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Stay Awake!!

Stay Awake!  This is the alarm of our time.  Life has a way of seducing us into the world concerned with itself and able to see beyond.  I recall our travels to the Holy Land and entering the Garden of Gethsemane.  It was quiet time for reflection.  I grabbed a chair and sat to pray.  Soon my eyes got heavy and I started to doze off.  Like the disciples who Jesus admonished, “can’t you stay awake” one hour with me?  My spirit was willing but my flesh was weak.

To be awake is not about sleep but our readiness to respond.  People are already comparing the response in Texas to hurricane Harvey with the response to hurricane Katrina.  Katrina had two disasters, the hurricane was the first but the lack of readiness to respond was the second.  Texas has had equal if not greater devastation than Katrina but the response has been tremendous so far.  We cannot control nature but we can prepare even for the unimaginable.  We must pray not only for the lives lost and those who must begin the long journey of recovery, but also for those first responders many who are volunteers prepared to respond who have kept their candle burning to give the light of hope.

The gospel of Mathew on the ten Virgins (Mt 25:1-13) is often used for Quincianeras (15th birthday celebration).  An analogy can be made of this gospel in our readiness to respond.  First there are 10 virgins and ten is a sign of totality.  The Lord wants all to be saved and we are all created for Him.  Only five are ready for the bridegroom five were foolish.  To be asleep is to be unprepared.  Jesus calls us to be the light of the world, to reflect his image that he may recognize in us his love.  Our lamp is our soul that shines with the love of joy, peace, kindness, generosity, and many other graces.  The bridegroom is Jesus, the way the truth, and the life we all seek.  If the lamp is our soul then what is the oil?   Oil is a source of fuel for cooking, it nourishes the body.  Oil is also used in church for anointing, a visible sign of salvation.  The oil in our lamps needed to give light is our good works.  The foolish virgin had no oil of good works to offer Jesus as a visible sign of their faith, hope, and love.  The wise virgins were prepared their good works were a light for Jesus to recognize.  We have ten Commandments not to pick the five we want to obey but all of them reflect good works.  The New Testament in James 2:26 says, “just as the body without a spirit is dead, so also faith without works is dead.”  Thus the law, faith and works all go together.  “What good is it my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works?  Can faith save him?  If a brother or sister has nothing to wear and has no food for the day, and one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace, keep warm, and eat well’ but you do not give them the necessities of the body, what good is it?  So also faith of itself, if it does not have works is dead.” (Jam. 2:14-17)

In one week a healthy man who had given years of volunteer work at a hospital went home and choked on something and died.  He was always ready to help and give of himself He was recognized for his works of charity, God recognized his faith.  Then in the same week a woman in her 60s in the hospital is being taken off life support. Then there is a request for a memorial service for a 94 year old who passed away.  It begs to ask the question we all need to ask.  “Am I ready?”  Death does not make appointments.  Someone made the comment, “If you are not ready to die, then you have not been ready to live.”  We are to live each day as if it is our first, our last, our only day to offer up to God.

Recently this all became very real to me personally.  With the recent eclipse I began having severe headaches for two days the on the third day I was having lunch with my wife and a friend.  I began to choke could not breath and my face started to change color (they tell me).  Our friend started to do the Heimlich maneuver on me.  Each of those experiences begged the question, “Am I ready?”  Death is like a thief at night.  It is a reminder to be the best that God created us to be.  To live each day with passion as if it is the first, the last, the only day we have.  That day may be this day and we want to be ready to be an offering of ourselves.  Some things we cannot control but what we can we are to work to be perfect as God calls us to be and they will know that he is with us and we are in Him.

Little Jacinto, Saint Jacinto now was asked, “What do you want to be when you grow up?”  He said “I want to die and go to heaven.”  We can say he was born ready, but the Blessed Mother said he had to do many rosaries.  Let us pray for readiness each moment of life.

