"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
14 October 2014
12 October 2014
Invited to be transformed by the feast
28th
Sunday OT
Fr.
Philip Neri Powell, OP
Mt.
Carmel Academy, NOLA
The
truth of the Kingdom has yet to be fully revealed much less
understood. Since parables can take us deeper into the mystery of the
Kingdom of Heaven, Jesus uses them as the only fruitful way of
teaching us the features of the coming reign of God. These short
allegorical stories give us an indirect peek at the bigger truth,
using the ordinary elements of daily life – the familiar people,
places, and things that regular folks see and hear everyday. To
understand the bigger truth a parable reveals, we compare the
elements of the story to what we already know. So, who are we in the
parable of the wedding feast? We aren't the king, his son, or the
soldiers. We could be the guests, though we've been at the party for
a while now. We can't be the poor guy who gets bounced b/c he's
improperly dressed. We're still at the party. That leaves the
servants. We're the servants. The ones sent out by the king to summon
his guests. The ones sent out to rouse the rabble and bring them as
guests to the feast. That's what we do: we go out and invite to the
feast those rarely invited. As servants of the king, we obey the
king.
What
are His orders? “The feast is ready, but those who were invited
were not worthy to come. Go out, therefore, into the main roads and
invite to the feast whomever you find.” Note what's missing from
these orders. We are not ordered to evaluate any potential guest's
wardrobe. We are not ordered to assess their moral worthiness; their
social standing, wealth, health, looks, or family ties. We are not
ordered to invite only those who look like us, sound like us, think
like us, or believe like us. The king's order are crystal clear, “Go
out, therefore, into the main roads and invite to the feast whomever
you find.” Whomever we find might be poorly dressed or morally
rotten; or high-born and ugly as sin; or low-born and beautiful; or
just plain folks with nothing much to do that evening. “Whomever
you find” is an all-encompassing category that makes it very
difficult not to invite whomever we might find. That's our job. It's
what we do. After those we have invited to the feast get here, then
it's the king's job to sort them all out. Not ours. The guy who's
bounced out into the darkness is bounced out into the darkness b/c
he's not properly dressed. In parable-terms, he's not properly
disposed, not internally prepared to receive food and drink from the
Lord's generous table. He's not wearing the heart and mind of one
who's accepted an invitation to party eternally with the Father's
Son.
The
invitation we all receive to party with the Father at His Son's feast
is “come as you are.” Black tie. Business casual. Beach wear.
Whatever you have on is just fine. In fact, the more poorly dressed,
the more poorly disposed we are for the feast, the better. The point
of the feast is not to show off or network, or to advertise your
worthiness for the occasion. The point is to honor and celebrate the
Son's marriage. Thus says the King, “Accepting my invitation makes
you worthy.” But the transformation from unworthy wretch to worthy
guest cannot leave us untouched. You may arrive at the wedding feast
“as you are,” but you stay at the King's table b/c you have
freely given yourself over to the celebration of His Son's marriage.
In other words, no one remains at the feast dressed as they arrived.
And no one leaves unless they are sent by the King to invite others.
Come as you are. Be made worthy. Put on a rich, new wedding garment.
And leave only to spread the word of the King's generosity. The
King's feast has a purpose, a goal: to bring as many in as possible
and transform unworthy wretches into guests worthy of the Son. That
includes you and me.
What
doesn't include you and me is the intimate process of transformation
that the feast begins; that is, the internal work that God alone does
to change an unworthy wretch into a worthy guest. You and I are sent
out to proclaim the invitation that God has made. We are ordered to
invite “whomever we find,” and tell them about the feast. When
they accept the invitation and return with us to the table, we are to
do everything we can to help them stay; everything, that is, except
lie about the transformative nature of the feast itself. We welcome.
We include. We gather up and support. We pay careful attention to our
own made-worthiness, and we even sacrifice to keep God's guests at
the table. But the work of transformation cannot happen if the guest
does not will to be transformed. And we cannot pretend that the feast
does not do what it is designed to do. We cannot lie to the guest or
ourselves and say that there is no need for change, there is no
reason to turn around and face the King. If the guest wills to remain
outside the power of the King's feast, then we can do nothing more
than pray that he will return, inviting him back again and again,
always welcoming, always ready to serve as the King has ordered us to
serve.
Stepping
outside the words and images of the parable, let's say plainly what
must be said. God's invitation to receive His grace through Jesus
Christ is universal. No one is excluded. Never has been, never will
be. As His baptized priests, prophets, and kings, we are charged with
making sure that His invitation to repentance and holiness is heard
over and over and over again. Receiving His grace means repenting of
our debilitating sins, confessing them, and resolving to never commit
them again. It is true that God invites us to come to Him “as we
are.” But the purpose of His invitation is make us holy, not to
affirm us in our sin or to tell us that our sin is not really a sin.
We must not misunderstand His loving invitation to share in His
divine life as a nod of approval or a sign that we are perfect “as
is.” If we are perfect “as is” – sin and all – then why
send His only Son to die for us? Why establish the Church to
administer His saving grace? In fact, why bother with an invitation
at all if there is no one to save? As a Body, we are being challenged
to ignore the need for repentance from sin in favor of being
“welcoming and inclusive,” meaning in practice “pretending that
sin isn't sin.” This is a lie, a deadly lie that kills the
unrepentant and the one telling the lie.
As
with all things Catholic, we are set squarely on the razor's edge,
teetering delicately btw Pharisaical Judgmentalism and Wholesale
Indifferentism. We cannot judge the internal transformation of any
other person, nor can we ignore the obvious public signs that no
transformation has taken place. Judgmentalism makes for a paltry
feast. And Indifferentism renders the feast pointless. If we are to
celebrate and honor the Son's sacrifice for us, then we must work
hard to maintain our balance on that razor's edge: welcome and
include AND expect repentance and transformation. Most especially for
ourselves.
