"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
11 August 2014
10 August 2014
Doubting Peter's doubt
19th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Peter is having a hard week. Our Lord has called him “Satan” and described him as an obstacle. Then there's the whole failed exorcism episode where the disciples' faith is too weak to drive out a demon. Today, Peter nearly falls into the sea b/c his faith is too small. Pulling him back from the drink, Jesus asks Peter, “Why did you doubt?” Peter doesn't answer, so we're left with the accusing question. Is this fair to Peter? Is it fair to accuse him of being a doubter? Keep in mind: it's Peter who, seeing Jesus walking on the sea, yells out, “Lord, if it is you, command me to come to you on the water.” Yes, there's some doubt in there – “if it is you” – but it still takes some pretty solid faith and courage to test Jesus' power with one's own life. Peter had no way of knowing whether or not the “ghost” he was seeing was really the Lord. Of course, the accusation of doubt against Peter comes only after he's on the water and the sea becomes rough. Fearing for his life, Peter yells out, “Lord, save me!” Where's the doubt? Even knowing that he is looking at the Lord, Peter thinks that he has to ask Jesus to save him. As if Jesus had not already done so.
Let's dig a bit deeper into Peter's doubt and ask the unasked question: what is Peter doubting? If we take doubt to mean something like “a failure to trust” or “a hesitancy to believe,” then there has to be someone we are failing to trust, or something we are hesitating to believe. Our gospel scene strongly suggests that Peter's near demise in the rough sea is caused by his lack of trust in Jesus; he hesitates for just a second to believe in Jesus' love for him. Is this the failure that nearly kills him? If so, then why does he immediately cry out, “Lord, save me!” Why cry out for help to the very person whose power you are doubting? In other words, if Peter is doubting Jesus, why turn to him for rescue? Yelling out for Christ's help when in peril seems to be an exemplary expression of faith in Christ. So, again, who is Peter doubting? Consider this: Jesus has called Peter “Satan;” described him as an obstacle; and rebuked him for his small faith. Despite all of these indications that the Lord is somehow displeased with Peter, Jesus establishes his Church on Peter and gives him the keys to the kingdom. Is it possible that Peter is experiencing just a little confusion about who he is? Maybe Peter – in a moment of panic – fails to trust in the faith he has been given. Peter doubts his own strength in Christ.
Think about your own relationship with God. There have been times when you doubted. Doubt creeps in a like a noxious bayou fog no matter how tight we think we are with God. Think about that doubt and ask: was I really doubting God's love for me? I mean, did I really think that Love Himself stopped loving me personally? Or was I really worried about the strength of my own love for Him? See, God is Love, so His love for us is a universal given. He loves us b/c Love is Who He is. And though we are made to love Him, we are also made with a built-in free will that is subject to sin. When doubt wiggles its way into our relationship with God, more often than not – if we're honest and thorough – we can trace that doubt back to a lack of confidence in our own “small faith,” back to our own anxiety about whether or not we are truly in love with God. When the sea gets rough and Peter panics, he does what any one of us here tonight would do: he calls on Jesus for help! That call, that cry for rescue isn't a sign that Peter doubts Christ's power to rescue him; it's a sign that he needs a stronger sense of himself as a man already rescued. How strong is your sense of yourself as a man or woman already rescued by the power of Christ?
God knows we are limited creatures. Prone to making mistakes and even intentionally doing evil things. Part of being limited is needing to be reminded over and over again that we are loved by Love Himself. We forget that w/o His love we do not exist. Literally, God's love is what hold us in being. At those moments when we forget that His love holds us in being, we also tend to forget that we experience His love for us as caring attention. The $15 theological term is divine providence – God provides; He makes provision for us. He supplies all that we need. That we think we need all sort of things that we don't really need and never receive is not His problem. Strip away greedy wanting and lusting longing and all need is exactly what God provides – His love. So, when we forget that He loves us, when we forget – even for a split second – that we live, move, and have our being in His love, our confidence fails and doubt runs wild and free on the playground of our souls. Left unchecked, doubt will play and play and play until a moment's lapse in faith becomes a lifetime of anxiety and despair. What doubts needs to flourish is a soul that forgets that it is loved, rescued, and freed from sin and death.
