"A [preacher] who does not love art, poetry, music and nature can be dangerous. Blindness and deafness toward the beautiful are not incidental; they are necessarily reflected in his [preaching]." — BXVI
08 September 2017
03 September 2017
Don't put down your cross!
22nd Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
Our
Lord names Peter “Satan.” Last week, he named Peter “the Rock,”
the rock upon which his Church would be built. How does Peter go from
being “the Rock” to “Satan” in a week's time? Having declared
his belief that Jesus is the Christ, and receiving his title, “the
Rock of the Church,” Peter ends up doing what many of us do when
confronted by a crisis of faith. We panic. . .and do or say something
dumb. When Peter hears Jesus say that he – Jesus – must go to
Jerusalem and die at the hands of his enemies, Peter blurts out the
dumbest possible thing he could, “God forbid!” Apparently, in his
panic, Peter forgets that Jesus is God – a confession he himself
made just last week – and that God is telling him what must happen.
Rather than comfort Peter or accompany him or engage him in
encounter, Jesus rebukes him, “Get behind me, Satan!” Sorry. But
Jesus would get an “F” in pastoral practice at the seminary!
Rather than coddle Peter's lack of faith, Jesus calls him out as a
tempter, giving him the name of humanity's greatest spiritual enemy.
Jesus knows that he must carry his cross and die. Not even the Rock
can be allowed to deter him.
So, what does all this have to do with the price of crawfish at
Dorignac's?
Besides showing us how even an Apostle, Peter the Rock, can allow his
fear to overrule his faith, Jesus is revealing to us a truth bound to
make us a little queasy – we
all have a cross to carry and Satan's self-appointed task is tempt us
into putting it down.
Jesus knows that he is bound for Jerusalem and death. He knows he's
going to be betrayed, tortured, and executed. He bears all this as
his cross,
along with humanity's sinful nature. If he were to allow Peter to
tempt him into laying down his cross, humanity's salvation would be
thwarted. We would – even now – dwell in darkness and death,
without any hope for redemption. Instead, Jesus does what he must. He
rebukes Peter and reveals another hard-to-hear truth: “Whoever
wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross, and
follow me.” That's God's thinking not Man's. It is Satan who
encourages us to set aside our crosses and make ourselves more
comfortable. It is Satan who teaches us that our crosses are
unbearable burdens; that our crosses are unnecessary restrictions on
our liberty. It's his job to make us believe that we can still
receive God's love even as we set aside the very tools we need to
receive His love.
If
you think it's strange to look at the cross you carry as a tool for
receiving God's love, think again. Think this way instead: Jesus'
cross was his tool for receiving God's love for all of humanity. The
cross was the instrument – the tool – by which Jesus took up our
sinful natures and gave them to our Father in sacrifice, freeing us
from sin and death. If this is true for Christ, why can't it be true
for us as well? Jesus himself says that taking our crosses is a
condition for following him. Following him where? If you follow him,
you end up where he did – dying sacrificially on your cross; that
is, dying to self for the sake of Christ to become holy. In his
desperation to prevent you from dying to self and becoming holy,
Satan will tempt you with every trick at his disposal. One of his
oldest tricks – the one Peter tries out – is to try and convince
you that your cross is an unnecessary
burden;
that you have been unfairly
treated
in the games of crosses; that somehow or another you have been
especially
picked out
of the crowd to endure extra trials. And b/c you have been so sorely
mistreated
by God, you deserve a break, you are entitled to set your cross aside
and just coast for a while. And when you do, Satan slithers up next
to you, and says, “Let me show you an easier way. . .”
And
that “easier way” is indeed easier. . . and shorter, faster, less
expensive. . .and deadlier.
Set your cross aside – your tool for receiving God's love and
growing in holiness – and your way is most definitely easier.
Because there is nothing easier than choosing to be separated from
God. . .forever.
What Satan knows and we must never forget – no cross of ours is
ever bigger than our Father's love for us. No cross of ours is ever
deadlier than life lived in shadow of the devil's lies. Whatever your
cross is – disease, poverty, bad marriage, sexual vice, alcohol,
drugs, whatever it is – your cross is temporary, and Christ is
always, always, always with you. Carry that cross while
following Christ's teachings,
dying to self in loving sacrifice for another, and you will better
receive God's ever-present love and mercy; you
will grow in holiness.
Our crosses are not lifestyle choices, or a harmless bad habits, or
unfair impositions on our freedom. They are living, breathing tools
for lifting up our brokenness. By lifting up to God that which
threatens to smother us in sin, we give Him glory, and He takes our
contrite hearts as worthy sacrifice. When Satan tempts you to lay
down your cross and take it easy, say to him, “What profit would
there be for me to gain the whole world and forfeit my life?”
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29 August 2017
Glittering gold, burdensome lead
St. Augustine
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
NDS, NOLA
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Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
NDS, NOLA
Painting
a vivid picture of their woe, Dante consigns Hypocrites to the Eighth
Circle of Hell: “Down here, a people of elaborate
design/perambulated at a mournful pace;/their attitude was hollow and
resigned.//The lurid cloaks in which that are encased/had monkish
cowls made in the Cluny mode,/obscuring almost all the upper
face.//Without was dazzling filigree of gold;/within was lead, of
such a density/that Frederick's copes were lighter sevenfold.//O
weary mantle for eternity!”* Hypocrisy is not only a “weary mantle
for eternity”; it is also a burdensome disguise for any
Christian in the here and now, most especially the Christian
minister, or those aspiring to become Christian ministers. In Dante's
Hell, sinners live-out their principal sins. . .forever. Because they
have chosen to be in Hell, sinners cannot leave their punishments
behind. They made their eternal choices while alive on Earth. And
now, God honors – forever – their choice to be separated from
Him. For the hypocrite, he lived his life on Earth glittering in gold
on the outside, while carrying his sin like lead on the inside. His
spiritual progress on Earth is mirrored in Hell – he walks in
circles, going nowhere, slowly.
Our
Lords says to the scribes and Pharisees, “Woe to you, you
hypocrites. You lock the Kingdom of heaven before men. You do not
enter yourselves, nor do you allow entrance to those trying to
enter.” The spiritual leader who practices hypocrisy lives that
sort of life that, in word and deed, glitters like gold on the
outside but rots on the inside; and, in
effect, locks the
door to heaven, forbidding entrance not only to those whom he leads
but to himself as well. A life lived in hypocrisy is an inauthentic
life, a life where the freedom of the Child of God is shoved into a
joyless, merciless spiritual straitjacket, and its misery is spread
with the rule of a father's authority. Our Lord condemns the scribes
and Pharisees to eternal woe b/c they deprive themselves and others
of the Father's freely offered mercy, burying His offer in mounds of
religious acrobatics – hoops to leap, walls to climb, moats to
swim. Where these men should be bridges to God, they are instead
obstacle courses. Where they should be teachers, they are scolds.
