Sunday, December 28, 2014

Questions for the readings for Epiphany Sunday

Our readings for Epiphany Sunday are:
  1. Isaiah 60: 1-6
  2. Psalms 72: 1-2, 7-8, 10-11, 12-13
  3. Ephesians 2: 2-3a, 5-6
  4. Matthew 2: 1-12
  1. Rise up in splendor
    • Is there anything in your life that has not been brought "into the light?"
    • What do you think would happen if you shared that with someone that you trusted?
    • How do you think bringing those dark parts of your past, your nature, into the light brings healing?
    • How do you think that bringing those aspects of you to the light make you stronger?
  2. Grant wisdom to the king
    • How much should we expect of our elected officials?
    • Do you think that God wants justice for all people in this world?
    • What can we do to help bring that about?
  3. Privileged generation
    • Oftentimes, as we grow older, we reminisce, and often pine for one aspect or another of our youth.  Do you think that this "generation" is privileged in terms of the things that God is accomplishing in our world today?
    • How do you see yourself participating in that ongoing unfolding of God's creation?
    • What do you think the next step might be?  Dream big.
    • What are you doing to make that dream a reality?
  4. King of the Jews
    • Has there ever been a time in your life when something that God was doing threatened something that was important to you, or at least you thought was important?
    • How did you handle it?
    • How might you have handled it better?
    • How can you prepare better for the next such occurrence?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
  1. Is my life bringing others to God?
  2. What am I doing to increase my own wisdom, that I might help others?
  3. Am I comfortable sharing the goodness of God with others?
  4. How am I preparing the way for God's arrival?
Lead Us to Your Light
Sometimes, the hardest thing to do
Is to tell someone who cares about you
That all is not right,
That your heart has weaknesses
That you have fed because you were afraid,
That if that part of you died,
There would not be anything much else left.

It's not that that other person
Necessarily has insights, wisdom, a solution.
As they have a caring heart,
An attentive ear,
The time to hear you out
Enough love to not judge,
And commitment to stick with you through it all.

I pray that you find that someone
That fellow-journeyer
That can help you find the strength
Within
To be who you were meant to be
And not settle
For anything less.

Shalom

Monday, December 22, 2014

Feast of the Holy Family

Our readings for the Feast of the Holy Family are:
  1. Genesis 15: 1-6, 21:1-3
  2. Psalms 105: 1-2, 3-4, 6-7, 8-9
  3. Hebrews 11: 8, 11-12, 17-19
  4. Luke 2: 22-40
  1. God promises a son
    • What are you believing God for these days?
    • How certain are you of that?
    • Does that certainty say more about your beliefs or God's faithfulness?
  2. Great is His name
    • What are you grateful for these days?
    • Where was God in each of those events?
    • What do those things tell you about God?
  3. Power of faith
    • Do you have any stories to tell of events or happenings that came about because of faith, yours or others?
    • What do those tell you about God?
    • How have those changed your life?
  4. Looking forward
    • What are you hoping for in the future?
    • Within your life?
    • Within your family?
    • Within this parish?
    • What are you doing to bring that piece of God's Kingdom to earth?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
  1. Do I have the courage to "let go and let God" in my life?
  2. Have I told God how grateful I am lately?
  3. Have I shared my fears with God?
  4. Do I see myself as someone with a unique purpose in life, that no one else can fulfill?
But I was just learning how to relate to him
When God called Abraham to sacrifice Isaac,
You have to wonder what thoughts were going through his mind.

I know that I would have thought it mean spirited of God,
To first give me this miracle son, so late in life,

And then snatch him away with no warning.

This same God who called me from my kinsmen
To a lonely and strange place.

All so that I might receive a promise of a horde of descendants,
Apparently just to see whether I'll do anything for Him.

I thought my God was bigger than that.

The gods that others worship, they are capricious and cruel.
They get away with it because they can.

But this one seemed so different.  At once larger, transcendent.
And at the same time more intimate, as close as my very breath.

Mount Moriah looms in the distance.

This God of mine has given me purpose, adventure even.
Through Him I met Sarah, and continued this journey with her.

Through Him I became a child of promise, 
With more purpose than merely greater flocks and wealth.

Somehow, I must journey on, just to see what's next if nothing else.

Peace to all of you this Christmas season!