____________________________
11 October 2014
Four Paintings
These are the first four paintings I've completed. Because of the lighting conditions and my amateur camera (8.2 megapixel), the paintings appear more yellow than they really are. Each one 16x20 on canvas board.
Light of the Nations (ON HOLD)
Tree of Life (RECYCLED)
Ps 150 (SOLD)
Wondrous Deeds
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09 October 2014
Painting
Mendicant Thanks to the kind soul who recently browsed the Wish List and sent me some painting supplies!
I have thus far painted two canvases that I like. Both are abstract color studies.
If (and when) I get good pics of the two, I will post them for your enjoyment and/or derision.
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07 October 2014
Choosing the Better Part
Our Lady of the Rosary
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
NDS/St Dominic Church, NOLA
We
have in the sisters, Martha and Mary, two models, two paradigms for
how we might proceed to reveal Christ's mystery to the world. When
Jesus visits the sisters, Martha begins to fuss about, trying her
best to prepare a suitably hospitable meal for their guest.
Frustrated that Mary is ignoring her domestic duties in order to dote
on Jesus, Martha complains to Jesus and asks him to admonish Mary for
her apparent laziness. Instead of scolding Mary for her inattention
to duty, Jesus turns Martha's complaint back on her, saying, “Martha,
Martha, you are anxious and worried about many things.” We should
notice here that Jesus doesn't chastise Martha for griping nor does
he seem ungrateful for her work on his behalf. Rather than soothe
Martha's hurt feelings by telling Mary to get to work, rather than
tempering Martha's anger with a lecture on patience, Jesus goes
straight to the root of her fussiness. Martha is anxious; she is
worried. Faced with the presence of Christ in her home, Martha
chooses to get busy; she deflects her anxiety by “doing stuff,”
hoping, perhaps, that by staying busy she will burn off the fretting
worry. Mary, on the other hand, sits at Jesus' feet and listens to
his instruction. She too might be anxious. She might be just as wound
up and nervous as her sister in the presence of Christ, but she
chooses “the better part,” attending to Jesus as he teaches her
the mysteries of his Father's revelation.
Why
does Jesus consider Mary's rapt attention to be better than Martha's
distracted busyness? Let's ask this question another way. Who is most
likely to learn: a student who sits in class texting on her cell
phone, checking Facebook, or doodling; or the student who attentively
listens to the teacher—no distractions, nothing to cloud her mind
or burden her heart? If you have ever tried to teach a child a
difficult math problem, or convey a set of relatively boring facts,
then you know the answer to this question! Mary has the better part
because she is more likely to learn, more likely to “get it,”
more likely to become the better teacher and preacher of the
mysteries herself. Martha will get quite a lot done, but will she be
open to seeing and hearing the mystery that Jesus has to reveal?
Jesus tells Martha, “There is need of only one thing.” There is
only one needful thing, only one thing we need: to listen to the
Word, the Word made flesh in Christ.
When
you take up Christ's commission to preach the mystery of salvation to
the world, do you first listen to the Word; or do you get busy “doing
stuff” that looks Christian, sounds Christian? Do you really hear
what Christ has to say about God's mercy, His love? Do you attend to
the Body of Christ in action during the celebration of his
sacraments? Do you watch for Christ to reveal himself in those you
love, in those you despise, those you would rather ignore or
disparage? Can you set aside the work of doing Christian things and
just be a follower of Christ, just long enough to be filled with the
Spirit necessary to teach with all wisdom? It's vital that we
understand that Martha isn't wrong for doing stuff. Her flaw rests
solely in her anxiety and her worry while she's doing stuff. Being
anxious and worried about many things while doing God's work is a
sure sign that we are failing to grasp the central mystery of our
commission to preach the Good News: it is Christ who preaches
through us, not only with us, along side us, but through us. If
we have truly seen and heard the mystery of our salvation through
God's infinite mercy, then there is nothing to fear, nothing to be
anxious about, nothing that can or will defeat the Word we are vowed
to spread. Why? Because everything we do and say reveals Christ to
the world. If the Church is the sacrament of God's presence in the
world, and we are members of the Body of Christ, the Church, then we
too are sacraments of God's presence. Individually imperfect,
together we are made more perfect on the way to our perfection in
Christ.
_______________________
05 October 2014
Will you stand on the Cornerstone come what may?
27th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
Here's
a warning no servant of God ever wants to hear: “. . .the Kingdom
of God will be taken away from you and given to a people that will
produce its fruit.” What's worse than living your life as an heir
to eternal life only to discover that—in the end—you've been
disinherited? When Jesus finishes telling the priests and elders the
parable of the murderous tenants, he quotes Ps 118, “The stone that
the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.” By rejecting
Christ as the cornerstone of their relationship with God, the leaders
of God's people reject their inheritance. Their reaction to this
prophetic statement? They ain't happy. However, they are more afraid
than unhappy—afraid of Jesus' popularity, so they postpone
arresting him. They're not worried about losing their eternal
inheritance. They're worried about losing their power and prestige
among the people. When we think about the arduous demands of
faithfully following Christ, do we think first of our eternal
inheritance, or do we first consider how following him might look to
family, friends, or neighbors? Do we reject the cornerstone of our
faith in favor of not being noticed, in favor of never being
challenged or excluded from polite company?
Rejecting
God in favor of wealth, power, and fame is not new to the 21st
century. The parable of the tenants retells the history of the Jewish
people's stormy relationship with God. We know the story all too
well. It tells just like the history of the Church's relationship
with God: lots of disobedience and great moments of heroic virtue.
