Posts Tagged ‘Jesus’

Passion Play

· Sunday, 22 Nov 2009, 1 am · Saint Cecilia, pray for us

Accidentally and pleasantly discovered this song by William Fitzsimmons called “Passion Play.” (listen)

I should not have hid
Where my heart can’t follow
Cause this grace gets so far
And too hard to swallow
I’ve been running from Saul,
He’s been giving chase
When I look in his eyes
All I see is his face

Are you still on my back
After all these years?
Chasing my out of hell
And my nice veneers
I don’t know how you stand
When you’ve got no floor
Or how you can breathe
With your hands on boards

I just want to be not what I am today
I just want to be better than my friends might say
I just want a small part in your passion play

Do you hear when I call
    In the midst of wrong?
Do you hear these here words
    While I sing this song?

Are you caught up in me
Like I heard you say?
Or just some big cashier
That I’ll have to pay

I just want to be not what I am today
I just want to be better than my friends might say
I just want a small part in your passion play

— William Fitzsimmons

Prayer for the First Day of School

· Monday, 10 Aug 2009, 6 pm · Saint Lawrence, pray for us

I was asked by my principal to do the prayer for the first of our teacher meetings this week. She requested that it be connected to the theme for the school year, which happens to be an emphasis on the school’s mission statement. Fortunately we have a very good mission statement. In fact, the mission statement can easily be made a prayer with a slight rewording. I borrowed most of it for the third sentence in the second paragraph after the poem. Thank you Holy Spirit for helping me to write this.

Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Son of Man,

Help us this morning to pray like You, out of a sense of abundance, these words of your servant, St. John of the Cross, that seem so fitting for why we are here as a school community:

The flame of love
Grows as it is divided
It increases by being shared
From one, then two, then three
And darkness is transformed into glory
And the walls reflect its light
Share your flame!
Share the flame!

The Sisters of Mercy named this school after your mother to honor You. She was the first to say “yes” to sharing the Flame, to sharing You with the world.

The most important people in the world walk through our classroom doors. Help us to share the Flame, to share You, with them. Make us a deep faith community so that we may serve our students and their families with mercy and compassion.

We are in the learning business. Open us up to grace, the divine stimulus plan, so that we may create a profit for You.

It is all about You, Jesus.

We pray in Your most holy name. Amen.

Christ in the Desert

· Monday, 6 Jul 2009, 12 am · Saint Maria Goretti, pray for us

In looking for more information about the Russian portrait painter Ivan Kramskoy (see previous post), I discovered one his more famous paintings:

Ivan Kramskoy's 'Christ in the Desert'
Christ in the Desert by Ivan Kramskoy, 1872

Walking on Water

· Monday, 30 Mar 2009, 12 am · Saint John Climacus, pray for us

God is everywhere. That’s easy to say, but do we really believe it? Are we willing to admit that God is present even in what looks nothing like holiness or love, i.e. in our sin—before, during, and after?

Here’s a powerful poem from Presence: An International Journal of Spiritual Direction, September, 2008.

After the storm, clouds like blown
milkweed lie in the widening sky.
I still don’t know how we survive

our youth, how in a matchstick boat
we cross the wind-clawed sea. When I
look back, I see no boat. I must have

walked on water, holding fast to false
beliefs: that I was strong;
that the worst

had already happened; that to commit
suicide would disgrace
the memory of my grandparents,

who had survived Auschwitz,
so what excuse might I give
for not surviving America?

Maybe it’s not truth that save us,
but a half-remembered image:
dimly seeing in the dark

a luminous, familiar
figure walking on the sea.
And like Peter, you step

out of doubt as out of a boat,
and start walking across the storm—
not on water, not on air,

barely even on faith—
toward what you don’t dare
call love.

— Joanna Warwick

No Longer Saw A…

· Tuesday, 10 Mar 2009, 10 pm · Saint Forty Martyrs of Armenia, pray for us

From Fr. Boyer’s homily on Sunday on the Transfiguration of Jesus (Mark 9:2-10):

If Peter, James, and John no longer saw a man from Nazareth but the glory of his exaltation, then we no longer see bread on this altar; but what it becomes for us.

If Peter, James and John no longer saw the man they followed up that mountain
but saw the glory of divine life in him, then we no longer see each other just a neighbor or a stranger for by grace that same glory shines in each of us.

If Peter, James, and John heard a voice that said: “Listen to him.” So have we.

If Peter, James, and John can take the risk of following Jesus even when they did not understand where he would lead them and what it would mean, so can we.

You Don’t Have To Prove Anything

· Monday, 14 Jul 2008, 1 pm

There is a line from a William Stafford poem:

“It’s for the best,” my mother said, “Nothing can
ever be wrong for anyone truly good.”

And then I look at the suffering Jesus endured,
and the suffering of all people.
If any one was definitely good, it would be Jesus.
As for me, the only good in me is Jesus.

And yet he suffered.
I have suffered, and will again.
The people I love have suffered.
The stranger in the store has suffered,
and perhaps even now is trying to live with tragedy.

Why? I don’t know.
I do know that Jesus came and he suffered.
He was human. He suffered
with us, for us.

God never answered Job’s questions.
He is not going to answer mine.
God is the one who asks the questions:
How are you going to respond?
Are you going to receive or reject, keep or give?

The answer to the question is not a what, but a who,
not words, but the Word.
God is the answer to all questions.
And Jesus came
to show and to live and to be the answer.

I claim no deep understanding,
but I know—I know—with Jesus,
nothing can ever be wrong.

