Sunday, December 27, 2020

Epiphany

Our readings for the Feast of the Epiphany are:
  1. Isaiah 60: 1-6
  2. Psalms 72: 1-2, 7-8, 10-11, 12-13
  3. Ephesians 3: 2-3a, 5-6
  4. Matthew 2: 1-22
  • Let your light shine
    • It is perhaps appropriate that we celebrate Christ's coming when the days are shortest (at least in the Northern hemisphere).  There is darkness all around us of various sorts, and Christ calls us to help Him dispel that darkness.
    • What are some areas of darkness in your own life?
    • What are some areas of darkness in your family?
    • What are some areas of darkness in your community?
    • Do you have to be personally perfect before you can start work to dispel the darkness that is outside you?
    • How do you know which darkness you are called to dispel?
  • The king's own son
    • Many that I talk to are now hopeful that, with new leadership, we will see improvements in our country.  Maybe.
    • If God told you to utter just one prayer for our leadership, who would you pray for?
    • What would you pray for them?
    • Do you think that Jesus would have that prayer for them if He were here today?
    • Why?
  • Revelation can be hard
    • History is replete with people, some of them who became quite well known, even infamous, because of what they thought were revelations to them.
    • How would you define a revelation?
    • Do you think that God still gives revelations to His followers these days?
    • Do we need any new revelations?
    • Who would you believe could have a legitimate revelation?
    • How would you test a revelation?
      • Hark!
        • Scripture is not specific about where the Magi came from, but it's safe to say that they did not have the benefit of Jewish doctrine or Scriptures.  Yet somehow, these journeyers recognized the authority of God's word to them in a dream, and followed that direction.
        • How does God communicate His will to you?
        • Do you feel that God makes Himself pretty clear?
        • Do you find that it's any easier to discern God's will for your life now that it was earlier in your life?
        • What is your process for finding God's will in your life?
      • Preparation for Reconciliation:
      1. What darkness has God brought me here, to dispel?
      2. Where is God moving me to bring His kingdom to earth in our government?
      3. Where might God be revealing something to me?
      4. Where is God calling me to something new?
      Prayer by the Lakeshore
      The old fisherman looked out over his beloved lake, and inhaled deeply.
      He had seen epic storms brew and brood here, 
      Howling wind, blinding snow, pelting rain.

      And the sun eventually always came back.
      As though nothing unusual or cruel had happened.
      No matter how much damage had been done to the docks and houses.

      When he was young, he thought that nature was just being mean.
      Throwing temper tantrums from time to time,
      Hurting his family and community out of sheer spite.

      Later, he lost faith in God, and decided that the storms were borne of indifference.
      They occurred because there was no reason for them not to, 
      At least to a God who didn't care.

      Later still, he lost faith again, and decided that it was not indifference,
      But the non-existence of God that explained the careless hand of fate,
      That dealt such random blows to all those who relied on the lake for sustenance.

      Now, having been through so much, he saw only beauty.
      Towering thunderheads marching across the sky in all their glory
      Might bring rough weather, hail, bitter cold, but also beauty, always beauty.

      Not just when all was done and quiet, for quiet is its own beauty.
      But during the epic grandeur of the fury of nature in full riot,
      The sky lighting as though on fire from a thousand sparks.

      Beauty that transformed hardships, even tragedies, into portals
      From comfort and security, to freedom and larger horizons.
      He had learned to find God in every condition, every outcome, every event.

      And he finally breathed a prayer of thanks for all the storms that he had endured,
      And watched the sun slowly set into the trees on the far shore of his beloved lake.
      Knowing that no matter how many storms lay ahead of him, he knew them to be gift.

      Shalom!

