Thursday, December 19, 2019

Experiencing God 248 - Living Our Beliefs

Today we celebrate the third Sunday of Advent, a half way point. As part of my own Advent journey, I’ve been following Matthew Kelly’s “Best Advent Ever”. Each morning, I receive an e-mail, with a short video of Matthew Kelly’s advent reflection. This week, he presented a question in his video for personal reflection. He asked: “Are you happy with the way the world is going?  And if you are not, then what can you do about it? How can you keep from becoming discouraged by all you don’t like?” It’s a big question for sure, and worthy of some reflection.

In respect to this question, there’s a story about Mahatma Gandhi that has always intrigued me. During the early years of Gandhi’s active but peaceful resistance against the injustices he saw in India, he began to gain some attention from the press. Journalists around the world began to wonder what he was all about, what motivated him to respond to the injustices he saw. During one of his press interviews, a reporter asked him: What do you believe? Which creed do you follow? Gandhi’s response was very revealing. He said “If you really want to know what I believe, then look at the way I live.” Then he went on to say: “Be the change that you want to see in the world."  

What Gandhi is saying from this statement, at least for me, is that I can recite a creed, I can follow a belief system or religion, I can know the dogma particular to my belief, but the truth of who I am and what I believe can really only be found in the way I live my life. When I see an injustice, something that requires change, then my life, my passion, and my energy can be found there.

In the gospel reading we’ve just heard from Matthew, John the Baptist is in prison. And we know why he is there. He has offended Herod son, Philip and Herodias who were in an improper relationship.

His honesty to them about their relationship has landed him in a prison cell. While there, in all probability, he has been kept abreast of what is happening in Jesus’ ministry.

As we heard in last week’s Gospel, John had previously declared that Jesus was the one who was coming to fulfill the Old Testament prophecies. He boldly proclaimed Him as the one more powerful than himself, that he was not worthy even to carry his sandals. But now he seems to have some doubts, some confusion at what has happened. Because of this, he sends a messenger to Jesus to ask: “Are you the Christ? Are you the expected Messiah, or are we to wait for someone else?” And of course we know how Jesus responded to John’s messenger. “Go back and tell John what you have seen, and what you have heard. The blind see again, the lame walk, the deaf hear, lepers are cleansed, and the good news is proclaimed to the poor.” In other words, “the truth of who I am, the messiah, can be found in the way I live. I am that change I want to see in the world.”

So how can this apply to us today?

We are not Jesus; we are not even Ghandi; but through the uniqueness of our own experience in this life; through our uniqueness as people living out our Christian lives, we can be or at least become that change that we want to see in the world around us. How can we do this? By using our lives, our passions our energies to inspire and create change where we see that it is necessary.

If we see a need for more peace in the world, then we must first become that peace within ourselves. We must let go of our own hostilities, our own fears, our own envies and our own greed. Then we can offer, even to those who may appear to be our enemies, the peace and acceptance that has the ability to heal. If we see a need for the world to be less compulsive and less addictive, then we first let go of our own compulsiveness, our own addictions. Then we can be that assistance others need in seeking their own freedom. If we see the need for more music and joy in the world, then become that music, become that joy to be heard and experienced in places where it may not exist. If our concern centres around the importance of family life, then be that best husband and father, be that best wife and mother. If the world needs to be more hospitable, then be hospitable to all that you meet. In this way the good news given to us through our Christian heritage can be alive and active. It can bear fruit in our own lives and in the lives we touch. It can become a leaven that will enable people to see that truly the Kingdom of God is at hand. Is this not in essence the mission of our church?

In our Christian lives today, we seem to be struggling with two perceptions of church. One perception is given to us from the media, in our news broadcasts on TV, and in our newspapers. It is a perception of church that has to do with power, often manipulation and abuse, underlining agendas; a church of “Do as I say, but not as I do”. This is not a perception I am drawn too. In fact I find it quite deadly and discouraging.

But there is another perception of church, for me the real church, that is more evident, and we don’t have to look too far to see it. In fact, I see it in so many places right here at St. Mother Teresa: In the Catholic Women’s League and the Knights of Columbus and the service they render to this community; in the St. Vincent de Paul Society and their outreach of those in need; to all those involved in our programs of sacramental preparation, catechetics, pastoral care and our liturgies of worship.

These are all signs of a church that discovers its identity, not through a reciting a creed, but through the way it chooses to live; to be that witness of Christ to the world. It’s the church that Jesus proclaimed to John’s messenger: “Tell John what you see and what you hear. The blind can see again, the lame walk, the deaf hear, and lepers are cleansed, and the good news is proclaimed.”

