Matthew 24:37 - 44 ©

 

The Son of Man is Coming at an Hour You Do Not Expect

 

Jesus said to his disciples, ‘As it was in Noah’s day, so will it be when the Son of Man comes. For in those days before the Flood people were eating, drinking, taking wives, taking husbands, right up to the day Noah went into the ark, and they suspected nothing till the Flood came and swept all away. It will be like this when the Son of Man comes. Then of two men in the fields one is taken, one left; of two women at the millstone grinding, one is taken, one left.

 

‘So stay awake, because you do not know the day when your master is coming. You may be quite sure of this that if the householder had known at what time of the night the burglar would come, he would have stayed awake and would not have allowed anyone to break through the wall of his house. Therefore, you too must stand ready because the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not expect.’

 

 

The First Sunday of Advent, A Holy Day of Obligation (Year A)




Monday, November 7, 2022

November 7th, 2022, Monday

Observation

  

The news talkers are talking

Piqued with foreboding

 

The anticipation of disaster…tomorrow

The reality of today

 

Worry is present suffering

A down payment on tomorrow’s doom

 

The sky is light blue

The street is quiet outside my window

 

The squirrel in the maple

Preparing for winter

The long sleep with spring to come

 

 

#haibun

#observation

#poetry




Sunday, November 6, 2022

November 6th, 2022, Sunday

 
Observation

 

The November sun is bright at 8:00 am

 

The crooked finger of bare trees…clawing

Shadows scratching at the window blinds

 

Daylight savings today, with a hint of winter

The scent of cold things, late-autumn leaves

 

Drying in the stiff-breeze

 

The sound of water boiling in the kettle

Calling me to coffee and the taste of chocolate


 

Saturday, March 6, 2021

Observation - March 6th, 2021, Saturday

The sky is powder blue

 

The sun, unnaturally bright

 

A silver disk of light

 

Melting the few remaining patches of dirty snow

 

There is a buzz in the air

 

And birdsong

 

The feeling of spring, and joy

 

At its early return.




Saturday, February 6, 2021

Observation - February 6th, 2021, Saturday

It is cold outside, but the sun is shining

 

The sky is striped, blue and white

 

I can feel the cold coming, seeping through the windows

 

The sun’s light through wavey glass

 

Snow clings to the limbs of my tree

 

Each flake a tiny prism from which the sun light leaps

 

And there is hope, today in America…there is hope