When the disciples first see the ghostly figure walking toward them on the water, “they were terrified. . .and they cried out in fear.” Why are they afraid? They are the hand-picked students of the Messiah. They are the foundation stones of the apostolic faith. Of all living souls at the time, these men should have been the strongest in faith, the least likely to flinch at the unknown. But upon seeing something they do not understand, they squeal and tremble. Jesus has to yell out to them, “Take courage, it is I; do not be afraid.” The disciples' reaction on the sea could be seen as an embarrassing admission that they are cowards at heart. But like man, woman, or child who draws a breath, they are limited creatures, prone to forgetting who they are in Christ. So, Christ reminds them they are his: “Strengthen your heart, it is I; do not fear.” When a weakened heart is strengthened, the whole body is strengthened. When a weakened faith is renewed, the whole person is renewed. The disciples' fear, their small confidence in who they are as men of Christ sent them spiraling into doubt. It's almost as if they didn't know that they had already been rescued from the storm of sin and death.
How about you: do you know that you have already been rescued from the storm of sin and death? Do you know that whatever disaster strikes, whatever fear grips you in a moment, that God loves you and will provide for you? He might not provide what you think you need or want, but He will provide all that you need to return His love. If your confidence fails – even for a split second – do what Peter did and cry out: “Lord, save me!” That's enough to remind you that you are already saved in Christ. It's just enough to strengthen your heart, to slay the doubt, and return you to knowing again the love that God always gives. Remember what Elijah discovers about the Lord – He's not in the tornado, the earthquake, or the fire. He's in the small, still voice, a voice that forever whispers, “Take courage, it is I; I am with you always.”
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Acrylic Procrastination
I am the Platonic Form of Procrastination from which all lesser forms of procrastination emanate.
Having written three pages of today's homily, I decided to reward myself by watching one of my favorite artists on Youtube, Gerda Lipski.
I invite you to receive my Procrastination Emanation by clicking on this link.
Yes, she's German. No, I don't understand a word she's saying.
However, she does some amazing things with acrylic paint.
For example, I've watched this vid three or four times. Amazing.
Oh, I learned today that Haushaltsspiritus is German for rubbing alcohol.
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Am I being harassed, or am I just crazy?
Sitting here contemplating today's Mass readings and wondering if I will ever come up with an opening sentence for the homily, I am plagued by a mosquito or a no-see-um.
It lands on my leg, buzzes around just out of sight, or flashes across my computer screen.
As I vainly search for the little bugger, a scene from The Simpson's pops into my head. . .
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09 August 2014
Exercise faith, don't measure it. . .
18th Week OT (S)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
How
embarrassing for the disciples! Imagine their chagrin. Despite their
time with Jesus and their love for him, they can't manage a simple
exorcism. While they blush and shuffle their feet, our Lord, sounding
disappointed and out-of-sorts, rails at them, “O faithless and
perverse generation, how long will I be with you? How long will I
endure you?” Faithless and perverse?! Well, that's hardly pastoral.
Not very shepherd-like, is it? And then we have that sarcastic
rhetorical question: how long will he
endure us?
Seriously, who's “enduring” whom here? We're trying to learn, so
we ask, “Why couldn't we exorcise this guy?” After yelling at us
for the ineffectiveness of our “little faith,” he tells us that
all it takes to move mountains is to “have faith the size of a
mustard seed.” Those things are tiny! Again, seriously, who's
enduring whom? Cryptic parables, weird prophecies, inconsistent
proverbs, novel prayers. And he expects us to get all this – snap!
– like that. Tell us, Lord, what's the difference btw “having
little faith” and “having faith the size of a mustard seed”?
The problem isn't the size of our faith. The problem is that we don't
know what faith is.
