Wednesday, February 24, 2010
SNOW DRAGON
First Sunday of Lent
This morning in the newspaper, there was an article about a rather cool or rather "hot" invention called THE SNOW DRAGON. This machine is able to melt tons of snow...10 tons of snow an hour to be exact...in these parts of the Northeast this winter, such a machine is a gift indeed!
As I read about the "snow dragon", I thought how wonderful it would be to have a snow dragon for our hearts. To melt away all the resentments, lusts, greed, jealousies and anxieties that lurk about in the recesses of the heart. As I prayed,
I realized that we do have such a machine. It's the confessional and the season of Lent is the time to make use of this marvelous "machine"!
For many of us, we associate Lent as a time for Winter Spiritual Olympics...a time when WE do spiritual tricks, like the athletes we are watching in Vancouver. I might suggest, however, that we avoid such displays of personal heroics and allow this Lent to be a time when we allow our LORD to do HIS work IN us. A time for Jesus to be a "Snow Dragon" for us. A time when we allow our sin to melt away and be warmed up as we draw close to Jesus. Then, we wake up out of our cold winter.
Of course, such an invitation fits well with our Gospel today. For we find our Lord in a "hot climate" in the desert today, hungry, tired, alone and tempted. And it is here that he meets another type of dragon, SATAN. Jesus meets him head on and endures his wild attacks.
Friends, one of the things that this Gospel shows us is that this meeting between Jesus and Satan is real, it's not an anology, a fable or story. Satan is not just a pipe-dream...he is real! You may not have heard that recently from a catholic pulpit. But it's time to hear it and it's important for us to reflect on that today. For what happens in the Gospel today is crucial, it's real and in the temptations of Jesus we discover what Life is all about. It's a battle.
This is a good reminder, for in seeing this, we see Jesus to be who He is. And he at the root of things is Savior. He's not just a nice guy. Yeah, He's a nice guy, but He is savior. And as such He saves. He saves us. From what? From the fires of Hell. And oh, how we need that salvation.
In light of this fact, it might be helpful re-read once again, what exactly the Church teaches on HELL, i.e. what exactly Jesus saves us from. This reflection might help us in our spiritual life and warm our hearts to the love of Jesus. Let's take a look at the Catechism:
1034 Jesus often speaks of "Gehenna" of "the unquenchable fire" reserved for those who to the end of their lives refuse to believe and be converted, where both soul and body can be lost.612 Jesus solemnly proclaims that he "will send his angels, and they will gather . . . all evil doers, and throw them into the furnace of fire,"613 and that he will pronounce the condemnation: "Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire!"614
1035 The teaching of the Church affirms the existence of hell and its eternity. Immediately after death the souls of those who die in a state of mortal sin descend into hell, where they suffer the punishments of hell, "eternal fire."615 The chief punishment of hell is eternal separation from God, in whom alone man can possess the life and happiness for which he was created and for which he longs.
1036 The affirmations of Sacred Scripture and the teachings of the Church on the subject of hell are a call to the responsibility incumbent upon man to make use of his freedom in view of his eternal destiny. They are at the same time an urgent call to conversion: "Enter by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is easy, that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard, that leads to life, and those who find it are few."
My friends, the Good News here is that this teaching does indeed help us to hear the CALL to CONVERSION. The Catechism describes this Call as Urgent. Lent is the time for this to happen.
Let us then, Heed the Call of our Lord. To keep our eyes on the goal and let us ask him to be our snow dragon this season, which will provide us victory over the Satan Dragon in our lives.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
COMMENTS ON THE BLOG
Just a note to those who read this blog, as you can see, I've decided to use this blog as a way of sharing weekly homilies. Comments about the homilies are appreciated and read, but will not be posted or responded to on the blog itself. Should you desire to ask me a question or seek an answer to a comment that you have, I ask you to email me directly by visiting our website....www.HeedTheCall.org
I have found that responding directly to questions via email is more helpful then on the blog. Many thanks!
I have found that responding directly to questions via email is more helpful then on the blog. Many thanks!
Monday, February 8, 2010
TWO "Rs" THAT STILL NEED LEARNING
5th Sunday of Ordinary Time
This past week, across the country, the Church celebrated Catholic Schools Week. Catholic Schools have been in the news a good bit locally here in Philly and the whole theme gave me a chance to remember my school days where I learned the 3 Rs -- Reading, Writing and Arithmetic. I suppose that I got by in those subjects and I learned how to read, write and add. But in reflecting on my school days and the most valuable subjects to me, I discovered 2 more Rs which I never had a class in, but which to me mean the most in my life. They are REVERENCE and RESPECT.
