Audio on Soundcloud!

Audio on Soundcloud.

Now my recordings will be uploaded to the parish Soundcloud account. Here is the address: https://soundcloud.com/stthereselittleflowersb


Also, see what else is happening at our parish: https://littleflowerchurch.org/

Finally, look to the right for links to Audio from other good resources!

Saturday, March 18, 2017

Homily

When Jesus is dying on the cross, we hear Him cry “I thirst.”  Today we see in the Gospel what Jesus really means when he says that.  Let’s allow the Catechism of the Catholic Church help us to explain this:  2560 "If you knew the gift of God!" The wonder of prayer is revealed beside the well where we come seeking water: there, Christ comes to meet every human being. It is he who first seeks us and asks us for a drink. Jesus thirsts; his asking arises from the depths of God's desire for us. Whether we realize it or not, prayer is the encounter of God's thirst with ours. God thirsts that we may thirst for him.
Today we see the dramatic encounter of those two thirsts.  Humanity, like the woman at the well who has known six men, is parched, is thirsting for something that will fill that infinite hole in her heart and soul.  It’s no surprise that finite things, even human persons, could never fill that longing, that thirst.  And if we can muster up the courage to stop, to listen, to face our own hearts, then we will find that we have done the same.  We have run from God in our search for water, for something to fill our thirst.  But Lent is wake-up call for us to see that we are not alone, that God is not hiding, but is rather waiting and longing (even more that we are) for us to find Him.  But we have to let Him in, past the barriers, past the traps of our enemy: traps like fear; like unforgiveness; like hardness of heart because we don’t want to be hurt again; like hyperactivity; like pretending we don’t hear our hungers.  When we let down our guard, if we let Jesus past those barriers, then we will find something that the world cannot take away: a peace that comes from knowing we are loved and held.
Saint Teresa of Kolkata, known more popularly as Mother Teresa, began her new life, her “call within a call” to reach out to the poorest of the poor after she had a profound experience on a train ride.  That experience was in fact a deep awareness of the words from Christ’s Cross: I Thirst.  You may have heard that every house of her Missionaries of Charity would contain these words under the crucifix in the chapel.  These words were the mission that the sisters were sent to fulfill: they were to find Jesus thirsting in the poor, and love Him through them, satisfying at the same time both the deepest thirst that God has, and the deepest thirst of humanity: to love and to be loved.
And that, my friends, is discipleship in a nutshell.  That is what Christianity is all about.  Saint Paul summarizes it clearly: “The Love of God has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.”  And this gift is not meant to be hoarded to ourselves; if so, it becomes sour.  Rather it is meant to be shared, like Saint Teresa shared it, with the world, starting with those who are right in front of you.

Jesus, help us to hear our thirst, to let you quench it, and to share your love with others who need it.

Sunday, March 12, 2017

Sunday Homily - Walking by faith

Audio: click here.
Abraham couldn’t see where the Lord was leading him, but had to trust in the promise laid out before him.
Just like Noah didn’t see the rain coming, but had to trust God’s plan.
Just like Moses had to go straight to pharaoh and demand freedom of Israel, not seeing how it could possibly work out, but the promise was there – “I will be with you.”
The same is true in the 16th chapter of Matthew’s Gospel.  Immediately prior to today’s Gospel, the disciples couldn’t see what the Lord was talking about when he said “the Son of Man will be handed over and crucified,” but today the Lord gives them a sign of the promise that “on the third day be raised.”
You know, these stories are so important because they are exactly our stories.  We cannot see where the Lord is leading us, but the promise is there.  How often do we have it all figured out?  How often do all those plans get totally demolished or completely swept away by the circumstances of life.
In some ways, this is the hinge of the entire relationship between human beings and God.  All the bible stories point to this encounter between our freedom and God’s freedom working together in a type of beautiful dance.  Abraham got up and went.  Noah built.  Moses spoke.  Mary said “fiat - let it be done to me according to your word.”  Joseph “got up and did as the angel had commanded him.”  Jesus said “Father let this cup pass from me, yet not my will but yours be done,” and took up His cross and embraced His death out of the depth of His love for us.
So today, and really of Lent and every day of our lives, God is trying to lead us to our true happiness. Even when we don’t see the road ahead, our promised destiny is before us: to be like Christ Jesus.  That dazzling white raiment and glorified body is a sign of the new way to be human that God desires for us.  For each of us God shows us the saint that we could be, the best version of ourselves that is most truly ourselves.  We don’t know how to get there.  We have to walk by faith.  He is summoning us: will we follow?  Will we build according to his plan?  Will we speak His words?  Will we say “fiat”?  Will we take up our cross out of the depth of our love for Him?

