So...back on Thanksgiving my brother told me he had some "sermon material," and said I should check out this song:
For some of the story behind the song, check this out.
Not too bad...although I guess I always thought of Jesus as more of a wine drinker.
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Discovered
Back in September, I received a surprise email: someone had found my blog and wanted permission to use some of my photos. (Those who know me well know I've never been that big of a picture-taker, so that makes this all the more remarkable!)
Yesterday, I received word that those photos are now being used.
I took some pictures while skiing last winter at the Paul Smiths VIC, and you can see those photos here, here, and here in the winter edition of the Visitor Interpretive Center website.
Pretty cool, no? Not to mention, I hear they're skiing in that neighborhood already (at least until it gets warm this weekend), so maybe I'll be able to sneak out for a spell into the winter woods myself...
Yesterday, I received word that those photos are now being used.
I took some pictures while skiing last winter at the Paul Smiths VIC, and you can see those photos here, here, and here in the winter edition of the Visitor Interpretive Center website.
Pretty cool, no? Not to mention, I hear they're skiing in that neighborhood already (at least until it gets warm this weekend), so maybe I'll be able to sneak out for a spell into the winter woods myself...
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Seeing Red
As I think is only right and just, my family's Thanksgiving table was graced by a superabundance of things cranberry: three of them from my kitchen (clockwise from the top: cranberry chutney with maple syrup, apple, and thyme; fresh cranberry relish with citrus and cinnamon; and classic whole cranberry sauce), and one from a can. The more adventuresome gave the first three a try; the less adventuresome made sure I had some to take back home.
From the same region on my color wheel, my "Christmas" cactus seems to have gotten a bit confused: it started blushing right about Halloween, and looks like it'll be almost through blooming by the First Sunday of Advent. There's an overachiever in every crowd, isn't there?
From the same region on my color wheel, my "Christmas" cactus seems to have gotten a bit confused: it started blushing right about Halloween, and looks like it'll be almost through blooming by the First Sunday of Advent. There's an overachiever in every crowd, isn't there?
Dancing King
In my enthusiasm for Matt's work, I even sent the link for his video to Bishop LaValley. I don't think he'd mind me sharing his reply:
Thanks a bunch, Elizabeth, for sending me that link last Sunday!
I know that I’d break something were I to try even one of those steps.That's surely a reaction Matt got again and again: "But I don't know how to dance!" (Watch for just a bit, and you'll realize that Matt doesn't know how to dance, either.) You don't have to know how to dance, because we all know how to laugh and how to smile--skills we perfected in our first weeks of after birth. The world needs a does of joy! Laugh and smile enough, and people will wonder what you're up to. And when they ask, tell them about the King who is the cause of such great rejoicing.
Thanks a bunch, Elizabeth, for sending me that link last Sunday!
Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe B
If
you use email, it happens all the time:
somebody
forwards you a YouTube video.
You’ve gotta watch this! It’s the best!
You’ve gotta watch this! It’s the best!
Now—and
please, take no offence if you’ve sent me a link before—
but
since these videos are rarely
quite
as funny or inspirational as they’re made out to be,
I
usually watch just the first minute or two
with
my finger hovering over “Delete.”
Last
weekend, one of you—a parishioner—
sent
me an email that said, “This is really fun to watch.”
As
usual, I reluctantly pressed play and assumed the position…
…but
quickly realized that this video was different.
You
see, there’s this guy—Matt Harding, 36—
from
Seattle, Washington.
And
throughout this five-minute video, Matt is dancing.
As
it turns out, this is the fourth video of Matt dancing
to
make its way across the Internet in the last few years.
The
first two are series of scenes of him
dancing
alone in famous places around the world—
something
odd and mildly entertaining.
In
the next two videos,
Matt
still travels widely
but
now gets other people—total strangers—
to
join him in front of the camera and dance.
And
it’s totally captivating.
I’m
talking here about thousands of people,
following
Matt’s lead in clip after clip.
In
that fourth video alone,
Matt
dances in 11 U.S. states
and 55 different countries.
Many
of the locations are pretty predictable:
folks
in Boston, Berlin, and Beijing,
bopping to the beat.
Matt
starts dancing with a few folks—
some
who’ve contacted him earlier online—
and
then a curious crowd starts to gather.
they’re all mimicking his crazy moves.
And
they’re smiling—big smiles.
And
laughing—a lot.
While
the dancing is certainly catchy,
more
infectious yet is the raw joy
which accompanies it.
What
makes this more remarkable still
is that Matt has made a point
to
go and dance in places
that we often hear about in the news,
but
not for being particularly happy—
places
like Rwanda and North Korea,
like Cairo and Kabul and Gaza.