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Christmas day

Our readings for Christmas Day are:
  1. Isaiah 52: 7-10
  2. Psalms 98, 1, 2-3, 3-4, 5-6
  3. Hebrews 1: 1-6
  4. John 1: 1-18
  1. Announcing the good news
    • What about your life tells others of "Good news"?
    • Do you see any opportunities to bring Christ back into Christmas?
    • If you wanted to tell someone to "come and see" Christ in action, where would you take them?
    • Why?
  2. The joy of the Lord
    • What gives you joy?
    • What things do you think give God joy?
    • If you had a godly joy, would that be taken away by misfortune, setbacks, other people lying about you, ...?
    • Why is this godly joy so impervious to disaster?
  3. Revelation
    • Do you think that Jesus' entire life and ministry can be captured entirely in words?
    • If not, how are we to teach others those parts of His ministry/life that go beyond mere words?
    • Who do you see doing that teaching toda?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
  1. Under what circumstances might I be willing to admit that I'm Catholic?
  2. What do I have to rejoice in this week?  Have I told anyone?
  3. What have I done this week to get closer to Jesus?
  4. What parts of me are still not under Christ's dominion?
Canticle of King David
From across the gulf of expectant centuries I greet you
Fulfillment of the promise of my line.

Where I was but a faint shadow of your greatness
My reign could only point to your kingdom.

My God, our father be praised through all time
For the courage it is now taking

To trust the fate of all humanity, past, present and future
On humanity's ability to see you.

In my glory, there was no mistaking my entrance.
My armies were my advance team.

But you, you come among the poor and forgotten
With barely a whisper in the desert to hail you.

I dwelt in a magnificent house of cedar.
And your first home is a stable.

You and you alone have seen what true kingship is.
And I pray that my life find fulfillment in yours.

Merry Christmas to all of you!

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Questions for the readings for the 4th Sunday of Advent

Our readings for this fourth Sunday of Advent are:
  1. 2 Samuel 7: 1-5, 8b-12, 14a, 16
  2. Psalms 89: 2-3, 4-5, 27, 29
  3. Romans 16: 25-27
  4. Luke 1: 26-38
  1. Promise of peace
    • What have you done for God lately?
    • Did that at all improve your relationship with God and others?
    • Do you think that your relationship with God is about His action or your response?
  2. God is faithful
    • It is often said that we are a covenant people, that we are founded and formed by the promise of God.
    • In your own words, how would you state that covenant?
    • Would you stake your life on God keeping his end of the bargain?
  3. Revelation
    • Do you feel that the God has nothing more to reveal to us, or do you feel that process is ongoing, even today?
    • If you feel that God is still revealing Himself, what do you think some of those revelations are of late?
    • How are those revelations changing you?
  4. Being full of grace
    • You may recall the distinction between sanctifying (that which gives us eternal life in God) and actual grace (a movement within us initiated by God to strengthen our relationship to Him).
    • What are some graces that you have experienced of late?
    • What are some graces that you would like to experience?
    • What would life be like if you were full of grace?
    • How might you get to that state of grace repleteness?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
  1. Am I willing to let God take my relationship with Him wherever He wills?
  2. What am I believing God for today?
  3. What am I doing that I might hear God better?
  4. How am I bringing Christ to earth this season?
Intimacy
Sometimes it's easy to try too hard.
Prayer becomes a project, 
Milestones and schedules
Deliverables and deadlines.

When all of the work has already been done.
Jesus has made Himself closer than I know.
And all that I have to do is reach out
And touch the Presence in my life.

Taking time each day to see that touch
Learn to be sensitive to the still small voice
Helps me learn gratitude, 
And fills me with awe

Awe that I too might be the feathery touch of the Divine
In someone else's life.
That makes all the difference
Between despair and hope.

Lord, in this season of arriving
Let me come to be your Presence
In all of the places I go
That I might be a fit stable for you to be born.

Maranatha!

