"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
07 February 2015
06 February 2015
Fear Makes Us Foolish
St Paul Miki and Companions
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St Dominic Church, NOLA
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St Dominic Church, NOLA
When
we fall into sin, it's usually because of pride. Herod is no
exception. His degeneration into foolishness might be blamed on lust
– an older man drooling over a much younger woman. But – at its
core – all foolishness is pride. Salome the Dancer, and her mother,
Herodias, take advantage of Herod's pride through his lust and turn
his well-known generosity into cold-blooded murder. They succeed in
turning Herod into a murdering tyrant b/c he is possessed by the dark
spirits of anxiety and fear. Why else would a powerful king keep a
holy and righteous man like John the Baptist in prison? Fear makes us
foolish, and foolishness is and always will be the enemy of God's
wisdom.
John
preaches against Herod's adultery, warning the king again and again
that his sin will taint the kingdom. Herod imprisons John, keeping
him close, and preventing him from preaching against the king
publicly. We can almost hear Herod's internal conflict. God's wisdom
and the king's conscience draw Herod to John's preaching. Herod knows
that John is right. But power, lust, and misplaced generosity prevent
him from choosing wisdom over foolishness. Having consistently chosen
to accomplish apparently good ends by evil means, Herod reaches a
point where Salome and Herodias tip the scale and the king murders
John, becoming, in this deadly choice, a Royal Fool.
Herod's
fall into darkness shows us that fools are made not born. In fact,
fools are self-made, constructed, if you will, out of pride, and
played by men and women who once listened to wisdom. If Herod's power
and pride started his decline, then fear accelerated it, and lust and
hard-heartedness sealed the deal. Like all of our moral choices, vice
is a habit: we choose again and again to call evil Good. Over time,
we are no longer capable of recognizing the Good and come to believe
that in choosing Evil we are choosing Good. Herod believes that
keeping John in prison prevents political unrest – it's all about
national security and John's safety. And even though he is distressed
by Salome's request for John's head on a platter, Herod justifies the
prophet's execution as an act of fidelity to his oath, fearing
embarrassment if he breaks it. The king is motivated at every
decision-point by vicious habits and these habits take him—step by
step—right into moral foolishness.
Hearing,
seeing, and doing God's wisdom are all habits: choices and actions we
must take one at a time, step by step. Each decision we make brings
us closer to foolishness or closer to wisdom. If living in God's
wisdom is your goal, then let your prayer be: “The Lord is my light
and my salvation; whom should I fear? The Lord is my life’s refuge;
of whom should I be afraid?” Why this prayer? B/c fear of the Lord
is the beginning of wisdom.
_______________________
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01 February 2015
Our reason for living
4th Sunday of OT
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
Paul
writes to the always-anxious Corinthians, “Brothers and sisters, I
should like you to be free of anxieties.” He would like for them to
be released from the slavery of their doubts, the chains of their
mistrust, and the need for total control. He would like for them to
be able to live in the world and not flail around panicked about what
comes next. What’s After This? Where’s the plan? The map? The
schedule? Paul would like for his Corinthian brothers and sisters to
be rested in the Lord’s promise of mercy, settled into an enduring
trust of their Father, and focused on all the things Christ left them
to accomplish. Instead, they – like us – spend an inordinate
amount of our limited time fretting, scheming, worrying, fidgeting
about things and people we cannot possibly influence or control.
Let's call this phenomenon, Heliocopter Spirituality – the tendency
to hover anxiously over our own lives, stressing about outcomes
rather than leaving it all for God to figure out.
What
are the Corinthians stressing over? They're distracted by the rigors
of family life, worried needlessly by the demands of husbands and
wives and children, taken away from the difficult work, the hard
labor of preparing for the coming again of the Christ. Paul, and all
those Jesus leaves behind, wait for their beloved Master to return to
them and take them all away. They are anxious about many things, but
most anxious about the apparent delay in his return. Paul’s
admonishment to them: don’t become too attached to the workings of
this world – the things of this world demand their own kind
attention, their own kind of sacrifice. Rather, stay free for Christ,
and do what he has asked you to do.