Consider
the mustard seed. About 2mm in diameter. Barely larger than a single
grain of sand. Less than half of cup of these seeds contains 25g of
protein. That's more protein than we find in a 3oz steak. That same
half cup contains almost 20g of monounsaturated fat – the good fat
that reduces bad cholesterol and increases good cholesterol. Rich in
B vitamins and trace metals like iron, calcium, and zinc, that half
cup provides nearly 15g of dietary fiber. The mustard seed is a
powerhouse of excellent nutrition! So, what do these fascinating
nutritional facts have to do with our faith? The size of our faith –
big, small, long, or short – has nothing to do with the power of
our faith, the ability of our faith to accomplish great things. Faith
is not measurable in ounces, feet, pounds, or grams. “More faith”
does not mean “better faith.” When Jesus tells us that “faith
the size of a mustard seed” can move mountains, he's not measuring
the diameter of faith and telling us to collect more seeds. A gallon
jug of mustard seeds sitting idly in a pantry can do nothing for high
cholesterol, or protein deficiency, or constipation. For those seeds
to unleash their full nutritional potential, they must be consumed
and allowed to do their natural best. And so it is with faith.
The
supernatural gift of trusting in God is not a thing to be possessed.
Like a watch or a pair of shoes. Faith* is a disposition, a
temperament; it's a good habit, an instilled inclination to turn
ourselves toward God and rely on His love for us to do the work He's
given us to do. Our tendency to think of faith in terms of measurable
amounts is understandable. We say things like “my faith isn't
strong enough,” or “I need a larger faith.” But this way of
speaking about faith pushes us into the same problem the disciples
encounter this morning. If we rely on the size or weight of our faith
to accomplish great things, then we will end in failure every time.
If, however, we rely solely on the love of the Father to provide and
care for us; if we surrender entirely to His will; if we receive the
gift of trusting in Him and exercise this gift like a triathlete at
an Olympic gym, mountains will be the smallest things we can move. We
can be moved from our fallen human nature, from our inclinations
towards disobedience and death and onto our graced end – eternal
life. Exercise faith like a vital muscle. Tend it like a
prize-winning orchid. And refuse to measure it by the ounces and
inches of this world.
* For those with a more analytical mind, here's a definition of faith from the Catholic Encyclopedia, 1909. "The foregoing analyses will enable us to define an act of Divine supernatural faith as "the act of the intellect assenting to a Divine truth owing to the movement of the will, which is itself moved by the grace of God" (St. Thomas, II-II, Q. iv, a. 2). And just as the light of faith is a gift supernaturally bestowed upon the understanding, so also this Divine grace moving the will is, as its name implies, an equally supernatural and an absolutely gratuitous gift. Neither gift is due to previous study neither of them can be acquired by human efforts, but "Ask and ye shall receive."
* For those with a more analytical mind, here's a definition of faith from the Catholic Encyclopedia, 1909. "The foregoing analyses will enable us to define an act of Divine supernatural faith as "the act of the intellect assenting to a Divine truth owing to the movement of the will, which is itself moved by the grace of God" (St. Thomas, II-II, Q. iv, a. 2). And just as the light of faith is a gift supernaturally bestowed upon the understanding, so also this Divine grace moving the will is, as its name implies, an equally supernatural and an absolutely gratuitous gift. Neither gift is due to previous study neither of them can be acquired by human efforts, but "Ask and ye shall receive."
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08 August 2014
How beautiful are your feet?
NB. Deacon John is preaching at this morning's Mass. . .so, here's a 2010 homily for Dominic's feast day.
Solemnity of St. Dominic
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
Audio File
Brothers and sisters, I would begin this morning with a question: are
your feet beautiful? Up and down the mountains, do you walk with
beautiful feet? If you bring glad tidings; announce the Lord's peace;
bear his good news; and proclaim salvation through his mercy; if you
raise a cry of joy; break into song; rejoice at his marvelous deeds; and
give witness to the Lord restoring his people, then your feet are
indeed beautiful. Your feet are beautiful b/c they bring you among us
as a preacher of the Good News! A prophet of the Lord's salt and light,
his blessing and fire. Are your feet beautiful? In word and deed, do
you bring his Good News to the world? Do you rejoice, sing, give
witness, bear his glad tidings? Are you Christ-for-others out there?