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Questions for the readings for the 3rd Sunday in Advent

Our readings for this 3rd Sunday of Advent are:
  1. Isaiah 61: 1-2a,10-11
  2. Luke 1: 46-48, 49-50, 53-54
  3. 1 Thessalonians 5: 16-24
  4. John 1: 6-8, 19-28
  1. Anointed by God
    • Do you think that it's possible to have peace without justice or justice without peace?
    • How would you define each of those graces?
    • Do you think that either justice or peace can be found without God?
    • Do you think that men and women like the Dali Llama and Gandhi are people of peace?
  2. Living the magnificat
    • Are things such as success, riches, fame, power necessarily bad by themselves?
    • If you happen to be "cursed" with such things, what sort of an attitude should we have toward them?
    • How would you define true power?
  3. Living with the prophetic
    • It occurs to me that the prophets in our lives, those who call us to greater devotion, greater authenticity, greater ardor in our walk with God, can be a pesky lot, and a disturbance in our lives that many could well do without.
    • How do you think someone goes about "testing the prophets?"
    • Who do you think might be responsible for that role?
    • How often do you think that prophets need to be tested?  Once they're "certified", does that ever lapse?
    • Who are the prophets in our community?
  4. Expecting the unexpected
    • A complete stranger walks up to you and asks "who are you?"  Your response is likely to be rather context sensitive.  If they ask you here at Church, you'd probably site your ministries here, and only later mention that you provide for your family with your "day job."
    • But if you were to break away from the contextual setting for a moment, and try to answer that question in the broadest sense possible, how would you answer?
    • Is that the person that you've always wanted to become?
    • Do you feel a calling to be that person?
    • What direction do you see your identity going?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
  1. Have I been a healing presence to anyone this past week?
  2. Where do I see God moving of late?  What of those movements do I feel drawn to?
  3. How could my entire life be more prayerful?
  4. What do I want my headstone to say of me when I'm gone?
Announcement
By nature, I'm an "behind the scenes" sort of guy.
Try not to draw attention to myself.
Better that way, just in case I have it wrong.

Those motivational slogans like "go big or go home"
Never stirred my blood, quickened my pulse,
Hoping that I'll leave something behind worth remembering.

The problem with the "low profile" approach
Is that it can become too easy,
To hide behind anonymity, just in case you're wrong.

Maybe it's time to build a broader community
Of those that see and hear me,
Speak up a little more boldly, don't let my life mumble.

There's an urgency on the wind.
An expectation that the time for deciding is waning.
An end to weighing, a time for choosing.

Jesus' coming happens all the time.
His kingdom nearer than we can imagine.
Hidden only by distractions, that need to be named.

I am only truly ready for that arrival
In helping others
Maranatha!

Saturday, December 6, 2014

This is a meditation that I did on the Holy Family.  Take a look and see what you think.