What the parable doesn't include is an explanation for our repeated
failures. We can hear greed
in the tenants' justification for killing the owner's son. But greed
never poisons alone. We can hear a little wrath
in the tenants' desire to wound their employer. Some pride
and class envy.
Why do the priests and elders reject Christ? Why do we so
consistently reject making Christ the cornerstone of our lives.
Making Christ the cornerstone of our everyday lives means risking one
of our most valuable treasures: being
a respected player in whatever social game that defines us.
Family, friends, co-workers, colleagues, neighbors, fellow
parishioners. If I make Christ my cornerstone, will I have to buck
popular political trends, go against the prevailing attitudes of my
peers, and risk losing real prestige for nothing more than a promise
of future glory?
Social
psychologists will tell you that there is almost nothing more
difficult for an individual to do than go against the crowd. The
psychology of the herd is infectious; it takes the single soul into a
massed spirit where deliberation and freedom are strangled for the
sake of frenzy. But few of us will ever be caught up in that sort of
mob. The mobs we belong to are much more subtle and more dangerous:
the workplace, the family reunion, movie night with friends, faculty
meetings, events where those whose opinions of us we honor gather to
socialize and strengthen the bonds of the group. When the opportunity
arises, do we choose Christ as our cornerstone; or do we choose our
standing in the group? When family, friends, co-workers express their
support for the culture of death, do you stand on Christ; or do you
back down to save face? When your peers start advocate undermining
marriage and the family; or expressing racist opinions; or defaming
the Church, do you stand on Christ, or back down? If Christ is to be
your cornerstone, then everything you are must find its integrity and
strength in Christ, regardless of the consequences. As baptized
prophets of the Church, you are sent out to live the truth of the
gospel. Even if and especially when it means your prestige must take
a beating. When the time comes, will you “remember the marvelous
works of the Lord,” most especially the marvelous work of your
salvation achieved on the altar of the Cross?
If
contemplating your willingness to remain faithful to Christ and his
Church is making you nervous, listen again to Paul: “Have no
anxiety at all, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with
thanksgiving, make your requests known to God. Then the peace of God
that surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in
Christ Jesus.” The peace of God will guard our hearts and minds in
Christ Jesus if we make known to him – in prayer with thanksgiving
– all that we need. If you need strength
to stand firmly on his cornerstone, ask for it with thanksgiving. If
you need patience
to stand diligently on his cornerstone, ask for it with thanksgiving.
If you need wisdom to stand knowledgeably on his cornerstone, ask for
it with thanksgiving. Nothing you need to stand upon the cornerstone
of Christ will be denied you if you seek it out and simply ask for it
with thanksgiving. Any anxiety you may be feeling b/c of who you are
in Christ is the product of the Enemy coaxing you toward silence,
toward defensiveness and silence. The peace that God gives us
surpasses all understanding, all anxiety, all hesitancy and guile.
When we speak up to proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ, it is not
our tongues that speak but his. Not our words but his. Not our time
and energy spent but his. As his faithful servants, we serve his
mission and ministry by continuing to speak his Word of mercy to
anyone who will listen.
Paul
not only tells us how to pray for what we need to stand on the
cornerstone of Christ, he also tells us how to go about training our
hearts and minds for the holy work that the Lord has given us to
complete. He writes, “. . .whatever is true, whatever is honorable,
whatever is just, pure, lovely, gracious, if there is any excellence
and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.”
Just as we work to discipline our bodily appetites against
temptation, avoiding those occasions where we might be tempted to put
the things of this world before God, so too can we work to discipline
our hearts and minds against the invasive ideas and passions –
falsity, dishonor, injustice, impurity, ugliness, crudity,
mediocrity, and scorn. Look at the tenants who murder the vineyard
owner's son. They think about murder and talk about murder before
actually committing murder. They fail to resist greed and anger, and
they feed one another's passions until the deed is done. They would,
according to the priests and elders, suffer “wretched deaths” for
their failure to discipline themselves. When we make a stand on the
cornerstone of Christ and lay claim to our inheritance as the
Father's sons and daughters, our words and deeds must bring honor,
dignity, and praise to His name.
The
builders God raised up rejected Christ as their cornerstone, and
Christ says to them, “. . .the kingdom of God will be taken away
from you and given to a people that will produce its fruit.” We
stand with Christ in his Church to proclaim the Good News of
salvation. Whether this stand is popular or not; prestigious or not;
profitable or not. If we would be the people who produce the good
fruit of His kingdom, the people to inherit the Kingdom of heaven on
our last day, then we must stand with Christ as he died for us.
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What kind of cry can such a dumb herald utter?
From the Office of Readings: Pastoral Guide by Saint Gregory the Great, pope
Let the pastor be discreetly silent, and to the point when he speaks
A spiritual guide should be silent when discretion requires and speak
when words are of service. Otherwise he may say what he should not or be
silent when he should speak. Indiscreet speech may lead men into error
and an imprudent silence may leave in error those who could have been
taught. Pastors who lack foresight hesitate to say openly what is right
because they fear losing the favor of men. As the voice of truth tells
us, such leaders are not zealous pastors who protect their flocks,
rather they are like mercenaries who flee by taking refuge in silence
when the wolf appears.
The Lord reproaches them through the
prophet: They are dumb dogs that cannot bark. On another occasion he
complains: You did not advance against the foe or set up a wall in front
of the house of Israel, so that you might stand fast in battle on the
day of the Lord. To advance against the foe involves a bold resistance
to the powers of this world in defense of the flock. To stand fast in
battle on the day of the Lord means to oppose the wicked enemy out of
love for what is right.
When a pastor has been afraid to assert
what is right, has he not turned his back and fled by remaining silent?