Lord Jesus, help us to overcome our fears by finding our security in the glory you reveal to us.

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

High School Penance Service "Ferverino" (Short sermon)

Who made a specific Lenten promise?
Who failed already?
Good.  Good?  Yes. Good.
Why Good?  Because it’s important for us to learn that we are never going to “wow” God with how awesome we are.
Lent isn’t about God being “wowed.”
Lent is about us learning “dependence.”
I DIDN’T COME TO CALL THE RIGHTEOUS. If you “got it all together” then Jesus didn’t come for you – that’s not a good thing.  You want Jesus.
I CAME TO CALL SINNERS. This is every one of us.  That’s why it’s sort of a good thing when we fall short.  Not that I hope every one of us fails, but that I hope you see that the key to success in the spiritual life is not our own powers, but on leaning on God.
DEPENDENCE = knowing that I am nothing without God.  Sure I  may be able to do some cool things seemingly on my own, but even all of that is due to the fact that God created me, helped me to grow up the way that I did, with the support and people that have fostered me and the opportunities that I have – so yah, without all of that, I am nothing.  And for me to continue to grow in the most important area (my capacity to love like Jesus loved from the Cross) then I need to rely on God.

SO. Don’t be afraid to come to Confession today and tell God your sins.  It’s just one way that you say “Lord, I need you.”  “I can’t do this without you.”  “Teach me to love.” “Help me to grow into what you made me to be.” “Help me.”  Amen?  Amen?

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Trusting Like Children in Our Heavenly Father

Audio: Click Here!

Today we are given some beautiful images about how we should trust God instead of worry about all the other stuff out there.
You know, I think we find it difficult to trust God and his plan for our lives simply because we often don’t understand it and can’t (so to speak) “see it” until we’ve gone through it.  Whereas with all the other things we can see them pretty clearly.  The tangible things, the stuff that the word “mammon” refers to, are right before us and easy to understand, and perhaps more tempting, very easy to control and manipulate.  We feel like when we use things, we are in control of them, even when they tie bonds to our hearts.
The world tells us to be afraid.  So many people thrive off our fears.  If you get someone afraid of something, it’s much easier to sell them the false “antidote” that can calm their fears.  Just like when Peter looked at all the waves, taking our eyes away from Jesus can easily fill us up with fear.
Our patroness, however, is a profound example to us of trusting the God we cannot control, cannot fully understand, and often cannot see.  Saint Therese knew she was “little” she was weak, unfit to match up to the great souls of church history and of her modern world.  But she also knew that God was a loving father, and so in order for her to become greater than all those great souls, she only needed to trust in her God, make herself small, and raise up her arms to be picked up by him to great heights.
I once heard a father speak about his little daughter’s courageous trust in him.  She was standing on the table at home and when dad came into the room, she geared up for a jump toward him.  Not paying too much attention, the father had his mind on something else as he got close to her.  She leaped toward him and he was able to gather her in.
If an earthly father loves that much, how much more with your Heavenly Father?
And if a child has that much trust in her earthly Father, how much more should we have in our heavenly Father?

Lord, help us to keep our eyes away from the stuff around us that gives us false hopes and fake trust, and turned toward you with confidence in your tender care for us.

Sunday, February 19, 2017

God's Wisdom in A Divided World of "Enemies"