Peace in the Most Unlikely Places
A Mini Retreat
1.     Opening Prayer – 5 minutes
a.     Have a prayer handout at each place in the room.
b.     Play Castle of the Soul by Tony Alonso.
c.     Reader proclaims John 16:33
d.     Pray together:
Prince of Peace
So fill our hearts this day
With the vision of Your love all around us
That the clamor of the everyday
Might recede just enough
That we might hear Your voice
And be drawn to you and see Your face.
Amen
2.     Opening talk – 10 minutes
We are daily inundated by second best things.  None of them is wrong or un Christian in its own right, but in the aggregate, they become a burden, a taskmaster that we barely discern, let alone confront, and even less likely free ourselves from.  Matthew 11: 28-29 “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.  Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls, for my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”  Maybe this afternoon you feel as though you are on a treadmill, with no end in sight, and no way to get off.  Maybe right this very minute, that deadline at work, your children’s homework, the house cleaning that needs to get done, the car that needs to be repaired, all these and many many more are chasing each other around in your mind like so many hamsters in a cage.
We don’t have the answers to your treadmill, but you do.  Deep within your soul, God is there waiting for you to come, sit down, and find your true self, find who you truly are in God.  We learn best by example, and today, we want to share some reflections with you on the lives of three very stressed people.  Each of them had their challenges, each of them needed to be present to the events that we overtaking them, to savor the time, and ponder its meaning.  Each of them had to find peace in the most unlikely places.
This afternoon we’d like to contemplate with you, each of these three people, give you a chance to find your story in theirs, and in finding meaning in their humble story, you can find meaning in yours.  We will invite you to share your reflections with each other, and so help each other discover where peace has always been, waiting for you to come and partake of it, of the author of all peace.
What we are going to do with you today is to rest with the Holy family for a spell.  In imaginative contemplation, we are going to enter into these scenes from Sacred Scripture, so that we might experience the Presence of God in a more intimate, and immanent fashion, so that we might deepen our relationship with Jesus through these events of the Gospels leading up to His birth among us.  Through this contemplation, the time, distance and cultural differences between use here, today, and their struggles of so long ago become transparent, as we strive to imaginatively enter into the very events as they are portrayed to us in the Gospels.  We invite you to join us as we set the stage for these scenes, and then dwell within each of them that we might touch and be touched by the presence of God in a new way.
3.     Breakout sessions:
a.     Matthew 1: 18-24 Joseph is told in a dream to take Mary as his wife.
Imagine yourself, in the fields outside of town.  As a child you used to come here to be alone, and pray.  You always felt closer to God out here, away from the sights and sounds of the village.  Today you need to be close to God.  Your beloved, your heart, the light of your eyes has betrayed you, and you must discern what to do about it.  At first, your concern was what others in the village were going to think, say, the shame that this would bring to your house, to Mary’s house.  Then, slowly, your worry turned instead to Mary, and you realized that she had thrown away the one chance that she ever had to live a normal life, to be happy the way that her mother, and her mother’s mother before her had each found happiness.  Mary was still a good woman; this one mistake took nothing from that.  Yet, something had to be done.  Certainly you, an upstanding man of the community, with so much to look forward to, could not be saddled with the shame of fathering a child before matrimony.  And then you hit upon it.  You would put her away, never to see her again, help her to emigrate to another village, start over, and get another chance.
The thought of never seeing her again felt like a hot knife through your vitals.  But there was no other way.  You turned the matter over in your mind again and again, and no better options came to mind.  Your heart felt like ashes, but you realized that you owed it to your family, to Mary, to your future children, whoever their mother might one day turn out to be.  Slowly you trudged back home across the verdant fields, numbly realizing that this scene had forever lost its charm for you because it was here that your heart broke.
                                          i.    Put yourself into this scene, before Joseph received the word from the angel.  Imagine that you’re a friend of Joseph’s and the two of you are talking about all of this in strict confidence.  Set aside what you know of this birth.  Listen to Joseph pour out his heart.  What would you say to him?  How would you comfort him?
                                         ii.    Have you ever had a tough decision to make, and felt that you had no good options?  Where did you turn for help?  How did you discern the path before you?  Do you have a tough decision to make now?  What makes it hard?  What would Joseph say to you today?
You feel dead inside as you prepare for bed.  The normal routine of the day seems almost impossible to manage, yet you know that tomorrow is going to require every ounce of courage that you have, and you know from experience that staying up all night never made anything any better.  You get into bed, blow out the lamp, and lie there, miserable, waiting for sleep to give you some escape from the horrible situation that you find yourself in.  You dare not ask why this is happening to you, because you know there is no answer, and once the question is asked, it can never be silenced.
In the morning, you remember a dream.  It was very vivid, and you feel certain of what to do now.  It’s still going to take courage; it’s still going to be hard.  People won’t understand, least of all your family, but you know it’s the right thing to do, and somehow your heart is lighter even though you are still carrying a burden, just a different type.
                                        iii.    Imagine that you’ve just awakened; new vistas are opening up in front of you.  What do you think that felt like to Joseph?  Do you think that there was anything that Joseph did that prepared him to hear this sort of message?  Do you think that he found peace in this alternative?  Why?  In your discerning, have you ever looked to your heart to guide you?
b.     Luke 2: 1-7 – Mary’s vantage point
You had attended births before in your family.  They were always joyous communal celebrations with plenty of the women in attendance on the mother to be, and the men trying to provide rough comfort to the father to be.  But this, this was so lonely.  Caesar’s decree had put everyone in Israel on the move, shuffling the population, essentially creating vast waves of refugees in their own country, just for the purpose of a census.  Sleepy little villages like Bethlehem were never the destination for groups of travelers of any consequence, so there were hardly any inns to begin with.  And now the demand for somewhere to lay your head was beyond imagining.  As you watch your haggard husband try time and again to find a place to stay the night, to somehow approach comfort for you, you struggle with this aching isolation from family and friends.
Back home, as everyone has watched your belly grow, the tongues have begun to wag.  Your close family, more from stubbornness than anything else, believed your story of the visitation by an angel, and the prophecy of a coming prophet among us, but the rest, they drew their own conclusions.  The worst was the pity that you could see in their eyes when they looked at Joseph.  You made it clear that the child was not his, that much the village could accept, which just made Joseph look pathetic for sticking with you.  That barrier between you and those that you had grown up with left an ache in your heart.
