“We know that in everything God works for good with those who love Him, who are called according to His purpose” [Rom 8:28].
Monday, May 29, 2023
Another Kilmer Poem - for Memorial Day
“Gird Your Loins!”
“Thou therefore gird up thy loins, and arise, and speak to them all that I command thee…” [Jer 1:17]
“Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil…Stand therefore, having girded your loins with truth, and having put on the breastplate of righteousness, and having shod your feet with the equipment of the gospel of peace; above all taking the shield of faith, with which you can quench all the flaming darts of the evil one. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God” [Eph 6:11,’14-17].
“Therefore gird up your minds, be sober, set your hope upon the grace that is coming to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ. As obedient children, do not be conformed to the passions of your former ignorance, but as he who called you is holy, be holy yourselves in all your conduct; since it is written, ‘You shall be holy, for I am holy’” [1 Pet 1:13-16].
“Our Catholic sisters devote themselves to serving others selflessly. Decent people would not mock and blaspheme them. So we now know what gods the Dodger admin worships. Open desecration and anti-Catholicism is not disqualifying. Disappointing, but not surprising. Gird your loins.”
Sunday, May 28, 2023
Grief and Thanksgiving
“First of all, then, I ask that supplications, prayers, petitions, and thanksgivings be offered for everyone, for kings and all in authority, that we may lead a quiet and tranquil life in all devotion and dignity. This is good and pleasing to God our savior, who wills everyone to be saved and to come to knowledge of the truth. For there is one God. There is also one mediator between God and the human race, Christ Jesus, himself human, who gave himself as ransom for all” [1 Tim 2:1-6].
Thank God for the roar of the world!
Thank God for the mighty tide of fears
Against me always hurled!
Thank God for the bitter and ceaseless strife,
And the sting of His chastening rod!
Thank God for the stress and the pain of life,
And Oh, thank God for God!
Friday, May 26, 2023
A Three-Day Stay Away
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
Homily: Saturday, 6th Week of Easter
Readings: Acts 18:23-28; Ps 47; John 16:23b-28
___________________________
Back in my other life, in my consulting days, I was often asked to talk to industrial salespeople and sales managers. One thing I tried to instill in them was the need to focus on both the roadwork and the homework. On homework, I meant becoming true experts on their products and services, and equally important, learning everything they can about their customers. Only then will their roadwork bring dividends.
We see a little of that in our reading from Acts. Apollos, an evangelist from Alexandria, was an eloquent preacher but he was lacking in knowledge of the Christian faith. So, the married team of Priscilla and Aquila took him aside and spent some time teaching Him so he could proclaim the truth of the Gospel confidently. It’s a beautiful example of believers helping, supporting, and encouraging each other in the faith, helping one another to grow in the Lord.
As I thought about today's readings, I recalled a few of my own experiences teaching others, both successful and not so successful.
About 20 years ago, shortly before we moved to Florida, I was asked to give a brief reflection to an ecumenical group in our Cape Cod town. It was during the Lenten season and the pastors of all the Christian churches thought it would be good to have a series of prayer meetings, open to anyone who cared to attend.
Anyway, my pastor volunteered me to represent our parish, and the Congregational minister who had organized everything, asked me to preach at the first of these weekly meetings. The topic he gave me was prayer...so, there I was preaching to a couple of hundred folks, mostly Protestants, from a half-dozen denominations.
At one point early in my talk, I asked the participants, “To whom do you pray?” Almost unanimously, they answered, “Jesus!” I had expected this, and I told them that praying to Our Lord Jesus Christ was certainly a good thing.
But then I went to the Gospel, and read a number of different passages where Jesus instructs His disciples on prayer. Of course, the most famous is the Lords’ Prayer, or as we Catholics often call it, The Our Father, echoing its first words:
“Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name…” [Mt 6:9]
I then turned to John’s Gospel and read the Word from today’s
passage:
“Amen, amen, I say to you, whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you” [Jn 16:23].
I followed this with another half-dozen passages from the Gospels and St. Paul’s letters, teaching us to pray to the Father, always in Jesus’ Name, and guided by the Holy Spirit.“…the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words.” [Rom 8:26].
So, what does today’s Gospel passage, and the New Testament in general, teach us about prayer? Well, among other things, we learn that prayer should be Trinitarian: to the Father, in the Son’s Name, and through the workings of the Holy Spirit. We need only listen to the Eucharistic prayer at every Mass, a prayer addressed to the Father, through the Son – yes, “through Him, with Him, and in Him – and in the unity of the Holy Spirit.” Our prayer, then, has the pattern of the Trinity stamped on it.
As I said to that mixed congregation on Cape Cod, “Pray to Jesus if you like, but remember that any prayer to Jesus will always unite us with the Father through the love and power of the Holy Spirit.” Paul, once again, put it so much better:
“…you received a spirit of adoption, through which we cry, “Abba, Father!” The Spirit itself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God…” [Rom 8:15-16]
Tuesday, May 16, 2023
Homily: Tuesday, 6th Week of Easter
Readings: Acts 16:22-34; Ps 138; John 16:5-11
_________________________Coincidentally, or perhaps not since I really don’t believe in
coincidences, in our parish Bible Study we’re currently discussing this particular
chapter, chapter 16, of the Acts of the Apostles. This section of Acts tells us
of Paul’s second missionary journey, a journey that truly made history because,
for the first time, Christianity made its way into Europe. For the early Church,
Europe was mission territory, and I suppose, in some respects it still is.