We collect ourselves together this morning for one purpose: to become
more like Christ than we were yesterday. To accomplish this, we will
pray in thanksgiving; hear his Word proclaimed and preached; and we will
eat and drink his Body and Blood from the altar. Then we will go out
there and present ourselves to the world as evidence, as living,
breathing testimony to the truth of the Gospel. We are sons and
daughters of the Father. Brothers and sisters to Christ. And with St.
Dominic, we are preachers of the Good News!
Whether we know it or not, we are all preachers. Through baptism, we
were all made priests, prophets, and kings along with Christ. Now,
let's be honest: some of us are better at preaching than others; all of
us have good preaching days and bad ones. There are times when being a
witness for the mercy of God is more aggravating than it is delightful.
The burden of forgiving those who hate us can be crushing. Most of the
time, the temptation to dive into the flow of the world and revel in
passion is overwhelming. No Christian who wakes up to an ordinary day
can deny that following Christ out there can test one's patience,
endurance, and resolve. It would be easier not to bother, safer to just
walk away. Jesus knows this, and this is why he says to us, “You are
the salt of the earth. . .You are the light of the world.” Salt
preserves, enlivens, seasons. Light shines through the darkness,
reveals what's hidden. As his disciples, his students, we are charged
with being salt and light for one another and for the world. So, not
only are we to be preachers, we're to be bright, salty preachers of the
Good News!
Jesus knows all too well the realities of being a faithful servant of
the Father in this world. His life and death provide us with ample
evidence that preaching the Father's word of mercy is a dangerous gamble
for the preacher. Just being a Christian these days, even a bad
Christian, invites persecution and death. Look at the mass murder of
Christians in Nigeria, Sudan, Egypt, Afghanistan. There have been no car
bombs exploding outside American churches yet; however, militant
secular humanism, disguised as a human rights movement is building its
case against Christ and his Church in the U.S. Through bureaucratic
regulations, employment anti-discrimination laws, “hate speech” codes,
social engineering in the military, and the redefinition of marriage
through judicial fiat, the Church is being bullied out of the public
square and silenced as a voice for the least among us. Facing this
secular challenge as preachers of the Good News requires more than
political savvy and good media skills. It requires courage, strength,
perseverance, and, most of all, an absolute trust in God. Given all
this, Jesus warns us that though we are the salt of the earth and light
for the world, salt can lose its power to season, and a light can be
extinguished. How does this happen? How does salt become tasteless and
light become darkness?
To put the question more directly: how do we as faithful preachers of
the Good News become “go along to get along” pewsitters? The answer
lies in our reading this morning from Isaiah. If we fail to bring glad
tidings; fail to announce the Lord's peace; hide his good news under a
bushel basket; and only whisper about our salvation through his mercy;
if we stifle our cries of joy; break into griping, whining instead of
song; begrudge his marvelous deeds; and give witness to only to our
disappointment and despair, then our feet, the feet of Christ's
preachers, become anything but beautiful. Salt loses its taste when it
is stored too long, never used. The fire of the Spirit, its light will
dim and go dark unless it is fed. Like any normal human person, we are
all prone to being intimidated into silence by ideological opposition,
threats of violence and protests, ridicule, and public bullying. And
our courage and faithfulness are easily compromised by our sin.
Whatever joy we have, whatever elation we may want to express with
Christ can be beaten into hushed and private words. Being all too aware
of our own sinfulness, our own failings, we can easily be shamed into
taking our faith indoors, away from those who are all-too-ready to be
offended by it. We can find ways to accept the division of our public
and private selves and only show our acceptable faces outside these
walls. But when we do these things, we cease being preachers of the
Good News. We become dim lights and tasteless salt.