You survey the barn that you will spend the night in with a certain dismay, and then you realize, this is somehow all part of God’s plan for you, for this child, for your family, for the family of humanity.  It’s not clear where God is going with all of this, but you realize that God is with you, even in these humble and unfamiliar surroundings.  You breathe deeply, and chuckle as you realize that these are familiar surroundings.  You’d spent plenty of time in farms growing up; you were familiar with the warm smell of the goats, sheep, chickens, and the occasional cow.  You can tell, miraculously enough that the stalls have been mucked out fairly recently, and the straw on the floor is reasonably clean.  Joseph, ever the builder, grabs a feeding trough, gets the freshest straw he can find, and lines it to make a bed for the child, because your face has told him that the birth that has been dogging you this entire trip is now about to happen, and you realize that there simply is nothing more for the two of you to do, than to be present to this event, present together.
                                          i.    Have you ever made plans for a really important event, and had them go completely awry?  Were you able to enjoy the event anyway?  Do you think that God was present in those circumstances in spite of, or because of the way that things turned out?  How seriously do you think that we should take our own planning in the first place?
                                         ii.    The condition of loneliness can come over us for any number of reasons, sometimes even in the midst of throngs of people.  What are some things that have made you lonely in the past?  Was God there with you?  Did you realize His presence at the time, or did you come to see that later, upon reflection?
                                        iii.    Think of an unlikely time when sharing something, however uncomfortable, with someone changed your outlook entirely.  Did they somehow “solve” your problem in the course of discussing it with you?  Did they help you to see things in a different light?  Was it just the case that “venting” made it better?  Was there any conversation needed at all?  What does that tell you about prayer, our relating to God?
c.     Luke 2: 8-20 – From Jesus’ perspective
The first thing that I felt were the hands, drawing me out, rubbing me down, then wrapping me up.  It’s not like the familiar confinement that I’ve grown used to, but I feel snug and warm.  Then it was the arms, supporting me, hugging me.  Finally it was the faces, hovering over me close enough that I could see them.  I see lips moving and hear soothing sounds being made.  It all adds up to this feeling of closeness, connectedness.  Gradually, I’m aware of others of my Father’s creatures.  I smell the wool of the sheep, the sweet straw beneath me, I hear contented cattle lowing, and I hear a calf nursing at its mother, and realize that I too am hungry.  My mother instinctively realizes my condition, and she comes into focus, opening her blouse and offering me her warmth and roundness.  I begin to take sustenance, and I pray for the first time in this miraculous flesh that I have been given:
Blessed are You, Lord God of all the earth,
Through your goodness and the work of human hands,
This my mother has been nourished by the grain of the field and the fruit of the vine,
And she now offers that nourishment to me, to strengthen me,
That I might one day grow into the man that you would have me be,
That I might one day show your children what a generous and loving God you are,
How You and You alone have been there for them, for us, through the centuries,
And the desperate longing that you have to be known as you have always known us.
You hear a commotion, and realize that new faces have arrived, and the sheep smell gets a lot stronger, but it’s not coming from sheep.  Then you realize that these men have spent so much time with their flocks that they have taken on their smell, and you smile.  You realize that, in time, you are going to show the rest of humanity how God has sent you to be so intimate with them, so much a part of their lives, that you too will smell like sheep, and you take comfort in the Father’s wisdom as you drift off to sleep, surrounded by the love of God in so many different expressions.
                                          i.    What are you thankful for in your life?  How many of those were “blessings in disguise?”  Do you ever get a chance to talk to anyone about those gifts?  When was the last time that thanked God for them?
                                         ii.    Do you feel that your future is pretty certain, or is there an element or two that you don’t know that you have complete control over?  Does that bother you?  What is the worst that can happen?  Do you believe that God could still be with you through a dark hour like that?  In the final analysis, what does God’s presence really mean to you?
                                        iii.    Are there others in your life who are having a hard time finding peace in this hectic season?  Do you think that the baby Jesus might have something to say to them based on these reflections today?  Do you think that Jesus might be calling you to help spread some peace?
4.     Matthew 2: 1-12 – Advent overall, from the standpoint of the Wise Men
The new rising star was plain to all of us who studied the heavens, and we talked about it among ourselves a great deal.  But all but the three of us were curious enough about it to venture out in caravan to find what it might mean.  “Too many times have we seen portents that amounted to nothing” they would say, or “it’s too dangerous to cross the desert this time of year.  Stay home and tend to your studies.”  But each of us, for his own reasons, decided to venture out, take the chance, see this new arrival, this new king for ourselves.  Quickly, we each went among our people to gather wherewithal to present gifts to this new king, and departed.
We had heard of Jerusalem, this outpost of the Roman empire.  It was easy enough to find the local king, everyone knew who he was.  But none of the local residents could tell us where their new King might be.  We thought that odd, surely we were not the only ones who saw the signs. But we got an audience with the king anyway.  He received us quickly enough once he heard of our errand.  And he asked that we might tell him where the child was when we found him.  The local king was anxious and suspicious, but at least he gave us some directions.  Going outside of the busy city, we again saw the star that had first summoned us from our various cities to this lonely place, and it guided us to Bethlehem, guided us to a small stable there, guided us to believe that something truly marvelous was happening.
Our camels were a stark contrast to the poverty that we waded through on our way to that stable.  Garments that blended in at the courts of Jerusalem stuck out boldly here.  But we were past worrying; we could tell we were so close.  Then we found him, and suddenly, the rude surroundings, the improbable way that we got here, the paranoia of King Herod all became transparent, we realized all that was just the trappings of this moment, and we knew stronger than anything that we have ever known, that this new King was going to change the world as we knew it, in ways that we could not even guess.  We looked at each other and saw the same revelation in each other’s eyes, and rejoiced that this truly was a dawn of new hope.
We knew that we were going to have to travel fast and far to get here, so we each had chosen a gift that represented the best of what our respective peoples had to offer.  They were just a token of the clans that had offered them, but there was a bit of each of our tribesmen in those gifts, they were present in these offerings, they had sponsored us in this venture, they would be the first to hear of this incredible encounter with the transcendent when we returned home.  It seemed so surrealistic that we would be kneeling before an infant born of peasants, but it didn’t matter.  We offered our gifts, ourselves, and our communities to this new king, not knowing what life in his service would bring, but knowing that it was the very best that would ever happen to any of us.
a.     What would you like to offer to God this Advent?  Some things to ponder might be:
                                          i.    Success
                                         ii.    Recognition for all of the hard work that I’ve been doing lately
                                        iii.    My time
b.     How do you think that offering will be received?
c.     How do you think that offering will change your life?
5.     Closing Reflection – See what you think:
a.     This marks the end of our reflection time together, but it doesn’t need to mark the end of your prayer experience in this season of your life.  To enter into this sort of contemplation, you don’t need the rest of us or this place.  But you do need time.  Time to spend with God in which you let your imagination be used by Him to touch your heart and speak words both tender and true to you.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Our readings for this 2nd Sunday of Advent are:

