Pope Benedict XVI: The history of salvation is not a small event, on a poor planet, in the immensity of the universe. It is not a minimal thing which happens by chance on a lost planet. It is rather the motive for everything, the motive for creation. Everything is created so that this story can exist, the encounter between God and His creature.
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Saturday, December 24, 2016
Christmas homily
Pope Benedict XVI: The history of salvation is not a small event, on a poor planet, in the immensity of the universe. It is not a minimal thing which happens by chance on a lost planet. It is rather the motive for everything, the motive for creation. Everything is created so that this story can exist, the encounter between God and His creature.
Saturday, December 17, 2016
"Obedience of Faith" - following their examples
Audio: click here!
What does it look like for someone to be a great basketball player? We look to Michael Jordan, to Larry Bird, to Magic Johnson, Alan Iverson, etc. These people excelled at the sport and show us what it means.
Saturday, December 10, 2016
Healing - fast and slow
A few years ago there was a book that came out titled, Thinking, Fast and Slow. Today, on this very joyful Sunday, so joyful we see the ROSE color used (Latin for “pink, sort of”) we can see a theme in the readings that might as well be Healing, fast and slow.
Monday, December 5, 2016
Not easy, but worth it.
Saturday, November 26, 2016
Choose Surprise or Preparation
Audio: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0Bx8IQkJZZ39KMTBpbkVOTmhfTWc
Happy Advent, and happy new year to everyone! That's right, the Church year begins today, over a month earlier than the secular calendar. Did that catch you off guard? It happens a lot that time seems to vanish away from us, where things that we felt were still weeks away are all of the sudden upon us. The new year is one example, but not the only one. Did you know the Jubilee Year of Mercy just ended last week? And of course, Christmas and New Years' Eve are around the corner as well. Sometimes we can get caught off guard with birthdays or anniversaries, with other deadlines that are important for either our work or for our personal lives. We know these “surprises” really aren't surprises, but sometimes we are a little shocked that things come upon us so suddenly. Of course, this wouldn't be a problem if we prepared ourselves ahead of time.
Well, it turns out that it works like that in our spiritual lives also, and at the start of Advent we are reminded (I should say we are warned) precisely about those things that can catch us off guard if we aren't careful, and they are pretty important.
Advent begins really with a call for us to “wake up” to what is really important and to prepare for it so we aren't caught off guard. This is precisely the image Saint Paul uses: we are living in a darkness that is passing away, just like every morning at 6am in South Bend this time of year. That darkness (of sin and evil) which engulfs our world will not last forever, and will in fact be conquered very soon when the sun rises (when Jesus returns). We don't know exactly when, but we know it's coming. So we must prepare, Paul says: put off the deeds of darkness and live as in the light, putting on the Lord Jesus. If we do not live properly, Jesus makes clear in the Gospel that we will be in a very unpleasant situation of surprise: like getting caught by a thief, or being swept away in the flood like those who mocked Noah for preparing his family for the future he saw coming.
So too in Advent we prepare, joyfully but soberly, with true awareness of our need, but with greater anticipation for the good the Lord is planning.
Isn't the idea of a new year exciting, encouraging? I love the thought that I can turn into a better priest, put more good into the world by my work, and help those around me, and fall more in love with the God who created me, who died on a Cross for me, and whose Holy Spirit dwells within me. This excitement is what Isaiah speaks of in the first reading: “Let us go to the mountain of the Lord, to the God of Jacob, so that He may instruct us.” Let us learn what it means to be children of the light and turn aside from the darkness around us, for this darkness leads nowhere, is passing away, and offers us nothing compared to the beauty that the light opens up for us.
So many people make New Year’s resolutions that fizzle out before January ends. However, if you use this season of Advent as an opportunity to get a head start, you will have developed the right spiritual habit by the time Jan 1st rolls around. And don’t settle for some little resolution that doesn’t work on your heart. Make it important, make it significant, but make it attainable.
So what’s your spiritual resolution for the New Year of Advent? Perhaps you can prepare for Christ’s coming with more quiet, more prayer, more mercy & love to those around us, more joy at the new beginning God is offering us, so that the Lord's coming (at the end of time or at our own passing) isn't a terrifying surprise, but something we daily look forward to with joyful anticipation.
Saturday, November 19, 2016
Homily - (Christ the King) How to "get it" when it matters
Well the same goes for the deeper questions of our faith: why does a 14-month old baby die unexpectedly? Why do planes crash? Why do we have to suffer such pain, and ultimately die? Why? We don't "get it" sometimes. We don't see the deeper answer to our deep questions.
The section from Saint Paul's Letter to the Colossians today brings in focus for us the only real answer to our deepest questions: the person of Jesus Christ, and especially his Paschal Mystery. The truth is that we will never "get it" for the deep questions of life if we don't "get Jesus." If we don't put Him at the center, nothing else makes sense.
Have you ever said (or had your kids say): "Mom (or Dad), you just don't get it." I think there's some time where every teenager says this (or at least thinks it 100 times) - whether it is about hippie outfits or 80's hairstyles or grunge music or Pokemon Go or today's "lingo" or anything else. So often we just don't "get it" - which is fine for small things but is a tragedy and a disaster when it comes to the most important things of life.
Paul summarizes the centrality of Jesus perfectly: All things were created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. He is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in all things he himself might be preeminent.
And Luke today shows us where Jesus becomes a King, on the Cross. This is the one who will judge us at the end of time. If this Year of Mercy has taught us anything, it has taught us that we should not fear the loving God who freely gives everything, even the clothes on his back, to win us back to him - truly a love that is absolutely infinite.
One of the deepest questions, why do we suffer, is answered not by a statement from God, but by His own suffering with us. We must never doubt that God can use any suffering we endure for love of Him to bring about a greater good, even if we never see it.
Finally, let us remember the words to the good thief: "Today you will be with me in paradise." This is one of the reason's why we reject the idea of capital punishment and physician assisted suicide: it is never too late on this earth, even to our last breath, to receive God's mercy. We all need His Mercy, and we may need every moment to receive it.
Saturday, November 12, 2016
Homily - Protests and the Gospel of Peace - That they may be one!
It is a good thing we prayed last Sunday as a parish community for healing and peace in our country. Today I urge you to continue that prayer, because clearly we still need it. Last Wednesday morning college campuses and some city centers had protests – some of them starting fires and many of them riddled with more poisonous speech than our already-wearied ears and hearts wish to take in. Certainly we can understand what has led some small pockets of people to this type of response, but is this in any way helpful? St. Paul tells us in his letter to the Romans “Do not be conquered by evil, but overcome evil with good.” We as Christians are called to something greater, and in the readings today we are reminded exactly of the important lessons that would hinder us from any demonstration that is not peaceful and ultimately directed toward healing and unifying in the truth of Christ Jesus.