"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
24 December 2013
A Catholic literature?
MERRY CHRISTMAS! HAPPY NEW YEAR!
BLESSED EPIPHANY!
The Squirrels have been less than vigilant in their war against my reading regime. They must've heard that I am focusing on spiritual/pleasure reading during this break. When I'm reading in preparation to teach a course, they are merciless in attacking my peace.
A HancAquam post wouldn't be complete w/o a link to some books. . .so, here's a piece from Cosmos The In Lost (yes, that's how he arranges it):
There's a debate raging amongst Catholic literary critics about whether or not Catholic literature is dead and/or dying. Prof. Rosman denies that "literature of faith" is either dead or dying and defends the existence of a robust Catholic literary scene. The title of the post linked above refers to Greg Wolfe, editor of Image, a journal that trades in the literature of faith.
Check it out!
___________________
18 December 2013
What happens when we surrender. . .?
NB. I'll be traveling toward The Squirrels tomorrow morning. So, here's a Roman homily from Year B that I never got to preach. . .
4th Sunday of Advent: 2 Sm 7:1-5, 8-14, 16; Rom 16:25-27; Luke 1:26-38
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Convento SS Domenico e Sisto, Roma
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Convento SS Domenico e Sisto, Roma
Unless
Samuel Beckett is right, and we wait for Nothing when we wait on
Godot, then when we wait, we wait in need. There is something or
someone we do not know, something or someone we do not have; yet feel,
yet know we must have; so, we wait. When we wait, we desire. Waiting
is what the body does with unfilled desire. We sit here or walk there,
or stand, leaning against someone stronger or more patient, perched
right on the edge of bounding up in mock surprise to shout, “Finally!”
Exasperated, or relieved in anger. You are here. Finally! I have you.
But it is too soon yet to claim victory, to claim our prize for
patient waiting. Unlike Estragon and his philosophical friend, Vladmir,
both waiting for Godot, our advent clock has many more ticks and tocks
before the final gift is dropped, before our longest longing is eased,
and our waiting in hope is rewarded with the birth of the Word into the
world. What we have to wait with today is Mary’s surrender, the end of
her anticipation as she answers the archangel’s call to be the ark of
the Lord, His tent in flesh: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord.
May it be done to me according to your word.” If and when, in our
waiting and in our desiring, if and when we surrender, what happens?
This week of our long wait begins a headlong fall into the celebration of the birth of the Word into the world. In just one week, we sit up and notice one more time that hope is born for us; faith is pushed out from eternity and into our lives; love is gifted with a body, a mind, a soul for our sakes. In just one week, the one John the desert prophet promised arrives and begins his thirty-three year presence to those who have waited for centuries. But today, this last Sunday of our waiting, we party with the angels as they and we hear a young Jewish woman, confronted with a choice by the archangel Gabriel, we all hear her choose life—his, hers, ours, and the world’s. We all hear her choose to be the mother of God, the God- Bearer. “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word.” Look! I serve the Lord. Let His will be for me as you say it is.
What would happen to your life if, every morning from now on, you awake up and say aloud, “I serve the Lord. Let His will be mine.” First, understand that this is a prayer of priestly sacrifice. All the elements of sacrifice are present in that one prayer: you are a priest offering yourself as victim to a loving God on the altar of your day. Second, once sacrificed with this prayer, this act of human will, you belong body and soul to He Who made you. He made you and his love holds you in being as His creation. Your prayer of sacrifice is an act of gratitude, of giving thanks. Third, if you will do His will you will expend your day in His service as His handmaid, his servant. Every thought you have, every act you do, every passion you feel has already been given over to the fulfillment of His will. Fourth, His will for all His servants is to love Him, love ourselves, and love our neighbors. We are able to love, that is, we are gifted with the capacity for love, to love in virtue of our creation by Love Himself. He loved us first so that we might love. Lastly, as His willing priests, our lives are made new again, reconstituted from the smallest cell out, gifted with the newest possible life available, the life of His Son. We are made Christ for others. We are the walking Word, the talking Word, the feeling, doing, working Word—priests forever now in an entirely sacrificial life of becoming perfectly His will in the flesh.
This young Jewish woman, given a choice by Gabriel, says YES to His will for her, and becomes the first Christian priest and prophet, the template from whom all of us as future priests and prophets will be pressed out. On the cross, dying for our sakes, the Lord himself follows his mother in saying yes. Abandoned by his friends, betrayed by one he loves, despairing, seemingly lost to pain and death, and believing himself to have been forsaken to his enemies, our Lord will cry out to His Father, “Yes! I will all that you will!” His life of perpetual sacrifice begins. This is what we long for. This is what we desire, what we need. Though we are constantly deflected and distracted in our priestly obligations to be love and to love others, we nonetheless know and feel the ineffable hollowness of a life that refuses to love, that wills not to be one for another.