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23rd Sunday of Ordinary Time

Today’s principle message is of reconciliation.  To arrive at reconciliation we need to take a step back to the 1st principle of God.  God is a God of order.  In God we have a need for order and unity.  It can be said that if God is a God of order and science is the study of an ordered universe then science is the study of God revealed in his order.  Science is however subordinate to the highest order of truth, a lower order of truth.  What does all this philosophy have to do with reconciliation? 

To be in unity with God we must be reconciled with each other.  We must restore order to our relationships.  In contrast disunity is the poison of disorder.  We must begin with ourselves.  “if today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts.”  Our hearts must be open to reconciliation to be in unity of mind, body, and spirit.  Perhaps our struggle of relationships is a deeper struggle of self.  Our own restlessness and disunity promotes disorder in our relationships. 

The first reading is God’s call to reconciliation with Him, to hear his voice and be in right relationship with the God of love while the second mandate is to be in reconciliation with our neighbor.  With God we have a sacrament of reconciliation to renew the bond of love.  With neighbor we have a calling to dialogue but dialogue requires the desire for unity and free will cannot force unity in a hardened heart.  Thus as the gospel reading makes clear our obligation is limited by the heart of the other.  We can directly seek reconciliation and extend peace, we can seek unity through others and we can turn to the church as a voice of truth.  We then must let go and let God in God’s time work in the hearts of others. 

The order of unity is love where two or three agree on anything through prayer it shall be granted for the greater good.  In the first reading God testifies that we are to proclaim the Word of God when we hear him speak.  God speaks in scripture all the time but there are those moments in time when it speaks directly to us.  It is when the person in the pew feels “that is coming towards me”.  It enters our soul to awaken us to his truth in our particular situation and to reconcile us in our relationships. 

The Word also takes flesh in our flesh when we witness evil, sin, injustice, abuse, and neglect to awaken our duty to respond to the danger of eternal death.  There is a cultural paradigm shift going on in our society to silence speech whether by so called “safe zones” or by outright inflammatory speech and violence.  Billy Graham started his ministry on a street corner preaching the Word of God’s love, mercy and call for reconciliation.  Today, I fear he would be stoned to death, persecuted or injured for offending a group of people in the pubic square. 

God seeks to reconcile the world to himself and we are called to be the voice of dialogue beginning at home, in our communities, and in our engagement on world issues.  The consequence of sin is death.  How many souls remain resentful and unforgiving?  Malachy McCourt states, “Resentment is like taking poison and waiting for the other person to die.”  Many souls are dying with resentful hearts.  They feel justified in their resentment.  They see forgiving as a sign of weakness, giving into the other person or giving up their cause  The cause is never given up if it seeks truth, not my truth or your truth but God’s truth. 

What are we to do?  Rev. Dr. William Mitchell says, “Forgiving is a gift given in the face of a moral wrong, without denying the wrong itself.”  Give the gift don’t dney the harm that can eat us up alive inside.  We give the gift and let God take care of the rest.  This comes from a heart of love greater than the wrong done.  It is a voluntary decision to give up the desire for revenge and release a person from any interpersonal debt incurred by wronging you.  This comes from a mind that is willing to make an act of forgiveness, perhaps by going to confession to invite God to help us release the pain and receive his grace.  Forgiveness is a process both emotional in dealing with the anger, hurt, and disappointment and of the mind in understanding the behavior, the person, and having empathy. 

What are we not to do?  We don’t minimize the reality of what happened.  We don’t forget or repress the memory we learn to let it go.  Sometimes memory has its own sense of humor.  We stop talking to someone for years and we don’t remember why but we remember the anger.  Forgiving is not making excuses for the other or oneself.  Forgiving is not tolerating negative behavior that only keeps us angry.  Forgiving is not something we do after we “get even”, two wrong don’t make it right.  I remember a woman who came in for counseling for depression and anger management.  She was very remorseful for hitting her husband with a 2X4 piece of stud saying, “he made me mad”.  Anger is not a sin it is what we do with our anger that becomes a poison. 