Whereas if he intervenes on behalf of the flock, he sets up a wall
against the enemy in front of the house of Israel.
Therefore, the Lord
again says to his unfaithful people: Your prophets saw false and foolish
visions and did not point out your wickedness, that you might repent of
your sins. The name of the prophet is sometimes given in the sacred
writings to teachers who both declare the present to be fleeting and
reveal what is to come. The word of God accuses them of seeing false
visions because they are afraid to reproach men for their faults and
thereby lull the evildoer with an empty promise of safety. Because they
fear reproach, they keep silent and fail to point out the sinner’s
wrongdoing.
The word of reproach is a key that unlocks a door,
because reproach reveals a fault of which the evildoer is himself often
unaware. That is why Paul says of the bishop: He must be able to
encourage men in sound doctrine and refute those who oppose it. For the
same reason God tells us through Malachi: The lips of the priest are to
preserve knowledge, and men shall look to him for the law, for he is the
messenger of the Lord of hosts. Finally, that is also the reason why
the Lord warns us through Isaiah: Cry out and be not still; raise your
voice in a trumpet call.
Anyone ordained a priest undertakes the
task of preaching, so that with a loud cry he may go on ahead of the
terrible judge who follows. If, then, a priest does not know how to
preach, what kind of cry can such a dumb herald utter? It was to bring
this home that the Holy Spirit descended in the form of tongues on the
first pastors, for he causes those whom he has filled, to speak out
spontaneously."
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30 September 2014
What Scripture is. . .
NB. A 2005 homily for the Feast of St. Jerome. I dedicate this one to Dr. Nathan Eubank, one of our two superb Scripture scholars at NDS. Dr. Eubank was recently appointed to the USCCB cmte to help revise the NAB.
26th Week OT (Fri): 2 Tim
3.14-17; Matt 13.47-52
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
St Albert Priory & Church of the Incarnation
Scripture is the family story. It is the story we are told and tell about how those who came before us struggled with the God—how they loved Him, served Him, challenged Him, railed against His apparent injustices, how they betrayed Him, and finally, killed Him as an enemy of the Empire and the Temple.
Scripture is the family story about what Jesus taught the disciples. About what he did in the crowds with the diseased, the outcast, those near death in sin. Scripture is the family story of what happens when we call on His name and ask Him to be with us; what happens when we pray in the spirit of righteousness and receive His grace to preserve, to grow, to triumph.
Scripture is our history, our story, our flight-plan and our road map. It is also a record of our failures in the faith, our surrenders to easy, alien doctrines; a record of those times when we scratched our itchy ears with whatever shiny new thing winked at us—Greek Stoicism or angel worship or Gnosticism or just the plain ole insistence on the Old Law and its requirements.
Scripture is a foundation, a framework, and a beautifully appointed castle. It stands against the fickle tides of fashion, fending off the modernist barbarians who would put us back in the desert wandering, back into the crowds disbelieving, leaving us at the foot of the cross gambling, standing at the empty tomb shaking our head at how clever those Christian thieves can be.
Scripture teaches us, refutes us, corrects us, and trains us in righteousness. We are made students, penitents, disciples, and apostles. Belonging to God, we are fully equipped and competently trained to do every good work Christ has commanded us to do. And through Scripture we know not only where the family has been and where is it, but where it is going as well.
We also know Jesus Christ Himself; deep speaks to deep, Word to Word, the Word of God is flesh and spirit, one revelation of the Divine and another together: scripture and Christ, Word and Word, wisdom of salvation and Salvation Himself.
The celebration of St Jerome is a piercing call to the Church, all of us, to take up the hard work of reading scripture and opening our hearts and minds to the insistent knocking of the wisdom that the Word contains. Jerome, in a commentary on Isaiah, puts the matter plainly, “For if,” as Paul says, “Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God, and if the man who does not know scripture does not know the power and wisdom of God, then ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ.” There’s a slap in the face! If you don’t know scripture, you don’t know Christ. Ignorance of the Word is ignorance of the Word.
Give yourself over to the Word to be taught in the wisdom of salvation, to be refuted in your error, to be corrected in your sin, and to be trained in righteousness. Give yourself over to Christ, submit to the wisdom of five millenia of witnesses who witness with one voice to the power, the love, the mercy, the constancy and the faithfulness of our God.
Come, everyone! Join the good fish in the bucket of the righteous!
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
St Albert Priory & Church of the Incarnation
Scripture is the family story. It is the story we are told and tell about how those who came before us struggled with the God—how they loved Him, served Him, challenged Him, railed against His apparent injustices, how they betrayed Him, and finally, killed Him as an enemy of the Empire and the Temple.
Scripture is the family story about what Jesus taught the disciples. About what he did in the crowds with the diseased, the outcast, those near death in sin. Scripture is the family story of what happens when we call on His name and ask Him to be with us; what happens when we pray in the spirit of righteousness and receive His grace to preserve, to grow, to triumph.
Scripture is our history, our story, our flight-plan and our road map. It is also a record of our failures in the faith, our surrenders to easy, alien doctrines; a record of those times when we scratched our itchy ears with whatever shiny new thing winked at us—Greek Stoicism or angel worship or Gnosticism or just the plain ole insistence on the Old Law and its requirements.
Scripture is a foundation, a framework, and a beautifully appointed castle. It stands against the fickle tides of fashion, fending off the modernist barbarians who would put us back in the desert wandering, back into the crowds disbelieving, leaving us at the foot of the cross gambling, standing at the empty tomb shaking our head at how clever those Christian thieves can be.
Scripture teaches us, refutes us, corrects us, and trains us in righteousness. We are made students, penitents, disciples, and apostles. Belonging to God, we are fully equipped and competently trained to do every good work Christ has commanded us to do. And through Scripture we know not only where the family has been and where is it, but where it is going as well.