Near the end of the same poem,

“You don’t have to prove anything,” my mother said.
“Just be ready for what God sends.”

Doubting Thomas

· Thursday, 3 Jul 2008, 2 pm

Today is the feast day for Saint Thomas the Apostle. I chose Thomas (or maybe he chose me) for my patron saint for my baptism/confirmation a few years ago. I have an affinity for Thomas, partly because it took me nearly forty years of doubt and skepticism to finally accept the gift of faith.

Thomas, as most people know, gets a kind of bad rap for doubting. Perhaps it is warranted. Perhaps not. It is interesting to note that of the four Gospels, it is in the Book of John where Thomas is mentioned the most.

At the Last Supper, it is Thomas who asked the question leading to Jesus’ deep Christological statement:

Thomas said to him, “Lord, we do not know where you are going; how can we know the way?”
Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but by me.”
(John 14:5-6 RSV)

In today’s reading from John 20:24-29 NAB:

Thomas, called Didymus, one of the Twelve,
was not with them when Jesus came.
So the other disciples said to him, “We have seen the Lord.”
But Thomas said to them,
“Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands
and put my finger into the nailmarks
and put my hand into his side, I will not believe.”
Now a week later his disciples were again inside
and Thomas was with them.

Jesus came, although the doors were locked,
and stood in their midst and said, “Peace be with you.”
Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and see my hands,
and bring your hand and put it into my side,
and do not be unbelieving, but believe.”
Thomas answered and said to him, “My Lord and my God!”
Jesus said to him, “Have you come to believe because you have seen me?
Blessed are those who have not seen and have believed.”

I suppose this is the scene that gives Thomas his nickname. But if we read just a few verses of above this in 19 & 20:

On the evening of that day, the first day of the week, the doors being shut where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among them and said to them, “Peace be with you.”
When he had said this, he showed them his hands and his side. Then the disciples were glad when they saw the Lord.

It seems to me that Thomas was just asking for the same experience as the other Apostles. He did not want to be left out.

I wonder where Thomas was on that first evening? Why was he not with the others when Jesus first appeared?

As my spiritual director pointed out, Thomas received what he asked for but realized it was more than he needed. The text does not say that he actually touched Jesus. He knew when he saw him. And John credits Thomas with a new declaration of who Jesus was, “My Lord and my God!”

During Mass near the beginning of the Liturgy of the Eucharist when the priest first holds up the bread/Body, and then again when he first holds up the chalice of wine/Blood, there is supposed to be a long tradition (although my catechesis did not include it) of saying to ones self, “My Lord and my God.” The congregation is kneeling at this point, and although Scripture does not say it, I imagine Thomas kneeling too in front of Jesus and the others saying the same declaration of belief. Such a humble statement needs an outward sign as concrete as a physical gesture to represent the inner experience.

Thank you Thomas. Blessed are those who witnessed. Blessed are those who have not seen and have believed.

How Does the Devil Seduce?

· Sunday, 8 Jun 2008, 2 pm

I discovered an old interview with Father Gabriele Amorth on the internet concerning Satan and exorcism. It is an interesting article, but this particular piece near the end jumped out at me.

How does the Devil go about seducing men and women?

AMORTH: His strategy is monotonous. I have told him so and he admits it … He convinces people that there is no hell, that there is no sin, just one more experience to live. Lust, success and power are the three great passions on which the Devil insists.

I am reminded of Jesus’ three temptations in the desert, Luke 4:1-13.

“Command this stone to become bread” tempts Jesus to use his power to satisfy his desire. Disordered desires and wants are lusts.

All the kingdoms of this world would be given to Jesus if He worshiped Satan. This at first seems like a temptation to power, but it fits better with the idea of success. What do we give up in order to be successful, to be the best, to win? What do we worship, what do we idolize, what do we sell our soul for in attempts to be successful? How do I become fractured, less integrated, less whole, compromised, in an attempt to gain some thing?

Finally, Satan tries to get Jesus to put God to the test. That’s where the power comes in, to use God as if He was an object for our manipulation and control. Do we try to use and manipulate people for our own success and desires?

Notice what is hidden between the words of lust, success and power—pride. Did you also notice that all three are temporary? The devil has nothing to offer that is permanent or eternal, except spiritual death.

And what is the antidote to pride? Humility and love.

Know your enemy.

Rescue

· Sunday, 11 May 2008, noon

I think Walker Percy, in Lost in the Cosmos, sums up the situation between man and God via Jesus:

If you’re a big enough fool to climb a tree and like a cat refuse to come down, then someone who loves you has to make as big a fool of himself to rescue you.

Personhood

· Friday, 2 May 2008, 1 pm

From Br. Joseph —

What is a person?

Classical Christian theology and philosophy defines a person as one who has the ability to know, to love, and to choose (to will). This is the image of God in which we are made. (The angels, our spiritual kinsmen, are also persons made in the image of God.)

Saint Richard of Chichester (1197-1253, English bishop) wrote a prayer that fits beautifully into what it means to be a person.

Thanks be to you, my Lord, Jesus Christ,
For all the benefits that you have given me,
For all the pains and insults you have borne for me.

O most merciful Redeemer, friend and brother,
May I know you more clearly,
Love you more dearly,
Follow you more nearly,
Day by day.

The end of this prayer may sound familiar to some. It is the basis for the lyrics to the song “Day by Day” from the 1970s musical “Godspell”.

Through this prayer, we call upon God and grace to help make us a full person like Jesus—to know God and others, to love God and others, and to choose good for God and others, day by day.

Our Lady of Mercy, pray for us…