It’s the church that Isaiah proclaims in our first reading: “Here is your God”, he says. God will come and save you. Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped.”

It’s the church that St. James speaks about in our second reading where he tells us to wait for it with the patience of a farmer waiting for his precious crop to grow from the earth.

Matthew Kelly in his advent video says that, as Catholic Christians, we are not afraid to affirm our beliefs. Together we share that belief through the professing of our creed, but that is only one side of the coin. Our true identity as Catholic Christians will only be found as we live our beliefs,walk in our beliefs, become occupied in our beliefs. This is why people like St. Mother Teresa leave such an impression upon us. They are not discouraged or become immobilized by things in the world they do not like; but they become that change they want to see in the world.

Advent is our season of waiting; waiting for the coming of the messiah: not only in the Christmas festivities that we will all celebrate on the 25th, but in hearts open to receive Him, in lives that are changed by Him. Let us pray for that change in our own hearts, in our own lives, so as to be that visible presence of Christ in the world, to be sources of healing and peace to all those who may need it.

Monday, December 2, 2019

Experiencing God 247 Advent

Today, we begin a new liturgical year.  In the Catholic Church, the first Sunday of Advent is the beginning of a new cycle of readings at our masses, a new cycle of holy days and holidays for roughly the next 365 days.  It’s also the time of year that we are not only called to prepare our hearts for the coming of Jesus at Christmas, but also to examine our own lives; spiritually speaking to take stock of where we are in respect to our faith.   The readings we have just heard are very conducive for this very purpose.  The theme of these readings is very obvious to all of us.  As St. Paul tells us quite bluntly: “Brothers and Sisters, you know what time it is. It is now the moment for us to wake from our sleep.  And as Jesus says in the Gospel of Matthew: “Keep awake, therefore, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming”. Stay alert, keep awake, be vigilant How does that apply to us this first week of Advent?

Whenever I hear these particular readings about being awake, the story that comes to my mind is the “Christmas Carol” by Charles Dickens. 
We all know the story well since the movie version is played every year on our TV screens during the Advent season.  Ebenezer Scrooge may be physically awake, but in many other ways he is very much asleep.  Caught up in greed and his distorted perception of success, he is asleep to most things that are important for spiritual health and well-being.  He is driven by his incessant need to accumulate more and more until that moment when Spirit of Christmas future reveals to him the destiny he has created for himself.  And that destiny is a lonely death, an unkempt grave, and the loss of everything that he thought was so important.  And of course, this experience of coming face to face with his own death awakens him to see how much of his whole life has been spent as a prisoner to his own greed. But he has time to change and change he did.  He amends his ways, and moves his life forward in a whole new direction. 

In this story, Dickens greatly exaggerates the contrasts between Scrooge before and Scrooge after to make his point, which he does very well.  Certainly, none of us here falls within the extremes of Scrooge’s selfishness and greed.  But if we are completely honest with ourselves, and reflect carefully on our own lives, we may discover a bit of ourselves in this person of Scrooge; perhaps even that part that often forgets what is really important for our spiritual life as we get caught up in the business of ordinary living. 

This, I believe, is the message that Jesus is trying to convey to his disciples and to us in today’s Gospel. 
 “As the days of Noah were, so will be the coming of the Son of Man.  For as in those days before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage until the day Noah entered the ark, and they knew nothing until the flood came and swept them all away. So too will be the coming of the Son of Man.  Keep awake therefore, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming.”

As we ponder the season of Advent, we can discover that the Lord comes to us quite unexpectedly in three different ways.  As I mentioned before, Advent is principally the time of year that we are called to prepare our hearts for the coming of Jesus at Christmas.  We engage in and celebrate the birth of Jesus, not only with our family and friends, but also as a faith community.  Here Jesus is revealed as an infant, fragile, humble and poor, born in a stable in Bethlehem. 
 
The second way he comes to us is the way portrayed in today’s Gospel or St. Paul’s letter to the Romans, often referred to as the “end times”, which could also be our own “end time”. It is here that Jesus comes in glory, with strength and victory.  St. Paul tells the Romans: “Salvation is nearer to us now than when we became believers; the night is far gone, the day is near.” To be awake is to be aware and prepared as much as we can be for this coming of Christ.