We also know Jesus Christ Himself; deep speaks to deep, Word to Word, the Word of God is flesh and spirit, one revelation of the Divine and another together: scripture and Christ, Word and Word, wisdom of salvation and Salvation Himself.
The celebration of St Jerome is a piercing call to the Church, all of us, to take up the hard work of reading scripture and opening our hearts and minds to the insistent knocking of the wisdom that the Word contains. Jerome, in a commentary on Isaiah, puts the matter plainly, “For if,” as Paul says, “Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God, and if the man who does not know scripture does not know the power and wisdom of God, then ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ.” There’s a slap in the face! If you don’t know scripture, you don’t know Christ. Ignorance of the Word is ignorance of the Word.
Give yourself over to the Word to be taught in the wisdom of salvation, to be refuted in your error, to be corrected in your sin, and to be trained in righteousness. Give yourself over to Christ, submit to the wisdom of five millenia of witnesses who witness with one voice to the power, the love, the mercy, the constancy and the faithfulness of our God.
Come, everyone! Join the good fish in the bucket of the righteous!
______________________
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29 September 2014
Audio File for Homily: 26th Sunday OT
Audio File for "Do You Have a Heart Problem?"
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28 September 2014
Do you have a Heart Problem? (Audio File Updated)
26th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
God's
people complain to the prophet Ezekiel, “The Lord is unfair! His
rules are too rigid. His demands on us are burdensome. His ways are
so unfair!” Through Ezekiel, the Lord turns the complaints around
and asks, “Is it my way that is unfair, or rather, are not your
ways unfair?” The Lord's obvious point is that when we complain
about His “rules,” what we are really complaining about is our
own refusal to see and hear the inevitable consequences of our own
bad choices. It's not gravity's fault that we fall to the ground when
we choose to jump out of a perfectly good tree. Nor is it God's fault
when we persist in our sins, sowing disobedience and discord, and are
then left to deal with the messy results. All of our favorite tricks
for dodging responsibility are just that – tricks. Re-defining a
sin so that it doesn't seem like a sin. Appealing to polls or science
or other religions to wave away unpleasant “rules.” Putting God's
will “into the proper context” in order to lighten any perceived
burden. None of these work. Not ultimately. What works? What works
every single time? Repentance and God's mercy. In that order: we
repent – turn toward God – and His mercy freely flows.
Here's
one way to think about this: the Church – that's us – has a heart
problem. Not just a troubled heart or a heavy heart, but a problem
with how our hearts in
Christ circulate the
life-blood of the Church, the two key ingredients of our salvation:
our repentance and God's mercy. This diagnosis of a heart problem
arises for us at a time in the life of the Church when we are being
challenged more than ever to examine and defend the basic truths of
the faith, forced to consider and reconsider how we as followers of
Christ understand ourselves as heirs to the Kingdom. What does it
mean to be an heir to the Kingdom? Take Jesus' parable of the two
sons. This is a parable about the Old and New Covenants, about
unrepentant Israel under the Law of Moses and the obedient Church
under the grace of Christ. The first son, at first disobedient,
eventually repents and obeys his father's command to work the
vineyards. The second son, pretending to be obedient, immediately
agrees to work the vineyards but never gets around to it. Jesus asks
the chief priests and elders, “Which son does the father's will?”
They reply correctly, “The first.” Jesus then admonishes them,
“Amen, I say to you, tax collectors and prostitutes are entering
the kingdom of God before you.” Notorious public sinners are
becoming heirs to the Kingdom!
How?
How do these notorious public sinners enter the kingdom before God's
chosen religious leaders? B/c the notorious public sinners heard John
the Baptist preach repentance, and they repented of their sins. Like
the first son, they turned themselves around and obeyed. The priests
and elders heard John, but they never turned, relying instead on the
illusion of obedience to save them. Like the second son, they believe
that obedience is just words. God's mercy flows freely and abundantly
to those who repent, those who truly turn themselves around and do
the will of the Father. Notice: it's not the ones who complain and
whine about the “rules” that end up repenting and inheriting the
Kingdom. It's not the really super-religious people who follow all
the rules who end up inheriting the Kingdom. Who inherits? Traitors,
hookers, serial killers, child molesters, and thieves. They inherit.
. .IF they repent, turn around toward God, and obey His will. If we
will inherit the Kingdom, we will spend much less time complaining
about the unfairness of God's ways and much, much more time and
energy turning ourselves around to face the Him, the only One who can
and will save us.
All
of this is Christianity 101. So, where's the heart problem? Here's
the problem: having received God's mercy by repenting of our own
sins, do we allow our fellow sinners the chance to live out the mercy
they themselves have received through repentance? Or, do we refuse to
recognize them as brothers and sisters in Christ? Are we tempted to
assume the worse about notorious sinners and leave them out of the
Kingdom? Look to your own experience with God's mercy. Instead of
complaining about His “unfair ways,” you searched your
conscience, found your sins, confessed and repented of them, then
went on with your growth in holiness fed by His mercy. If you can do
it, then why can't another? Maybe you suffer from a heart problem.
Does repentance and mercy freely circulate in your body? If not, then
they cannot freely circulate in the Body of Christ, the Church. And
if these two key ingredients of our salvation cannot freely
circulate, then the Church will grow weaker and weaker at a time when
we need one another's strength and courage more and more. It is the
Lord's Way that we must repent to receive mercy. It is also His Way
that we must recognize repentance and allow His mercy to feed others.