  1. Isaiah 40: 1-5, 9-11
  2. Psalms 85: 9-10, 11-12, 13-14
  3. 2 Peter 3: 8-14
  4. Mark 1: 1-8
  1. Preparing the way
    • Why do you think that God calls on us to prepare a way for Him?
    • What are some of the ways that we can prepare a way for God to arrive more immanently in our lives?
    • What can we do to prepare God's way in our families this season?
    • Other communities that we are a part of?
  2. Finding peace in unlikely places
    • How would you define peace?
    • What does that feel like?
    • Does it ever last very long?
    • Should it?
  3. Eternity in our midst
    • What do you think that you're doing today is going to persist into eternity?
    • How important are those eternal things to you?
    • Why is the rest so important?
  4. Are you part of a non prophet organization?
    • Do we have any prophets in our midst today?
    • How do you think that they got to be prophets?
    • Have you ever felt that you really needed to tell someone something, maybe something that would free them from some sort of bondage in their lives?
    • Does that make you at all prophetic?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
  1. What is my life preparing me and others for?
  2. What things are there my life that take away my peace?
  3. Am I willing to follow God even if I don't know how it's going to turn out?
  4. Am I able to hear God's voice, no matter where it's coming from?
Street Preacher
"Repent, for the kingdom is near" he said.
Repent of what might I ask?