Obviously,
I’ve been thinking about this video all week.
And
whenever I do, I smile.
And
I’m clearly not alone:
millions
and millions of people
And
they’ve left all kinds of comments:
– You’re my hero!
– Matt for President!
Some
of the comments run much deeper:
– Sometimes I feel that Matt
is the only hope for the human race...
Maybe
these folks
are overstating things just a bit.
It’s
not like Matt’s dancing
has ended war or relieved hunger.
He
is, after all, making moves,
not starting a movement.
And
yet I can’t help but think that Matt’s dancing
is
really making a difference in the world.
Does
that sound far-fetched? Sure it
does.
But
so does the fact that a Jewish peasant from a backwater town,
condemned
to die on a Roman cross 2,000 years ago,
should
be honored by more than a billion souls—
one
in six people now alive on planet earth—
as
humanity’s only Savior and our universal King.
And
that, of course, is precisely
what’s
happening in the Catholic Church around the globe this very day.
One
person can change the world.
Just
two weeks ago,
500
of them for you to keep,
500
of them for you to give away.
I was
on retreat then, so I didn’t see them go out…
…but
I have already started to see the results coming in.
If
you’re sitting in this church right now
because
a friend or neighbor invited you back
(and
I’ve been told some people are),
I
want you to know:
we’re
so glad you’re here!
But
I’ve also been moved by the active parishioners
who
have come to tell me about their experience
of
giving a book away.
They’ve
all had the same look I saw in Matt’s video:
every
one of them has been beaming;
there’s
been a light of joy on each of their faces.
In encouraging
somebody else,
they’ve
been renewed and encouraged themselves.
We
live in a world
where there are plenty of things
that
bring out the worst in people.
True
confession:
I
went out with my mother and my brother
to Wal-Mart at
8:00pm on Thanksgiving night.
Bad, bad idea!
We
were there less than five minutes,
we didn’t buy a thing,
and
we all went home pretty disturbed.
It
might be the closest I’ve ever seen
human beings come to behaving
like animals.
Why
not, instead, be people who go out
and
help change things for the better?
Matt
Harding has found an incredible way to bring people joy.
But
while I’m greatly inspired by his work,
I
don’t think one man’s dancing is going to save the world.
And
it doesn’t have to.
Because
I believe one man’s death already has.
And
believing such good news,
in
a world where so much news is so very bad,
how
could I possibly keep that to myself?
This
Sunday’s solemnity
of
our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe,
is
the perfect time to recall
that
we are called to be part of a cosmic choreography.
God’s
only begotten Son, the Alpha and the Omega,
who
from the first set the world firmly on its foundation
and
will come in glory amid the clouds at its end,
lived,
died, and rose again in human flesh and blood
to
teach us a few essential steps,
that
we might dance on earth to the music of heaven.
There
is great joy in joining this dance,
and
even greater joy in inviting others to join, too.
We don’t
think twice
about
forwarding silly videos to everybody we know.
Why
do we hold back
when
it comes to forwarding our faith?
Sure—somebody
might quickly hit, “Delete.”
But
why keep from them something
that
could bring more than just a smile—
something
that could bring them salvation?
When
I look out into the pews during Mass,
“joy”
is not, unfortunately, the first thing I see on most people’s faces.
But
if we’ve come to hear our King’s voice speak the truth,
if
we’ve come to take our place at his royal table,
then
shouldn’t our joy be just as evident, just as contagious,
as it
is with all those people watching and dancing with Matt?
My
friends, let’s recapture the joy!
And
let’s not fear to spread it around.
Do
so, and we can change the world.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Monday, November 19, 2012
Let's Dance!
And while we're at it, here's another smiler...
On Ice
I'm not even sure how to introduce this, other than to say: Enjoy! (And don't you like their hats?)
Sunday, November 18, 2012
For the Future
Pulling into the parking lot for 10:30am Mass today, I heard a radio interview with Willie Nelson during which they played a bit of his song, "Come on Back Jesus," which says: "Come on back Jesus / and pick up John Wayne on the way."
It seemed at least half appropriate this Sunday.
It seemed at least half appropriate this Sunday.
Thirty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time B
(which
is practically prehistoric
to whippersnappers like Fr. Tom):
the
first was Future Stuff,
and
then came its creatively titled sequel,
More
Future Stuff.
In
both, the authors made predictions
about
all kinds of gismos and gadgets
that
people would enjoy in the future—
the
“future” being the early 2000’s.