Forgiveness, reconciliation, mercy is seeing Jesus on the cross and accepting his love is open to all sinners and we can be an instrument of his love.  The world is in need of more and more reconciliation.  The path to destruction begins with the silencing of the voice of the other leading to disunity, then disorder and finally destruction.  Even if we disagree we need to be at least willing to agree to disagree in dialogue.  God works where two or three are gathered in his name.

Who is our model for forgiveness and reconciliation?  The one called “full of grace”, Blessed Mother Mary a model of humility.  The Mother who stood at the cross of her Son’s persecution remained in perfect love and did not sin.    Did she feel all the human emotions of anger, grief, pain and suffering?  Yes, she did.  She overcame them with love.  In Jesus, God became more like man to bring us to reconciliation.  In Mary humanity became more like God to be perfect as God is perfect.  God entrusts in us the message of reconciliation to be more like Christ.  This too takes great courage. 

Literature speaks of four great themes of life.  There is a “comedy” where anything that can go wrong does go wrong but in the end all ends well.  There is a “romance” where life has its passion and challenges that seek a higher unity of life.  There is a “tragedy” with a sad ending, a sense of loss and emptiness.  There is also an “irony” where we are left with no understanding and confusion.  So how does this play out with reconciliation?

“Comedy”: Why did it take so long to make up?  I don’t know but you started it.  You also held onto it for so long but now together we end it. 

“Romance”:  I was so angry because I love you so much.  I wish it had never happened but we are much closer now and understanding of each other.

“Tragedy”:  What happened cannot be undone and letting go is not easy.  I still love you but life goes on without you now and I can accept it. 

“Irony”: Though I will never completely understand I trust in God and accept his will for my life. 

In each of these themes of life we can find God’s peace and reconciliation.  Let us harden not our hearts to his voice calling us back to his love and mercy.  Forgiving all injuries is a spiritual work of mercy.  “Love one another” and we will receive God’s peace of heart. 

Let us pray an act of love and reconciliation.  “O my God, I love you above all things with my whole heart and soul, because you are all-good and worthy of all my love.  I love my neighbor as myself for the love of you.  I forgive all who have injured me, and I ask pardon of all whom I have injured.  Amen.” (Handbook for Catholics, Loyola Press 1995, pg. 8)

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Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

1 Kgs 3: 5, 7-12; Rom. 8: 28-30; Mt. 13: 44-52

How many lives do you impact?  We seldom stop to recognize the impact we are making in the world.  The lives that we encounter daily at home raising a family, at work serving a purpose, in our gatherings of celebration expressing our joy, in funerals expressing our compassion, and in the streets with the stranger, the store clerk, server, child, or elderly.  We impact many lives and make a difference in this world. 

Solomon was a youth who understood the impact his life would have on thousands of lives and he wanted to serve with an understanding heart to judge, distinguish right from wrong.  We too participate in the kingdom of God making an impact on many lives in the seen and unseen.  Until heaven will it be revealed to us completely.  We journey in the ordinary of life faithful to our state.  The ordinary does not imply insignificance.  To the contrary, if God is with us everything is significant.  We are here to make a difference in the history of salvation.   We must remain open to the work of the Spirit. 

One of the sad statistics of today is the rising suicide rates among the general population but especially among youth where it has doubled and even tripled in some areas in the last ten years.  One testimony of a father whose son named Will a talented boy, good grades, played sports, wrote lyrics for a band, successful in every aspect of his life, dead at 15 from suicide. Like Solomon this boy felt all the pressure to be perfect.  He took serious his responsibilities.  He also knew that if he made a mistake everyone would know about it by lunch time with all the social media at the fingertips of everyone’s phone.  Solomon desired to judge rightly.  Will feared being judged wrongly.  Will’s dad was thinking “everything is great!”  Today his message to youth is “Wow, this is really hard.”  The challenges of this world require faith, hope, and love, they require God in our lives.