But thirdly, Advent is also that time when we prepare for the coming of Christ in this present moment, to be transformed by His Presence on a daily basis through our prayer, through our participation in the sacraments where He is made visible to us.  It is here that we discover that he comes to comfort those afflicted: Those who may have lost a loved one, those who may be suffering from an illness.  And like Scrooge, it is here as well, in our present time, that we discover he comes also to afflict the comfortable: To remind us that some of our decisions, our way of life may be destructive to our spiritual well-being, that some of our priorities are mixed up.   It is during these times, we can ask ourselves:  Are there areas in my relationships with others; with my spouse, with my children, with my co-workers and friends that need to be changed in some way?  Are there areas in my own life, in my relationship with Christ, in my connection with Church, that need to be enhanced or reprioritized? It is here, in the now, that we are able to discover that Advent is not so much about all the busyness that arises at this time of the year, but it is about rediscovering the Christ who dwells among us, who dwells within us.  And through this indwelling presence, we are able to awaken and see possibilities that come through our faith. We begin to see that the Kingdom of God expresses itself in our acts of generosity towards others, of patience and understanding, in honest and unselfish service, and in the thousands of ways where people are striving and committing their lives for justice and peace.

Isaiah expresses this so vividly in our first reading as he describes a vision which is meant to capture our hearts and give us that hope we all need to live fully in God’s Presence.  “Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.  Where swords will be beat into ploughshares, and spears into pruning hooks, and nation will not life sword against nation.”  It is quite evident that we cannot accomplish this on our own.  It will only come as we invite Jesus into our lives and hearts now, as we turn to God and set our focus on His ways, His truths, and live that as best we can in our own lives now.

In the song, The summons, we hear:
Will you come and follow me if I but call your name?
Will you go where you don’t know and never be the same?
Will you let my love be shown?  Will you let my name be known?
Will you let my life be grown in you and you in me?

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Experiencing God 246 - End Times

You can tell that Advent is just around the corner when we start to hear all those readings on the “end times”, or the end of the world as we know it.  Overall, many people today seem to have quite a fascination with this “end of times” theory.  You only have to look at all the movies on Netflix that are based on some earth shattering disaster and a suppose-it end of all life to appreciate this rather unusual fascination.  I recall clearly in my early elementary years at school some of my fellow students speaking about some possible catastrophic events that could lead to the end of life as we know it: The sun burning out, or some meteorite hitting and destroying the earth.  As we reflect on today’s scripture readings, perhaps it is a good time for us to ask ourselves the question: “How are we to understand these “end time” readings as a prelude to Advent, which for most of us is a season of expectation and hope?” 
The Gospel reading from Luke starts with Jesus and His disciples wondering through the temple in Jerusalem, and obviously admiring the beauty and grandeur of this structure.  We read that some were speaking about how magnificent it was, beautifully adorned with stones and gifts dedicated to God.  This reminded me of our recent trip to Ireland when Mary Anne and I visited the new Catholic Cathedral in Galway.  It was a magnificent structure completed in 1965 after six years of construction. It was huge with a seating capacity of over 1,500.  The floors were all made of marble from Connemara, a place close by in Ireland famous for its marble. The pews were Utile mahogany from West Africa, and the ceilings were all Western Red Cedar from the West Coast of the US.

Overall, it was really an eye catcher, and great for the many pictures I took.  Perhaps while there, if I had taken the time to listen to Jesus, I may have heard the same words that he spoke to his disciples in today’s Gospel:  “As for all these things that you see, the days will come when not one stone will be left upon another; and all will be thrown down”.  With these words, I don’t believe that Jesus is denying the grandeur or the sacredness of the place.  After all, is He not the one who drove out the buyers and sellers who were turning this temple into a market place.
What I believe he is saying is that there is something much more important going on here than what you are seeing with your eyes.  What you see with your eyes is transient and passing in nature. Regardless of its magnificence and beauty, it is still an object of time, and time, in one way or another, will eventually erase all that from your view”.   But there is something much more important going on here that you are not seeing. So what Jesus is saying in respect to the fate of this magnificent temple, and his further statements on the apocalypse is not so much an explanation of the destruction of the temple, or end of world as we know it, but the unveiling of a deeper truth.  In fact apocalypse means unveiling. Something new to us is going to be unveiled; the curtain is being drawn back so that we may be able to see more clearly what is being revealed.
Therefore, our readings at this point of time before Advent become somewhat of a warning for us, a challenge to remain vigilant. 
What do I mean by being vigilant?  It means to be watchful, to be awake; not to be complacent to those things that threaten our relationship with God; not to be distracted by things that are impermanent in nature.
Malachi expresses this so forcibly in our first reading:  “See, the day is coming, burning like an over, when all the arrogant and all evildoers will be stubble.  But for you who revere my name, the sun of righteousness shall rise, with healing in its wings.”  What is it that is being unveiled to us as we hear these somewhat harsh but prophetic words from Malachi? 
As we move into Advent, our season of expectation and hope, and then into Lent and Easter, we discover what is being unveiled; “we discover the rising of the sun of righteousness with healing in its wings.”
The disciples, of course, respond to Jesus’ statement in the same manner as we often do our selves.  They asked Him: “Teacher, when will this be, and what will be the signs that this “end” is about to take place?  And Jesus then goes into three things that they can expect to happen, and perhaps we can expect them to happen to us as well. 