Now Paul, on this journey accompanied by Silas, wasn’t looking for
trouble. They just wanted to preach the Good News of Jesus Christ to both Jew
and Gentile and lead both to salvation. Their first stop after crossing the Aegean,
was Philippi, a city of Macedonia and a Roman colony. Philippi was populated by
large numbers of retired Roman soldiers, and unexpectedly they ran into some serious
trouble.
Paul had exorcised a demon who had possessed a slave girl. This
angered the owner of the girl because the demon was pretty good at fortune
telling, and people paid for this. As a result, Paul and Silas were arrested
and attacked by a mob. The local magistrate conducted a kangaroo court, had the
two missionaries stripped and beaten, then imprisoned and chained them. Not a
good day.
But that night, as Paul and Silas prayed and sang psalms, an earthquake
hit, opened the doors to the jail, and broke their chains. The jailer, thinking
everyone had escaped, was about to kill himself when Paul stops him, “We’re
all here.” Paul hadn’t escaped and had apparently convinced the other
prisoners to remain as well.
It all turns into one of those wonderful events, when the Holy
Spirit moves someone to faith, for the jailer asks, “What must I do to be
saved?” [Acts 16:30] Paul doesn’t waste a lot of words here, and gives perhaps the
shortest of homilies:
“Believe
in the Lord Jesus and you and your household will be saved” [Acts 16:31].
The jailer takes them to his home, treats their wounds, listens to
God’s Word, and he and his entire household are baptized.
Thinking about this remarkable event, I realized that even when we’re
trying to do what we believe God wants of us, without calling attention to
ourselves, sometimes it just doesn’t go well, and were rejected, even
mistreated.
Paul, trying to quiet that slave girl by exorcising the demon that
was creating such a disturbance, ends up getting him and Silas beaten and
imprisoned. I doubt Paul regretted what he had done. After all, even if secular
authority persecutes us, we must still “obey God rather than men” [Acts 5:29].
In the same way today, the entire Church, and that includes all of
us, must stand tall for religious freedom, defending the Church’s right to preach
the truth in the face of pressures to conform to secular values. Like Paul and
Silas, we must all be willing to proclaim the Gospel, practice our faith, and teach
the truth as it relates to both morality and justice. We need only trust in God,
in his goodness, knowing He will turn all to good for those who love him. As
Paul and Silas learned that night in the prison, in all things, our God is in
charge, not us.
And as Jesus promised His disciples, He sends His advocate, His
Holy Spirit, to us. It is the Spirit who will lead us, guide us, and speak and
act through us…if only we will let Him. Recall what Jesus revealed of the
Spirit:
“…the
Spirit of truth…will guide you to all truth. He will not speak on his own, but
he will speak what he hears…He will glorify me…and declare it to you” [Jn 16:13-14].
This,
brothers and sisters, is why we should always be open to the Spirit, letting
Him guide us in all things. Through the Holy Spirit, we proclaim our ancient
faith in the saving death and resurrection of Christ until he comes again.
It
is also why we should never despair when it seems those we love don’t respond
to God’s Word. The Spirit works in His own time and His own way.
We
need only trust and be faithful.
Sunday, May 14, 2023
For Moms
Although I loved these women, only one mother is the love of my life, and that's my wife, Diane. We've been married for 54 wonderful years, through good times and challenging times, but no bad times. We've suffered though some sad times, but these were overwhelmed by so many times of remarkable joy. Every day has been a gift, especially that day when I saw her for the first time. It was a blind date and when she walked into her folk’s living room, I was smitten. That was on September 16, 1967. Here a photo of Diane back when we first met.
Friday, May 12, 2023
Homily: Funeral Mass for Patricia Curtin
Readings: Eccl 3:1-11; Ps 23; Rom 14:7-9; Jn 10: 14-15,27-30
___________________________
Claude,
Diane and I, indeed, all of us here – we know how much you love your dear Patricia,
and so, to you and to Sally, to Patricia’s nephews, Rich and Steve, and to all
of your longtime friends, our deepest condolences. And I’m joined in this by
Fr. Peter, Fr. John, Fr. Gerry, all your brother deacons and their wives – in
truth, by the entire St. Vincent de Paul parish family.
Believe
us, Claude, Patricia’s absence has left a hole in our hearts as well. I can only
imagine how much you miss her, but if you let Him, God will fill this emptiness;
He’ll fill it with His grace, bringing with
it His peace and His enduring love.
Know,
too, that we grieve with you. And yet, because of our faith, and because of your
faith, we can look beyond our grief today. Despite our sorrow, we can be joyful
that Patricia is now in God’s care, and to be cared for by our loving, merciful
God…well, that’s a wondrous, powerful thing. I suppose St. Paul said it best,
as he usually does:
“Both in life
and death we are the Lord’s” [Rom 14:8].