They
foresaw things like computers
that would be voice activated,
or
that could help you find your way
driving on unfamiliar roads,
and
even cars that would park themselves—
all
things we actually do have today.
(Of
course, they also predicted
we’d now have bathing suits
which
would change colors with our mood.
I’m
kind of glad they were wrong about that one!)
How
is it that people are able to make
such
fairly accurate forecasts of the future?
It’s
not, of course, by magic,
not
by looking into some crystal ball.
It
actually involves only two simple steps:
first,
taking careful note of what we human beings are capable of,
and
then taking careful note of what we human beings desire most.
It’s
one thing to recognize what’s humanly possible,
yet
another to make out what we actually
have
the motivation to accomplish.
In
the gospel this Sunday,
we
find Jesus making predictions, too—
not
about the marvelous technology of tomorrow,
but
about the end of time.
And
I think it’s relatively safe to say
Jesus
uses much the same technique to reach his conclusions:
predictions
based on both what we human beings are capable of,
and—in
a significant twist—on what God desires most.
Now—at
first glance, anyway—Jesus’ peek into the future
isn’t
quite so optimistic as those books.
In
fact, it sounds pretty grim:
full
of distress and tribulation and deep, deep darkness.
What
gives?
Are
things really that hopeless?
Isn’t
there at least some chance for an eternally happy ending?
Let’s
scratch beneath the surface of these predictions.
First,
there will be the tribulations.
In
other places, Jesus speaks of these
as
being like the pangs of birth (Mt 24:8).
(And
from what I hear,
such
things are more than minor “pangs”!)
Like
the painful labor that accompanies the delivery of a child,
so most
of us—unless we’re perfect saints
or unless
we’re sinners who’ve put ourselves
beyond
the reach of God’s mercy—
can
anticipate at least some distress
in passing
from this world to the next.
It’s
not about punishment, per se;
it’s
a matter of God’s desires and our desires
needing
to be better lined up…
…and
just guess whose are going to have to be adjusted a bit.
(For
the individual soul,
this
experience is what we call purgatory.)
God
knows well what we’re capable of—for good or ill—
because
he’s the one who made us.
And
God made us with a distinct goal in mind:
that
we would know the fullness of joy in his presence forever.
That’s
God’s desire!
That’s
meant to be our inheritance!
And
then there will be darkness.
Jesus
speaks of losing the sun and the moon and the stars
in
an era when you couldn’t just flip a switch
and
turn the lights on at will.
His
first hearers would have quickly recognized
that
darkness and light are part of a natural rhythm. (cf. J. Lienhard)
And
as the old saying goes:
“The
night is always darkest before the dawn.”
Jesus,
then, is not predicting a darkness of endless doom,
but
one of expectation—of hope-filled longing—
as
we await the return of him who is Light from Light.
We
would do well—each one of us—
to
attempt to make some predictions about the future:
not
about possible hi-tech advances;
not
even about our own probable accomplishments.
We
need to look toward the end:
the
end of time, the end of our lives.
And
we need to seriously consider our prospects for eternity.
That
is THE question, isn’t it?
It’s
the only question that ultimately matters—
the
one that’s not going away
no
matter how we try to avoid it.
This
Year of Faith is a perfect time for each of us
to
take a good hard look at our own potential.
It
should be like seeing
the
first tender leaves sprout in the spring:
a
hint of what can, what will be.
Despite
our limitations, despite our hesitations,
we
are all capable of pretty amazing things.
And
then we need to take a good hard look at our motivations.
Where
is my heart leading me?
What
direction is my life taking? What
path am I on?
And
if we realize we’re off track—whether by a little or a lot—
now
is the time to find our way back:
to
make sure that what God most desires
is
what we desire, too.
Outside
of Lowville,
where I was once assigned,
some
folks had
a large, hand-painted sign
next
to the road which read,
“Christ is coming. Are you ready?”
It
was a good, clear reminder
whenever I drove by.
Likewise,
in the fall of every year
the
Church invites her children
to reflect on the “last things”—
on
death and all that comes after.
And
in a few moments,
as we do every Sunday,
we
will again confess our faith
that
Christ “will come again in glory
to
judge the living and the dead.”
Let
us look to this future not with fear,
but
with readiness and hope.
We
know not the day nor the hour,
but
we know what God is capable of.
And
so we dare to pray:
Come,
Lord Jesus!
Come
in great power, accompanied by your angels!
Come
to gather your scattered people!
Through
tribulation and darkness,
come and lead us into joy and light!
Saturday, November 17, 2012
On the List
The following article (by yours truly) appears in today's edition of the Malone Telegram...