How
do we do this? How do we recognize repentance and allow God's mercy
to feed others? As always, Paul comes to our aid. He pleads with us:
“If there is any encouragement in Christ, any solace in love, any
participation in the Spirit, any compassion and mercy, complete my
joy. . .Have in you the same attitude that is also in Christ Jesus.”
In other words, if Christ strengthens your heart or comforts you in
love; if you in any way take part in the life and work of the Holy
Spirit, or receive from the Spirit any amount of compassion or mercy,
then take on the mind of Christ – think with his sacrificial love,
work with his dedication for the salvation of souls, and speak in the
language of obedience and service. Paul challenges us to be “of
the same mind, with the same love, united in heart, thinking one
thing. Do nothing out of selfishness or out of [vanity].” When we
repent and lay claim to God's mercy for ourselves, yet refuse to
recognize the repentance of another, thus refusing to see God's mercy
at work in them, we put ourselves in the Judgment Seat, displacing
Christ as the only true Judge. Then our heart problem becomes
critical and the Church grows weaker. It is unfair that God forgives
those we believe to be unrepentant sinners? Let Him answer: “Is it
my way that is unfair, or rather, are not your ways unfair?”
Our
Lord admonishes the priests and elders b/c they did not believe John
the Baptist when he preached the baptist of repentance for the
forgiveness of sins. They were appalled when tax collectors and
prostitutes lined the River Jordan for baptism, and they accused John
of defiling God's ways. But they were really accusing God Himself.
Jesus turns the accusing finger back on them, telling them that the
worst of the worst among them were entering the Kingdom before they
could. The difference btw the priests/elders and the notorious
sinners is not their sin or their desire for mercy. Both groups are
sinners; both want mercy. The difference is that the sinners turned
toward God, repenting of their sins in all humility, asking for and
receiving the forgiveness they need to become heirs to the Kingdom.
The priests and elders complain to Jesus that God is being too lax,
too easy on the sinners; He's encouraging more sin by letting them
off w/o sufficient punishments. God says, “Is it my way that is
unfair, or rather, are not your ways unfair?” If you have a heart
problem, repent and let the Father's mercy heal you.
________________________
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Vocation Vids and Stories
NOLAPriest.com has produced an excellent vocations video, What Does It Mean To Be A Seminarian? The vid was filmed at NDS and features NOLA seminarian, Colm Cahill.
The linked page also includes two other vids: one from Archbishop Aymond and one on this summer's priestly ordinations.
The site also has three vocation stories from seminarians. Andrew Ruddman, a student of mine, features in one of the stories.
Check them out!
___________________
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26 September 2014
Who is Jesus for me and mine?
NB. I celebrated the NDS Masses this Tues, Wed, and Thurs b/c the priests of the archdiocese were having a big meeting. I was the only priest left at the seminary! Today, I have 16 homily-tutorials scheduled. Oy. Below is a homily from 2012. Just thought I'd close out the week. . .
25th Week OT (F)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
Audio file
We've heard it said—many times—that we live and move and have our being
in God. Without God, we are nothing, literally, not a thing at all. So,
one of the most humble services that we perform for ourselves is to
measure, to take account of, where we stand in the creating and
re-creating kinship that gave us life and sustains us in love. When we
perform this humble service, what are we measuring? What sort of scale
do we use? Since our relationship with God is familial, that is, we
think and act along with God as a family, and since a family is bound
together by blood and nourished in love, we could describe our
relationship to the Father as holy—a relationship set apart from the
world, consecrated to a divine purpose. How then do we measure
holiness—our nearness to the Father, our distance from Him? Sin
measures our distance from God; obedience measures our nearness. The
Preacher of Ecclesiastes tells us that all things under heaven have
their appointed time, a time to arrive and unfold, a time to depart and
decay. As we live and move and have our being in God, it is always time
to measure our kinship with Him. Now and always is the right moment to
ask yourself, “Who is Jesus for me and mine?” Your answer measures your
holiness.
When Jesus asks his disciples, “Who do you say that I am?” and Peter
answers, “The Christ of God,” Jesus rebukes them all and orders them to
keep this answer a secret. Having taken the measure of his disciples and
heard their confession of faith, our Lord not only silences them, he
also reveals to them his immediate future: suffering, rejection, death,
and resurrection. Does he silence them b/c he fears too many will suffer
and die along with him? Or does he demand they keep this secret so
that his ministry might not be impeded by his enemies? Our Lord knows
that to follow him is invites persecution. But following him also
guarantees rescue. Following him guarantees death, but it also promises
resurrection. Maybe he demands silence about his true identity b/c he
knows that too many will too quickly chase after him and fail to soberly
measure the consequences, fail to honestly take account of the
sacrifices required to live the radical love that the Father demands of
His children. If there is a time to be born and a time to die, a time to
sow and a time to harvest, then there is a time to soberly, honestly
measure who Christ is and who you are as his student in the school of
charity.
Friday is the traditional day in the Church calendar when we remember the crucifixion and examine our relationship in holiness with God. If sin measures our distance from God and obedience our nearness, then there is no better day to take account our of disobedience and give thanks for the nearness of His mercy. And there is no better way to accomplish this work of humility than to spend some time seriously contemplating our answer to the question, “Who do you say Jesus is?” For there to be any chance at all that he is the rock of your holiness, he must be—minimally—the one, the only one who suffered on the cross for you; died for you; and rose on the third day for you. Whatever else and whoever else he might be for you—enlightened master, social justice icon, moral exemplar—he must be the Crucified Christ, the long-promised Messiah. Your faith in this truth is the unique measure of your holiness. Not the only measure to be sure but the one that gives all other measures their scale. I dare you: examine your day—your thoughts, words, deeds—and ask yourself before you fall asleep: seeing and hearing me today, is there anyone out there b/c of me who loves God more now than they did when they woke up this morning?