1. Many will come in His name claiming the “end is near.  His advice: Don’t go after them; pay no attention to them. 
2.  There will be wars and insurrections, earthquakes, famines, plagues, but the end will not follow immediately. 
3.  For those who revere the name of Jesus, who open their lives to Him, they will experience resistance from those who do not.  Some will even be arrested, persecuted, put and prison and may even die because of it. What does Jesus ask us to do? He asks us to witness to the truth. Rely upon Him to give us the words we are to say; rely on the wisdom that comes from the Holy Spirit, a wisdom that our opponents cannot withstand or contradict.  The Gospel concludes with the very affirming words:  “Not a hair of your head will perish.  By your endurance you will gain your souls. 
So in summary what are we to do in these in-between times: To remain vigilant.  To be seekers and witnesses to the truth: To place our reliance on Christ and the Holy Spirit to guide us in carrying out our daily responsibilities: And as St. Paul suggests in our second reading to the Thessalonians: “Work quietly to earn your own living; labor so as not to be a burden on others. Don’t be busybodies, living in idleness, as if some catastrophic event were about to be-fall you”.  After all, we are first and foremost advent people.  Our identities as Catholic Christians are founded on the hope, the expectation of Christ’s coming, and His daily abiding presence in our lives.
In one of the Dartmouth churches, hanging on a wall, there’s a banner with a scripture reading that I read as a reminder whenever I go there.  It is from the prophet Micah:   “O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you: Only three things: To act justly, to love tenderly, and to walk humbly with your God.”
When we do these three things, then we build our house on a foundation of rock, that neither rain nor wind can disturb. 
“Not a hair of your head will perish.  By your endurance you will gain your souls. 

Friday, November 1, 2019

Experiencing God 245 - Thanksgiving


Welcome to our Thanksgiving mass.  Thanksgiving day provides for us, not only an opportunity to gather around a dinner table and share time with family and friends, but also a chance to thank the one who makes it all possible. We gather here this morning to give thanks to God, because everything that we have has been ultimately gifted to us in and through Him.
Meister Eckhert, a German mystic once wrote:  “If the only prayer you ever say in our whole life is ‘thank-you’, then that will suffice’.  You see, we cannot be thankful if nothing has been given to us.  Therefore to be a thankful, we must first understand and know that there is a source behind all good things that come our way.  Good things just do not happen by coincidence.  Good things are given to us by someone, and as Catholic Christians, we know who that someone is.  A thankful person recognizes this, and with this recognition comes that great attribute of gratitude.  Have you ever been with someone who is filled with gratitude, a gratitude for life?  We all have, and we know they are a joy to be with.  You are that joy when you share the virtue of gratitude with others.
When I was looking through the different options for Gospel readings for Thanksgiving, I discovered that the most popular one is the story of Jesus healing the ten lepers.   

In this story, as you know, only one comes back to express his gratitude directly to Jesus for being cleansed.  This Gospel is perfect lead-in to speak about the power and the joy of heart-felt gratitude.  But I ended up opting for the Gospel from Matthew; the one you have just heard.  I did this after asking myself a question.  And I throw out this question to you. “What is the greatest gift that you are thankful for this thanksgiving in 2019?  What fills your heart with the greatest sense of gratitude?  The answer that came immediately to my mind as I asked this question was the gift of faith.  Today, we hear Jesus saying in the Gospel:  “I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent, and have revealed them to infants.  What has the Father hidden from the so called wise and the intelligent of the world?  What has the Father revealed to mere infants?  It is this mysterious ability to be able to see through the eyes of faith, to see God’s presence and at work in all things. I believe Jesus’ reference to the so called wise and learned is probably directed to the Scribes and Pharisees who got so caught up in the thousands of rules and regulations that though they had to follow, along with everyone else, that they lost sight of God’s presence in the world and the people all around them.    
All things have been handed to me by my Father, Jesus says; and no one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom I choose to reveal Him. 
We are so blessed to have our gift of faith in the Father who Jesus chooses to reveal to us on a daily basis.  We are fortunate to be able to receive Jesus so personally in the Eucharist, to be forgiven through the sacrament of reconciliation, to be blessed in the sacraments of marriage and orders.  Everything that gives witness to our lives as being special springs from this gift of faith freely given to us by Jesus. In fact, for me, it is only by looking at life through this lens of faith that everything else in this somewhat crazy world begins to make sense.  And in spite of the fact that there is much darkness in the world around us, we can live with thankfulness. We can live in gratitude.
To be a thankful person means firstly that we understand and know, in a heart-felt way, that it is through faith that we discover the source behind the good things that come our way.  The blessings of our family, the blessings of our faith community, our good fortune as Haligonians and Canadians, the joy of the friendships we share with one another. It is through these blessing from God that we can live in gratitude and live out that commission with one another that St. Paul explains in his letter to the Colossians. 
As God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness and patience.  Bear with one another, and if anyone has a complaint against another, then forgive that person just as the Lord has forgiven you.  Teach and admonish one another in wisdom and with gratitude in your hearts.”   
During this Eucharistic celebration where we are able once again to invite Jesus into our hearts, let us also remember those who perhaps are not doing as we as we are ourselves. 
We remember those who may not have enough food, those who have lost so much in natural disasters, and those who have lost loved ones who will be missed at their Thanksgiving table.  Through their own gift of faith, let us pray that they may, with open hearts, accept Jesus’ invitation as we have heard in today’s Gospel.  “Come to me all you who are weary and carrying heavy burdens.  And I will give you rest.”