What
are you anxious about? What unclean spirits harass you? Do you know
the name of the fearfulness that chews away at the strength of your
gifts, your trust, your patience? Do you know the name of the spirit
that moves you to hide from God, moves you to ignore God, moves you
to defy God? You can all say, “Sure, Father, it’s the Devil!”
Yes, it is. But more specifically, can you identify, precisely point
out the spirit that steals your peace in Christ?
Jesus
goes to Capernaum to teach in the synagogue. People are astonished at
his teaching, stunned at the authenticity and authority of his
message. He speaks the Word; he teaches and preaches a Word of power
and might, claiming for himself the authority of his Father and, in
doing so, claiming for the Father the lives, the souls of those who
hear and heed his Word. Despite the power of his message, it's not
the men and women who hear him that feel their world shaking. Notice
who grows anxious, notice whose peace is rattled to the core: the
unclean spirits!
The
men and women who hear Jesus preach are gifted, graced with the
boundless love of God. The unclean spirit is fearful. The men and
women are astonished, opened, enlightened, touched by glory at the
Word proclaimed. The unclean spirit is dreadful, nervous, shaken, and
most definitely stirred! The people there leap forward to grab hold
of the Word and they hold on to the Word as if it were a hurt child,
or a long-lost loved one. They embrace the hope, the expectation of
eternal life, the renewal of their lives with the Father, the
reconciliation that the God-man, Jesus, makes real. The unclean
spirit can only despair and complain. It can only wail louder and
gripe, “What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you
come to destroy us?” Our Lord was sent. He is sent. And he will be
sent again.
Moses
spoke to his people and said, “A prophet like me will the Lord,
your God, raise for you from among your own kin; to him you shall
listen […] I will put my words into his mouth; he shall tell them
all that I command him.” Our Lord will send a prophet, a voice to
speak His Word to us and we will listen. We heard Elijah, Ezekiel,
Jeremiah. We heard Amos and Isaiah. And much more recently, we heard
John the Baptizer. We heard the Name he spoke to us, the announcement
of the Good News of our Savior’s arrival in the flesh. And then we
heard the Christ Himself teach us salvation, preach to us the Way of
Life through him. We believed. We heard and we believed.
And
yet we are still capable of anxiety. Why? I think we forget Who we
are dealing with. I think we trudge along, so habituated to hearing
the Bad News, that everything the Good God has done for us is lost in
the panicky headlines, the hysterical screaming of one crisis after
another. We forget what we have said “Amen” to here. We forget
what we have asked for here. We come here to remember. And yet, still
we forget.
Here’s
a reminder, just a reminder to put a little fear into the spirit of
forgetfulness that may be haunting us. This evening, if you
participate fully in this Eucharist, you will say “Amen”—“it
is so”—to the presence of Christ among us. He IS here. You will
thank him for his Word proclaimed and thank him again for his Gospel.
You will say amen to his ancient teaching and amen again for taking
care of your needs. You will say amen to His blessed Name and amen to
his coming Kingdom; amen to His will done in all creation and amen to
your need for His daily food; amen to his mercy and yours and amen to
his protection from evil. You will say “amen” to offering bread
and wine, his body and soul on that altar of sacrifice, to be
blessed, transformed and given back to Him. You will say amen to His
peace and share it. Amen to the Lamb of God and his sacrifice for us.
Amen to his supper. And amen and amen for the Holy One of God who
teaches with a new authority, preaches with a new authenticity the
Word of Life.
What
are you anxious about? What spirits worry you? Remember what you have
said amen to here this evening. Remember what you have sacrificed and
who you are in Christ. Our Lord wants us free of anxieties. Our Lord
wants us free so that we can spread the fame of the Good News to
everyone, everywhere. Free of attachments, free of distractions, free
of sin and death. . .so that our witness to his Good News is our
reason for rising, our reason for living.