Last week we spoke about how the wisdom of God is different from human wisdom.  We learn today a bit more about just how different that wisdom is when Jesus continues his authoritative interpretation of the Law given to Moses.  He seeks to transform our lives in a deeper way than the past, to heal us at the source of our spiritual disease.
The wisdom of this world, of our culture here in 21st century USA, is often a wisdom that falls way short of what we were created to be.  Our American culture is so much a “dog-eat-dog” society, where we are all competing for the limited goods and successes that are available, so every other person around us is an obstacle to be overcome.  The ways of the world say “get even” (“an eye for an eye”) and then “get ahead.”
Every one of us has experienced this false wisdom in our lives and in our own hearts.  I remember being bullied a little bit as a Freshman in high school.  Was I ready to “love my enemy” in that situation: not so much.  I kinda wanted to get even, or at least to have the guy brought down, humiliated, and put in his place.  I was looking for immediate and direct justice, and there was no love in my heart at the time.  Years later I found out that the guy ran a red light and now has to live with the fact that he killed someone by his bad choices.  I can only imagine what that might do to someone.  I now pray that God helps him to change, to heal, and to bring God’s mercy and forgiveness to others.
God’s wisdom is different: “offer no resistance to evil.”  How does that help?  What could that possibly do?  A lot.  It can transform an entire society, one person at a time.  Just ask Mahatma Gandhi or Martin Luther King Jr.  They put this gospel lesson into practice in a radical way: forcing “enemies” to realize the common humanity that they share by not running away and hiding in our own little bubbles.  Rather, no matter how difficult it is to keep this encounter going, look them in the face, show them who your dignity, force them to see how horrible their actions are.  Perhaps then they will come to their senses, realize their own failings, and be transformed.  May God help us to be people of communion in the midst of a society that often fails to encounter those who are different from us, our so called “enemies” who are actually our brothers and sisters.
“Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”  This is the ultimate challenge that God offers us.  And Jesus gets more specific on how to do that, which only makes it more difficult: love your neighbor as yourself, even to the point of loving your enemies.  Come Lord Jesus, feed us in this Eucharist, and help us to love as you love from the Cross.


Saturday, February 11, 2017

Chesteron and the Wisdom of God

There are some ways that Jesus makes us feel really good, but there can be other ways He really challenges us and makes things difficult.  Today might be one of those days for us, because in this Gospel, as we look into the mirror that his words are, Jesus shows us how imperfect we are precisely in the obvious ways we fall short.  It’s not like he brings up things to us that we didn’t know beforehand.  It’s something that is burned into our hearts, our conscience convicts us of them so clearly.  We can say Based off this pure and simple wisdom, without a doubt that we don’t measure up again and again, and that isn’t fun to face.  But hey, ultimately it’s worth facing.  Because I’d rather live in reality than fantasy, wouldn’t you?
The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult; and left untried.
This “common sense” phrase of G. K. Chesterton helps us to come to grips with the fact that the message of the Gospel doesn’t always comfort us, but sometimes convicts us, and it helps us to live up to that calling.
In the second reading today, Saint Paul speaks of a wisdom today that is beyond “the wisdom of this age” but that does not mean it is not accessible to us thanks to the Spirit.  God’s wisdom is given to us.  This is a great gift, a great treasure.  But at the same time, it is also a great responsibility.  This wisdom must be nurtured and cultivated.  We can foster it through the things we read, watch, or listen to, and how we reflect on them.  This is what the writer of Sirach has done over his lifetime, and what G. K. Chesterton did through his, and what we ourselves are called to do.
If we aren’t careful to nurture the wisdom God has given us, we will fill our minds with what Paul calls the “Wisdom of this age.”  It is a false wisdom that, in a new way or an old-fashioned way, allows us to be comfortable with our distance from God.  It is rationalizing.  “Open your mind,” the world’s wisdom says.  But Chesterton, in his common sense way of thinking, reminds us: The object of opening the mind, as of opening the mouth, is to shut it again on something solid.
The wisdom of the world says, “we don’t need the laws of old to guide us.  They are holding us down. Etc.”
Chesterton’s wise reply: In the matter of reforming things, as distinct from deforming them, there is one plain and simple principle; a principle which will probably be called a paradox. There exists in such a case a certain institution or law; let us say, for the sake of simplicity, a fence or gate erected across a road. The more modern type of reformer goes gaily up to it and says, “I don’t see the use of this; let us clear it away.” To which the more intelligent type of reformer will do well to answer: “If you don’t see the use of it, I certainly won’t let you clear it away. Go away and think. Then, when you can come back and tell me that you do see the use of it, I may allow you to destroy it.
The Spirit convicts us and teaches us and guides us.  Conscience is the voice of the Holy Spirit.  Let us not kill this voice of the spirit that convicts us, or we will also kill the only voice that can guide us along the path that saves us from ourselves.  For if we kill the voice of God, then there are only two other options to listen to: ourselves or the voice of the enemies of God.