Anything that holds you back, ensnares you, makes you slow to follow God's voice.
But how do I know if I'm holding back if I don't really hear anything just now?

Your hearing is dulled, your eyes blinded by the cares of this world.
But, if I don't pay the rent, buy food, pay my taxes, I could end up like you.

Jesus came to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
So it's wrong to be comfortable?

It's wrong to stop questioning, seeking, searching.
But I've found God, or He found me, and we're good.

If there's never any conflict between you and God, you're not really living.
I don't want to have conflicts with God.

Next time you have some really harsh trouble, rant at God and see what comes back.
Ranting at God is disrespectful.

It's an authentic form of prayer.  Give it a try.  Don't forget to listen for the response.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Our readings for this first Sunday of Advent are:

  1. Isaiah 63: 16b-17, 19b, 64: 2-7
  2. Psalms 80: 2-3, 15-16, 18-19
  3. 1 Corinthians 1: 3-9
  4. Matthew 13: 33-37
  1. Praying intently/intensely
    • Do you ever rant at God?
    • How do you think it might make Him feel if you were to ever do so?
    • If He had to choose, do you think that God would prefer that we be honest or reasonable in our prayers?
  2. Seeing God's face
    • Have you ever had a special friend, someone that you had shared a great deal with through life, who had the capacity to remind you of the best parts of you every time that the two of you got together?
    • What do you do to help make that friend more present to you during a separation?
    • How might that inform your prayer life while we're physically unable to "see" God?
  3. Relying on God
    • The end times always sound scary.  Just what do you think God's protection of us is going to save us from during those days?
    • What do you think would be the best preparation for that closing chapter of human history?
    • How much of that do you think that you can afford to do, and still get by in the day to day?
  4. Watching and waiting
    • Each of us has our talents, if we're lucky we recognize them, and align them with our calling. Do you think that there are people, maybe even folks among us today, that are especially good at reading the signs of the times, discerning the flow of human and salvation history, and helping the rest of us respond prayerfully to such movements?
    • If so, would that free the rest of us to go on about our business as usual?
    • Can you think of anyone who performs this sort of service in one way or another today?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
  1. Do I trust God with my deepest longings and desires, even if I don't think that He would approve?
  2. What are the things in my life that I need to be saved from today?
  3. When was the last time that I thanked God for all of the graces that He has given me.
  4. If I knew that Jesus was returning tomorrow, how would I live differently today?
Traveling Light
Freedom is a sharp two-edged sword.
Shackles come in many forms, and freedom from them can be costly.

Waiting until you find yourself at the end of a chain
Before trying to free yourself can make for missed opportunities, loss of nimbleness of thought and deed.

The simple question "what would I be willing to live without"
Can yield some interesting insights into your heart of hearts.

For me, the struggle might be living without sure knowledge that my work will be appreciated.
Or maybe it would be hard for me to get along without acceptance from others.

Long practice in offering those up to Jesus in prayer of thanks and surrender
Giving me practice in indifference toward them,

Gradually lessening the fear of loss,
Gradually increasing my trust in God,

Making me better able to hear God's voice in my heart
I'm thinking that's a prayer that might be pleasing.

May you find peace beneath the turbulence.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Our readings for this Christ the King Sunday are: Ezekiel 34: 11-12, 15-17, Psalms 23: 1-2, 2-3, 5-6,
1 Corinthians 15: 20-26, 28, and Matthew 25: 31-46.