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25 January 2015
Getting Your Attention
3rd Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
What
gets our attention these days? A disaster? Some sort of crisis? Maybe
a name change for your favorite team gets you worked up? Or maybe
you're a fairly even-tempered soul who reacts calmly in all
situations. You're calm in a crisis, controlled, and clear-headed.
After all, what isn't a crisis these days? Global warming!
Terrorists! ISIS and Boko Haram! Ebola! The End of America! Genocide
in Nigeria and Syria! The Collapse of Europe! Open Borders! Just
about anything that happens these days (no matter how minor) is
presented to us as a crisis of earth-shattering proportions, a
disaster on par with the worst punishments visited on sinners in the
Old Testament. Digging through the hysterical rhetoric of a
hyperventilating media can be exhausting work. If you're like me,
you've come to the conclusion that “Wolf” has been cried once too
often, and that it is far better to throw in with the providence of
God and let human events unfold as they will, knowing that Love
Himself has already won the victory for us. Squeals of panic from
politicians, activists, and media talking-heads take on a whole new
insignificance when placed along side the Word of God and His promise
of loving-care. None of this, however, should close our ears to the
His call for our repentance. Though He will not destroy us again for
our disobedience, He will leave us to face the consequences of
ignoring a fair warning. “I tell you, brothers and sisters, the
time is running out. . .”
So,
what does it take to get your attention these days? The people of
Nineveh hear Jonah announce in their streets, “Forty days more and
Nineveh shall be destroyed!” Just forty days. And everything you
know and love will be gone. Does that get your attention? Apparently,
it gets the Ninevehites' attention b/c they repent and their city is
spared. What's odd about this brief episode from the Book of Jonah is
that the prophet sent by God to warn the Ninevehites never actually
offers them a deal. You know the deal: repent or burn. Jonah simply
goes around the streets yelling that the city will be destroyed in
forty days. No conditions. No hedged bets against destruction. Just a
straightforward warning. Why no conditions? Well, we might speculate
that Jonah wanted the city destroyed. Or perhaps the Lord's
punishment for his earlier reluctance to serve left him feeling a
little petulant. Regardless, the threat of destruction is enough to
send a city-wide wave of repentance through the population. Having
secured the Ninevehites' attention without offering them a deal,
Jonah secures the city for the Lord.
So,
what does it take to secure your attention? Writing to the
Corinthians, Paul announces, “I tell you, brothers and sisters, the
time is running out. . .For the world in its present form is passing
away.” Does knowing that your time will one day run out secure your
attention? Paul's warning to the Corinthians is hardly profound. The
world in its present form is always passing away. Time is always
running out. Anyone with a watch and somewhere to be knows this. What
might not be so obvious at first glance is that for time to run out,
for the world in its present form to pass away, there must be a point
somewhen in the future toward which we are moving in time. In
other words, Paul is telling the Corinthians that time and this
present world have an end and that end is swiftly coming to bear. Is
this an attention-grabber? Hardly. We're told everyday that the end
is near. It's either the ice caps melting or the scarcity of clean
air or some new genetically modified plague that's coming to wipe us
all out. . .any moment now! Just a few more minutes. . .one or two
more hours. . .or, um, in a year or two. Maybe. Telling us that time
is short is nothing new, not scary enough to open our ears to news we
do not want to hear. It will take more than the dull beat of crisis,
crisis, crisis from the media to get our attention.
So,
for the last time, what will open your ears to hear what you really
need to hear? How about this: “This is the time of fulfillment. The
kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe in the gospel!” A
time of fulfillment. Not the end of time, or the destruction of your
city, but the fulfillment of God's promise to bring His kingdom to
us. We are now living in that period of human history that will
witness the keeping of a divine promise. Turn from disobedience
toward righteousness and believe that the Lord wills that all sinners
come to Him for His mercy. Notice the absence of a threat, the
absence of a deal. Notice also that Jesus doesn't warn us or nag at
us. He simply announces that the Kingdom of God is at hand and then
he invites us to turn from our sin and believe that we are forgiven.