There is a desert experience we must all pass through.  There is also a promised land.  The Old Testament daily readings this week have been from Exodus.  Moses leading the people through the desert and each hardship is a test of faith.  Our focus is on the Promised Land.  The Kingdom, the Promised land starts here in the present, in the ordinary, in Mass, in his body and blood, and in our struggles blessed to carry the cross. 

Even when there is a shared struggle in life like the loss of a loved one each experiences their own unique grief.  “Wow, this is really hard.  No kidding!”  Are we prepared to face the desert experience when it comes?  Solomon’s prayer to God is a servant’s prayer.  He understood who he was serving in all he would be called to do.  His prayer was for what he needed to be a good servant, not to grow rich or rule with power.  His desire was to build a kingdom for God, a treasure buried in a field unseen to others but discovered in his heart; a kingdom of fine pearls of wisdom, and a net that catches souls of every kind. 

“We know all things work for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose.”  Do we walk in the steps we are predestined responding to the call, justified by conforming to the image of Jesus, glorified by the love of God?  How do we know?  When we walk in his steps says St. Paul in Galatians we gain the fruits of the Spirit.  We have and share our “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.  (Gal. 5:22-23).  That is nine gifts which we can recall as, in the power of the Spirit he strengthens our faithfulness, gentleness and self-control to become the image of the Son in patience, kindness, and generosity and arrive at the Father’s love with joy and peace in our hearts.   

Fidelity to the word made flesh nurtures us into the gentleness of a child of faith to be obedient in self-control. Patience is also self-restraint with kindness giving of ourselves in generosity.  The heart of understanding comes to know the will of the Father and celebrates the truth of knowledge with joy and peace resting in the Father’s heart. 

All this lead us to an extraordinary life in the ordinary of life.  Here we are called to be the best we can be in his image.  Who shared in our humanity a fidelity to the ordinary and was called to the extraordinary?  It was our Blessed Mother Mary.  Until the angel appears Mary was faithful to her ordinary daily life. It is from this faithfulness that God sees the fruit of the Spirit and called her and many other Saints to an extraordinary life of greater sanctity. 

Today we have the “new and the old”, the completion of the Word in the Old Testament and the New Testament, in the law of obedience and in the law of the Spirit of fidelity, our love in action.  Each life leaves it legacy for generations to come.  It is the legacy of love that endures. 

Come to the Promise Land.  The invitation requires no RSVP, No Regrets, only Mary’s fiat, “let it be done according to your will” Lord. 

 

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Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 2017

Wis. 55: 12:13, 16-19; Rom. 8: 26-27; Mt. 13: 24-43

Judgement Day, Heaven or Hell!  “Lord you are good and forgiving…judge with clemency.”  I am reminded of a priest covert from a Protestant faith on the EWTN program Journey Home who said Catholics don’t preach much on heaven and hell.  Perhaps this is because the focus is on repentance as pilgrims in our journey home to heaven.

The Master over all things does not need our repentance.  Repentance is for our good not his and we should not expect leniency but offer our works to receive this grace.  Scriptures says, “See how a person is justified by works and not by faith alone…For just as a body without a spirit is dead, so also faith without works is dead.” (Ja. 2: 24, 26).  The Catechism teaches the necessity of faith, “therefore without faith no one has ever attained justification, or will anyone obtain eternal life” (CCC: 161).  Faith is the mustard seed to grow through works into the largest of plants in a mature soul.  Faith alone is not salvation it is the seed in the journey to salvation nourished by the works of love to our God of love.  What are these works?  They are the works of love in mercy and obedience to his commandments.

Today’s gospel makes clear there is no universal salvation, a “free ticket” everyone gets to have.  Some people think everyone is going to heaven and/or there is no hell.  There is good seed, the children of God and weeds, the children of the evil one.  Who are the children of the evil one?  Those committed to the works of the evil one.  Let us not judge the person that is the work of God.  Let us judge the works of evil for they will be known by their works.  Commitment to a culture of death whether in the name of religion or as a State’s rights are a judgment the works of the evil one against the good of humanity.