Where they should be preachers, they are haranguers. And b/c they are
hypocrites for money, they are triply-damned. “Woe be to you”
(x3).
This
all sounds severe. Maybe even terrifying. And it should. As ministers
and aspiring ministers of the Gospel, we are doubly responsible to
Christ the Judge for how we carry out his work. We are responsible
for ourselves and those we are charged to serve. How do we avoid
hypocrisy? Dante's infernal punishment of the hypocrite is our
answer. Everything that glitters gold on the outside must be matched
and even surpassed by the glittering gold on the inside. This doesn't
mean constant moral purity! It means that we first receive the
Gospel, teach and preach the Gospel, live out the Gospel, and then
spend ourselves doing everything possible to lift up those who look
to us for help. We unlock doors of mercy. We build bridges to Christ. We knock down
walls around forgiveness. And we go to God – in the end – confident that we have
done His work, bearing witness to His truth in love.
*Inferno, Canto XXIII (trans. Carson)
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26 August 2017
Tape it to your coffee pot or steering wheel. . .
21st Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St Anthony of Padua, NOLA
Here
in New Orleans we are experts on a few things. Food. Partying. How to
wait for a hurricane, which usually involves food and partying. What
to do when it rains for too long. And the absolute necessity of solid
foundations. . .even if those foundations are nine or so feet off the
ground. When you live in a city where the ground resembles a wore-out
sponge and the sky never seems to stop crying, you learn to
appreciate the usefulness of a rock-solid, never-shifting foundation.
Even if everything on top of that foundation gets swept away, the
foundation itself remains, ready to start again. We need good
foundations for our buildings, and we need good foundations for our
faith. In a world that seems to have lost its mind lately, where
everything we once thought certain and sure has been swept away, we
need the best foundation to keep our place. Christ himself has given
us that foundation: Peter and his Church. On his profession of faith
that Jesus is the Christ, Peter receives the keys to the kingdom of
heaven from Christ and hears our Lord say, “. . .you are Peter,
and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the
netherworld shall not prevail against it.” IOW, come hell or high
water, the Church is here to stay!
And stay she has for 2,017
years. Through the bloody persecutions of Rome's emperors. Through
the destruction of the empire by Vandals, Goths, and Visigoths.
Through the schism between East and West. Through the Black Death
which killed at least half of Europe's people, some 140 million
souls. Through three popes reigning at the same time. Through
Luther's revolt and the rise of Protestantism. The best intellectual
efforts of “Enlightenment” era philosophers and politicians. The
French Revolution and its Cult of Reason. Napoleon's empire. The
Kaiser's Kulturkampf.
The Bolshevik Revolution. The First and Second World Wars. The
post-Vatican Two turmoil. The Age of Aquarius. The best efforts of
dissenters and revolutionaries within the Church in the 70's, 80's,
and 90's. And now – in 2017 – the Church will endure through the
current particularly American insanity that pretends to create
reality out of thin air by using the correct terminology. Without a
solid foundation in the apostolic faith, Catholilcs are liable to end
up believing five-year old boys can be magically changed into
ten-year old girls just b/c they say so. Thanks be to God we have the
Rock of Peter and his Church.
All
that the Church has endured over the centuries bears witness to
Christ's promise that not even Hell will prevail against her. And his
promise endures not b/c the Church is somehow mystically protected
from harm. There's no magic at work here. Christ identifies both
Peter and Peter's faith as the Rock the Church is built upon. With
the Holy Spirit's guarantee to Peter against error and the living
faith of the People of God, the Church navigates the world's dangers
and the world's silliness to maintain a constant heading toward
preaching the Good News and caring for souls. Along the way, members
of the Body will jump ship and swim off to answer siren calls,
finding themselves dashed against the rocks of all sorts of nonsense.
Even religious, priests, and bishops have been and will be seduced on
occasion. But when we cling – and cling hard – to Peter's
confession – “You are the Christ!” – we can clearly see the
silliness for what it is. The nonsense for what it is. What better
way is there for us to endure than to cling – and cling hard – to
the Way, the Truth, and the Life who is Christ Jesus?
Our
Lord has a question for us all: who
do you say that I am?
That's not a rhetorical question. That's not a question the preacher
asks just to sound like he saying something profound. It's a real
question from 2, 000 years ago and right this moment. Jesus wants to
know who you think he is. Your answer to this question determines
whether or not you're in the boat or swimming toward the rocks. If,
with Peter, you say, “You are the Christ!” then the next question
is all too obvious: do
you live like you believe he's the Christ?
We are no longer living in a Christian culture. Not even in New
Orleans. We can no longer look to our political and cultural
institutions for support in the faith. Even our public language, our
common ways of speaking with one another, no longer carries the
weight of our Christian tradition. Maybe, at one time, we could move
through our day and find constant reminders of the faith. This is
probably true now only for those of us who work in the Church. So, it
has to be said: just
showing up is not enough anymore. Your
faith must be chosen, intentional; it must determined and in
evidence. If not, you are in danger of losing it, or leaving it
behind. Tape it to your steering wheel, over your desk; stick on your
alarm clock, or your coffee pot; write in on your hand or your
favorite book; make it your desktop wallpaper, or your ringtone: Who
do I say Jesus is?
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19 August 2017
We don't teach the Lord
NB. This Sunday's Gospel reading tempts Catholic preachers into Christological error. You may hear your pastor/deacon say that the Canaanite woman teaches Jesus a lesson about inclusivity. This is the standard historical-critical interpretation from 1983. And it is wrong. Thus, I'm excerpting a portion of a Roman homily from 2008 to provide a less erroneous view:
We need to dispense
immediately with the ridiculous claim that this story is about a
“marginalized woman of color teaching Jesus a lesson about radical
inclusivity.” Creatures teach the Creator nothing. Jesus and the woman,
however, do manage to teach the disciples that access to the Lord’s
table is about trusting in the Living Word and not about one’s lineage,
nationality, or relative status according to the Law. The Canaanite
woman is made a child of God by her faith! In her humility, she asks for
help and then testifies that any help she receives will be a gift and
not an entitlement. Jesus rewards her faith by giving her her greatest
desire: “…the woman’s daughter was healed from that hour.”