Let us never give up, brothers and sisters, on the way God has for us, for the two options before us are fire and water, death and life, and every moment of our lives, we choose one or the other.  Come Holy Spirit, and help us to foster the wisdom of God, that we may choose water over fire, life over death, even when it is most difficult.

Saturday, February 4, 2017

homily - Salt and Light for Western Society in 2017

Audio: Click here!
We continue this week with the next part of the Sermon on the Mount which Jesus began last week with the Beatitudes, showing us our destination as human beings: poverty of spirit, meekness, purity of heart, hunger and thirst for righteousness, peacemaking, mourning (in the suffering that love often requires) and even being persecuted for the sake of righteousness.  This is our goal, and now today we have that summarized in one three beautiful images: salt and light and a city upon a hill.  This shows us how the Christians operate in their unique time and place and the gift they are to be for their world.
Salt is called a preservative because it keeps food from going bad.  It protects the good and fights away the bad, as far as edible food is concerned.  However, salt is not too valuable in itself nowadays (though at the time of Christ it was quite valuable): but its worth was and is revealed when we have something good that we want to protect.  Christians are called to do the same: preserve the good of our society and culture.
Light, like salt, is not about itself but what it provides toward other things.  It shines into the darkness and overcomes it.  So too must Christians bring good to where there is not sufficient good - to overcome evil with the power of good.
A city upon a hill was a witness to life, to unity, to the common good that people were created for.  Christian communities must lift up and unite their cultures, contrary to the evil of volatility in our culture which is driven by the sake of consumer attention and increased revenue.  Old media and new social media cultivate an environment that perpetuates itself in this volatility.
So HOW CAN WE CHRISTIANS BE SALT and LIGHT IN OUR CULTURE TODAY?
I see three ways that our culture really doesn’t get the Gospel
1. FORGIVENESS
a. We have to be people who value forgiveness because in our society we don’t see enough of it.  We don’t see people ready to ask for forgiveness because there are so many who don’t give forgiveness.  We need to be people that say “that was wrong but I will allow you the space and the love that you need to change and grow and move forward from this.”  We must recall the words of the Our Father – “as we forgive those…” and the words of Christ from the Cross – “Father forgive them…”.  And we must live these words in our world, including making use of the sacrament of Confession.
2. SUFFERING (PAIN)
a. Secondly, our society really struggles to understand suffering.  We so often get sucked into and wrapped up in the black hole that pain is, that we allow it to consume us.  So much more for those who do not have faith, who do not know that there is a God over all of it and greater than this suffering.  We need to show them how to carry the Cross because Jesus has done it before us.  The stations of the Cross need to be carried in our hearts.  We need to show them that suffering has meaning, and that Jesus can make their wounds something glorious and transform them with the power of love.
3. WONDER (MARVEL) – G.K. CHESTERTON and my cousin Leah
a. Enjoy the beauty of life – nature, people, and especially a life well-lived.
b. Grown-up people are not strong enough to exult in monotony. But perhaps God is strong enough to exult in monotony. It is possible that God says every morning, "Do it again" to the sun; and every evening, "Do it again" to the moon. It may not be automatic necessity that makes all daisies alike; it may be that God makes every daisy separately, but has never got tired of making them. It may be that He has the eternal appetite of infancy; for we have sinned and grown old, and our Father is younger than we. – G.K. Chesterton
People / money Simplicity / stuff-chasing Humility / Pride & Boastfulness Peace / hustle & bustle Taking back Sunday (boycotting Super Bowl parties – just kidding!) Love & Life / Evil & Death
ALL THREE OF THESE ARE SERVANTS OF JOY –
If people don’t know how to forgive, If they don’t know how to go beyond their pain to a deeper meaning, if they don’t know how to “stop and smell the roses” as they wonder at the goodness of life, then joy dies really fast.   Christians must witness to a joy in a quiet life of wholesome goodness that builds our world up from beneath the radar.
And that Joy doesn’t come from a human source, but is EVANGELII GAUDIUM as Pope Francis says, the joy of the Gospel.  Joy because we know that God is in control, that he has won the battle, that his love has conquered sin and death and no pain can compare with the eternity that is ahead of us in heaven.
And all of that Joy, brothers and sisters, is found here in the Eucharist.  Here we see Forgiveness, the deeper meaning of suffering, and the marvelous beauty of God’s work in Christ.  All of this is present here in the Mass.  Let us ask Jesus to strengthen us from this Mass so that we can be salt and light for our world today.