We don't have to fast to be saved or put on sackcloth or wail our
sins in the streets. All we need to do is turn from sin and believe
that the Father loves us enough to announce the coming of His kingdom
by sending His only Son to live and die as one of us. He fulfills His
promise in the body and blood of Christ. The urgent choice we have to
make is btw receiving him as Lord, or living – in this world and
the next – with the consequences of sin.
Jesus
calls all of us to believe his gospel. Not a gospel of loss, of grief
and mourning; not of threat or bargain, or dust and fumes; nor the
gospel of city-wide apocalypse or righteous war. His is a gospel of
everlasting goodness and eternal life, permanent mercy and
all-pervading grace; a gospel of ceaseless vitality and living
strength. And it is our gospel! Our story! Our work in the
world and, if we will take it up, our dare and our charge—to be
with Christ in here and to be Christ out there. He says to Simon and
Andrew, “Come after me, and I will make you fishers of men.”
Follow after me and my gospel, and I will turn you into men who cast
your nets to harvest the lives of men and women who long to give
themselves to God. Simon and Andrew abandon all they know and follow
Christ. James and John leave their father in his boat and follow
Christ. And all of are made into the men that Jesus promises. How did
he get their attention? Threats of impending apocalypse? No. Promises
of damnation if they refuse? No. He simply tells them the truth. And
that truth rings in their ears louder than family, friends, career,
hobbies, or even the lure of this world's impermanent joys.
OK.
I lied. I'm going to ask one more time: what does it take to get your
attention? Sirens? Flashing lights? Threats of immediate death? How
about an invitation from Christ himself to become an heir to his
heavenly kingdom? To be a member of his Body with an eternal purpose?
If so, here's the Good News: you are so invited. All you need
to do to become a disciple of Christ, a preacher of his word, a
teacher of his truth. . .is accept his invitation and then go out and
bear witness to all that he has said and all that he has done.
_________________________
24 January 2015
Three Paintings More
I'm dedicating this paintings to Young Master Thurmond, a budding 6 y.o. artist. For his inspiration!
Between Grass and Flowers * (18x24 canvas panel)
Fig Tree (18x24 canvas panel)
Unblemished (18x24 canvas panel)
* This title is just a little pretentious. It refers to Dante's Purgatorio, Cantos VIII. Consider it a "shout out" to my University of Dallas homies (is "homies" still a thing?)
__________________________________
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18 January 2015
Speak, Lord!
2nd Sunday OT (B)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
God
calls. He calls us to service, to sacrifice. He calls us to
surrender. Do we hear His voice when He calls? Are we like John the
Baptist who while still in his mother's womb recognizes his Lord's
presence and leaps with joy? Or, are we more like Samuel who doesn't
recognize the voice of the God calling him in the night? What's the
difference btw John the Baptist's and Samuel's encounter with God?
Both are called to serve. Both answer the call – eventually. The
difference btw the two is that Samuel doesn't immediately recognize
God's voice b/c “at that time [he] [is] not familiar with the Lord,
because the Lord had not revealed anything to him as yet.” From
Elizabeth's womb John knows the Lord. Nothing more was necessary than
Christ's nearness. Samuel needed a leap of faith; he needed to
believe before he heard God's voice as
God's voice, calling
him to serve. To hear the Lord Samuel had to put aside confusion,
doubt, and fear. He had to say: “Speak, for your servant is
listening.” Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening. That's a
confession, a profession of faith, an invitation from a servant to
his Master to teach him. Do you have the courage to say to God,
“Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening”?
Before
you too eagerly agree that you have the courage to invite God's call,
consider the consequences. Hearing the Lord's call and listening to
Him could mean a revolution, it could mean an upheaval in your life
like you have never experienced before. It could mean becoming a
different person, a new person, one led by an all-consuming desire to
do God's will, a person fired up to preach and teach the Good News, a
person born anew in the power of the Spirit — forgiving, loving,
merciful, peaceful, prophetic. Inviting God's call into your life
could be the end of your life as you know it. Sin becomes heavier;
absolution all the more refreshing. The need to speak the truth
becomes unbearable. Look at John the Baptist! He leaps for joy in his
mother's womb at the mere presence of the Christ Child. He knew
before he was born that his life would be forever bound to Christ's.