We can confess up front that more often than not we are the disciples in this story. We’re the ones wanting to protect Jesus from harm, to prevent others from defiling him or abusing his name. We will set ourselves outside the tent as guards against the unworthy, as gatekeepers against the annoying and the merely curious. With stout arms crossed across our proud chests we are vigilant against the unclean dogs sniffing around for hand-outs; those who have not earned an audience by showing loyalty; those who would waste the Lord’s time with trivialities; obviously, as his only loyal disciples, we are best selected as his secretaries, his guards, his watchers. Occasionally, we may even have to protect him from himself. Imagine if he wanted to do something stupid like sacrifice his life in order to save everyone! Everyone! Not just the deserving, the observant, the righteous, and the clean, but just anyone who might accept his invitation to join his eternal table. Oy! What a mess. Sometimes we might have to protect Jesus from Jesus. Sad but true.
The entire homily is here: Access Denied.
06 August 2017
Mankind's definitive deliverance from evil
NB. The new pastor of Our Lady of the Rosary, Fr. Jonathan Hemelt, will be celebrating all of the Masses there through the month of August. I will return to OLR in September.
I can't think of a better reflection on the Feast of the Transfiguration that these paragraphs from BXVI brilliant 2007 post-synodal exhortation:
SACRAMENTUM CARITATIS
10.
In instituting the sacrament of the Eucharist, Jesus anticipates and
makes present the sacrifice of the Cross and the victory of the
resurrection. At the same time, He reveals that He Himself is the true sacrificial lamb, destined in the Father's plan from the foundation of the world, as we read in The First Letter of Peter. By placing His gift in this context, Jesus shows the
salvific meaning of His death and resurrection, a mystery which renews
history and the whole cosmos. The
institution of the Eucharist demonstrates how Jesus' death, for all its
violence and absurdity, became in Him a supreme act of love and
mankind's definitive deliverance from evil.
11. By His command to "do this in remembrance of me", He asks us to respond to His gift and to make it sacramentally
present. In these words the Lord expresses, as it were, His expectation
that the Church, born of His sacrifice, will receive this gift,
developing under the guidance of the Holy Spirit the liturgical form of
the sacrament. The remembrance of His perfect gift consists not in the
mere repetition of the Last Supper, but in the Eucharist itself, that
is, in the radical newness of Christian worship. In this way, Jesus left
us the task of entering into His "hour." "The Eucharist draws us into
Jesus' act of self-oblation. More than just statically receiving the
incarnate Logos, we enter into the very dynamic of His self-giving." Jesus "draws us into Himself." The
substantial conversion of bread and wine into His body and blood
introduces within creation the principle of a radical change, a sort of
"nuclear fission," to use an image familiar to us today, which
penetrates to the heart of all being, a change meant to set off a
process which transforms reality, a process leading ultimately to the
transfiguration of the entire world, to the point where God will be all
in all.
23.
Certainly the ordained minister also acts "in the name of the whole
Church, when presenting to God the prayer of the Church, and above all
when offering the eucharistic sacrifice." As a result, priests
should be conscious of the fact that in their ministry they must never
put themselves or their personal opinions in first place, but Jesus
Christ. Any attempt to make themselves the center of the liturgical action contradicts their very identity as priests.
The priest is above all a servant of others, and he must continually
work at being a sign pointing to Christ, a docile instrument in the
Lord's hands. This is seen particularly in his humility in leading the
liturgical assembly, in obedience to the rite, uniting himself to it in
mind and heart, and avoiding anything that might give the impression of
an inordinate emphasis on his own personality.
36. The "subject" of the liturgy's intrinsic beauty is Christ Himself, risen and glorified in the Holy Spirit, who includes the Church in His work. Here we can recall an evocative phrase of Saint Augustine which strikingly describes this dynamic of faith proper to the Eucharist. The great Bishop of Hippo, speaking specifically of the eucharistic mystery, stresses the fact that Christ assimilates us to Himself: "The bread you see on the altar, sanctified by the word of God, is the body of Christ. The chalice, or rather, what the chalice contains, sanctified by the word of God, is the blood of Christ. In these signs, Christ the Lord willed to entrust to us His body and the blood which He shed for the forgiveness of our sins. If you have received them properly, you yourselves are what you have received." Consequently, "not only have we become Christians, we have become Christ himself." We can thus contemplate God's mysterious work, which brings about a profound unity between ourselves and the Lord Jesus: "one should not believe that Christ is in the head but not in the body; rather He is complete in the head and in the body."
46. Given the importance of the word of God, the quality of homilies needs to be improved. The homily is "part of the liturgical action", and is meant to foster a deeper understanding of the word of God, so that it can bear fruit in the lives of the faithful. Hence ordained ministers must "prepare the homily carefully, based on an adequate knowledge of Sacred Scripture". Generic and abstract homilies should be avoided. In particular, I ask these ministers to preach in such a way that the homily closely relates the proclamation of the word of God to the sacramental celebration and the life of the community, so that the word of God truly becomes the Church's vital nourishment and support. The catechetical and paraenetic [moral instruction] aim of the homily should not be forgotten. During the course of the liturgical year it is appropriate to offer the faithful, prudently and on the basis of the three-year lectionary, "thematic" homilies treating the great themes of the Christian faith, on the basis of what has been authoritatively proposed by the Magisterium in the four "pillars" of the Catechism of the Catholic Church and the recent Compendium, namely: the profession of faith, the celebration of the Christian mystery, life in Christ and Christian prayer.
82. In discovering the beauty of the eucharistic form of the Christian life, we are also led to reflect on the moral energy it provides for sustaining the authentic freedom of the children of God. Here I wish to take up a discussion that took place during the Synod about the connection between the eucharistic form of life and moral transformation. Pope John Paul II stated that the moral life "has the value of a 'spiritual worship', flowing from and nourished by that inexhaustible source of holiness and glorification of God which is found in the sacraments, especially in the Eucharist: by sharing in the sacrifice of the Cross, the Christian partakes of Christ's self-giving love and is equipped and committed to live this same charity in all his thoughts and deeds". In a word, "'worship' itself, eucharistic communion, includes the reality both of being loved and of loving others in turn. A Eucharist which does not pass over into the concrete practice of love is intrinsically fragmented".
This appeal to the moral value of spiritual worship should not be interpreted in a merely moralistic way. It is before all else the joy-filled discovery of love at work in the hearts of those who accept the Lord's gift, abandon themselves to him and thus find true freedom. The moral transformation implicit in the new worship instituted by Christ is a heartfelt yearning to respond to the Lord's love with one's whole being, while remaining ever conscious of one's own weakness. This is clearly reflected in the Gospel story of Zacchaeus. After welcoming Jesus to his home, the tax collector is completely changed: he decides to give half of his possessions to the poor and to repay fourfold those whom he had defrauded. The moral urgency born of welcoming Jesus into our lives is the fruit of gratitude for having experienced the Lord's unmerited closeness.