* * *
Our modern English word, “canonize,” comes from the ancient
Greek word, kanon, meaning, “a
measuring stick.” Since the early
days of Christianity, a “canon” has been a sort of sacred list—such as the
canon of Scripture: the authoritative inventory of books in the Bible by which
authentic Christian teaching can be measured. Likewise, to “canonize” a person is to single him or her out
for the official list of saints: the roll call of holy men and women against
whom Christians can reliably measure themselves.
I consider myself blessed to have been in Rome just one
month ago as the Catholic Church added seven more to its list.
None other than the New York Times (10/14/12) pointed out that this recent canonization brings to
12 the number of Catholic saints we can reasonably claim as American (although most
were born elsewhere, and a few died long before the U.S. ever came to be). And of that even dozen, we can champion
seven of them as New Yorkers, including two of those newly added to the list: St.
Kateri Tekakwitha and St. Marianne Cope.
Tekakwitha was born in the Iroquois village of Ossernenon
(now Auriesville) in 1656. (This
was just a few years after three Jesuit missionaries from France—also on that
list of U.S./N.Y. saints—were martyred nearby.) Smallpox left her orphaned at the age of four, as well as
severely scarred and almost blind.
(By many accounts, Tekakwitha translates, “she who bumps into
things.”) Having been adopted by a
Mohawk uncle, she encountered Jesuit missionaries as a teenager and eagerly
embraced Christianity. Despite the
objections of her uncle, she was baptized in 1676 and took the name Kateri
(“Catherine”). Harassed because of
her newfound faith and her persistent desire to live as a virgin united only to
Christ, Kateri moved north to a community of “praying Indians” outside of
Montréal (now Kahnawake).
There she continued to grow in holiness before her
young death from
fever in 1680.
Even in these very brief sketches of their lives, it’s
fairly easy to see why these two women have been included in the Church’s canon
of saints. But why did I go all
the way to Rome to see firsthand that they’d made the books?
Because these locals give me hope that I, too, might measure
up and find myself on the list.
No—I have no pretensions of ever being formally canonized by
the Pope in a solemn Vatican ceremony.
We New Yorkers, after all, are not generally celebrated for our outstanding
holiness. Yet with seven already
in the official register, and knowing that these are but a select few out of
the vast catalogue of those enjoying eternity in God’s presence, there is considerable
hope that we—whether city slicker or country bumpkin, native-born or transplant,
saintly now or still considering our options—might even eventually make the
cut.
While saintliness may be officially recognized of those
who’ve already made it to heaven, it’s a reality that’s first worked out right
here on earth in responding to God’s call and cooperating with his grace. For St. Kateri, that meant sticking
with her faith when others were less than supportive—even outright
hostile. For St. Marianne, that
meant going where she was most needed and standing up for those whom society
would sooner abandon. These two
women may have lived in other times, when New York was a far different place,
but the lessons we can draw from their lives are very much lessons for
today. That’s why they’re saints! Whenever and wherever, their lives
provide us with a dependable yardstick by which to measure our own.
May the example of these holy New Yorkers and their prayers
from above inspire us each day to live as those the Lord can list as his own.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
In Plain Sight
So, I made it back from my retreat on Sunday evening...but I probably shouldn't say "back." You see, I went on retreat...but never left.
As I mentioned a week ago, I was scheduled to make my retreat with the Sisters of Bethlehem at their monastery in the Catskills, but their power was still out from Superstorm Sandi. When some parishioners heard of my plight, they very generously offered me their cabin along the Salmon River about seven miles from here--either to tide me over until the sisters could take guests again, or for the entire week. So I accepted their offer, not knowing how things would go. But by the time the monastery called on Tuesday to say that the electricity had come back on, I was already hooked and decided to stay put.
I managed to do everything much as I would have: spend my days in silence (with only the music of the river in the background), read a lot, take long walks each day (and a few naps, too). St. Helen's (our parish church in Chasm Falls) became my "private chapel" for the week, where I could offer Mass and adore the Blessed Sacrament. It really was quite delightful. I was a happy hermit, indeed!
Thus I ended up making my retreat more or less hidden in plain sight (which was both a good lesson and an unexpected treat)...meanwhile discovering some beautiful spots here in the parish that fit much same description...
"There are many who live in the mountains and behave as if they were in the town, and they are wasting their time. It is possible to be a solitary in one’s mind while living in a crowd, and it is possible for one who is a solitary to live in the crowd of one's own thoughts."
—Saint Syncletica
"Holy solitude is, after all, not
the absence of the world, but the presence of God."