He lived in the wilderness most of his life, and his head landed on a
platter for speaking the truth to a king. Invite God's call into your
life. If you dare. The only we can do more dangerous than saying to
God – Speak, Lord! – is to say, “Leave me alone, Lord, your
servant is busy with other things.”
If
it takes courage to invite the Lord's call into your life, it
takes something like suicidal recklessness to dismiss Him from
your life. As a followers of Christ vowed to bear witness to the
Father's mercy in the world, we cannot function w/o the constant
attention of God's energizing grace. We cannot be anything near who
and what we need to be w/o constantly drawing in His glory, w/o being
constantly perfected in His love. To dismiss God's voice from our
lives is more than just spiritual suicide. It's a betrayal of
everything we have pledged to be and to do in the world for the
world. This might all seem to be a little out-there. I'm not
suggesting that any of us actually say to God, “Nope. Not working
for you, Lord.” But what we might say is something like, “I'll
get to your work after I've done mine.” Or “I've got a thousand
things to get done today. One of those things is your work.” God's
work goes on the To Do List along with grocery shopping, picking up
the kids, and paying the bills. In the chaos of daily-getting-by our
vow to God to be His living witnesses to the world becomes another
mundane task, another chore to check off a list. How do we remember
that those groceries, those kids, that job; everything, including
this life is His freely given gift to us? We belong to God. 100%
wholly owned by the Father. Our lives are His.
How
do we remember this basic truth? When Jesus walks past John and two
of his disciples, John announces, “Behold, the Lamb of God!”
John's disciples leave his side and follow Christ. Jesus asks them,
“What are you look for?” They could've said eternal life, pardon
for our sins, a place to get some good gumbo. What do they actually
say? “Rabbi,
where are you staying?” Where Jesus is staying is not all that
important here. What is important is that they address Jesus as
“Rabbi,” Teacher. They are looking to Christ to be their teacher,
to be the one who shows them the Way. After spending an afternoon
with Jesus, Andrew, one of John's former disciples, goes to Simon,
his brother, and tells him, “We have found the Messiah.” They
find a teacher and a savior. And what do they do? They go out and
bring others in. The gospel says that Andrew brings Simon to Jesus.
How do you remember – day in and day out – that your job, your
kids, your friends, your very life are all freely given gifts from
God? And that you are His servant? You bear witness to God's mercy
everyday and bring to Him a student, a disciple, someone in need of
being taught the Way. Even if – especially
if – that someone
is yourself. You get out of bed every morning, saying, “Speak,
Lord, your servant is listening.”
That
takes courage. Because – as I've said – hearing the Lord's call
and doing His will can be revolutionary. Nothing remains the same.
Samuel grows into a great prophet. Andrew and the other disciples
grow into apostles. Simon becomes Peter, the Rock, the foundation
stone of Christ's Church on earth. That small band of men and women
cowering in the Upper Room at Pentecost become the longest surviving
human institution on the planet. Who will you become when you invite
the Lord's call and listen to His voice? You will become exactly who
and what He needs you to be right where you are. More faithful, more
loving, more hopeful, stronger, more courageous, wiser, more just.
You will become – in Christ – exactly who and what you have vowed
to be and do: a
powerful witness to the mercy of God.
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17 January 2015
16 January 2015
Help the Seminarians. . .they really need it
Notre Dame Seminary basketball team going to Ohio. . .with your help!
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14 January 2015
Gesso Thank You
A Kind & Generous Soul sent me a bottle of gesso from the Wish List. . .
Thank you. Perfect timing. . .I am completely out.
Fr. Philip
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Thank you. Perfect timing. . .I am completely out.
Fr. Philip
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11 January 2015
He is never nearer. . .