In our country we have reached a stage in the culture of death called the “right to die”.  In England the judicial system has ruled it has the right to decide the option of death for little Charlie J., the infant born with a rare disease.  The state determines life and death not the parents.  The court has ruled the parents have no rights to seek further medical care for a child and he needs to be taken home to die.  The battle is on.  We are not far behind in our laws.  Take for example the Church opposition of contraception early in the debate while other faith denominations supported it.  No one then thought of late term abortions much less partial birth abortions would be a legal reality.  It was for the first trimester of pregnancy or in cases rape or danger to the mother.  Today body parts are on the market for sale.  Who all participates in the works of the evil one becomes a child of the evil one.

The works of the evil one include those that “cause others to sin”.  Here we must examine our conscience.  As a culture we value personal responsibility for our actions yet we are quick to blame, “he made me do it or she made me mad”.  Is it not that there is a sense of mutual responsibility for the ultimate sin.  We acknowledge the reality of cause and effect.  Anyone who has dealt with or lived through domestic violence learns understands the cycle of abuse from one generation to another.  How many souls will our actions impact for good or evil?  How many generations will the impact have?

We also have the expression, “I don’t know what got into me, the devil made me do it.”  The devil has received its just punishment but our judgment awaits his day.

In Spanish we have the expression, “En acción de gracias”, “in act of thanksgiving” God is merciful.  Scripture says, “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not from you; it is the gift of God, it is not from works, so no one may boast.”  (Eph. 2:8)  Have we found a contradiction in scripture?  This completes our understanding of faith and works.  God alone saves!  There is no target of works we must reach to be saved for one to say “I met the goal and another I didn’t do enough”.  Works are the cause and effect of faith.  Just as faith has a cause and effect of love as scripture says, “…if I have all faith so as to move mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.”  Faith works through love in its works.  We reside in his love through our works of mercy and obedience.  It is not either or but both and, both faith and works belong together in salvation history.

The kingdom is like yeast, a little raises three measures of good bread.  Jesus is our yeast and the woman is the church kneading the flour to give us a whole batch of children of God.  Together we will feed the hungry souls of righteousness.

The faith of a mustard seed means we must take that leap of faith and trust God with how he calls us to good works.  Heaven is calling.  What is our response today?

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I Am Aware of Thy Love

I Am Aware Of Thy Love

Oh Lord, my God

Thy love in my heart

Has awakened my spirit

Making it sparkle like the stars in heaven,

With a joy beyond description.

For your love, oh Lord,

Is a necessity that my soul requires

Like the essentials that my body needs.

The air that I breathe

The water that I drink,

The food that I eat.

 

How sweet it is, oh Lord,

When the day has gone its way,

Leaving darkness in its wake.

I pause to take a few moments

Dedicating my thoughts unto Thee.

As I read Thy word and meditate.

For your word is like a treasure chest,

Filled with so many beautiful things

Glowing with hour glory.

 

I stand in complete serenity of peace

In the midst of Thy holiness

Covered with your grace

With my humble soul singing

Unto Thee,

How Great Thou Art,’

I kneel down by my bed,

Starting to count the blessings

That came my way.

I softly let my tears say thanks unto Thee

For loving me so. 

Even though I do not understand why?

I am thankful that you do. 

Written by Maria Anna Cortino, July 18, 2017

 

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The Parable of the Sower

Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time: Is. 55: 10-11; Rom. 8: 18-23; Mt. 13: 1-23

Why does Jesus speak in parables?  That is the question on the minds of his disciples.  He gives a long explanation using farming to explain it so we can all understand.  We can surmise it as it takes faith in action to believe, to trust and to follow. 