36. The "subject" of the liturgy's intrinsic beauty is Christ Himself, risen and glorified in the Holy Spirit, who includes the Church in His work. Here we can recall an evocative phrase of Saint Augustine which strikingly describes this dynamic of faith proper to the Eucharist. The great Bishop of Hippo, speaking specifically of the eucharistic mystery, stresses the fact that Christ assimilates us to Himself: "The bread you see on the altar, sanctified by the word of God, is the body of Christ. The chalice, or rather, what the chalice contains, sanctified by the word of God, is the blood of Christ. In these signs, Christ the Lord willed to entrust to us His body and the blood which He shed for the forgiveness of our sins. If you have received them properly, you yourselves are what you have received." Consequently, "not only have we become Christians, we have become Christ himself." We can thus contemplate God's mysterious work, which brings about a profound unity between ourselves and the Lord Jesus: "one should not believe that Christ is in the head but not in the body; rather He is complete in the head and in the body."
46. Given the importance of the word of God, the quality of homilies needs to be improved. The homily is "part of the liturgical action", and is meant to foster a deeper understanding of the word of God, so that it can bear fruit in the lives of the faithful. Hence ordained ministers must "prepare the homily carefully, based on an adequate knowledge of Sacred Scripture". Generic and abstract homilies should be avoided. In particular, I ask these ministers to preach in such a way that the homily closely relates the proclamation of the word of God to the sacramental celebration and the life of the community, so that the word of God truly becomes the Church's vital nourishment and support. The catechetical and paraenetic [moral instruction] aim of the homily should not be forgotten. During the course of the liturgical year it is appropriate to offer the faithful, prudently and on the basis of the three-year lectionary, "thematic" homilies treating the great themes of the Christian faith, on the basis of what has been authoritatively proposed by the Magisterium in the four "pillars" of the Catechism of the Catholic Church and the recent Compendium, namely: the profession of faith, the celebration of the Christian mystery, life in Christ and Christian prayer.
82. In discovering the beauty of the eucharistic form of the Christian life, we are also led to reflect on the moral energy it provides for sustaining the authentic freedom of the children of God. Here I wish to take up a discussion that took place during the Synod about the connection between the eucharistic form of life and moral transformation. Pope John Paul II stated that the moral life "has the value of a 'spiritual worship', flowing from and nourished by that inexhaustible source of holiness and glorification of God which is found in the sacraments, especially in the Eucharist: by sharing in the sacrifice of the Cross, the Christian partakes of Christ's self-giving love and is equipped and committed to live this same charity in all his thoughts and deeds". In a word, "'worship' itself, eucharistic communion, includes the reality both of being loved and of loving others in turn. A Eucharist which does not pass over into the concrete practice of love is intrinsically fragmented".
This appeal to the moral value of spiritual worship should not be interpreted in a merely moralistic way. It is before all else the joy-filled discovery of love at work in the hearts of those who accept the Lord's gift, abandon themselves to him and thus find true freedom. The moral transformation implicit in the new worship instituted by Christ is a heartfelt yearning to respond to the Lord's love with one's whole being, while remaining ever conscious of one's own weakness. This is clearly reflected in the Gospel story of Zacchaeus. After welcoming Jesus to his home, the tax collector is completely changed: he decides to give half of his possessions to the poor and to repay fourfold those whom he had defrauded. The moral urgency born of welcoming Jesus into our lives is the fruit of gratitude for having experienced the Lord's unmerited closeness.
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23 July 2017
The Weeds of Prayer
16th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
In
prayer we are “beggars before God.” Having nothing, we ask for
everything, and receive what we need. If we cannot quite put words to
our needs, “the Spirit himself intercedes with inexpressible
groanings.” Like the rest of creation, we too long to be raised to
perfection, to be made complete again in the presence of God. But
until we are given the beatific vision, we live and move in this
world – needing, asking, receiving, giving; not knowing perfectly
what comes next. Not knowing what comes next can be a source of
anxiety or a source of freedom. If we trust in God, fully
surrendering ourselves to His providence, not knowing what comes next
is freeing. How we pray in this
freedom is simple:
“Lord, your will be
done. I receive all You have to give!”
Prayer becomes more complicated when we hold back, when we hide away
bits of control, little needs to direct and dominate: “Lord,
your will be done (if your will is to allow me to do my will), and I
receive all You have to give (if what You have to give is what I
want)!” This is
not the prayer of a beggar. It IS the prayer of a willful child who
falsely believes he/she knows perfectly what comes next. We don't
know and acting on that not- knowing can kill us. Both physically and
spiritually.
Jesus
proposes to the crowds a parable about the wisdom of not acting in
ignorance. He tells them (and us) to allow the weeds to grow among
the wheat. We can't always tell the difference btw the weeds and the
wheat. Pulling up the weeds might damage the wheat. Let them both
grow and the harvesters will separate them – wheat to the barn,
weeds to the fire. Full knowledge of which is which comes at the end
not the beginning. The same is true for the differences btw our wants
and our needs. If I pray in ignorance for what I need,
I may be praying for what I want
instead. And when I don't get what I think I need, I begin to doubt
God's providence. Maybe I stop praying. Maybe I stop believing. Maybe
– even – I turn against God b/c He has failed to meet my “needs.”
My ignorance – my “not-knowing” – can cause me to stumble
along the Way. . .unless. . .I know that I am ignorant and choose
instead to surrender myself to God's providence and receive whatever
He sends my way. “Lord,
your will be done. I receive all You have to give!” The
mature pray-er begins and ends in ignorance, allowing the Harvester
to separate his wants from his needs, the wheat from the weeds.
What
are the weeds in prayer? Jesus says, “While everyone was asleep
[the farmer's] enemy came and sowed weeds all through the wheat. . .”
Notice that everyone was asleep. They weren't keeping vigil. No one
was on watch. And b/c no one was watching, the farmer's enemy was
free to sow weeds. When we are not paying attention to our spiritual
lives, when we are living life as if God doesn't exist, the Enemy is
free to sow his weeds. His favorite weed to sow is the weed we'll
call “Self-Sufficiency,” also known as “I Don't Any Help.”
This weed tempts us to believe that we already know what the problem
is and how to solve it. It tempts us – in our pride – to turn
away from God's providence and rely on our own ingenuity. Or to tell
God what the problem is and how He ought to fix it. Given enough time
to grow this weed produces fruit called, “I Need a Hole Plugged.”
God and His providence become little more than an emergency yelp when
things go bad. There's a way to render these weeds powerless over
your prayer. Don't pull them! Let them grow. But render them
powerless by admitting upfront that you don't know what you need,
desire God above all else, and receive all the He sends you with
praise and thanksgiving.