___________________Friday is the traditional day in the Church calendar when we remember the crucifixion and examine our relationship in holiness with God. If sin measures our distance from God and obedience our nearness, then there is no better day to take account our of disobedience and give thanks for the nearness of His mercy. And there is no better way to accomplish this work of humility than to spend some time seriously contemplating our answer to the question, “Who do you say Jesus is?” For there to be any chance at all that he is the rock of your holiness, he must be—minimally—the one, the only one who suffered on the cross for you; died for you; and rose on the third day for you. Whatever else and whoever else he might be for you—enlightened master, social justice icon, moral exemplar—he must be the Crucified Christ, the long-promised Messiah. Your faith in this truth is the unique measure of your holiness. Not the only measure to be sure but the one that gives all other measures their scale. I dare you: examine your day—your thoughts, words, deeds—and ask yourself before you fall asleep: seeing and hearing me today, is there anyone out there b/c of me who loves God more now than they did when they woke up this morning?
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25 September 2014
Have you sworn to the mission of Christ?
25th Week OT (Th)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
________________________
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Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
We
know that kings fear prophets and we know why: prophets of the Lord
trust in God alone, leaving no room in their hearts for the things of
this world, no space for the king to occupy with threats or bribes.
Now we know that kings can be perplexed by the Lord's prophets and
preachers – curious or puzzled by who they are and what they might
achieve in God's name. Herod the tetrarch hears “about all that
[is] happening” in his kingdom, and the news leaves him “greatly
perplexed.” All that
is happening in
Herod's kingdom is the ministry of Jesus the Christ. Teaching,
preaching, healing, casting out demons. All
that is happening is
the fulfillment of the Father's promise to His people to forever free
them from the slavery of sin. All
that is happening is
the advent of the long-awaited Messiah and the redemption of creation
as a hostage to death. Herod is perplexed b/c some say that this
Jesus is Elijah the prophet. Some say that he is the martyred herald,
John. So, the king, anxiously curious, asks, “Who then is this
about whom I hear such things?” To quail his anxiety and satiate
his curiosity, Herod persists in “trying to see him.” As priests,
prophets, and kings in Christ Jesus, it is our sacred duty to show
the Herod's of this world exactly
who Christ is.
In
Herod's own day, Christ showed himself to be exactly who and what he
claimed to be: the Son of God, the Son of Man, the Messiah. In word
and deed, he revealed the Father to those with eyes to see and ears
to hear. And upon those who saw and heard his Word, he sent the Holy
Spirit in fire and tongues to give birth to the Church. The witness
of the Church – from that 2,000 yr old Pentecost up to and
including Sept 25, 2014 – is the consistent, on-going testimony of
the Spirit manifested in and through the words and deeds of the men
and women who surrender themselves to the ever-merciful will of God
and place themselves wholly under obedience to the single-hearted
mission of Christ: tell my Father's people that through me His mercy
is freely given for the salvation of their souls. Is this the mission
and ministry you have sworn yourself to? Are you under the obedience
of Christ to preach and teach the Good News – that no one has to
remain a slave to sin; that no one has to endure the permanent
darkness of death; that no one can be compelled to deny that Jesus is
Lord? If we are not preaching and teaching and living out Christ's
command to love, then how we will show our 21st century Herod's exactly
who Christ is?
Qoheleth
– centuries ago – prophetically describes an enduring spirit, one
that still animates the powers of this world: useless vanity, futile
labor, directionless change, wasted bounty, breathless speech,
exhausted novelty, and the forgetfulness of memory and its
destruction. We can call this spirit, Nihil
–
the emptiness that motivates Herod's perplexity and the principal
obstacle to our mission. Nihil
possesses the heart and mind and encourages chaos by convincing the
poor soul that only Nothing matters; Nothing is good, true, and
beautiful; Nothing rules and guides; Nothing is sacred, Nothing
transcends. Against the spirit of Nihil, God's prophets and preachers
bring another Spirit, another more powerful force: the spirit and
power of Caritas.
All that is happening through us must be the love and mercy Christ
promises to sinners. It's not enough to just speak the words. We are
vowed to preach the Word. Teach the Word. And act out the Word. We
must be and do exactly
who and what Christ is for the salvation of the world. Herod was
perplexed. This world is more than perplexed; it is possessed of a
spirit of destruction and deceit. Our sacred duty is to show a Better
Way by being that Better Way, by being Christ for others.
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24 September 2014
Graft your life onto the Cross
25th Week OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
_______________________
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Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
Kings
fear prophets b/c prophets have nothing to lose when the kings
decides that the prophet's truth-telling threatens kingly power. With
nothing and no one to hold hostage, nothing short of death can
silence a noisy prophet. And thus are we tested in faith: are you
prepared to die for telling the Truth and doing the Good? More
specifically, are you prepared to die for preaching Christ and for
living out his unbreakable Word? If not, Christ says, “Take nothing
for the journey. . .” Take nothing along with you but Christ. Take
nothing but his Word – his promises, his mighty deeds. Anything not
of Christ and everyone but Christ can be taken from you. Mother,
father, brothers and sisters, friends, car, house, job, reputation –
all of these can be/will be destroyed when the powers of this world
tire of your truth-telling and do-gooding. If nothing and no one
comes before Christ, if nothing and no one counts more than Christ in
your work, then the king cannot silence you. He cannot kill Christ.
Not again. Christ has defeated the kings of this world. So, whatever
treasure they may have to tempt you into silence – it all belongs
to Christ. . .and to us as his adopted brothers and sisters. Our
prayer as prophets on the Way: “Give me neither poverty nor
riches; provide me only [what] I need.”