Experiencing God 244 - Zacchaeus


“The whole world before you, O Lord, is like a speck that tips the scales, and like a drop of morning dew that falls on the ground.”  In this reading from Wisdom, if the whole world before the Lord is only a speck, imagine how small we are.  In the total scheme of things, we are very small, our lives very insignificant  but in God’s eyes, very precious. There’s an old Zen expression that is similar to this that I have used at funerals:  “How should we view life in this fleeting world: Like a star at dawn, like a bubble in a stream, like a flash of lightening in a summer cloud, or like a flickering lamp."  In other words, our lives are over in a flash. We need to hear these wisdom teachings and reflect upon them in order to jolt us from our conventional and often conditioned ways of thinking.  The secular culture in which we live has a way of shaping our thoughts and our behavior in ways that are neither true nor reflect reality.  We often end up placing an inordinate importance on things that are really not important at all, and forgetting the things that are the most important. In Thursday’s church prayer this week, a reading from Thessalonians jolted me in this way. It reads: “You know very well that the day of the Lord is coming like a thief in the night.  Just when people are saying, “peace and security”, ruin will fall on them with the suddenness of pains overtaking a woman in labor, and there will be no escape. You are not in the dark that this day should catch you off guard like a thief. We belong, not to darkness but to light, therefore let us not be asleep, but awake.” 
We belong, not to darkness, but to light.  Today’s Gospel from Luke we’ve just heard is a story of a man who was lost in darkness, but who found the light.  It is a story of man, not too much different from ourselves, who was lost.  Lost to what?  Lost from God; lost to community; maybe lost to family and even lost to himself: A man caught in the grips of power, inordinate need for success and financial security that extended far beyond his own physical needs.  Zacchaeus, we are told, was a chief tax collector, and was very rich.  His riches were attained by appropriating taxes from those who were poor or just getting by, and profiting a great deal from it himself.  Luke tells us that he was short in stature, but it is very obvious he is also short in moral attributes as well.  His own Jewish name, Zacchaeus, meant “Righteous One”, but there is little that is righteous about him at this point. And as you can well imagine, he was not well liked and respected by his town folks. But when he heard that Jesus was among the many travelling through Jericho, making that 18 mile journey to Jerusalem, he became very interested in seeing Him. Zacchaeus would probably have heard about Jesus from his town folks, and let’s face it, most of what he would have heard would be in direct conflict with his own behavior and lifestyle.  Yet his desire to see him, this mysterious itinerate preacher, out-weighed the jeers, laughter and cat calls he received from the crowds as he the climbed that sycamore trees in the public square.  So he humbled himself in order to see, to make eye contact with that one person who was so different from himself. Zacchaeus was looking for Jesus, but as it turned out, it appears that Jesus was also looking for Zacchaeus. 
And it was this eye contact they made, and the greeting and invitation that followed that jolted Zacchaeus from his conditioned ways of thinking, his self-centered way behaving to see the light of reality, the light of truth. 
He did not hear: “What are you doing Zacchaeus; You look and are acting like such a fool.”  Nor: “You scoundrel Zacchaeus, how dare your cheat people like you do.  But what he heard was Jesus calling him by name: “Zacchaeus, hurry down from there, for I must stay at your house today”.