Paul
lays all this bare for us in his letter to the Romans: “The
Spirit comes to the aid of our weakness; for we do not know how to
pray as we ought. . .” Paul is not suggesting here that we've
forgotten the words to our prayers, or that we're praying the wrong
prayers. He's telling us that our weakness – our ignorance (for we
do not know how to pray as we ought) – is aided by the Spirit. We
are strengthened in prayer by the Spirit, guided by the Spirit to
struggle with our ignorance and surrender to the providence of God.
Prayer is not a matter of overcoming not-knowing or learning all that
we ought to know. Prayer is about placing ourselves – freely and
generously – in the path of the Spirit so that He may take us up
and deliver us – needs and all – into the presence of the One Who
loves us. If we are tightly bound by sin, or diverted by disordered
passions, or driven away by an ugly pride, we cannot throw ourselves
in the path of the Spirit. Nor can we pray. Nor can we receive all
that God has to give us. This is why Christ – “the one who
searches hearts knows what is the intention of the Spirit” – sits
at the right hand of the Father and “intercedes for the holy ones
according to God's will.” What we do not know and cannot know about
our own needs and about God's will, Christ knows. And he is there to
hear us even when all we can do is groan.
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16 July 2017
Looking is not seeing. . .
15th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
I
failed algebra twice in high school and once in college. In every
other subject in high school and college both I did just fine.
English, history, and philosophy were simple. . .compared to algebra.
I managed – finally – to pass college algebra with a C+ by
memorizing the formulas and using them mechanically. I understood
literature. I understood the flow of history. I understood
philosophical arguments. I could not understand the quadratic
equation. To save my soul, the souls of my family and friends, the
souls of the whole nation – I simply could not “get” algebra.
And I still can't. I memorized the equations and mechanically applied
them, having no clue how or why they worked. No doubt the sufferings
of my poor teachers sprung many a soul from purgatory in those years.
What I know now that I didn't know then is that “understanding”
takes more than “knowing that” and “knowing how.”
Understanding – true understanding – is knowledge put to work,
lived out, lived with. The disciples ask Jesus why he teaches the
crowds with parables. Jesus answers: “. . .they
look but do not see and hear but do not listen or understand.”
Looking is not seeing; hearing is not listening. Seeing and listening
to the Word of God are gifts given to us for our salvation.
Some
in the crowds have not yet received the gifts of seeing and
listening. So, Jesus defends his use of parables in teaching on the
grounds that there are some there who have not been granted knowledge
of the kingdom's mysteries. Why don't these people have the knowledge
required to see and listen? Jesus, quoting Isaiah 6, says, “Gross
is the heart of this people.” He's recalling the orders that God
gives Isaiah regarding His people, “Make the heart of this people
sluggish, dull
their ears and close their eyes; Lest they see with their eyes, and
hear with their ears, and their heart understand. . .” The sluggish
hearts of God's people refused to be moved by punishment, admonition,
argument, or exile. They closed their eyes to miracles and their ears
to prophecy. God orders Isaiah to let them languish in blindness and
deafness “until the cities are desolate, without inhabitants,
Houses, without people, and the land is a desolate waste.” In other
words, God will allow His people to live with the consequences of
their ignorance and disobedience until all that they have is
destroyed. This is not another
punishment, but a
hard call to repentance and conversion. Isaiah is sent to make sure
the message is crystal clear: repent, return to obedience, and be
healed.
For
those in the crowd who have received the gifts of seeing and
listening, Jesus' message is crystal clear. For those with a heart
open to the Word and a mind ready for the Truth, his parables are
instructions for living a holy life. The seed of the Word flourishes
in fertile soil. Rocks, sand, thorns, a blazing sun – all destroy
the seed before it can take root. The seed of the Word cannot take
root in a heart divided btw the Gospel and the World, in a heart that
beats for Self Alone. The seed of the Word cannot flourish in a heart
choked with anger, vengeance, malice, or pride. It cannot grow
surrounded by self-righteousness, gossip, obscenity, or vicious
habit. A disobedient heart cannot listen to the Father's offer of
mercy, nor can it see the truth of His love. The parable comes into
razor-sharp focus when the disobedient heart turns from sin and
listens again to the wisdom of Christ: “. . .the seed sown on rich
soil is the one who hears the word and understands it.” And the
one who understands “bears fruit and yields a hundred or sixty or
thirtyfold.”
Earlier
I noted that I finally managed to pass college algebra with a C+ by
memorizing the formulas and applying them mechanically. I did not
understand algebra then, and I still don't. What I have come to
understand is that our faith is not algebra. We cannot simply
memorize the formulas and apply them mechanically. Faith is trust and
trust must be lived – openly, freely, generously – with God and
one another. That means taking some risks, perhaps some dangerous
risks, but always risking with the assurance that whatever God has in
the works for us it's for our eternal best. Memorized formulas and
mechanical applications got me through algebra. . .that's b/c algebra
is the sort of thing that just needs to be done not necessarily
understood. Your relationship with the Father through Christ is a
living relationship that requires tending – like a healthy garden
or a growing child. It needs attention. It needs loving care. Left
alone, your relationship with God will grow stale; it will grow
“gross,” sluggish, and you will be left wondering why the
abundant graces you once enjoyed are so scarce of late. Receive the
gifts of seeing and listening so that the Word of God might be a
constant sight and source of wisdom and inspiration for you. Put that
wisdom into daily practice so that you can come to understand –
truly understand – the faith you profess. Christ is asking you, me,
all of us to become the good ground that yields a fruitful harvest!
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09 July 2017
Two Steps: Yoke Up and Learn
14th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
Last
Sunday we heard a discomforting truth: it
is possible for us to be unworthy of Christ.
If you love anyone or anything more than you love Christ, then you
are unworthy of him. We heard this truth not
from some sneering
traditionalist cardinal lurking in the Vatican but from Jesus
himself: “.
. .whoever does not take up his cross and follow after me is not
worthy of me.” To be worthy of Christ, to
be made worthy of Christ
we must submerge all our loves in Love Himself, surrendering every
attachment; drowning our actual sins, our disordered passions, and
our vices in the blood and water of the Crucified Christ. ALL sinners
are called to the Church; ALL sinners are welcomed in the Church. We
are ALL called to repentance and welcomed as New Creations in Christ
Jesus – when we confess, repent, and receive His mercy. When we
have received His mercy through repentance, Paul says of us: “You
are not in the flesh; on the contrary, you are in the spirit, if only
the Spirit of God dwells in you.” If
only the Spirit of God dwells in you.
How do we invite in and nurture the Spirit of God? Jesus says, “Take
my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of
heart. . .”