  • If you look just a few verses ahead of our Ezekiel reading for this Sunday, you see that the Lord is taking the shepherds of Israel to task for seeking their own benefit, rather than those that they served.
    • What are the ministries that you see yourself in these days?  They don't have to be formal or have a name necessarily.  You could be visiting a sick relative on a regular basis and be in a ministry of great mercy.
    • What are the challenges that you face in each of those ministries week in, week out?
    • How do you think that the great Good Shepherd might be able to help you with those challenges?
  • How do you think that the sheep learn to trust the shepherd?
    • What has God done for/to you lately that evokes your trust in Him?
    • Do you ever get the chance to talk to anyone else about His gifts in your life?
    • Has God ever disappointed you with His care?
  • We are often depicted as a pilgrim people, merely passing through in this life on our way to the Kingdom of God.
    • What are some ways that the Kingdom of God can and should be more evident in your family, our parish, our nation?
    • What's stopping you?
  • This week's Gospel calls us to look at the needs around us.
    • We are daily bombarded with needs that are going unmet in the world around us.  Of the many responses that we're capable of, two are easy to fall into:
      • Thinking that there is nothing that we can do that will make a substantial difference in the face of so much need, so we become apathetic.
      • Getting caught up in so many causes that we become burned out and of no use to anyone.
    • How do you decide what needs to meet in your life?
    • Is all of that giving on your part very much the same week in/week out, or is there some spontaneity to your generosity?
    • Which is better, to send a lavish check to an organization that you know is doing good things, or spend your time helping out personally?
Preparation for Reconciliation:
    1. Am I a joyful giver?
    2. How much do I trust God when He takes me out of my comfort zone?
    3. What am I doing to bring about the Kingdom of God this week?
    4. How have I been discerning where to spend myself?
    Smelling Like Sheep
    My middle school kids have a whole different set of challenges that they have to meet than I do.
    Everything from acne to term paper deadlines are just a distant memory to me.
    They probably look at me, and see their parents.
    Or, with a little imagination, their grand parents.

    For better or worse, I've made all of the decisions that they are facing now.
    I just have to learn to live with the consequences,
    Much less uncertainty at my stage in life, far fewer crisis.
    And I wonder what I have to say to them that really means anything to them.

    All of the wisdom of the ages is just noise if its delivered by someone
    Who cannot relate to their listeners,
    Who is unable to know the dark night of the soul that they wander through
    And lead them gently, one step at a time, from right where they are.

    Lord, give me true understanding of these your children,
    That I might have the respect and awe of them that you hold,
    That my love might be unconditional and authentic,
    That I might show them your face in ways that they can see clearly.

    Shalom!

    Monday, November 10, 2014

    Our readings for this coming week are: Proverbs 31: 10-13, 19-20, 30-31,
    Psalms 128: 1-2, 3, 4-5, 1 Thessalonians 5: 1-6, and Matthew 25: 14-30
    1. Proverbs:
      • Why do you think that we turn in our offerings during the Mass?
      • Wouldn't it be more efficient if everyone just filled out pledge cards and had an automatic deduction made from their checking account?
      • Or better yet, take a page from Uncle Sam and deduct it from our paycheck before we even see it?
    2. Psalms:
      • Have you ever felt robbed, you put in time and effort into something, be it a project at work, an initiative at Church, something you tried to establish at home, and you didn't get the results that you were counting on because someone sabotaged you in one way or another?
      • How did that make you feel?
      • What did you do about it?
      • Do you feel as though that might have been a justice issue in some regard?
      • How do you think that made God feel?
      • Did you ask Him?
    3. 1 Thessalonians:
      • What part of what we do, who we are in this life is going to endure into eternity?
      • Is heaven going to be any richer because Michelangelo lived?
      • If something that you're doing today isn't quite perfect, is it going to matter at the end of the world?
      • Why?
    4. Matthew:
      • Do you think that each of us is born into this world with a destiny that only we can fulfill
      • How do we go about finding out what that is?
      • How late in life do we find that destiny?
      • I'm reminded of the story of the 4th wiseman (http://www.cfcmiddleeast.org/?p=3117).
    Preparation for Reconciliation

    1. 1) How do I measure success?
    2. What am I doing to help others enjoy the fruits of their labors?
    3. How is today preparing me for eternity?
    4. What are my gifts and how am I sharing them?

    Ennobling Love
    Loving another is an act of defiance.
    It defies the fear that the other will disappoint, or betray.
    It defies the fear that this relationship will cost in unpredictable ways.

    No one in their right mind sets out on a relationship hoping to change the otherHistory has proven that to be a false hope time and again.
    But perhaps love has a power to change the world around the beloved.

    Love for another states in ways beyond words "you are worthy"
    That simple message, spoken into enough ears,
    Helps to transform those around the beloved.

    They see them with new eyes, new expectations.
    The beloved is able to live and move and have their being in that new context.
    And find themselves where before there were only ashes.

    Christ's love for us changed the world.
    I think He's inviting us to be as reckless and generous.
    That we might partake in and of His love in unpredictable ways.

    May the breathless waiting of Advent transform your entire year.