There’s a powerful line in the first letter of John chapter 4 which says: “We love because God first loved us.”   “We love because God first loved us”. This particular line of scripture has particular significance for me because it wasn’t until I had personally encountered Christ, and experienced His love for me, even though unworthy, that I was able to begin let go of much of my own conditioned behavior that kept me a prisoner, mainly a prisoner to myself.  The quickest and most powerful way of breaking the grips of our own self-centeredness, our own distorted way of seeing things, is through an experiential knowing that we are loved by God.  This correspondingly creates an experiential knowing that we are loved by others and that, we are in fact, loving persons ourselves. 
I don’t think Zacchaeus had much experience of this being loved by God or, very likely, by anyone else.  He had probably grown accustomed to the belief that if you don’t look after yourself, then nobody else will: So first and foremost, look after yourself.  Except, as we all know, just looking after yourself is a very lonely and very empty place. 
The human heart is not designed for the purpose of looking solely after yourself.  If this is your foremost preoccupation, then most likely you will be left a deep sense of emptiness, a life without purpose.   So something or someone is needed to break that false self-centered illusion of life that sticks to us so easily. For Zacchaeus, that someone is Jesus.   I believe you will all agree that it is not possible to have a true encounter with Jesus without being changed by it.  This encounter has a way of restructuring our priorities, and putting them in line with Gospel values.  This is not only true for Zacchaeus, as he was to find out, but it is also true for us today.  Through his own encounter with Jesus, Zacchaeus discovered within himself something more precious than the way of life he had adopted and wealth he had accumulated. 
Many of you may have read in Tuesday’s Chronicle Herald the story about the Dunsworth couple from the South end of Halifax who had their own faith encounter some 22 years ago. I believe they are now living in Nicaragua.   The husband writes: “Back in ‘97 when I was a cultural Catholic who identified with my religion, but not actually going to church, I used to think the notion of a spiritual ah-ha moment a lot of hooey.  That is, until I had one.   We had a comfortable life, a house in the south end, members of the Waeg, good public schools for our 4 children.  I had a decent but unfulfilling legal practice.  Things begin to happen when I attended a Halifax dinner for the Canadian Cancer Society where I met a group who had just come back from Guatemala on a project of building homes for Habitat for Humanity, and were now going to Nicaragua on a similar mission. I joined them.   The poverty I saw there caused me to question my whole life course and values. 
More than that, I felt like I was being called by some higher entity to do something, even if I wasn’t sure exactly what.” 
After the Guatemala trip, the Dunsworths continued the same charitable work in Costa Rica and Belize, and then Argentina where they ended up staying for four and one-half years.
In 2005, they moved to Nicaragua where they started their own project relating to a student work development program. This program continues today and currently has 74 students ranging from ages 6 to 16 years funded mainly through US and Canadian sources.  
We are all inspired by these stories of conversion and change.  We are inspired by the fact that the courage to undertake such change does not come from ourselves, but from the faith we possess and share.  As Catholic Christians, like Zacchaeus, we discover that the instrument of change is found in the person of Christ.  Our Gospel ends with the teaching: “For the Son of Man came, (not to judge) but to seek out and to save those who are lost.”