Advent is one long Mass of Thanksgiving and Praise, a month-long prayer of rejoicing and sacrifice as we turn away from sin and toward our perfection in Christ. What must we do? Unclench your fist. Unlock your heart. Fling open wide your mind. Make straight the path of the Lord to your very existence. Say YES! And join Christ at the altar as priest and victim. He is coming. He has come. He will come again. Wait. Need. Desire. And the flood of God as the Gift of Love Himself will overwhelm you and make you Christ.
__________________This week of our long wait begins a headlong fall into the celebration of the birth of the Word into the world. In just one week, we sit up and notice one more time that hope is born for us; faith is pushed out from eternity and into our lives; love is gifted with a body, a mind, a soul for our sakes. In just one week, the one John the desert prophet promised arrives and begins his thirty-three year presence to those who have waited for centuries. But today, this last Sunday of our waiting, we party with the angels as they and we hear a young Jewish woman, confronted with a choice by the archangel Gabriel, we all hear her choose life—his, hers, ours, and the world’s. We all hear her choose to be the mother of God, the God- Bearer. “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word.” Look! I serve the Lord. Let His will be for me as you say it is.
What would happen to your life if, every morning from now on, you awake up and say aloud, “I serve the Lord. Let His will be mine.” First, understand that this is a prayer of priestly sacrifice. All the elements of sacrifice are present in that one prayer: you are a priest offering yourself as victim to a loving God on the altar of your day. Second, once sacrificed with this prayer, this act of human will, you belong body and soul to He Who made you. He made you and his love holds you in being as His creation. Your prayer of sacrifice is an act of gratitude, of giving thanks. Third, if you will do His will you will expend your day in His service as His handmaid, his servant. Every thought you have, every act you do, every passion you feel has already been given over to the fulfillment of His will. Fourth, His will for all His servants is to love Him, love ourselves, and love our neighbors. We are able to love, that is, we are gifted with the capacity for love, to love in virtue of our creation by Love Himself. He loved us first so that we might love. Lastly, as His willing priests, our lives are made new again, reconstituted from the smallest cell out, gifted with the newest possible life available, the life of His Son. We are made Christ for others. We are the walking Word, the talking Word, the feeling, doing, working Word—priests forever now in an entirely sacrificial life of becoming perfectly His will in the flesh.
This young Jewish woman, given a choice by Gabriel, says YES to His will for her, and becomes the first Christian priest and prophet, the template from whom all of us as future priests and prophets will be pressed out. On the cross, dying for our sakes, the Lord himself follows his mother in saying yes. Abandoned by his friends, betrayed by one he loves, despairing, seemingly lost to pain and death, and believing himself to have been forsaken to his enemies, our Lord will cry out to His Father, “Yes! I will all that you will!” His life of perpetual sacrifice begins. This is what we long for. This is what we desire, what we need. Though we are constantly deflected and distracted in our priestly obligations to be love and to love others, we nonetheless know and feel the ineffable hollowness of a life that refuses to love, that wills not to be one for another.
Advent is one long Mass of Thanksgiving and Praise, a month-long prayer of rejoicing and sacrifice as we turn away from sin and toward our perfection in Christ. What must we do? Unclench your fist. Unlock your heart. Fling open wide your mind. Make straight the path of the Lord to your very existence. Say YES! And join Christ at the altar as priest and victim. He is coming. He has come. He will come again. Wait. Need. Desire. And the flood of God as the Gift of Love Himself will overwhelm you and make you Christ.
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15 December 2013
Make your heart firm by rejoicing
3rd Sunday of Advent/Gaudete
Sunday (A)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
As a newly oiled priest, I
served in campus ministry at the University of Dallas. Our office in
the student union was always roiling with activity. During the Advent
season, which arrives just before the end of the semester and finals
week, the liturgical energy of the office was always focused on
Christmas. Christmas music. Christmas decorations. Christmas chatter.
On occasion, frustrated with such blatant liturgical incorrectness, I
would growl something anti-Christmas from my office-cave and remind
everyone that we were in Advent not Christmas. The students would
smile indulgently; murmur, “Yes, Father, we know,” and go right
back to their Christmasy chatter. I become known as The Advent Nazi,
or Friar Grinch. The only support afforded me in my lonely push to
keep Christmas out of Advent was James' letter “to the twelve
tribes in the dispersion,” where the apostle urges his
Jewish-Christian community: “Be patient, brothers and sisters,
until the coming of the Lord.” All of Advent is about patiently
waiting for the birth of Christ. Gaudete Sunday is all about
rejoicing, and rejoicing never waits!