Jesus says that we are the salt of the earth and the light of the
world. He also says that salt can lose its power to season and light
its power to shine. What happens to the preacher who become tasteless
and dim? Jesus says, “. . .if salt loses its taste. . .It is no longer
good for anything but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot.” When we
are confronted by opposition to our preaching, to the proclamation of
the Good News with our words and deeds, we must remember that this world
passes away; it's nature is change. The kingdom of God is eternal,
unchanging. And if we hope at all upon the promises of God, we trust,
have full faith in the Spirit's guarantee that we will given what to
say, shown what to show when the Enemy sends for us. What we cannot do,
as preachers, is run after weak compromises, faithless accommodations,
and hope upon the temporary promises of this world's princes. Paul
encourages Timothy, “. . .proclaim the word; be persistent whether it is
convenient or inconvenient; convince, reprimand, encourage through all
patience and teaching.” Paul knows what Christ himself knew: that when
made to feel the heat of opposition, we are likely to ask for relief
from those who are stoking the fires. Paul writes, “For the time will
come when people will not tolerate sound doctrine. . .and will stop
listening to the truth and will be diverted to myths.” 21st century
myths abound! How tolerant are we of sound doctrine? Do we listen to
God's truth and preach it? Or do we beg for negotiation, hoping to just
be left alone?
Do you have the beautiful feet of a preacher? In word and deed, do you
bring his Good News to the world? Do you rejoice, sing, give witness,
bear his glad tidings? Are you Christ-for-others out there? We are
sons and daughters of the Father. Brothers and sisters to Christ. And
with St. Dominic, we are preachers of the Good News! In season and out,
convenient or inconvenient, shout it out: The Lord is king! And there
is no other!
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07 August 2014
Are you skilled in love?
NB. The annual repost of my St Dominic homily from 2007.
Solemnity of St. Dominic, Vespers: Phil 1.3-8
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
St Albert the Great Priory, Irving, TX
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Solemnity of St. Dominic, Vespers: Phil 1.3-8
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
St Albert the Great Priory, Irving, TX
We begin with an innocent question: are you skilled in love? Do you
possess the distinguishing talents, the connoisseur’s gifts for hunting,
finding, and cultivating love? If so, Paul is writing to you on this
evening feast of St. Dominic, “I am confident of this, that the one who
began a good work among you will bring it to completion…” In fact, he is
writing to all of us who are skilled in love, promising us the
achievement of the Good Work, a sterling finish to the gospel race we
have vowed to run. If we are to be graced love-makers, committed
craftsman of our Lord’s saving charity—looking to our Dominican brothers
and sisters: Jordan, Thomas, Catherine, Rose, Martin, fra. Angelico,
Margaret, Lacordaire—if we are to light even the smallest fire among the
wet woods of this wearying world, we will imprison our hearts and minds
in the gracious, re-creating Word, defending and confirming with every
word we speak the Good News of salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.
There is no joy for us in anything less. Our fiery brother, Savonarola,
preached the Lord’s Passion, saying, “Our preaching will be refined and
not refined, yet everyone can receive it, particularly those skilled in
love. Those who are not skilled will know their distance from Love.” And
that distance we must make our own and then travel to those who do not
yet know Love. Our sister, Catherine of Siena, preached this ministry,
saying, “The soul in love with [the Lord’s] truth never ceases to be of
service in a small enough way to all the world…” Surely, it is a small
enough way for us to walk, gifted as we are with the work of preaching
Christ Jesus and skilled in nothing less than giving voice and volume to
the advent of our Father’s Kingdom! We can find those who do not yet
know Love even when we ourselves forget to love, forget to be Love. From
our long history, we Dominicans know that it is never enough for us
merely to preach. We must be the preaching—with all our anxieties, human
quirks, tongue-tied failures, and even the occasional cold heart. The
sacred preaching is never just an imitation of Dominic. We do not
channel Hyacinth or Peter of Verona from the pulpit. Love shapes each
voice of the Word given the nature of the tongue that speaks it, so that
all the syllables of the Gospel will find their artful expression. And
all those skilled in love will hear One Word, One Voice, One Herald of
the Good News.
Lord, on this solemn feast of our Holy Father, Dominic, free us from the
silent death of fear and worry and jail us in your saving Word. Bring
to perfection the Good Work you have begun in us and take us with ready
hands and hearts to serve those who are not yet skilled in your Love.
Amen.
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Peter's failure is our warning. . .