In the summer of 2013, Pope
Francis preached to a group of seminarians and religious novices in
Rome. He exhorted them, “Herein
lies the secret of the fruitfulness of a disciple of the Lord! Jesus
sends his followers out with no 'purse, no bag, no sandals'. The
spread of the Gospel is not guaranteed either by the number of
persons, or by the prestige of the institution, or by the quantity of
available resources. What counts is to be permeated by the love of
Christ, to let oneself be led by the Holy Spirit and to graft one’s
own life onto the tree of life, which is the Lord’s Cross.” Graft
your life onto the Cross.
Is it possible to graft your life onto the Cross if you come to the
Cross weighted down with Necessary Things, with Important
Relationships, and Serious Responsibilities? If we love these more
than Christ? No. No, we cannot be grafted onto the Cross weighed down
by these burdens. However, if we love Christ first, that is, if we
love all other things, people, and relationships through
our love for Christ – placing Christ first in the order of
understanding – then we are already grafted onto to the trunk of
the Cross. And our lives are lives of praise and thanksgiving for the
chance to die with him on the altar of his cross.
In
21st
century America, it is more than just a little difficult to imagine
the depth of surrender that Jesus is urging on us. Yes, he means
material poverty when he says “take nothing on the journey.” Yes,
by “[take] neither walking stick, nor sack, nor food, nor
money, [nor] a second tunic” he means to say that the things we
own too often come to own us. And yes, he means that virtuous
detachment from stuff is essential to the preaching of the Good News.
But the depth of our surrender can only begin with material poverty
and virtuous detachment. If we become poor and wholly detached and
yet remain uncommitted to Christ's ministry of freely given mercy and
sacrificial love, then we are nothing more than just detached and
poor. Can poverty and detachment alone tell the Truth and do the
Good? No. Kings do not fear the poor and the detached. The powers of
this world fear the prophet's trust in God alone. They fear humility,
mercy, and the sort of love that dies for another. The depth of our
surrender then is measured not by our material poverty or detachment,
but how freely and eagerly our poverty and detachment bring Christ to
those caught in the traps of sin and death.
So.
. .who or what owns you, holding you back from diving to the
deepest depths of surrender in Christ?
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23 September 2014
Your head on a platter
Padre Pio
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre dame Seminary, NOLA
Why
would a king fear a prophet? How does a man like Herod, a man with
wealth, political and military power, and the loyalty of Imperial
Rome, become anxious about some backwoods preacher? At first glance,
prophets are nobodies. Disreputable, destitute, wandering madmen. No
family ties. No wealth, no power, no prestigious academic
credentials. They have no institutional affiliations, no grant money,
no access to the media. Their overwhelming stench drives even the
unwashed paparazzi away! So, who are these men who give kings
sleepless nights? If they are truly prophets of the Lord, then they
have one thing any king should fear: a mandate from God to speak the
truth. While God's prophets preach the Word, kings play the game of
politics, a game of influence in the acquisition of power. And the
fact that prophets have nothing lose—nothing to bargain with,
nothing to compromise—well, this makes them dangerous indeed. Herod
murdered John the Baptist on a whim. And that preacher from Nazareth
is quickly becoming a problem. Himself a priest, a prophet, and a
king, Jesus goes around claiming to be the Way, the Truth, and the
Life. With nothing to lose, nothing to compromise, he is an imminent
threat to the secular power of kings. And King Herod in particular.
As the Body of Christ—each one of us, baptized as priests,
prophets, and kings—as the Church, do we pose an imminent threat to
the powers of this world? If we don't, we aren't doing our jobs.
There
was a time when the Church could cause kings and queens to quake
under their royal bed covers. No monarch legitimately ruled without
the consent of the Church. Popes could foment a revolution by
relieving a monarch's subjects from their sacred duty to obey their
betters. The Church commanded armies, treasuries, orders of knights,
and, most frightening of all, the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Just
ask the Holy Roman Emperor, King Henry IV about those keys! But Herod
doesn't fear Jesus b/c Jesus can rouse the rabble and arm them, or
because he can buy a spot in the line of royal succession. Herod is
anxious about Jesus, perplexed by this itinerant preacher for the
same reason that most rulers fear those with nothing to lose: there's
nothing—short of death—to stop them from speaking the truth. And
in the case of Christ, death proved to be an international catalyst
for the spread of his Good News!
As
the Church, the Body of Christ, each of us baptized as priests,
prophets, and kings, do we keep the worldly powers awake at night
worrying about the truth we might unleashed upon the realm? Though
fear can be a powerful motivator for getting the right thing done, we
no longer rely on ecclesial knights and papal armies to threaten
kings with the violence of heaven. In all the ways that truly matter,
we have become more powerful by abdicating power, wealthier in
abandoning wealth, and holier in surrendering the pretenses of an
Imperial Church. But are we stripped bare enough to bring the
prophetic word to those who would threaten what we have left? Christ
warned his disciples that to be faithful to the end they could prefer
nothing and no one before him. Anything and anyone we choose before
we choose Christ is something or someone for us to lose when the king
gets anxious about our truth-telling. Then, we are forced to choose
again and again, each time we are called upon for the sake of unity,
or fashion, or convenience, each time we are harangued to compromise
or lie or cheat, we must choose. Christ or power? Christ or
influence? Christ or celebrity? Christ or popularity? Christ or the
family and friends?
The
preacher, Qoheleth, infamously laments: “All things are vanity!”
Futile, fleeting. For the Church, this is not a lament but an
expression of hope. The Good News of Christ Jesus is no thing.
Neither futile nor fleeting. And if we, his Body, are to be prophetic
in a time of corrupt and violent power, we cannot flinch from
speaking veritas in caritate, truth in love.
So,
let me ask you: how do you think your head will look on a silver
platter?
______________________
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