So,
why do we celebrate Gaudete Sunday during Advent? Three words: joy,
expectation, revelation. Like Laetare
Sunday during Lent, Gaudete
Sunday breaks the fast of the season, giving us a peek at the coming
revelation of the Incarnation. These “times off” were more
welcomed in ages past. Fasting and abstinence were a bit more severe
and a Sunday spent partying a week before Christmas and Easter served
to relieve the burden of penance. Nowadays, we jump from Thanksgiving
straight to Christmas without much of anything in between. This is an
old complaint among us Advent Nazis, one that falls on ears deafened
by hypnotizing muzaked carols and the cha-ching of the cash register.
Those of us who push Advent as its own season usually fail in our
mission, managing only to foist upon Christmas-happy Catholics modest
concessions. I'm told again and again, “Stop being Father Grinch,
Father!” And with great pastoral sensitivity and an ear to the
popular mood, I usually just release an exasperated sigh and do my
best to preach that without a sense of expectation, waiting is
useless to our growth in holiness; without a sense of the hidden,
revelation has nothing to reveal; and without a little holy fear, joy
is just a mood-stabilizer for the bubble-headed.
Properly
understood then, Gaudete Sunday
is more than just a peek at the holiday to come; it is a
expectant-peek into the unveiling of our joy in Christ. We re-joice.
We en-joy. We can be joy-ful. Where do we find joy? Why do find joy
in this
but not that?
Why aren't we gladden by all that God has made? Why isn't everyone
joyful? St. Thomas gives us an important (if somewhat dry) insight:
“[. . .] joy is caused by love, either through the presence of the
thing loved, or because the proper good of the thing loved existed
and endures in it [. . .] Hence joy is not a virtue distinct from
charity, but an act, or effect, of charity”(ST
II-II 28.1, 4). Joy is an effect of love. Love causes joy. Where
there is no love, there can be no joy. This may sound simple enough,
but how often have you heard joy explicitly linked to the virtue of
charity? Don't we usually think of being joyful, as a temporary
emotional spike in an otherwise hum-drum existence? We move along the
day in a comfortable flat-line until something happens to us that
lifts our spirit, bumps the happy meter up a peg or two. Then the
line goes flat again, waiting for the next spike, for the next jump
to excite the bored soul.
This
waiting for another spike in joy is not what the Lord has in mind
when tells us that he has come so that our “joy may be complete.”
Complete joy is not intermittent joy, or
joy-for-some-time-in-the-future. Complete joy is perfected joy,
all-the-time-joy. This doesn't mean that we're supposed to be walking
around with idiot grins on our faces, or leaping about like squirrels
on speed. Remember: joy is caused by love. And, as followers of
Christ, we all know that loving God, others, and self is the First
Commandment. Being joyful then is a necessary corollary to this
command, its natural effect. If Thomas is right—and, of course, he
is—we can be perfectly joyful b/c the “presence of the thing
loved” (i.e., God) is guaranteed. He is with us always. Even during
Advent, while we wait for his arrival, he is with us. When James
writes, “Be patient, brothers and sisters, until the coming of the
Lord,” he knows that Christ never left and will come again. How is
our joy made perfect? By the perfect presence of the one we love. Our
waiting in Advent is practice; that is, a rehearsal meant to heighten
our anticipation for the renewal of creation, the renewal that both
Isaiah and Jesus prophesy as the mark of God's favor.
That
renewal goes well beyond my renewal, your renewal, and the renewal of
the entire human race. Though we are privileged in many ways as
creatures created in His image and likeness, God's favor is
universal, repairing every deficiency; healing every wound; and
making straight the crooked paths to His righteousness. Isaiah sees
the land itself rejoicing at the Lord's return: “The desert and the
parched land will exult; the steppe will rejoice and bloom. They will
bloom with abundant flowers, and rejoice with joyful song.” When
John's disciples ask Jesus about his ministry, Jesus replies, “Go
and tell John what you hear and see: the blind regain their sight,
the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are
raised. . .” In the presence of God, nothing broken, thrown away,
disparaged, or lost remains unclaimed; no one hurt, hungry, poor, or
lonely remains untended. There is nothing to fear, nothing worth
fearing. Therefore, Isaiah says, “Strengthen your feeble hands,
steady your weak knees, encourage those with frightened hearts: Be
strong, fear not! Here is your God! He comes with vindication; with
divine justice He comes to save you.”