The Baptism of
the Lord
Fr. Philip Neri
Powell, OP
Lay
Carmelites/OLR, NOLA
“Thus
says the Lord: All you who are thirsty, come to the water!” The
water is given. . .but we must go to the water. If we are thirsty, we
drink. The water is given, but we must choose to drink. “You who
have no money, come, receive grain and eat. . .” The grain is
given. . .but we must go to the grain. If we are hungry, we eat. The
grain is given, but we must choose to eat. As it is with God's gifts
of water and grain, so it is with God's mercy, so it is with His
forgiveness. If we are repentant, we confess. Forgiveness is given,
but we must choose to receive that forgiveness. Who starves to death,
or dies of thirst when grain and water are freely given? How many of
us remain in sin when absolution is a gift just waiting to be
unwrapped? One of the themes of Christmas, the Epiphany, and the
Baptism of the Lord is our unworthiness to be given the gift of
eternal life. Truly, we do not deserve this prize. However, we are
made worthy, we are made to deserve this gift by the birth, the
baptism, the death, and the resurrection of the Lord. Having been
handed—without cost to us, without any work from us—the keys to
our Father's Kingdom, why would we hesitate, why would we balk at
stepping up to and stepping into a life of holiness with Him? “Seek
the Lord while he may be found, call him while he is near!”
Our
Lord is never nearer to us than He is right now. His call to us is
never clearer than it is right now. His gift of eternal life is never
more ready to be received than it is right now. The urgency that
Isiah puts into his prophecy isn't simply rhetorical; in other words,
he's not just being dramatic for the sake of being dramatic. The Lord
says to Isiah that His Word will go forth from His mouth and it
“shall not return to me void, but shall do my will, achieving the
end for which I sent it.” That Word, the Word sent out to do God's
will, is the Christ, the Son made flesh and he will not return to the
Father until the job he was sent to do is done. Since the Christ has
returned to the Father, we know that the job he was sent to do has
been done. That job is our salvation. The offer of mercy in flesh and
blood has been made—once, for all; to Jew and Gentile alike—and
now it's our turn. Do we receive His mercy? Do you take all that has
been given to you and put it all to work for the greater glory of
God? If not, then you condemn yourself to starve and die of thirst
within sight of grain and water.
Christ's
baptism in the Jordan by John's hand is the baptism of the world.
Every creature, every made thing is washed clean, made holy, and
brought into a new creation. God's human creatures are given the
freedom to follow Christ's example in baptism, or to continue as
natural creatures until death. But b/c each of us is gifted with an
immortal soul, the decision to continue on as a natural creature has
consequences beyond death. Without God's mercy, without receiving His
forgiveness, we perish by being forever separated from Him. Baptism
brings us into the life of Christ and sets us on the narrow way
toward our destined freedom in His love. Baptism makes possible every
other means of receiving God's gifts. Baptism is the first but not
the only invitation we get to come and enjoy the blessings of God's
generosity. Why would we choose to remain natural creatures when our
supernatural end is provided free of charge? Why would we remain in
sin when our freedom from sin is already paid for, already purchased?
So, receive all that God given you!
How
do we receive all that we have been given? First, we ask for what we
need in prayer. Asking for our needs to be met puts us in a proper
relationship with God; that is, as creatures totally dependent on Him
for everything we need, we place ourselves before Him in humility,
acknowledging our dependency. Second, even before we get what we
need, we give Him thanks. Giving thanks before our prayers are
answered ensures that we remain in humility and grow in humility even
as we reap His blessings. This also prevents us from becoming spoiled
brats who take and take but never acknowledge the source of our
blessings. Third, celebrate the sacraments as often as possible,
always knowing that God's mercy is freely given and never runs out.
The sacraments are the ordinary means of receiving grace. God is not
bound by His sacraments, but He has established them for us as
guaranteed fonts of assistance. We'd be foolish not to take
advantage of them as often as they are available. And finally, all
the gifts we receive from God are multiplied in the sharing of them.