Two
steps: take my yoke and learn from me. “Take the yoke” is Jesus'
way of saying “Take me on as your Lord.” When a plowman yokes his
oxen, he ties the two of them together, and then he ties the yoke to
the plow. The plowman controls the plow by controlling the oxen. If
you want to get really fancy, think of it this way: you and I are the
oxen, pulling the plow, the Church, and Christ is the plowman. When
we “take on the yoke” of Christ we submit ourselves to his
Lordship, his rule. We give ourselves over to his mission and
ministry in the world. We are bound together – you and I – tied
together in the Church to plow, sow, and harvest as the Lord
commands. Now, being the lazy academic priest that I am, none of this
sounds particularly enticing! Yet! The Lord promises just that: “.
. .my yoke is
easy, and my burden light.” I remember – as a kid – plowing and
weeding a three-acre garden under a hot summer sun in Mississippi. I
don't remember it being neither easy nor light. But the Lord's yoke,
his work for us is easy and light b/c we have invited in and nurtured
the Spirit of God. Whatever Christ the Plowman has given us to do, he
has done before us. His work is complete. We're catching up – for
our good and the good of the whole world.
The
second step – “learn from me” – follows on the first. Once we
have yoked ourselves to the plow of the Church and placed ourselves
under the rule of Christ, we
learn; that is, by
listening and doing, we come to a greater understanding of who we are
in Christ. Note well: yoking first; learning second. The learning
flows from the yoking. If we want to stand back – unyoked – and
try to learn about
Christ, we can. We
can gather all sorts of interesting facts and theories and stories
about the man, Jesus Christ. We can come to all sorts of fascinating
conclusions and even call ourselves his followers. BUT if we want to
truly learn – to contemplate, to be transformed – we must first
be yoked to Christ and through him to one another. And what can we
learn from the yoke? To work together? Yes. To share a common goal?
Sure. But we don't need Christ for that. Yoked to Christ and through
him to one another we learn what can only be learned so yoked: we
learn to become Christ.
His work is complete. You and I are not yet Christ. Our work
continues. And it continues only through his Lordship and the
indwelling of the Spirit of God.
Question
time: have you taken
on the yoke of Christ and learned from him?
Think back to last week. Do you love anyone or anything more than you
love Christ? Have you taken up your cross and followed him? If not,
then you are not worthy of him. Despite the best efforts of our
secular culture and even some in the Church, we cannot “unhear”
Jesus say what he has already always said. We have choices to make.
Graced choices. Choices that we are able to make only b/c God loved
us first. His love for us includes the freedom to accept or reject
His love. Accept or reject. One or the other. We cannot accept the
parts we like and reject the rest. Or reject it all and still fuss
about claiming our inheritance. Lest there be any confusion here: God
loves us all. The
good, the bad, and the ugly. And He wills that we love Him in return.
BUT He also wills that we love Him freely. When we choose to freely
love Him, our lives change. We yoke ourselves to Christ and submit to
him as Lord. We learn – through listening and doing – to become
Christs for others. And like Christ loving his Father, we surrender,
we sacrifice our lesser loves so that we might become perfect as He
is perfect.
The
discomforting truth is that we can choose not to submit, not to put
on the yoke of Christ and learn from him. We can choose to believe
that our sin isn't really sin, or that our disordered passions aren't
really disordered, or that our vices aren't really vicious. But
reality doesn't bend to wishes and make-believe. If you will be who
you were made to be – a New Creation in Christ, a living temple for
the Spirit of God – you will take on his yoke and learn. Jesus
pleads with us, “Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened,
and I will give you rest.”
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04 July 2017
Two Revolutions (2009)
Independence Day (2009)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Sisters of St Mary of Namur, Fort Worth, TX
Christ is with us. The Bridegroom has not abandoned us. His revolution continues so long as one of us is eager to preach his Word, teach his truth, do his good works. Today and everyday, we are free. And even as we celebrate our civil independence from tyranny, we must bow our heads to the Father and give Him thanks for creating us as creatures capable of living freely, wholly in the possibility of His perfection.
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Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Sisters of St Mary of Namur, Fort Worth, TX
Jesus
says to John's disciples, “No one patches an old cloak with a piece of
unshrunken cloth...People do not put new wine into old wineskins.” What
does this bit of homespun wisdom have to do with weddings, fasting, the
Pharisees, mourning the death of a bridegroom, and the price of camels
in Jerusalem? Better yet: what do any of these have to do with the
American Revolution and this country's declaration of independence from
the tyranny Old King George? Is Jesus teaching us to party while we can
b/c we won't be around forever? Is he arguing that we ought to be
better stewards of our antiques—human and otherwise? Or maybe he's
saying that the time will come when the older ways can no longer be
patched up and something fundamentally new must replace what we have
always had, always known. When “the way we have always done it” no
longer takes us where we ought to go; when the wineskin, the camel, the
cloak no longer holds its wine, hauls its load, or keep us warm, it's
time to start thinking about a trip to the market to haggle for
something new.
We celebrate two revolutions today: one temporal
and one eternal, one local and the other cosmic. The political
revolution freed a group of colonies in the New World from the
corruption of an old and dying Empire. The spiritual revolution freed
all of creation from the chains of sin and death. Today, we give God
thanks and praise for the birth of the United States of America by
celebrating our 4th of July freedoms. And we give God thanks and praise
for the birth, death, and resurrection of Christ by celebrating this
Eucharist, the daily revolution that overthrows the regime of sin and
spiritual decay.
The revolution of 1776 not only toppled the
imperial rule of George III in the American colonies, but it also
founded a way of life that celebrates God-gifted, self-evident, and
unalienable human rights as the foundation of all civil government and
social progress. The revolution that Christ led and leads against the
wiles and temptations of the world fulfills the promise of our Father to
bring us once again into His Kingdom—not a civil kingdom ruled by laws
and fallible hearts, but a heavenly kingdom where we will do His will
perfectly and thereby live more freely than we ever could here on earth.
In no way do we understand this kingdom as simply some sort of future
reward for good behavior. This is no pie in the sky by and by. Though
God's kingdom has come with the coming of Christ, we must live as bodies
and souls here and now, perfecting that imperfect portion of the
kingdom we know and love. No revolution succeeds immediately. No
revolution fulfills every promise at the moment of its birth. The women
and slaves of the newly minted United States can witness to this hard
fact. That we continue to sin, continue to fail, continue to rebel
against God's will for us is evidence enough that we do not yet live in
fullest days of the Kingdom. But like any ideal, any program for
perfecting the human heart and mind, we can live to the limits of our
imperfect natures, falling and trying again, knowing that we are loved
by Love Himself. With diligence. With trust. With hope. With one
another in the bonds of Christ's love, we can do more than live
lackluster lives of mediocre compliance. We can work out our salvation
in the tough love of repentance and forgiveness, the hard truths of
mercy and holiness.