And
save you He will, if you will to be saved. Ask to be saved and be
patient. Wait upon the Lord. James writes, “See how the farmer
waits for the precious fruit of the earth, being patient with it
until it receives the early and the late rains. You too must be
patient.” How does the farmer wait on the rain? He does everything
necessary before the rain arrives, everything necessary so that the
rain can do its best work for his benefit. The farmer's waiting is
never merely passive. He waits, but he works while he waits. James
says, “Make your hearts firm, because the coming of the Lord is at
hand.” That's our work while we wait: making our hearts firm. .
.not hard but firm. A firm heart never faints in fear, or flutters
with impatience, or races with undue excitement. A firm heart beats
with steady, consistent joy in the loving presence of God; a firm
heart is always pointed toward the Lord and never forgets the Way of
righteousness. Waiting—especially waiting upon the Lord—is good
exercise for the heart. We wait for a revelation at Christmas, the
unveiling of the Christ Child, Emmanuel. Tonight, we rejoice b/c he
is with us even now. We rejoice b/c he arrives. . .again. And our
renewal, the renewal of all of creation is at hand! “Those whom the
Lord has ransomed will return. . .crowned with everlasting joy; they
will meet with joy and gladness, and sorrow and mourning will flee.”
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Procrastination Music, or Sing Me Another Nap
My taste in music is a lot like my taste in movies. . .Kinda Redneck.
I don't buy CD's or download mp3's. Mostly, I just listen to standard urban radio and that means Top 40 stuff.
If I'm reading, I will listen to something incredibly pretentious like Japanese lutes or Russian Orthodox chant.
I do like some alternative music, but so much of it has passed me by since I stopped paying attention. Past favs: The Smiths, Sonic Youth, New Order.
In an effort to catch-up I surfed around YouTube (instead of grading papers, composing spring semester syllabi, or writing a Gaudete Sunday homily) and found something I really like.
This link will take you to a music mix-up that features songs from 20+ contemporary groups that fall roughly into what's being called "post-rock."
The music is ambient and somewhat unsettling at times. Lots of piano, violins, soft vocals, etc.
One of the bands I particularly like is Mogwai, a group out of Glascow.
NB. When I listen to the music mix-up linked above, I minimize the YouTube screen and just listen. . .so, the vids that accompany the music could be inappropriate or offensive in some way. I've never seen them.
______________________NB. When I listen to the music mix-up linked above, I minimize the YouTube screen and just listen. . .so, the vids that accompany the music could be inappropriate or offensive in some way. I've never seen them.
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13 December 2013
Wise Works Vindicate
“.
. .wisdom is vindicated by her works” (Matthew 11.19)
Ever
practical and very much aware of our human frailties, Jesus dares us
to do more than simply be wise. He dares us to work wisely, or to
accomplish wise works. The phrase “wisdom is vindicated by her
works” is comparable to “without works faith is dead.” While
wisdom and faith are different virtues, the works that complete each
virtue look very much alike. The difference might be that while good
works show faith, wise works vindicate wisdom.
Generally, we use “vindicate” to mean something like “to right
a wrong.” However, an obsolete use of the word makes much more
sense here: “to set free.” Consider: “wisdom is set free
by her works,” or “wisdom is let loose by her works.” In
the context of Jesus' remarks in Matthew, this rendition helps us to
understand that the false charges being made against the Lord will be
seen as false once his wisdom is set free/let loose by his wise
works. The question is: who among his enemies then and among us even now have
the eyes to see and the ears to hear the wisdom of his words and deeds?
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12 December 2013
Hear Elizabeth say to you. . .
NB. I partially chickened-out. The first part of this homily will be improvised.
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
[Vocation
story: encounter at the Altar of the Kings, National Cathedral in
Mexico City, 1981.]
How
do you hear God's Word spoken to you? When God sends word to you,
when He calls out your name and picks you up to accomplish His will,
how
do you hear Him? Mary hears and sees an angel. Elizabeth hears and
sees Mary. John, still in his mother's womb, leaps with joy at just
being near the Lord. Mary, Elizabeth, John all respond viscerally to
the Word; that is, not only are they moved spiritually—their souls
lightened, hearts and minds brightened—their viscera, their guts
are churned, stirred up. In the presence of the Word and at his
approach, these servants of God are snared; they are toiled-up-in the
embracing glory of their Savior. From her divine trap, Elizabeth
prophesies to Mary: “Blessed are you who believed that what was
spoken to you by the Lord would be fulfilled.” How do you hear the
Word spoken to you?
