2nd Sunday of Easter
Easter is over and I am wondering how you are. I am asking you this because for me the post Easter season is often more difficult than Lent. This is because Lent focuses me. I have a goal and I have the discipline to get there. After Easter I get triumpalistic, but then exhaustion sets in It and becomes so easy to let the discipline slip away. The Monday after Easter was the hardest day to stay focused in prayer because I felt that it was time to relax after the fourty days of discipline. So I wonder about you… What does your post-Easter scene look like?
Saturday within the Octave of Easter
These words from today’s Psalm (Ps 118:15) illustrate the insuppressible good news of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. The good news of the resurrection bubbles forth from Jesus’ disciples out of their gut, almost uncontrollably; it is unable to be squelched or held down.
Friday within the Octave of Easter
Sometimes I think it is very difficult to comprehend, let alone believe, that Jesus rose from the dead. Death for us is something final. It is something that we have to deal with and confront because we cannot undo time and make someone come back. That finality makes it quite hard to see that perhaps death does not always win – that God’s Son rose from the dead.
Thursday within the Octave of Easter
Most of us have grown up hearing the story of Jesus’ life, death and resurrection. We’ve known about, if not celebrated, many, many Easters in our lifetime. Sometimes it might seem almost ordinary, and maybe not amazing. Perhaps we’ve become accustomed to the idea of God becoming human, taking on flesh, being crucified, buried, and then rising from the dead, rising out of the tomb on the third day. It may seem almost commonplace to us.
Wednesday within the Octave of Easter
Signs of resurrection are all around us. The death of winter has given way to the new life of spring. Trees are flowering, bulbs bloom, and bird eggs are beginning to crack to reveal their babies. These signs along with the ever brightening sun are sufficient to make our souls smile. This new life bursting forth is yet one way the universe experiences the process of resurrection.
Tuesday within the Octave of Easter
I don’t tend to think too much about the Holy Spirit. Sure, I know that the Spirit is one of the three persons of the Trinity, but it’s not always so easy for me to picture the Spirit or recognize the work of the Spirit in my life. I’ve heard theologians say sometimes that the Spirit is neglected in the thoughts and devotions of Christians. For these reasons, it seems to me that the scripture readings for today have something important to say to us. They point us to the importance of the Spirit in our lives as Christians, especially as we continue to celebrate Jesus’ resurrection this Easter season.
Monday within the Octave of Easter
I am sure many of you have heard the saying “Seeing is believing”, but sometimes this is not always the case. I have had the experience many times in my life where several people are present at the same event, but what they “see” is very different. Our impression of a particular happening is influenced by many things. Our past experiences, our emotions, our expectations, our openness and trust all affect our individual experience of a particular event. Several years ago I had the opportunity to go zip lining. After the initial fear of trusting the equipment, I was able to take a “leap of faith” and travel above the tree line to see the amazing sights of the rainforest below me. There was another woman in our group, who was so fearful that she was having difficulty not only jumping off the platform, but she was completely unable to enjoy and appreciate the scenery because of her worry. We both did the same thing, but what we saw and experienced was completely different. I think the readings today describe 3 different groups of people and what they “saw” when they encountered the empty tomb. Because of their previous experiences, their openness and their expectations, each of the groups relate a different understanding of what they saw.
The Resurrection of the Lord
Love Wins is a book about God. The author, Rob Bells writes this book for people within and outside the church whose image of God is unhealthy. For example, think of people so unsure about God that they never quite know what to expect when we meet God face to face; or, people who think that God is like a watchful policeman looking out for infringements; or, that God is far beyond our human experiences. Bells writes for people like this. And his point is simple: that Jesus shows us what God is like. And the most significant thing that Jesus showed us about God is that LOVE WINS.
Holy Saturday
Something strange is happening - there is a great silence on earth today, a great silence and stillness. The whole earth keeps silence because the King is asleep. The earth trembled and is still because God has fallen asleep in the flesh and he has raised up all who have slept ever since the world began. God has died in the flesh and hell trembles with fear.
Good Friday of the Passion of the Lord
You've probably seen those optical illusions where, if you look at the picture one way, you'll see an old woman - but if you look at it another way, you'll see a young girl? (See here for one example: http://www.moillusions.com/2006/05/young-lady-or-old-hag.html) Optical illusions make us aware of the fact that what we think might be happening isn't always what is happening. Or - there's usually another way to look at the same facts.
Evening Mass of the Lord's Supper
Today begins the Easter Triduum with Holy Thursday liturgy, continuing with Good Friday and Holy Saturday, and reaching its high point in the Easter Vigil. The Easter Triduum is the culmination of the liturgical year in proclaiming Jesus’ passion and resurrection.
The readings for the Holy Thursday liturgy begin with the Exodus reading (12: 1-8, 11-14), which includes the ritual instructions for the Passover of the Lord. The blood of the Passover lamb was placed on the doorpost to protect the firstborn from the angel of death. On that night the Israelites were released from slavery in Egypt. Remembrance and celebration of this freedom continues with the yearly Jewish Passover celebration.