No one knows this better than a farmer.  When planting season starts there are so many potential obstacles to a good harvest, too much rain, too little rain, pests, storms, the quality of the soil, not enough laborers, and on it goes.  Farmers operate under faith in action vigilant to sustain the crop.  When harvest time comes they experience the joy of their faith believing in a power greater than self, trusting in the wisdom from knowledge, experience, and reason, and following their actions with prudence to forecast a good harvest.  I am reminded of a picture of a cotton picker harvesting the crop and all the white cotton flying into the future bail is depicted as the harvest of souls in white garments.  Just like we are called to be fishers of souls, we can also be more like farmers of souls and the white cotton are the souls dressed in our white baptismal robes harvested into the bail of salvation.     

It all begins with the seed and the soil.  God provides the seed in his word and we are the soil of creation.  Creation however is bound by slavery of sin that is blinding, deafening, and muting our senses.   I recall being a child growing up in Houston and we had the three monkeys hanging on the corner, one covering its eyes, one the ears and the other its mouth.  Back then it represented the meaning of see no evil, hear no evil, and speak no evil.  Where is evil?  The gospel speaks of the evil found in creation making us slaves of evil with groaning in labor pains in need of a rebirth into freedom.  Freedom comes from the word of redemption if we believe with the eyes of faith, trust with the ears of understanding and follow with the word of truth by our actions. 

“They look but do not see”.  Where is our attention?  Our look often begins in judgment of what we see from our bias.  St. Francis of Assisi at first could not see beyond the skin of a leper to the image of God behind the skin.  The expression “skin deep” is often as far as we allow ourselves to look.  We want to see you Jesus but like so many crowds we follow the herd mentality to validate our skin deep notions.  We miss seeing Christ risen from the dead and remain among the dead in spirit. 

“They hear but do not listen”.  Where is our reasoning?  Our mind becomes self-listening.  We hear our voice as soon as the other speaks reasoning with our prejudgment with the too often “yes, but”.  Listening is the art of leaving out the “but” and following the reasoning of the other to their heart.  Our “yes” is accepting truth from the word speaking to our hearts and reasoning in dialogue to discover “how did you reach that understanding?”  We are also reminded of the “blind leading the blind” so all truth requires discernment. 

They speak “but do not understand”.   The intent of dialogue is to reach understanding.  Dialogue is misused to offensively or defensively create barriers to understanding.  “What do you know or How dare you?”  That hurts the one body in Christ we share.  The art of speaking is a shared wisdom from the gift of the spirit giving fruit in our minds, hearts, and souls.  The harvest of understanding will bear much fruit. 

Seed on the path without understanding is stolen away by the evil one.  The seed on rocky ground understands but is rooted in shallow ground unable to sustain a tribulation.  Seeds among the thorns of worries and temptations choke the word from the heart before it gives fruit.  Seed on rich soil yields 100 or 60 or 30 fold. 

A butterfly must first overcome the slavery of its cocoon to be released into freedom.  If it is set free prior to its time it will not fly.  It is in the struggle to free itself from the cocoon that it gains strength in its wing to fly.  We are in a cocoon of creation and the struggle for freedom is our redemption.  Our freedom awaits but we must nurture the seed given to us in the word to give a good harvest.  Faith in action produces a harvest of good while faith without action quickly dies.  Let our wings be as nimble as a butterfly and as strong as an eagle to reach our heavenly freedom. 

 

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Ocean View

Standing in my bedroom,

Which happens to have a magnificent ocean view,

I slid the glass doors open and walked onto the balcony,

Where I stood looking upon the ocean,

While a nice gentle cool night breeze

Brushed my skin.

Standing there, Oh Lord, looking upon the ocean

Listening to the waves as they dance upon the waters,

Seeing the soft rays of moonlight smiling upon its surface,

Made my soul forget the cares of the day

Helping me feel the serenity of Thy peace

Oh Lord, my God,

So many times I forget to stop

To enjoy the beautiful things you have created.

To just let you take care

Of the burdens that are weighing me down.

To feel the relief of my distress.

Oh Lord, my God,

How sweet it is

To let go of everything negative

To breathe in the freshness of your peace.

When I finally put my trusts in Thee,

I let your spirit gently minister to mine.