Now,
it's highly unlikely that any of us will be visited by Gabriel, or
run across a burning bush, or hear Christ speak to us from a
crucifix. That these miraculous events are improbable shouldn't
prevent us from waiting on the Word. Waiting requires patience; it
requires silence. Waiting—especially waiting on the Word—also
requires perseverance, a long, hard dedication to sticking with it,
staying firmly balanced btw Doing the Will of the Lord Now and being
prepared to leap into Doing His Will Next. But more than anything
else, waiting on the Word demands that we surrender ourselves to the
inevitable strangeness of God's ways; that is, if we decide
beforehand how
we will hear Him, we may never hear Him. Leave aside for the moment
the need to forget what we think we ought to hear Him say and focus
on the way we expect to hear. Mary, Elizabeth, John all hear and see
the glory of their Savior in different ways. Abraham, Moses, Elijah
hear and see the same Word spelled in radically different ways. What
they all recognize in the Word is joy. Not simply an emotional
elation or a fleeting thrill but the lightness and brightness, the
pleasure of just being near the source of the Father's mercy.
While
you balance btw Now and What Comes Next, open yourself to joy, open
yourself to the visceral punch of delight that our Lord will swing
your way. Do this and you will hear Elizabeth say to you, “Blessed
are you who believe that what is spoken to you by the Lord is
fulfilled.”
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11 December 2013
Do you believe that His word is fulfilled?
NB. I will be the principal celebrant at tomorrow's NDS Mass. Right now I'm planning on preaching w/o a text. . .who knows, I may chicken out in the morning. Here's a OLG homily from 2011.
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
Just last week—on the solemnity of the Immaculate Conception—we heard
the archangel Gabriel declare to Mary, “Hail, full of grace! Blessed are
you among women for you have found favor with God.” Tonight we read
about Mary's visit to her elderly cousin, Elizabeth, a woman who's been
barren her whole life and is now pregnant with John the Baptist. When
Mary greets her cousin, John leaps with joy in his mother's womb. And
Elizabeth, in a fit of wonder and faith confirms the angel's greeting to
Mary, “Most blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of
your womb. . .Blessed are you [Mary] who believed that what was spoken
to you by the Lord would be fulfilled.” Do you, like Mary, believe that
what is spoken to you by the Lord will be fulfilled? And if you believe,
do you act in the world as one who has been spoken to by God?
Elizabeth proclaims Mary “blessed” b/c she—Mary—believed what was spoken
to her by the Lord would be fulfilled. And b/c she believes His word,
she submits her will to the will of God and now carries in her womb the
Word made flesh. For centuries, almost since the very beginning, the
Church has held our Blessed Mother up as the model of Christian service,
the model of what it means to say Yes to the Father's invitation to
allow His Word to take root in the human soul. If Mary is the model of
the faithful Church; and the Church is the Body of Christ; and we are
all members of that Body, then it follows that Mary's fiat—let it be
done to me according to His word—is also our response to the Father's
invitation to welcome and allow His Word to take root in each one of us.
If we hear this invitation and raise our own fiat, then Elizabeth's
praise of Mary is also her praise for us: “Blessed are those who believe
that what is spoken to them by the Lord will be fulfilled.” Likewise,
Mary's response to Elizabeth's praise is our response as well, “My soul
proclaims the greatness of the Lord; my spirit rejoices in God my
savior.”
Does your soul proclaim the Lord's greatness? Does your spirit rejoice
in your Savior? We can all understand why Mary would sing out like
this. She's been visited by an archangel. She's been given the Son of
God as her child. She's been favored above all women and called blessed.
She's got every reason to say that her soul proclaims God's greatness
and that her spirit rejoices in her Savior. Why would any of us repeat
her proclamation? We've not been visited by an angel or given birth to
the Word made flesh or been called blessed and most favored. Oh, but we
have. Not in the same way that Mary was, but we have most certainly been
given the Word made flesh and blood in the sacrament. And we've heard
His Word spoken many, many times at Mass. The question is: do we believe
that His Word will be fulfilled? Do we act in the world in a way that
demonstrates our belief? If we do, then our souls do proclaim the
greatness of God and our spirits do rejoice in our Savior. If you don't,
if you don't believe and act on His Word, then there is a way to get
right with God. Confession, repentance, and penance: receiving in the
sacrament of confession the forgiveness won for us by the Cross and
Empty Tomb.
Sin is the principal means used by the Enemy to prevent us from giving
God his dutiful worship and from carrying out our vow to be Christs in
the world. Plain and simple. Sin. Disobedience. The Enemy tempts, and we
fall. But falling is never a reason to stay fallen. Get back up and
receive all that Christ died to freely give you. God loves you and wants
you to participate in His divine life. But He will not coerce you; He
will not dominate or intimidate us into living with Him. He invites,
seduces, exhorts, all but pleads. Confess, repent, and do penance so
that you may follow Mary into blessedness.