Wednesday of the Holy Week
Have you ever played chess? A chess match can be as complex as the people playing. As the game progresses, it is possible to look ahead many moves. Sometimes the best strategy demands the use of a move called a sacrifice. While this sacrifice may seem like folly to an opponent, it can encourage a series of events that ultimately ends with your opponents collapse. Thus, temporary folly unlocks long term positive results. In the case of chess that means a checkmate. In the case of faith, that means eternal results.
Tuesday of the Holy Week
I’ve been reflecting lately on how difficult it is for me to imagine what it is like to have experienced what Jesus did, especially at the end of his life when so few people seemed to understand who he really was. The gospel reading speaks to this theme. In the reading, Jesus foretells his betrayal by Judas and his being handed over to suffer and to die. One line in particular in the reading strikes me. Jesus tells his disciples, “Where I am going, you cannot follow me now, though you will follow later” (v. 36).
Monday of Holy Week
Ever since I can remember, I’ve pondered what life after death would be like. And occasionally, throughout my young life, I’ve been blessed with experiences in which I get a tiny glimpse of what I think it will be like. For instance, seemingly unending mornings spent hiking, unexpected moments of consolation in Eucharistic Adoration, and, without question, my wedding day, have all given me a deeper, yet inexpressible, understanding of life after death. And perhaps you’ve had similar experiences? Being raised in a Catholic home, one common denominator has remained with regard to my understanding of life after death: God would be there. That much I knew for sure! I am eternally grateful for that awareness and my heaven-like experiences on earth which have only reinforced that truth in my life. To many, life after death is an absurdity. To others, life after death is a coping mechanism to somehow deal with our own mortality. But for the Christian, life after death is reality!
Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord
Suffer... Suffering... I do not like the very sound of these words. I don’t like the thoughts that these words trigger in my mind. I don’t want to imagine or think about it. There is not a single moment that I have spent trying to figure out what like must be if I had a lot of suffering. I have imagined my life without suffering... not ever getting old, not getting a single grey hair, not ever having to deal with wrinkles, not ever having to go the hospital, not ever having misunderstandings... but I try not to spend time imagining suffering. And yet, even as I stand here and preach, there is no denying that for one reason or another, I suffer. And I am aware that each one of you, for one reason or another, in small or greater degree, suffer.
Saturday of the Fifth Week of Lent
In today’s first reading, the prophet Ezekiel writes of how the LORD God will gather the people of Israel together again from their exile. God promises to heal their divisions, to cleanse them from their sinfulness, and to help them obey His commands. He promises to set up make a new and eternal covenant with them. He promises to make a sanctuary, a place to worship Him properly, that will last forever.
Friday of the Fifth Week of Lent
In the first reading for today, Jeremiah is responding with deep emotion to the situation in which he currently finds himself. He is at a very low point, in fact very close to despair, but he hasn’t quite lost hope yet. His spirit is divided. On the one side, he cries out with accusations and reproaches against God for bringing him to this low point. He has experienced his friends and acquaintances turning against him. And his message to the people of Judah has not been accepted by the people or the leaders of Judah. On the other side, he reaffirms his trust in God as his only help and recourse during a very troubling and trying time. In addition to his own personal sense of loss and futility, Jeremiah sees that the Lord is sending Judah into exile because Judah has turned against the Lord and his prophet, Jeremiah. Jeremiah is saddened by this. Nevertheless, he acknowledges that God has made a promise to help him and that this promise will eventually be fulfilled.
Thursday of the Fifth Week of Lent
What strength Jesus has! His life is on the line – some of the Jews are plotting to kill him and now they are accusing him of being possessed or insane, yet he remains strong in the truth and his understanding of his divinity. The Jews in today’s gospel (John 8: 51-59) do not understand that Jesus is speaking the truth. What they hear is someone speaking nonsense and lies. When Jesus responds with “before Abraham came to be, I AM”, one of Jesus’ most emphatic affirmations of his divine nature, they react out of the belief that he is blasphemous and they intend to stone him.
Wednesday of the Fifth Week of Lent
We live in a culture where messages are aimed at us from many directions. It is fascinating how if a message is said loudly and frequently enough in our culture, that its veracity is unquestioned. Consider the messages we have heard within our own families. Some families have raised their children with the truth that Catholics are not Christians. Others who have poor self-images have passed them onto their children unconsciously. In both of these examples what passes for truth is clearly not truth.
Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Lent
I continue to be concerned and disturbed by many things that are going on in the world today. The economy continues to improve, but many people remain unemployed. Wars continue to rage and innocent people get caught in the crossfire. It is beginning to feel as though the only news is bad news. At times like these I find myself tempted to despair about the world. What good can possibly come to people in a world like this? Yet I realize that this is wrong. There is still hope for the world. And I believe that this hope is the very work of God in our midst.