18th Week OT (Th)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic, NOLA
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Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic, NOLA
The Lord says to Jeremiah that He will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah. He says that this new covenant will not be like the covenant He made with their fathers. This new covenant, He says, will be written upon their hearts, “I will be their God, and they shall be my people.” This is the covenant that Christ comes to establish, the covenant established in the heart of any man, woman, or child who confesses to him, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”
To confess that Jesus is the Christ is to be established as a partaker in the new covenant. That's how the covenant is established. But what does this new covenant look like in action? Jesus gives us a disturbing glimpse into the future of those of confess his name. He tells the disciples that he will go to Jerusalem, suffer greatly, get killed, and rise from the tomb on the third day. Understandably upset by this piece of news, Peter, blurts out, “God forbid, Lord! No such thing shall ever happen to you.” We might expect Jesus to smile knowingly at Peter's expression of distressed love. Or maybe reassure him that all will be well. What we don't expect is Jesus' actual response: “Get behind me, Satan! You are an obstacle to me. You are thinking not as God does, but as men do.”
Why does Jesus rebuke Peter so callously? Jesus knows two truths about his own end that Peter does not. His death and resurrection will seal the new covenant, freeing all of creation from the death of sin; and, anyone who partakes in the new covenant will serve, suffer, and end their lives on a cross. Peter's outburst tells us that he has yet to grasp the necessity of the cross, the absolute value of dying for the love of one's friends. To confess – “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” – is to make oneself a sacrifice for love. Peter is Satan b/c he tempts Jesus to forsake his sacrificial mission. Peter is an obstacle, a scandal b/c he places his love for Jesus in the way of God's love for all of creation. Peter is thinking as men do rather than as God does by clutching what he has on earth and forsaking what he has to gain in heaven.
But despite his miserable failure to see and understand the necessity of the cross, Peter is given is keys to the kingdom and made the rock of the Church. His confession that Jesus is the Christ is the foundation stone, the starting place for building the Body. Coming to know and accept that the cross, and Christ's death on the cross, is the event that swings the world back to the Father – that revelation comes with suffering while preaching His word. Until Peter ceases to tempt others with a worldly love, he is Satan. Until he stops loving Christ as his personal possession, he is an obstacle. Until, he starts thinking with God, he is a man living outside the Word.
Peter's failure is our warning. If we confess the Sonship of Christ and accept the burdens and freedoms of the new covenant, our love, our eagerness to sacrifice, cannot be stingy, half-hearted, or limited to our earthly loves. Our willingness to serve cannot be restricted to the deserving, or to those who can repay our service. And our thinking – how we deliberate about our choices – cannot be dictated by the customs and conventions of men. We are free in the new covenant to take on the salvation of the world b/c God Himself has freed us in Christ. In Christ, we are Christ, sons of the living God.
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06 August 2014
Neither terrorists nor viruses. . .
Feast of the Transfiguration
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
I'll be the first to confess: I can be a bit jaded, world-weary. That
is, when it comes to watching the world and the problems we humans
create for ourselves, I am more likely than not to think, “Well,
that's hardly surprising.” When the news broke about the Ebola
virus in Africa, I was concerned but not surprised. When that
Malaysian plane was shot down over the Ukraine on the same day that
Israel starting blowing up terrorist tunnels in Gaza – not
surprised. This morning I read that the federal database for tracking
terrorists in the US contains 1.1 million names and that almost 80%
of American parents think that their children's lives will be worse
than theirs – not surprised. One of the advantages of being a
Catholic in this day and age is that very little shocks us. Why? B/c
we have an excellent understanding of what it means to be part of the
fallen human race. We know sin. Evil is no stranger. If we stopped
there – at our fallen, sinful nature – we would be despairing as
well as jaded and world-weary.
Thankfully, right on time, Christ
shows us our gifted end; he shows us where we can end up if we trust
in God and surrender ourselves to His will. That's
the whole reason for the dramatic revelation on Mt. Tabor – to show
us our gifted end, to show us where we can end up if we trust in God
and surrender ourselves to His will. Jesus takes Peter, James, and
John to the mountain top to show them what they can become –
transfigured, changed in such a way that they become unflinching
beacons of God's living glory. As witnesses to this truth of the
faith, Jesus appears with Moses and Elijah – prophets of the Law.
The Father sends these two prophets to
bear up under the
truth that Christ is not only His beloved Son but the literal flesh
and blood of His promise of eternal life as well. His promise – to
keep us with Him always – is given a figure; it's illustrated,
changed into a shape, a form, a person. . .the person of Christ.