 

Monday, October 21, 2019

Experiencing God 243 Persistence in Prayer


The theme of the readings for the 29th Sunday in ordinary time is a call to be persistent and continuous in our prayers to the Father. Luke, more than all the other Gospel writers stresses the importance of prayer as that means of retaining our communion with God.  It is Luke who often has Jesus going off to a lonely place by Himself to pray, to be present with the Father, to fortify that strong connection of love and trust. There are three points that I would like to make in respect to these readings.
Firstly: Faith, whether it be in others or in God, is built on a relationship and love and trust.  If we don’t love someone, if we don’t trust someone, then it is almost humanly impossible to have faith in them and to respond in faith. 
We currently have a federal election underway in Canada.  On the news, I’ve heard many interviews from people who are still undecided as to how they will vote.  Their most common complaint is that the whole campaign has been so negative that they don’t trust that any of the candidates will fulfill their election promises.  So many will probably not vote or end up spoiling their ballet. This is often the response where trust is absent. 
A couple of weeks ago, I shared the story about the little five year old girl who wandered away from her parents and climbed an Oak tree in her back yard. After climbing about 10 feet and looking down, she became very frightened. She cried out to her father for help. Her father came running to her, positioned himself under the tree, and then encouraged her to jump from the branch where she was sitting into his arms. 
It was because of her trust, because of her love for her father that she was able to respond in faith and jump from the tree to safety.  That’s why love and trust are so important in our family relationships if we wish them to remain strong and to grow. A violation of that trust can and does destroy many relationships. 
Secondly, we are all on a journey, a journey towards greater relatedness with God; or we should be.  To move towards this greater faith is God is to develop a stronger relationship of love and trust with Him.  In our journey, we must move away from selfishness towards selflessness.  We must move away from isolation and alienation towards the greater interaction with community and other people of faith. We must move away from being unloving and those feelings of being unloved towards greater intimacy with God.  Sometimes we like to think of this as happening suddenly, as in a prayer offered and instantly answered, but for most of us, this is a slow process of growth, often taking place over the course of a whole lifetime.
Thirdly, the principal way to grow in our relationship with God, to enhance our love and trust, is through persistent prayer.  The best description that I’ve ever heard about prayer comes from C. S. Lewis.  He says that the purpose of prayer is not to conform God’s will to my will, but to conform my will to God’s.  I’ll repeat that: “The purpose of prayer is not to conform God’s will to my will, but to conform my will to God’s.”  To grow towards greater relatedness with God, to conform my will to God’s will, is a process of continual growth that takes place over a lifetime.  And it requires persistence in our prayer. 
As in our marriages and other human relationships, mature love and trust requires our continual attention, our continual working at it.  When it comes to God, this is the labor of our continual prayer.
In our opening line of the Gospel, Jesus is telling his disciples:  “You must pray always and never lose heart.”  In other words, when it comes to growth in our intimacy with God, persistence in our prayer is so critical. 
And as an illustration of this persistence, he shares the parable of the widow and the unjust judge.  The widow has suffered an injustice, we don’t know what it is, but it is obviously something that has prevented her from getting on with her life.  There’s an obstacle or block that needs to be removed so that life can be restored.  So she appeals to a judge for help.  But the unjust judge refuses because he has no concern for her plight.  We read that the judge has neither fear of God or respect for people. In other words, he doesn’t care.  But it is in the widow’s persistence that the unjust judge eventually yields to her request, even if done for selfish reasons. The obstacle or block is removed and she is able to get on with her life.  Now if persistence works even in those cases with those who do not care, then how much more certainly it will work with God who does care.  In Luke’s Gospel, Jesus tells us: “Will not God grant justice for His chosen ones who cry out to Him?  Will he delay long in helping them?  I tell you, God will quickly grant justice”. 
Like yourselves, during my own lifetime, I’ve had many obstacles removed which enabled me to get on with my life at that particular moment and to move forward with greater love and trust: And the process continues.  I still have a long way to go.  But I know that through my own daily discipline of prayer God is there to help me with this process of ongoing growth. And I don’t see this as ever ending. 
Much of my prayer now is not necessarily an activity that has to get done; but has become a way of being with God, a way of seeing God in all things and knowing that God is presence no matter what the circumstances.
Perhaps this is an analogy of what’s going on in our first reading where the Israelites were doing battle with their enemy at Rephidim.  As long as they saw Moses’ outreached hand, they prevailed against their enemy because it was a visible sign of God’s Presence with them. But when Moses’ hand was no longer seen, the enemy prevailed.  When we know that God is Present with us, that He is on our side, then we have a much greater strength to fight the battles of life that come our way.  As we read in the psalm: I lift up my eyes, from where will my help come?  My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.     
Jesus tells us in John’s Gospel:  “I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing”.
Prayer is that sacred way of maintaining our connection with Christ the vine, so that we may grow in the way of life to which He is calling us.
Several years ago, at a workshop given to the Deacons and their wives, I recall Archbishop Mancini saying that when it comes to prayer, “Pray as you can, not as you can’t.  What he meant by this is that we all have our own particular way of coming to Christ, and connecting with Him in a relationship of love and trust.  Find and follow the way that works best for you.  It may be through the reading of scripture or the daily use of the church prayer.  It may be from daily mass or sitting before the Blessed Sacrament.  It may be from being part of a faith sharing group, Marian devotion, or the silence and stillness of meditation.  It may be several or all of these.  Find the way that works best for you so that you may enhance that love and trust of God in your own life.  And resist the distractions that come along, whatever they may be, to do nothing.  Prayer is there as a discipline to help us break the roots of our own insecurity, to break our excessive attachment to pleasure, comfort and things, so that we may enter into that greater relatedness with Christ. 