Yes,
we are His. And our Gospel passage from John sums it up beautifully, doesn’t
it?
“I am the good shepherd…the
sheep that belong to me listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me” [Jn 10:14,27].
We
belong to Him, and so He keeps calling us throughout our brief lives, but then
embraces us as we enter eternity.
“I give them eternal life.
They will never be lost” [Jn 10:28].
…and
what a promise this is, a promise sealed and delivered with God’s love.
I
suppose too many of us fall into that straying sheep category – you know, the
ones He has to retrieve and bring back to the fold. But not Patricia. She
followed the Shepherd, staying close, listening to His voice, and rejoicing in
God’s love, a love she was determined to share with others.
Indeed,
her kindness was eminently evident. Gracious and graceful, loving, creative, simply
a good woman, and so much more. More importantly, Patricia Curtin loved God and
neighbor, and in that loving she opened her heart to the movement, the
workings, of the Holy Spirit. You see, she was a joy-giver. That’s right, she
brought joy to those she encountered, just by being who she was. Diane and I
were always happy in her presence.
And
Patricia, as your wife, the wife of a permanent deacon, she shared in so many
of those ministries. She joined you in hospital ministry visiting the sick. She
played an active role in parish outreach at Our Mother’s Attic. And perhaps
most importantly, she kept you on the straight and narrow, pretty much a
fulltime job.
Thinking
back over all these years of friendship, it’s all packed together: those
dinners at Takis and so many other places – and there were many -- the holiday
feasts at your home or ours. The good times shared with the Wilsons. The day
trips to galleries, and museums, and your kindness when subjected to the
intrusive lens of my cameras. Oh, yes, and the bottles of – how can I put this?
– cheap wines, sampled here in Florida, and of slightly better vintages at
those Finger Lakes wineries.
Yes,
we visited Claude and Patricia at their lovely home on Seneca Lake. We didn’t
want to leave, but eventually we took the hint. And it was on that trip I
discovered they met in Paris in 1965. Coincidentally, thanks to the US Navy, I
happened to visit Pairs that same summer, but inexplicably we didn’t run into
each other.
Of
course, your meeting in that city of light began it all and calls to mind
everything that followed. And Claude, to recall that lifelong journey you
wisely chose to do so through God’s Word in the Book of Ecclesiastes. Such a
good choice. But such an atypical book of Scripture, more philosophical than
theological, a book in which the balance of our lives is repeatedly stressed.
Ecclesiastes
is really a book of thanksgiving, read in the autumn during the Feast of
Tabernacles, or Sukkot. In it we thank God for His gifts, especially the gift
of time, of all those times, in which we live our lives.
Times
for laughter, and times for tears, times of healthy days and days of suffering.
Times
for planting and starting, and times for reaping and ending.
Silent
times for prayer and contemplation, and times for talking and sharing and
embracing.
Happy
times and sad times.
And
yes, a time to be born and a time to die.
Sadly,
for those who have not accepted the gift of faith, in this they see only an end. T. S. Eliot, among my favorite poets, once wrote, “In my end is my
beginning.” And he was right: death isn’t an end; rather it’s a beginning, the
beginning of our real life, an eternal life bathed in God’s love. Patricia
knew this. She believed it with all her being. And because of her faith she’s
now in the embrace of our loving, merciful God.
Realize, too, this funeral Mass is primarily an act
of worship, but worship in the form of thanksgiving. We turn to our God
and thank Him for the gift of Patricia Curtin’s unrepeatable life, a life we
were blessed not only to witness, but also to share. But even more important, here
today we gather in prayer, and Word, and Eucharist, thanking our God for the gift
of His Son, Who gave His life for us, and renews that sacrifice right here on
this altar.
Without this gift,
we would have no hope: no hope of forgiveness, no hope of mercy, no hope of
salvation, no hope of eternal life. It’s because of this gift that we can
gather here today and not be consumed by grief. Because of this gift we don’t
despair. Because of this gift we can go on. We can continue with our own lives
knowing that Patricia, and you, and I – that we’ve all been redeemed by our
Lord, Jesus Christ.
So
many gifts from our God, a lifetime of gifts, relived by us through God’s gift
of memory. And so, today, filled with
hope, we hold close the memories of the past. It’s right to do so, to keep Patricia’s
memory alive. We’ll continue to tell the stories, the stories that bring
laughter and those that bring tears.
But today let us just claim and
proclaim all that was good and noble and loving and faithful in Patricia’s life.
And with that we’ll come to realize, the greatest thing she left behind is you,
Claude, and really all of us whom she loved and who loved her! In a sense,
we’re her legacy, her gift to the world, her gift to God. I can think of
nothing better.
Today, then, we
ask our Lord Jesus to take Patricia Curtin, his “good and faithful servant,”
into His loving embrace, to take away the pain, to wipe away the tears, and
give her the first taste of that eternal joy we all hope to share.
God love you
all.