While the other Rs no doubt are important in life, with REVERENCE and RESPECT forget it. Our lives would not get very far, indeed would not mean much at all. Without these reverence and repect, we would be just big babies, unruly children in grown up skin...and that my friends is a grim possibility.
My friends, it is these two subjects which we discover in our readings today and which shine so brightly for us. And thus, are worthy of some reflection.
We find in the first reading, the prophet Isaiah receiving his call from the Lord. We are told that he is caught up in an encounter with God: the temple is filled with incense, and he is quite overwhelmed by the sight. His first response is that of reverence, clearly he is in the presence of the holy, holy, holy Lord, who is worthy of his respect and honor. He feels unworthy, but receives that touch of the Lord, a call that would change his life forever.
We see something similar in the Gospel as well. First we hear that the crowd is "pressing in on Jesus, listening to his Word". Isn't that beautiful?? Would that we would do the same, press in on the Lord to hear his Word. That's reverence and respect at work. But there's still more!
Our Lord goes over to the rough and tough fishermen. He tells them to "put out to the deep and lower your nets for a catch". At first, there is some resistance: "Lord, we've been at it all night". But then in a beautiful act of humilty they lower their nets. Alot more was lowered that night besides nets, they lowered their pride which yielded to reverence and respect. Then, there is a great catch of fish and even better a great catch of men, as Jesus "catches" the Apostles. Their response is one of humility and reverence and they heed the call of Jesus, "they left it all and followed him."
My friends, it seems to me that in our highly educated and sophisticated society today, we have lost a lot of reverence and repect. Oh, we may know how to read and write, but without reverence and respect, we are all in trouble. These gifts really do open the gates for true wisdom and life. For when I have reverence and respect for the Lord, for others present in my heart, then I have Love and Love is God. And this is the greatest gift of all.
We might ask ourselves then, What do I reverence in my life. We might even pray...
Lord, give me a reverent heart, a heart on fire with Love for you, not on fire with anger, lust and pride. Teach me Lord to lower the nets of my pride which tangle me up over and over again. Give me Lord the grace to hold you as sacred in my heart, that I may love you, revere you and become like you.
God will answer such a prayer as this, he will teach us, he will give us these 2 great virtues and we like the apostles and Isaiah will never be the same again.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Receiving God's Perspective
4th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Here in cold Philadelphia, the hope of SPRING is in the air. Pitchers and Catchers report in less than a month, and Spring Training will soon begin! Just as we can find hope in baseball and we continue to find hope in the priesthood as the Year of the Priest marches onward, and what a beautiful year it has been as we have reflected on the simple yet powerful life of St. John Vianney, patron saint of all priests!
Today's readings offer a similar hope for vocations as we hear of the Call of Jeremiah, the Call of St. Paul to Love and the profession of Jesus Himself, as the fulfillment of all that has been. Great hope indeed, which carries with it, a few powerful lessons.
Lesson #1) Get God's perspective. Automatically in life we have our own perspective. This is natural, how we see things and our perspective can be quite good, accurate and truthful. But our perspective is always finite, always limited. Whether we are sitting in the front row behind home-plate or up in the nosebleed seats, our perspective is never the full or complete. And we are reminded of that today, in the Call of Jeremiah.
We hear of Jeremiah's call in the Old Testament, but notice well that we do not hear from Jeremiah, it's all about the Lord and his plan, his view, his thoughts of Jeremiah. Isn't that interesting?? Isn't that wonderful?? To hear how God sees and thinks of Jeremiah!!! Well the Lord sees and thinks about us as well. And what a gift it is to hear that from the Lord. To get his perspective on our lives, on our call, on our families and situations, etc. Very Interesting. Good News.
We hear of God's perspective also in the Gospel today, as Jesus claims to be the fulfillment of all that has been. And the people are excited as they hear from the Lord, but almost immediately, they fall back onto their own perspective and by the end of the Gospel, they are ready to kill Jesus. They become full of self doubt, full of their limited perspective.
Of course, the same thing can happen to us. We can fall back on our own way of thinking and really quite quickly we can lose hope. Our remedy is not just accepting God's perspective but accepting the Lord himself, who as St. Paul reminds us today, is LOVE. Love is the person of Jesus, and is both the source and the foundation of our vocation. To trust in the Love of God for us, to embrace his perspective and to receive his love, as Jeremiah did, as our Lord did. To trust in God's love for us, this is both our vocation and our salvation. Such Good News!
The challenge is to receive his perspective, his love and then to mature in it as St. Paul did. He who used to think like a child, speak like a child, act like a child, grew mature in love. And so too must we.
So today, let us ask the Lord to give us the grace to receive his perspective on our lives, let's ask the Lord what he sees and thinks, and let us mature in that vision, in that way of life, in the way of love. In this way, we will discover our vocation.
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