Saturday, September 7, 2019

Experiencing God 241 Cost Of Discipleship


One of the more popular game shows that ran on the CBC from 1957 to 1995 was “Front Page Challenge”.  Most of you, I suspect are familiar with it.  Gordon Sinclair, a very vocal, and often uncompromising journalist served on this panel show for most of those years.  Gordon Sinclair, as you know, was a colorful character. You couldn’t help but like him a bit, but he often proudly professed, in no uncertain terms, to being an atheist.  I remember on one of the “Front Page Challenge” shows where he announced quite brashly:  “How can you be a Christian when you are told in the Gospels that you cannot be a follower of Jesus unless you hate your father, mother, spouse, brothers, sisters, and even your own children.”  I have a feeling that Gordon Sinclair probably had a deeper understanding of this Gospel passage then what he portrayed that night on TV. 

But his question does cause us to ponder and to ask ourselves what is Jesus getting at in today’s Gospel with His very challenging conditions to being a disciple?  Is Jesus putting people off from being His followers when His demands are such that no reasonable person would seriously consider being a disciple under the circumstances?  First of all, we must understand that the language used by Jesus in today’s Gospel is deliberately strong.  There is a strong point that Jesus wishes to convey to the crowds. 

But we must also understand that we cannot interpret his words in a fundamentalist way.  His words must be understood in the way that He intended.  If we ask ourselves a simple question: Did Jesus love his parents? Did he love his mother Mary? The answer to these questions are obvious.  In fact, even during His excruciating and painful death on the cross, Jesus openly expressed deep concern for His mother, for her care and welfare. In the Gospel of John, we read: “When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple whom he loved standing beside her, he said to His mother: woman, here is your son, and to John he said: Here is your mother. So why is the word “hate” used in the Gospel.  We must hate our mother, or we must hate our father etc.

The word “hate” as used in this passage from Luke is what is called a “Semitic idiom”.  It is not referring to the negative emotions directed towards another as we would normally understand it, but has to do with preference.  What Jesus is saying is that we have to give lessor preference to our relationship with family members than to God. We have to give lessor preference to even our own life than to our relationship with God. In other words, we must put God first.  It can be said that when things are put right with God, then they are also put right with all others including ourselves. God knows what is best for us even before we know what is best for ourselves.

It is from this context that we can begin to understand and embrace Jesus’ other very strong challenges of discipleship: That we must take up our cross and follow Him: That we must be willing to give up all of our other possessions, or to "prefer them less" than our relationship with Christ. After all, worldly possessions are passing things, but Christ is eternal.

The second question we can ask ourselves from today’s Gospel is: Why at this point of time did Jesus use such strong language for discipleship which could easily have turned people away. Is His timing good?

Jesus spoke these words during his final journey to Jerusalem, a journey that would end in his own death by crucifixion.  The opening line of the Gospel reads:  “Large crowds were travelling with Jesus”.  Jesus challenged them because he saw that the crowds were caught up in an excitement, a fascination towards the person of Jesus Himself.  They were seeing Jesus as a superstar, a celebrity, and they were reacting to Him as we often do when a celebrity comes to town.  We can put on the tee shirt, or we can wave the flag, but that does not make us a follower.  It makes us only a fan. 

The crowds witnessed the miracles of Jesus.  They saw people being healed. They were impressed by his teachings.  And like many caught up in the amazement of the moment, they wanted to follow their new celebrity.  But they knew little of the sacrifices that were needed to be a follower.

Discipleship with Jesus could not be just a human fascination with passing event.  He challenged the crowds with two stories too illustrate that the cost of discipleship was much greater than just being an admirer.  It was important to Jesus that they were aware of these demands and to weigh them carefully.  Without that, they could begin to lay some sort of foundation, but not able to complete the construction.   

Saint Paul knew the full cost of discipleship.  In our second reading from his letter to Philemon, he speaks from prison, an imprisonment for preaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ.  His “yes” to Christ, his willingness to be faithful to the Gospel, makes him ready to accept whatever may come to be faithful to God’s mission. 

Understanding correctly the challenges proposed by Jesus and lived out by St. Paul; we are also given that opportunity to affirm our faith in Jesus, and to express our willingness to be His disciple.  Jesus is again reminding us that our choice to follow him is probably one of the most radical decisions we can ever make in our life. 

To make such a decision, Jesus has be to more important to us than our family, more important to us even than those we love most in the world, certainly more important to us than anything we could ever possess.  And Yes, Jesus must even be more important than our own comforts, status, health and life itself. 
On Thursday, we celebrated the feast day for St. Mother Teresa, our patron saint.  We are fortunate to have her as an example for the church as one who really did follow Jesus, one who was a true disciple.  As the price for her own discipleship, Mother Teresa gave herself completely. She made no attempt to trust in herself but relied totally on the Lord who promised to give her all she needed in order to be faithful to him.  May her example be an inspiration for us to live out our own lives as Jesus' disciples.