Standing there on the balcony,

Anointed with your love and peace,

I raised my hands and shouted to Thee

With cries of joy how awesome you are

I opened the eyes of my soul

To behold you clothed in splendor and majesty.

I just stand still

Knowing in my heart that you are God.

(Written by Maria Anna Cortino, June 9, 2017

 

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The Vision

I behold the beauty of your glory through the window of my soul, Oh Lord.

My heart is rejoicing in the green meadows that are so peaceful. 

It brings rest to my restless soul.

I walk with you oh Lord, hand in hand as a child walks with his Father.

We talk and laugh.

I enter into your garden.

I inhale the sweet aromas that are so pleasant. 

That makes me want to shout, dance with joy and glorify your Holy Name. 

Then you guide me to this beautiful crystal sea with unbelievable beauty. 

It shines so bright with your glory, as I take a sip of water my soul regains its strength.

What a glorious place of complete serenity. 

Then the Lord took my hand and said, come now to my house, sit at my table set for you. 

Now rejoice in my kingdom, for this is your home forever more. 

You have been redeemed. 

(Written by Maria Anna Cortino, June 1, 2017

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Ascension of the Lord

Where does a nine day Novena come from?  That was the question posed to me one day.  Nine days represent the time of prayer between the Ascension of the Lord and the coming of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples.  In prayer a Novena is a longing for the coming of the Lord, the anticipation and a realization of his return.  The power of the Holy Spirit gives witness to his coming “to the ends of the earth”.  Each baptized faithful is a temple of the Holy Spirit.  The “two men dressed in white garments …said,…’men of Galilee, why are you standing there looking at the sky?  This Jesus who has been taken up from you into heaven will return in the same way as you have seen him going into heaven.”  (Acts 1:10-11) We are to look not up to the sky for him but look ahead to where he wants us to take him in our love, our actions, our kerygma, proclaiming the kingdom of God. 

“The Father of glory…gave him as head over all things to the church which is his body the fullness of the one who fills all things in every way.” (Eph. 1:17, 22-23) His body given to the church which we receive in the Eucharist is in communion the fullness of all things from Jesus.  His is the authority, power, and dominion above all things and in Him it is now our authority, power, and dominion called to go forth.  This is the witness of disciples transformed into Apostles to go forth and heal the sick, cast out demons, have authority to forgive and be renewed in the sacramental life through his body, blood, soul, and divinity. 

We long to belong.  It is God’s creation, in our DNA to belong.  Where we belong is a choice of daily life.  We choose to belong to a family, to a community, to a house of worship.  When we say “yes” to the invitation to belong to God it comes with a promise and a shared responsibility.  The church says “welcome” and “go forth”.  Welcome to the love of Jesus and go forth to spread God’s love to others. 

Go forth into a world where there is much suffering, a world in need of the proclamation of the Kingdom of God.  Where does suffering go to die?  It dies where we find joy, purpose, and meaning in the calling.  The calling comes from God.  The calling is rooted in living our core values.  Those values are in our Christian heritage, passed on by our practice of faith, our traditions, and our sacramental life.  It is our inheritance to pass on and our responsibility. 

There is a story of an American researcher who went to study the customs of a Japanese education system.  As he sat at the back of the class doing his observation and taking notes, the teacher asked the students to draw a cube.  He went around the class and found one child who had drawn it incorrectly.  He asked, “Hiroshi would you like to come up to the board and draw a cube?”  The boy said “yes” with excitement.  After attempting to draw the cube he asked the class, “Class, did Hiroshi draw the cube correctly?”  They all said “no”.  The researcher felt bad for the child.  The teacher asked Hiroshi, “Would you like to try again to draw a cube?”  He said, “yes” and made a second attempt.  The teacher asked the class, “Did Hiroshi draw the cube correctly?”  The class said “no” all together.  The researcher not only started to feel bad for the child but felt the anxiety and projected feelings of humiliation for the “poor” child.  The teacher asked Hiroshi again, “Would you like to try again to draw a cube?”  The child said, “yes” and again he did it wrong, and again he asked the class and all said “no”.  By now the researcher was feeling the physical pain of this stressful activity wondering “why, put this child through this?”  Once again the child was asked if he wanted to try again and he said “yes”.  This time he drew it correctly.  The teacher asked the class, “Did Hiroshi draw the cube correctly?”  The all said “yes!” and began to clap.  The ones who drew it correctly did not have a lesson to learn but the child who went through the struggle and persevered learned a life lesson beyond how to draw a cube. 