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09 December 2013
Mary's Dangerous Yes
NB. My very first I.C. homily. . .2005:
Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Gen 3.9-15, 20; Eph 1.3-6, 11-12; Luke 1.26-38
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Madonna Hall, University of Dallas
Gen 3.9-15, 20; Eph 1.3-6, 11-12; Luke 1.26-38
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Madonna Hall, University of Dallas
It
is the most dangerous announcement ever made: “Hail, full of grace! The
Lord is with you.” The angel Gabriel, sent by God to Mary, greets the
virgin by telling her that she is most graced, wholly blessed, chosen,
and attended by the Lord. Very, very dangerous. And Mary knew this: “But
she was greatly troubled…” Greatly troubled?! Troubled…and wise. Mary
pondered the angelic greeting with dread. She understood that this
particular, unique grace picked her out of all God’s creatures. She
understood that receiving an angel from the Lord meant a mission, a
purpose beyond a mortal end, a life for her of singular graces, an
honored life of doing the Father’s will for His glory. Dangerous? You
bet!
Mary
is being asked by the Lord to serve as bearer of the world’s salvation,
the vessel of the Word, and the Mother of a nation redeemed. Saying yes
to this places her at that moment in time, that instant of human
history where the Divine takes on flesh, sets out toward selfless
sacrifice, and heals us all. In her ministry to all creation, the virgin
gives her body, her will, for the rest of us so that the Infinite Word
might speak Itself as a Finite Word and gather us together into a single
heart, a single mind, one voice in witness to the mercy and forgiveness
of the Lord.[1]
She is the mother of our salvation, the perfected vessel of our eternal
healing. Mary is a preacher of the gospel, the first preacher of the
Word—the most dangerous job there is.
When
we took on the responsibility of bearing the Word to the world—when we
became preachers—we took on the dangers of opposing all that the world
worships as good. Speaking the Word of Truth against the Lie riles up
the worst resentments and the most violent frustrations of those in the
world who resent Mary’s Yes, who resent the gift of the Christ Child,
and who turn their faces against his invitation to participate in the
Divine Life. The danger for us here is twofold: 1) that we are punished
as the causes of the resentment and frustration among those who reject
the Word and 2) that we succumb to the temptation to see these people as
hopeless, beyond reach, and deserving of temporal punishment. The
first—that we are blamed—is becoming common enough. The second—our
judgment of others—is scandalously common and unworthy of the
virgin-child who made our own Yes possible.
The
Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception is first a celebration of the
Incarnation of the Son of God as man. Mary’s dangerous Yes to God
prepares the way of the Lord, make possible his advent in creation, and
establishes her as the first preacher of the Word. Her clean conception
in the womb of her mother points us unswervingly to God’s mercy,
unswervingly to God’s invitation to bear His Word to the world with
unyielding charity, steely will, and the mercy of truth.
We
can meet the dangers of violent opposition and avoid the dangers of
judging others by submitting ourselves in both cases to the ministry of
the handmaid: “Lord, let your will be done in me according to your
Word.”
[1] See Prayer, Hans Urs von Balthasar, 157.
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Recommended Books for Catholics
The second most often asked question to a Dominican friar -- the first being: how do you keep that white habit clean?! -- is: "Friar, can you recommend a good book on ___________?"
I usually have at least one book in mind for most occasions.
This morning I ran across an excellent list of recommended books on all things theological, philosophical, cultural, and scientific!
Check it out: Recommended Books for Catholics
The science section doesn't include any recommendations from John Polkinghorne, my Ph.L. thesis topic. So, check him out too.
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08 December 2013
Make straight the path
2nd Sunday of Advent (A)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of Rosary, NOLA
What
does John come to do? When he walks out of the wilderness—a wild
man, a prophet of God—what is his mission? Isaiah tells us, “A
voice of one crying out in the desert, 'Prepare the way of the Lord,
make straight his paths.'” John is that voice. Eight-hundred years
after Isaiah prophesied the coming of a desert-voice, John arrives to
proclaim, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!” Turn
around. Go back. Get yourself right. The King is coming! Receive
baptism with water to wash yourself clean and mark yourself
repentant. Why? “Even now,” John preaches, “the ax lies at the
root of the trees. Therefore every tree that does not bear good fruit
will be cut down and thrown into the fire.” What does John come to
do? When he walks out of the wilderness—a wild man, a prophet of
God—what is his mission? John's mission, our mission is to make
straight the path for the Lord; to straighten the path to our hearts
by repenting of our sins. Are you ready for the King's arrival?