Radiating His Father's glory, Jesus sees the growing despair of his
disciples – our worry and dread – and he injects our flagging
hope with a simple tonic, “Rise, and do not be afraid.” Rise. And
do not be afraid. Our end, our gifted goal is the glory of the
Father. And nothing He has planted will ever be uprooted.
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05 August 2014
Well-planted, or uprooted?
NB. Fr. John Dominic is off on a medical mission. Fr. Mike asked me to take the morning Masses this week.
NB 2.0: Didn't preach this homily at the 8.30am Mass b/c Deacon Lloyd was on duty. I'd forgotten that our deacons preach on Tues and Fri. Oh well.
NB 2.0: Didn't preach this homily at the 8.30am Mass b/c Deacon Lloyd was on duty. I'd forgotten that our deacons preach on Tues and Fri. Oh well.
18th
Week OT (T)
Fr. Philip Neri
Powell, OP
St. Dominic
Church, NOLA
In
revealing a truth of the faith, our Lord undermines a centuries-old
religious tradition. At one point, the religious tradition he
undermines, washing hands before eating, revealed a truth of the
faith. But over time, the act became Its Own Thing. Handwashing
before meals became an empty ritual, an almost-complusive,
superstitious motion that obscured the truth it once revealed. When
Jesus points out that uncleanliness is about what comes out of one's
mouth rather than what goes in it, he dumps centuries of tradition
and sets the nerves of friend and foe alike to buzzing. You don't
have to be a scholar of the Law or a even a particularly religious
soul to see the implications of Jesus' rough treatment of religious
tradition: if handwashing is a pointless ritual, what other
centuries-old traditions are pointless as well? To soothe the
scrupulous and instruct the ignorant, our Lord says, “Every plant
that my heavenly Father has not planted will be uprooted.” In other
words, if God built it, willed it, wanted it. . .it – whatever It
is – it will endure. And everything and anything planted by
something or someone other than the Father. . .will be destroyed.
So,
the obvious question arises: are you planted by the Father? More
specifically, is your faith planted in the Father's will? Or, is your
faith planted in something or someone that will inevitably be
uprooted? Something like financial security, or religious ritual? Or
someone like a favorite politician, or a pastor or a celebrity or a
pope? Jesus tells his disciples not to follow the Pharisees b/c when
the blind lead the blind they all end up at the bottom of a pit. What
makes the Pharisees blind? They are reasonably well-off. Educated.
Religious. Politically connected. More popular with the crowds than
the Sadducees. They are serious men seeking God's will. But they are
blind. Their eyes cannot see b/c they will not to see. They will not
see the truth that gives the Law its authority; the goodness that
makes the Law holy; or the beauty that graces the Law with its
allure. If the Pharisees are blind, then what about the pastors and
the celebrities and the popes and anyone else we might be tempted to
trust before we trust the Father? If they do not trust the Father,
then they too are blind! Go to the Father first; trust Him; then,
follow those whose faith manifests the good fruits of the Spirit.
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03 August 2014
HELP!
The Dominican Province of St. Martin de Porres
If you have enjoyed this blog over the years, please consider giving to the province's 1216 Campaign. This money is used primarily for initial formation -- training our novices and educating our student brothers -- but it also helps with our operating expenses.
The on-line form allows you to make prayer intentions, which we then take and add to our conventual Masses and hours.
Thanks!
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02 August 2014
Disease Update
The antibiotics seem to be working on clearing up my Insectoid Induced Leprosy.
And my Ear Innards have finally stopped throbbing and threatening to burst forth in a Gelatinous Spew.
Unfortunately, the pills are making me nauseous.
The wonders of science.
Thanks for the prayers and encouragement!
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30 July 2014
Bug bites, staph, and the pill
Back from visiting The Parentals.
I left NOLA two weeks ago with three itchy bug bites.
I now have about 16 staph-infected bug bites. And an ear infection.
Went to one of those quickie E.R. clinics yesterday. The doc took a culture and gave me some antibiotics.
So. . .four pills a day for 10 days.
Joy.
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