Brother and sisters, the calling is to, “proclaim the word; be persistent whether it is convenient or inconvenient; convince, reprimand, encourage through all patience and teaching…be possessed in all circumstances; put up with hardship; perform the work of an evangelist; fulfill your ministry.”  (2 Tim 4: 2, 5) Those called before us have finished their race and kept the faith, now it is our turn “for all who have longed for his appearance”. (2 Tim 4: 8) Go forth the Kingdom of God is at hand. 

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Called to Earthy Sanctity

Called to Earthy Sanctity – I believe, I hope, and I trust!  The Lord calls each to holiness according to their state in life.  Earthy sanctity is encountering Christ in the world where the evils of sin abound to be an instrument that points to a greater good, an encounter with the living God, and a call to holiness for the body is clean but not all. 

Some are called to holiness in detachment from the world through a cloister life, monasticism, and clericalism that offers a separation from the world dedicated to prayer, contemplation, and service structured in that order of priority.  This comes through praying the Liturgy of the Hours throughout the day, the celebration of the Mass, daily Adoration time and in works to support self and offer service to others.  Through this calling one can discover a rich interior life climbing the highest spiritual mountains and going deep into the interior darkness to find the light of Christ. 

A deacon in our times is called to an earthy sanctity to battle sins of the world from within and without, to fight the good fight as a wounded warrior and to persevere to finish the race by going forth into the dark places of this world and bring the light of Christ where sin prevails.  From God the earth radiates his glory in the spirit of life for eternity but also the threat of death from sin deceived by the seven capital sins: pride, avarice, envy, wrath, lust, gluttony, and acedia.  Earthy sanctity carries its sin nature in search of purity of heart, mind, and soul with prayer, sacrifice, and charity.  This day I surrender to you O’ God, this moment, and this challenge for your glory especially when the cross seems hard to bear. 

Earthy Sanctity was caring for a dying man in the hospital as a nurse.  His body so swollen with fluid it poured out of his pores dying from liver disease.  It was debriding the gangrene off the foot of a man whose diabetes was not controlled and is trying to save his feet as you smell the stench of dead tissue.  It was being a counselor helping a child victim of abuse by a parent who now is separated from their home into an unknown world of foster care for their protection depressed and feeling abandoned.  It is administering a corporate company with the motto, “Changing hearts, Changing minds, Changing lives!” to prevent, intervene, and treat addiction.  Climbing the corporate ladder is also sanctifying it each step of the way.  It is daily facing the sins of the world as a sinner seeking to make a difference. 

A deacon finds refuge in the sacramental life, in the sanctity of marriage, in raising a family, and in fellowship while serving God in the domestic church, in the universal church, and in the world.  A deacon is to go forth in the economy of the world and the economy of salvation as a bridge that speaks to both in our times building up the kingdom of God.  A deacon finds refuge in communion with God, in our loved ones, and in our mother church who offers us a legion of angels, saints and the most Holy Trinity.  The one sent to us to awaken us in her apparitions is our Blessed Mother Mary and she remains to comfort us.  The purity of her conception and life places the crown on her head to intercede for us when we turn to her and ask, “Pray for us”.  Will her son deny her?  Not then, at the wedding of Cana, not now! 

The sun rises and the earth awakens to challenge God’s sons and daughters to subdue it.  We dare to walk in sanctity as children of the light but not all is clean for our feet remain in need of washing our sins clean.  In earthy sanctity we dare with courage to go forth with the armor of faith, hope and love to make holy ground. 

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