By its very nature, God's abundance is diffusive. Like an expensive
perfume sprayed in one room of the house, before long, the whole
house smells! God's abundance naturally (by nature) adds to itself,
multiplying, advancing, and blessing everyone it touches. When we
assist the diffusion of His abundant gifts, we are doubly blessed.
Our
Lord is blessed and baptized to fulfill all righteousness under the
Law. His baptism reveals his nature and mission: he is the Christ
sent to save the world from sin and death. His offer of mercy and
forgiveness is made daily, hourly and all we need to do is accept his
offer and thrive in holiness. When we come to Him in humility with
thanksgiving, He says to each one of us: “You are my beloved child;
with you I am well pleased.”
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09 January 2015
Coffee Cup Browsing (Terrorism Edition)
When the IRA was terrorizing London, I never once thought: "All Catholics must be terrorists."
But I'm not ready to sign on to the Catholic League position either. . .
Nor do I trust the Left's hysterical attempt to hide that fact that the Paris terrorists preached their version of Islam while killing innocents.
But I will agree that Islam -- in its many versions -- is fundamentally incompatible with western liberal democracy.
Keeping in mind that our Media Betters have no problem whatsoever repeatedly lying about, offending, and attacking Christians (and the Church in particular) all the while twisting themselves into pretzels to avoid offending Muslims.
In other Culture War news: Miami's archbishop requires employees of the archdiocese to keep quiet about their support for same-sex "marriage."
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08 January 2015
I am Here as Promised
Our Lady of Prompt Succor
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of Mt Carmel Convent, NOLA
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Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of Mt Carmel Convent, NOLA
Our faith is the triumph that conquers the world. Not swords or bullets
or boycotts or drones. But faith: our steadfast trust in God's promise
that all we need do to win victory over sin is receive His forgiveness
through Christ and live in the spirit of love he sent to dwell among us.
John announces two triumphs when he writes, “. . .the victory that
conquers the world is our faith.” There is the victory over personal
doubt and delusion; and there is that victory's win over the world. The
first win—the personal triumph—is won against the temptations fired at
each one of us from the Enemy's camp, the steady pounding of noise,
stench, illusion, and distraction. This battle is won when you and I
return the enemy's fire with prayer, good deeds, compassion, and mercy.
The second win—our victory over the world—is won against the besieging
spirits of despair, hatred, violence, and self-indulgence. This battle
is won when all of us together show those besieged by evil the power of
hope, love, peace, and generosity. All who are begotten by God conquer
the world b/c the world is always defeated in love.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a Lutheran theologian martyred by the Nazis at
Flossenberg in 1945, wrote, “Being a Christian is less about cautiously
avoiding sin than about courageously and actively doing God's will.”
Courageously and actively doing God's will certainly entails avoiding
sin but carefully maneuvering around temptations is only the beginning
of holiness. When Jesus rolls up the scroll containing Isaiah's
prophecies, he leaves in the air the ringing word of our mission: bring
glad tidings to the poor; proclaim liberty to captives; announce the
recovery of sight to the blind; release the oppressed into freedom; and
declare a year favorable to the Lord. This is not merely a social
justice mission or an agenda for worldly political liberation. That kind
struggle hardly needs a Christ. The revolution we fight for seeks the
overthrow of humanity's greatest oppressor: the Father of Lies. The one
who impoverishes nations families with greed; enslaves the foolish with
their own lusts; blinds the innocent with fables of pride and wrath;
oppresses the many through envy and gluttony; and declares every year,
every day good for rebellion against the One Who loves us despite our
disobedience. Simply avoiding sin cannot spark a votive candle much less
set loose a firestorm of holiness. For that we must seek to do the will
of the Father.