Christ is with us. The Bridegroom has not abandoned us. His revolution continues so long as one of us is eager to preach his Word, teach his truth, do his good works. Today and everyday, we are free. And even as we celebrate our civil independence from tyranny, we must bow our heads to the Father and give Him thanks for creating us as creatures capable of living freely, wholly in the possibility of His perfection.
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02 July 2017
Worthy OR Unworthy. . .not both
13th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
It's
standard Catholic fare these days on the internet and on TV for some
Catholic personality or media-priest to declare that the Church must be
more like Christ and drop her moral objections to [fill in the
blank]. Without fail, that blank is filled with whatever trendy
goofiness the elite secular culture is peddling this week, and it is
always has something to do with sex. I wish I could tell you that
this sort of thing is new in the Church, but it isn't. Since the day
after the Holy Spirit gave birth to the Church more than 2,000 years
ago, there have been those in the Church who cannot or will not
tolerate the discipline our faith requires of us. These days they are
especially keen on distorting perfectly good Christian practices like
mercy, love, forgiveness, etc. to undermine the Way, the Truth, and
the Life that Christ died to give us. Perhaps the most pernicious
distortion making the rounds right now is the idea that since none of
us is perfectly morally good, we should just dump Christ's teachings
on being worthy of him and ignore our responsibility to call one
another to holiness. The Church has no business admonishing sinners
we're told. Just allow Catholics their moral ignorance; it's the
“pastoral thing to do.”
Jesus
begs to differ. He says to his apostles no fewer than three times
that it is possible for us to be unworthy of him. We are unworthy if
(1) we love our parents more than we love him; (2) if we love our
children more than we love him; and (3) if we fail to take up our
cross and follow him. Why do these three specific failures make us
unworthy of Christ? Jesus says, “Whoever finds his life will lose
it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” In other
words, if I find “my life” in my family and friends and in my
self-centered interests, I will lose that
life. BUT if I lose “my life” for the sake of Christ, in his name
and for his mission, I will find it again. . .but radically altered.
My family, friends, and interests don't simply vanish when I turn my
life over to Christ; they return to me newly oriented, re-shaped at
the root and pointed faithfully toward Christ. Now, I am able to love
them all more perfectly through Christ, and see them all in his
light. Our take-away here should be obvious: it is possible to be
worthy of Christ and
it is possible to be unworthy of him. But not both at the same time.
If
I want to be unworthy of Christ, then all I have to do is love
something or someone else more than I love him. If I love my car, my
politics, my career, my sexuality, my bank account, my best friend,
or anyone or anything else more than I love Christ, then I am
unworthy of him. However, if I want to be made worthy of Christ, I
give away my car, my politics, my career, my sexuality, my bank
account, my best friend, and anyone or anything else that might
diminish my love of Christ. When all these people and things return
to me through Christ they will be radically re-oriented,
fundamentally transformed in his likeness and given a new mission, a
mission that is consistent with the ministry of the Body of Christ,
the Church. I can choose to be worthy or
unworthy. What I cannot do is choose to be worthy, claim to be
worthy, demand that the Church recognize me as worthy and surrender
nothing of what I love more than Christ. I may find a priest or
bishop or Catholic media personality willing to pump me up and tell
my sad story, but without the Cross, without my sacrifice, my
surrender, I am telling and living a lie. Jesus can't say it anymore
plainly than he does: “. . .whoever does not take up his cross and
follow after me is not worthy of me.”
Pope
Francis has suggested that we see the Church as a “field hospital”
where wounded patients come for emergency treatment. This is a
brilliant image! Those sick with sin and wounded by the world can
find immediate spiritual treatment in the sacramental care of the
Church. Staying with that image. . .what would we say of someone who
comes to the hospital and demands to be admitted as a patient;
demands that the doctors not call their wounds wounds;
refuses treatment of any kind; and then demands the doctors cease
treating all the other patients with similar wounds? Furthermore,
what would we say about a doctor who facilitates the admission of
this person and bows to their demands? A doctor who looks at an
obviously broken arm, says its not broken, does nothing to fix the
arm, and then demands that the other doctors stop fixing all of the
other obviously broken arms b/c they aren't really broken? I think
you would say with me that we've entered some sort of Catholic
Twilight Zone! If the Church is a “field hospital,” she is also a
“medicinal community” where sickness and wounds are constantly
treated as such. If no one is sick or wounded, then there is no
necessary treatment. If there is no treatment to be given, then why
are we here?
We
are here b/c we know that to be worthy of Christ, to be made worthy
of Christ we must first surrender everything and everyone we love,
submerging ourselves fully in the Love Who loves us first. That means
drowning our actual sins, our disordered passions, our vices and
allowing them to fall away in favor of being New Creations. We cannot
be who God made us to be if we cling to the old self, demanding that
the Truth change to fit our personal preferences. Christ changes us;
we do not and cannot change Christ. If you will to be worthy of him,
then “you too must think of yourselves as dead to sin and living
for God in Christ Jesus.”
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29 June 2017
Are you a Parlor Christian?
Ss. Peter and Paul
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
In
his homily for this solemnity, Pope Francis asks us to consider this
question: are we parlor Christians or apostles on the go?
That phrase – “parlor Christians” – makes me smile b/c I
remember my grandmother's parlor. Pristine; immaculately decorated
with bric-a-brac, hand-painted ceramics, family pictures in heavy
frames. I remember the sofa with its tiny embroidered floral
patterns and oddly shaped pillows. What I remember most vividly,
however, is the box of candy she kept on the coffee table. Candy
forever out of my reach b/c the parlor was forbidden to five-year
old's with grubby hands and feet. When Pope Francis asks us if we are
“parlor Christians” or “apostles on the go,” I imagine that
box of candy – tempting, just within reach – protected by the
sanctity of the parlor's cleanliness, its holiness, if you will. That
parlor was so set apart from the rest of my grandmother's house that
it seemed another world, another time entirely. It was a sanctuary, a
museum of sorts that trapped a treasure in uselessness. Are you a
parlor Christian or an apostle on the go?
What
is a “parlor Christian”? Parlor Christians are those who see
God's graces as treasures to be hoarded and put on display, protected
from grubby hands and feet, kept far away from the work-a-day world
of sinning and forgiving. Like that room in grandma's house that
serves no real, living purpose, parlor Christians are set-away,
forbidding, almost lifeless in their determination to remain
untouched by living in the goodness of creation. Guarding a treasure
rather than using it, they worship the idea of holiness rather
than allowing the Divine Treasure to make them truly holy in the
world, for the world. Pope Francis – needless to say! –
urges us to be apostles on the go. Like Peter and Paul, apostles for
the establishment and spread of the Good News. Like Peter and Paul,
witnesses unto death for the truth of the Gospel, bearing testimony
in our words and deeds to the freely offered mercy of the Father to
sinners. Like Peter and Paul, apostles who get dirty when we work,
tired when we play. But who always rely entirely on the treasured
graces abundantly poured by our Father Who never ceases to send us
out again and again – fully equipped, well-rested, and ready to
speak His word of truth.