—Madeleine Delbrel
Sunday, November 4, 2012
All Your Mind
So...I'm supposed to be heading out on retreat this afternoon (thus, no homily next Sunday)...but the Sisters of Bethlehem (down in the Catskills)--with whom I was to spend the week--have no power in the aftermath of "Superstorm" Sandi. So please pray for them and all who are still suffering because of last week's tempest. And please pray, too, that I find a quiet place to hide out and pray this week.
Thirty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time B
A
Sunday school teacher was discussing the Ten Commandments
with her very young class.
with her very young class.
After
explaining, “Honor thy father and thy mother,”
she
asked, “Is there a commandment that teaches us
how
to treat our brothers and sisters?”
Which
is when a little boy from a big family immediately answered,
“Thou
shall not kill.”
If
Jesus were taking questions today,
chances
are he wouldn’t be asked,
“Which
commandment is the most important?”
Much
more likely would be,
Why are there so many
commandments?
Why are there commandments
at all?
Couldn’t we drop just a few? (And I’ve got suggestions!) (cf. G. Rutler)
The
scribe who approaches Jesus in the gospel
is
someone who clearly
knows and loves the commandments.
He
already knows the answer to his own question.
Every
Jew did—and still does—
because it is repeated daily:
Sh'ma Yisrael
Adonai
Eloheinu Adonai Eḥad;
“Hear,
O Israel:
the Lord is our God, the Lord is One.”
Twice
each day—at its beginning and its end—
this
statement of faith
is dutifully recited from memory.
So…why
did the scribe ask?
Maybe
he recognized in Jesus
someone
who knew and loved the commandments
even
more than he did;
maybe
the scribe recognized an opportunity
to
keep these from being just another string of well-worn words,
but
to find in them a message
with
the power to change his life—
even
to change the world.
I
am the product of 22 years of Catholic education—
for
which I’ll be forever grateful.
I’ve
earned three separate degrees in religious fields.
And
yet—I’m embarrassed to admit—
I can’t
list the Ten Commandments in order—
never
could, actually.
You
see, I grew up in an era
(one
which I don’t believe is quite over yet)
when
religious education spent a lot more time
on creative
craft projects than teaching creeds.
Memorizing
things—like the sacraments or the commandments,
like
works of mercy or gifts of the Holy Spirit—
simply
wasn’t a priority.
And
I—along with a few generations of Catholics—
suffer
for it still.
The
Catholic faith, of course, is much, much more
than
a series of memorized prayers and lists.
But—like
the alphabet or multiplication tables
when
it comes to general knowledge—
such
carefully studied religious knowledge is absolutely foundational
to
a truly adult and flourishing faith.
(cf. D. Impasto)
Take
the Lord’s Prayer, for example.
It’s
certainly not the only way in which I pray.
But
it does set a pattern;
it
has taught me how—like Jesus—to approach my heavenly Father.
And
in those moments when words escape me—
times
when prayer is generally needed most—
it
provides me with a sure and comforting way to speak to God.
One
of the reasons we need a new evangelization—
why
our Pope has called for the current Year of Faith—
is
that so many Catholics these days know so very little
when
it comes to the fundamentals of our tradition.
In
the greatest of his commands God has asked for our all…
…and
yet part of us wonders, “What’s the least it’ll take to get by?”
We
human beings tend to look for shortcuts;
we try
to jump ahead to the happy ending.
And
so we’ve attempted to hand on the faith
without
all that much serious study or disciplined practice.
The
result? A fast-growing religious
illiteracy.
Studies
show that U.S. Catholic youth
now
rank lower in religious knowledge
than
any other group—including nonbelievers.
(cf.
Gallup, Pew, CARA)
It’s
little wonder so many wander away!
The
good news? It doesn’t have to be
this way!
We can
change this!
As individual
Catholics, as a Church,
we
must be well-grounded in the basics
before
we can make any real progress;
souls
must first have firm footing
if
we truly want to see them soar. (cf. N. Goldstein)
As famous
convert G. K. Chesterton once put it,
“The
point of having an open mind, like having an open mouth,
is
to close it on something solid.”
When
was the last time you made a personal effort
to
learn something new about the faith?
When
was the last time you went out of your way
to
help a young Catholic do the same?
And
why shouldn’t that be a regular part of our lives?
We should
never settle for a purely “rote religion”—
one
of rituals and repetition without any real depth.
But
there’s a good reason we call it “learning by heart.”
Like
the scribe in the gospel,
let
us never tire of asking questions,
of
looking for answers, of digging ever-deeper.
It’s
evidence that we long to love God
with
all our heart and soul and strength…
…and
with all our mind as well.
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