John
warns us that when the King arrives, “he will baptize you with the
Holy Spirit and fire.” That image—the fire of the Holy Spirit and
the fire of judgment—should both comfort us and frighten us. John
makes it clear that upon his arrival the King will sit in judgment:
“He will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into his
barn, but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.” That's
the frightening part b/c we have to ask ourselves: am I wheat, or am
I chaff? The better question, the comforting question is: do I want
to be wheat or chaff? Do I want to be gathered into the Lord's barn,
or do I want to burn in a unquenchable fire? Asked that way, the
answer seems obvious! “Well, duh, of course I want to be among the
wheat that's gathered into the Lord's barn!” But we can say that
and still think and speak and behave as if we long to be consumed in
the fires of judgment. As primitive as this scenario may sound to our
sophisticated 21st
century
ears, the fact is, God loves us and will honor our daily decisions to
live apart from Him. And He will honor those decisions forever.
Thus, John, fulfilling his mission as a prophet of repentance, calls
us back to the Way, back to the path of righteousness so that our
hearts and minds can faithfully follow Christ. The choice is ours to
make. Repent and prepare the way of the Lord, or carry on in
disobedience and prepare the way to an eternal death.
This
is the choice that John gives the Pharisees and Sadducees who come to
be baptized by him. He confronts them squarely with the discrepancy
btw their desire for baptism and their words and deeds: “You brood
of vipers!” he yells, “Who warned you to flee from the coming
wrath?” Now, it's not clear why these upstanding religious figures
were coming to a disreputable wild man like John for baptism. Maybe
they saw his popularity and hoped to cash in on it, or perhaps they
saw an opportunity to siphon off some of his followers. Maybe they
heard his preaching and sincerely desired to repent. Regardless, John
doesn't receive them well. He accuses them of ignoring God's prophets
of old and of living in hypocrisy. To remedy their offense, he
demands that their behavior match their intention. He shouts at them:
“Produce good fruit as evidence of your repentance.” And just in
case that they believe their status as descendents of Abraham will
save them, he adds, “God can raise up children to Abraham from
these stones.” From all this shouting we know two truths: first,
good intentions w/o good behavior are useless; and second, who we are
matters not at all when it comes to the final judgment. We are all
judged according to our deeds.
This
shouldn't worry us at all b/c bearing good fruit comes easy to the
followers of Christ, right? I mean, as men and women imbued with the
Holy Spirit in water and fire, we live and breath as members of the
Body of Christ. So, we have nothing much to worry about.
Unfortunately, we all know the disappointment of intending the good
while doing evil. The idea that we can want one thing while working
for its exact opposite doesn't surprise us, does it? It's an almost
universal human failing. We want to grow in holiness, yet
consistently make choices that keep us from using His gifts. We want
to stay away from sin, yet we constantly put ourselves near
temptation. It's almost as if we can see the perfection we desire but
believe that it is beyond our reach, beyond our merely human means to
acquire. Well, the perfection we long for is
beyond our merely human means to acquire! So are the good works that
John the Baptist tells us we must do as evidence of our repentance.
Bearing the good fruits of the Holy Spirit doesn't come naturally to
us b/c the gifts required to produce those good fruits are
supernatural. When we bear good fruit we do so only b/c we are
cooperating with the supernatural gifts given to us by God.
What
are those gifts? Isaiah tells us when describing the promised
Messiah, “. . .a spirit of wisdom
and of understanding,
a spirit of counsel
and of strength,
a spirit of knowledge
and of fear
of the Lord,
and his delight
shall be the fear of the Lord.” Wisdom is the gift that allows us
to know and love the things of God more than the things of man.
Understanding perfects our ability to judge the truth against the
lies of the world. Counsel makes it possible for us to distinguish
right from wrong and to choose the right. The gift of strength
empowers us to stand for what it is true, good, and beautiful against
all assaults. The gift of knowledge gives us a glimpse of the divine
in creation, revealing the hand of God in His works. Fear of the Lord
is the gift of awe in His majesty, and to delight in that awe is gift
of reverence. These gifts of the Holy Spirit perfect and strengthen
the virtues we receive at baptism: faith, hope, and charity. Now, you
may ask: Isaiah is describing the gifts that the Messiah will
exhibit, what do those gifts have to do with us? They have everything
to do with us b/c we have been baptized into the death and
resurrection of Christ. What gifts he received from the Father, we
receive as his brothers and sisters. He used these gifts to teach and
preach the Good News of God's mercy. Now we follow him.
And
we follow him best by heeding his herald, John. What does John come
to do? When he walks out of the wilderness—a wild man, a prophet of
God—what is his mission? He is charged with proclaiming a simple,
prophetic message: “Repent and prepare the way of the Lord!” Are
you ready? Is the path to your heart and mind straight and level? Are
you prepared to received Christ the King? You have everything you
could possibly need. You know and love God. You can tell the
difference btw good and evil. You can judge rightly and chose wisely.