________________________
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25 June 2017
Fear No One
12th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
“Fear
no one,” Jesus says. Fear is an enemy of faith, a first-cousin to
anxiety and one step away from despair. He's not talking about the
sort of fear we experience when the movie-monster jumps out from
behind the cellar door. Or when we're startled by a loud noise. He's
talking about that sort of fear that paralyzes, the sort of fear that
prevents us from doing what is true, good, and beautiful b/c we
cannot see beyond our words or actions. We don't know what's going to
happen to us if we speak up or take action in our pursuit of the
truth. We know we should speak the truth, but speaking the truth
might get us fired, or unfriended, or cause a stink. Acting to bring
about the good might stir up trouble or offend someone. Jesus is
reminding his disciples and us that we are obligated to speak the
truth and work diligently to bring about the good. It's not enough to
think true thoughts and imagine good works. As followers of Christ
we are heralds – like John the Baptist – heralds of the Good News
in this world. When the truth must be spoken and the good done, “fear
no one. . .What [Christ says] to you in the darkness, speak in the
light; what you hear whispered, proclaim on the housetops.” Fear is
a paralyzing silence that no follower of Christ can tolerate.
As
I've said, fear is an enemy of faith, a first-cousin to anxiety and
one step away from despair. Those who lie for power, do evil for
their own good, and destroy what is beautiful depend on the
paralyzing silence of those who have seen and heard the truth. What
better way for evil to flourish than for Christians to stand silent,
surrendering their faith to fear and giving their persecutors the
satisfaction of seeing the Good News of Jesus Christ die on our lips?
Our Lord tells us to fear no one NOT b/c he's going to strike them
down for opposing us. Not b/c he's going to deny them the occasional
victory. But b/c – in the end – the Father's will rules all. In
the end, and the beginning and the middle, the cross wins. Divine
love, Christ's sacrifice wins. We do not need to fear those who
oppose the Gospel b/c the Gospel has already won. We do need to bear
constant and consistent witness to the Gospel b/c its good news is
fresh daily, and not everyone with eyes to see and ears to hear has
seen and heard it. And not only that – but the principal
beneficiary of bearing witness to the Good News is the witness him or
herself. What better conditions the muscles of faith than lifting the
Gospel up for all to see and hear?
Look
for a moment at Jeremiah. When his friends betray him and seek to
destroy him, he bears witness to the Lord's help, “. . .the Lord is
with me, like a mighty champion: my persecutors will stumble, they
will not triumph. In their failure they will be put to utter shame,
to lasting, unforgettable confusion.” Now, Jeremiah may be boasting
a bit here, but we cannot accuse him of faithlessness or fearfulness.
He trusts the Lord absolutely and is unashamed to proclaim it! Can
you and I say the same? When presented with an opportunity – public
or private – to speak the truth of the faith to others, do we
fulfill our baptismal vows, or do we sit in paralyzed silence, afraid
that we might offend or cause trouble? If we choose silence, why? In
that moment, who or what causes our silence? Whoever or whatever
causes us to fail is more important to us than our faith in Christ
Jesus. Here we listen again to our Lord say, “Everyone who
acknowledges me before others I will acknowledge before my heavenly
Father. But whoever denies me before others, I will deny before my
heavenly Father.”
Fear
no one, and speak the truth. Without squeamishness, without waffling
or equivocation, speak the truth. In-fashion, out-of-fashion, trendy
or not, speak the truth. Whatever the consequences, when called upon
to do so, regardless of the circumstances, speak the truth of the
Good News. There is nothing and no one – in this world – to fear.
The Enemy thrives on our silence and inactivity. When we are
complacent, he is working hardest. When we have given up, he is just
getting started. If you think your words and deeds are useless
against the world, remember for whom you speak – the one whose
victory on the cross brought eternal life from death by the
forgiveness of sin. “What [Christ says] to you in the darkness,
speak in the light; what you hear whispered, proclaim on the
housetops.”
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20 June 2017
Reading List for Fall Semester 2017
In case anyone is
interested in what Notre Dame pre-theologians and theologians are
reading in my classes next fall. . .
HP 201: Intro to Homiletics
Dante, A., The Divine Comedy: Purgatory.
Lewis, C. S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain
Milosz, Czeslaw, New and Collected Poems, 1931-2001
O'Connor, Flannery, The Complete Stories
Percy, Walker, The Last Gentleman
HP505 (Homiletic Practicum II)
Cameron, Peter John. Why Preach?
Carl, Scott. Verbum Domini and the Complementarity of Exegesis and Theology.
Schall, James. A Line Through the Heart: On Sinning and Being Forgiven.
PH202 (Philosophy of God)
Aquinas, Thomas. Summa theologiae, Prima Pars, Q. 1-26 (text available on-line)
Davies, Brian. Thomas Aquinas on God and Evil.
Gilson, Etienne. God & Philosophy.
PH506 (Philosophical Theology)
Aquinas, Thomas. Summa theologiae, Prima Pars, Q. 1-26 (text available on-line)
Davies, Brian. Thomas Aquinas on God and Evil.
Gilson, Etienne. God & Philosophy.
Leslie, J. The Mystery of Existence: Why is There Anything at All?
____________________________________
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HP 201: Intro to Homiletics
Dante, A., The Divine Comedy: Purgatory.
Lewis, C. S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain
Milosz, Czeslaw, New and Collected Poems, 1931-2001
O'Connor, Flannery, The Complete Stories
Percy, Walker, The Last Gentleman
HP505 (Homiletic Practicum II)
Cameron, Peter John. Why Preach?
Carl, Scott. Verbum Domini and the Complementarity of Exegesis and Theology.
Schall, James. A Line Through the Heart: On Sinning and Being Forgiven.
PH202 (Philosophy of God)
Aquinas, Thomas. Summa theologiae, Prima Pars, Q. 1-26 (text available on-line)
Davies, Brian. Thomas Aquinas on God and Evil.
Gilson, Etienne. God & Philosophy.
PH506 (Philosophical Theology)
Aquinas, Thomas. Summa theologiae, Prima Pars, Q. 1-26 (text available on-line)
Davies, Brian. Thomas Aquinas on God and Evil.
Gilson, Etienne. God & Philosophy.
Leslie, J. The Mystery of Existence: Why is There Anything at All?
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