And what does God will for us? We already know that He wills that we
live with Him forever. We know too that He wills for us to live lives of
holiness in love so that His glory may increase among the nations. To
see His will accomplished, we must, above all, love. Love Him and one
another. We've heard this a gazillion-zillion times. It's almost become a
formal noise, like the mumbled “hey, how you doing?” we use to greet
strangers. But for the sake of Christ and the salvation of your immortal
soul, listen: “. . .we love God because he first loved us.” If you love
anyone—mom, dad, kids, spouse, anyone—you are able to love them b/c
(for the reason that) God loves us all. IOW, when you love someone, you
establish and maintain your participation in Divine Love. And it is only
through Divine Love—God Himself—that we are saved from sin and made
holy. This is why Jesus' announcement in the temple is so important: he
is saying, “I am here as promised. The Word made flesh. Love given flesh
and bone.” He shows us that we too can be love given flesh and bone. In
fact, if we entertain any hope at all of eternal life, we will spend
our days and nights finding ways to love better and more, much, much
more. Do the will of the Father with courage. And each time you do,
witness the Enemy's defeat by love.
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07 January 2015
"Their hearts were hardened."
From 2012 (with editions):
Wednesday after Epiphany
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
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Wednesday after Epiphany
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
What a sad indictment of the
disciples. After Jesus calms the angry sea and rescuing his friends from
a watery grave, Mark writes, “[The disciples] were completely
astounded. They had not understood the incident of the loaves. On the
contrary, their hearts were hardened.” It is sad that they are astounded
by Jesus' power to calm the sea and even sadder that they did not
understand the signs given to them when he fed the five thousand. As sad
as these failures are, it is saddest of all that their hearts have
hardened against accepting the truth of Jesus' true nature and mission.
What does all this sad failure tell us about the disciples? At the very
least, we know why they were so frightened by the storm and by Jesus
walking on the water to save them. With hearts hardened against both
understanding and love, the disciples are left with no other way to see
and feel the world than through fear. They are terrified at the prospect
of drowning, and even the appearance of their Master on the waves is
not enough to quell their fear. John writes, “There is no fear in love,
but perfect love drives out fear.” Christ is with us. There is no place
for fear among us. So, take heart!
When we say that a heart has grown hard, we mean that it is no longer
capable—on its own—of serving its spiritual function: it can no longer
love; that is, it can no longer seat Love Himself at the center of the
human soul. Without Love Himself seated in the center of our souls, no
soul can begin even to dream of seeing and understanding the miraculous
signs Christ performs, much less see and understand his true nature and
mission. Without Love Himself seated at the center of their lives, the
disciples are ignorant and loveless men chosen by Christ to learn and
love instead of fear; yet, their fear is what keeps them from learning
and loving. Their fear reaches its terrific peak at Jesus' arrest in the
Garden, and they surrender to the temptation to abandon him. Only after
the descent of the Holy Spirit, the spirit of love between the Father
and the Son, do they find their hearts grown large enough to hold all
the love they need to take on the Christ-nature and make his mission
their own. But now, in a boat on an angry sea, they cry out in
astonishment and fear, and they hear Jesus say, “Take courage, it is I,
do not be afraid!” Take heart! Christ is with us. And there is no place
for fear among us.
Without Love Himself seated in our hearts, we cannot begin even to dream
of seeing and understanding the miraculous signs Christ performs, much
less see and understand his true nature and mission. And understanding
that nature and mission is more than a matter of historical curiosity.
By receiving his body and blood in this sacrifice of thanksgiving, each
one of us who receives commits him/herself to taking on Christ's nature
and to making his mission our own. We take one more step toward becoming
fully human; that is, to becoming more perfectly human, completely
giving ourselves over to the Father for His divine purpose. But fear
stands btw each one of us and total surrender to God. The spirit of
not-knowing-what-comes; the spirit of worry, anxiety, turmoil floats
there tempting us to run, to just give up. And no amount of argument,
evidence, or tears will move us around those gnawing spirits. John tells
us, “. . .one who fears is not yet perfect in love.” So, we know that
perfect love moves fear, and there is only one Perfect Love: God
Himself. Thanks be to God that Christ is with us always. Now, take one
more step toward becoming Christ for one another and banish fear
forever.
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