You have the strength to resist temptation and fight the good fight.
You can stand in awe of God and offer Him the worship that is His
due. What do you think you might lack? What gift do you believe you
still need? While we remain in this time of preparation, we can spend
some time in sacrifice—make some of our time holy—by offering our
weaknesses and failures to God. We can resolve to make better use of
His freely given gifts. We can grow in humility and make ourselves
better vessels to receive His Holy Spirit. The Kingdom of God is at
hand. Repentance is the first step, but it is not the last. You must
prepare His way, make straight and level the path to your heart and
your mind. The King of Glory is coming.
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Vocations soaring in faithful dioceses and orders
Why are vocations to the priesthood soaring in some dioceses and religious orders?
It's NOT b/c those dioceses and orders are worshiping in the Temple of the Zeitgeist, or worse, polluting the faith with hokey New Age drivel.
It's NOT b/c those bishops and superiors have decided to make the ministerial priesthood invisible by discouraging clerical garb and habits.
It's NOT b/c those bishops and superiors have latched on to bogus theologies and ideologies designed to undermine the uniqueness of the faith.
It's NOT b/c psychotherapy and PC jargon have replaced virtue and religious formation.
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"I am only a man: I need visible signs."
The Second Sunday of Advent is our time to acknowledge and celebrate the Gifts of the Holy Spirit. . .in that spirit, here's a poem by the Polish-Lithuanian Catholic poet, Czeslaw Milosz from 1961.
Veni Creator
Come, Holy Spirit,
bending or not bending the grasses,
appearing or not above our heads in a tongue of flame,
at hay harvest or when they plough in the orchards or when snow
covers crippled firs in the Sierra Nevada.
I am only a man: I need visible signs.
I tire easily, building the stairway of abstraction.
Many a time I asked, you know it well, that the statue in church
lifts its hand, only once, just once, for me.
But I understand that signs must be human,
therefore call one man, anywhere on earth,
not me—after all I have some decency—
and allow me, when I look at him, to marvel at you.
(Translated By Czeslaw Milosz and Robert Pinsky)
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06 December 2013
Miscellany. . .
First semester of NDS classes are over!
Finals next week. . .for the seminarians. For me, a week of preaching tutorials and formation advisee meetings.
I was greatly relieved yesterday to discover that I do not have to trudge down to the Criminal Courthouse on Friday the 13th to serve on a jury. Turns out, all I needed to do was register on-line and wait on a summons to arrive at some future date.
A particularly persuasive transitional deacon at NDS snookered me into serving as a chaperone for a busload of teenaged pilgrims to the March for Life in DC in Jan 2014. I'm thinking that should be worth several thousands of years off my purgatory debt, right?
Going downtown to the Roosevelt Hotel today for a silent auction/Christmas fundraising lunch for NDS. We'll celebrate Mass at the historic Immaculate Conception Church on Barrone.
Headed to MS to celebrate Christmas with the Squirrels on the 19th. Oh, and I'll spend some time with the Parentals and the Extended Familials and well. Since the advanced seminar didn't make for the Spring, I can spend all that reading time on historical novels and spiritual reading. . .instead of dreary books about nihilism.
Happy Advent everyone!
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03 December 2013
Evangelii gaudium, or the morality of money
I've been contemplating the swirl of controversial issues raised by the Holy Father's exhortation, Evangelii gaudium, esp. the economic issues.
Setting aside problems with the Spanish-to-English translation and the hermeneutical lens of Francis' experience with Argentinian crony-capitalism (Peronism), the bottom-line for me is this: there is no such thing as an economic system that doesn't need a moral foundation to guarantee the dignity of the human person.
The role of the Church is to evangelize the culture so that the economy respects human dignity, both the dignity of the individual and human dignity in general.
Dr. Jeff Mirus puts it well:
The Church has very little interest in questions of economic theory per se. She does not seek to explain how money works, but how morality works.
For example, insofar as socialism carries within it a denial of the
freedom and dignity of the person, by completely subjecting ownership
and economic activity to the control of the State, socialism comes in
for criticism and even condemnation. And insofar as the theory of
capitalism is used to render personal moral economic decisions
irrelevant in the face of allegedly inexorable economic laws, then
capitalism also comes in for criticism and even condemnation. In broader
and far less purely theoretical strokes, we can paint socialism to
include all systems of exploitative government intervention, and
capitalism to include all exploitation of the mechanisms of markets and
finance. Moreover, when the rich miraculously develop political power
and the politicians miraculously grow rich (as seems to happen within
all systems), then a predictable and self-serving theoretical posturing
becomes even more poisonous.
Crony-capitalism or Wall Street socialism is perhaps the most insidious combination of our two most popular economic systems.
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