      Sunday, December 20, 2020

      Feast of the Holy Family

      Our readings for the Feast of the Holy Family are:
      1. Sirach 3: 2-6, 12-14
      2. Psalms 128: 1-2, 3, 4-5
      3. Colossians 3: 12-21
      4. Luke 2: 22-40
      • Dignity cannot be given
        • We have all seen it: an elderly, or homeless, or diseased person treated as just a problem to be solved, just one of far too many such problems for the staff on shift, for the allocated budget, the time allowed.  And we wonder what such treatment does to the dignity of the subject of such treatment.  Maybe we shudder, wondering if we are looking down the barrel of our own future.
        • Where does dignity ultimately come from?
        • Can it be truly taken away?
        • How then should we treat each other with dignity, regardless of whether the other person is able to speak up for themselves, demand better treatment, assert that they are worthy?
      • The fruit of our handiwork
        • We never actually stop working.  Every time that we exercise creativity, build something that was not there before, be it a civic organization, a local library, or a belt buckle, it is all work, all creative, all part of the unfolding of the creation if we do it in prayer.  Injustice deprives us of the fruits of that labor, steals our work from us, gives it away.
        • What does it mean to fear the Lord?
        • How do you think that fear of the Lord brings justice?
        • Does that connection and fear of God always work out?
      • Not talking about it is not mercy
        • Honesty is the best policy.  Really?
        • Think of times that you have finally "had it" with someone, and you decided to speak up about something that's been bugging you for a long time.
        • How did that go?
        • If something else started to bother you about that person, would you try that honesty thing again?
        • Why do you think that worked out that way?
          • Trust
            • Simeon and Anna both trusted God.  Their trust had no timetable, no expectations of what the promised Messiah would look like, form whence He would come.  They were there, ready, waiting, to see God's deliverance.
            • What are you waiting for in your life?
            • Is that waiting just a matter of killing time, or is it creative, active, productive?
            • Does it have to be all of those things?
          • Preparation for Reconciliation:
          1. Who in my life deserves to be treated with greater dignity?
          2. Where is God calling me to bring even a little justice?
          3. Where is Love calling me to speak up?
          4. Where am I trying to limit God?
          Prayer of Anna
          Lord, thank you for all of the love that you have heaped upon me through the years.
          From those within my family who accepted me when no one else would.
          From friends who encouraged me when I was inconsolable.
          For the heartaches that have given me strength to persevere.

          Thank you for your constant promise of Your Presence in my life,
          In the life of my community,
          In the life of your people.
          Thank you that you never wavered even when I did.

          Thank you for this long string of days leading up to this one.
          Each providing strength and sustenance for the next.
          Each giving me new graces to look back on and rejoice in.
          And thank you most of all for today, always today.

          Shalom!

          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
          • Singing ruins
            • It's easy to lose our way.  We lose sight of the giver and settle for the gift instead.  Maybe because we don't understand the true nature of gift.
            • What are some of the gifts that God has given you in your life?  Maybe friends or family who have sustained you, talents that you have been able to share with others, an experience.
            • How have you been changed by that gift?
            • Did there ever come a time when you had to give that gift up?
            • How did that change you?
            • Do you think that you have made the best use of all of your gifts?
            • Why?
          • Reminding God
            • The most powerful form of prayer comes when we remind God of His essential nature.  At that point in our prayer life, we have moved beyond treating God as some cosmic Santa Clause.  We have entered mysticism, we are relating to God out of appreciation for His incredible goodness.  We have fallen head over heels in love.
            • Think of a time when you were desperate for God to do something for you.  How did you pray?
            • How did God respond?
            • How did that response change you?
            • Did you expect that?
            • Why?
          • Are you talking to me?
            • We all tell stories.  The ones that begin with "when I was your age" are often directed to just one person, so you know who the speaker is talking to.  Often the rest of the conversation sets the context for the story, so the listener has an idea of the import of the story.  Salvation history is God's story telling to us.
            • Looking back on your life of this past year, what do you think God has been trying to tell you?
            • Can you imagine yourself telling stories from this past year to others in the years ahead?
            • What lessons do you think that you might try to impart in those stories?
              • Refulgence
                • That's a word that is a tough one to work into a sentence.  "My, you are simply refulgent in that dress."  What woman could resist that?  Try it and tell me how it goes.  And yet, it describes Jesus' presence among us, in spite of the fact that so few realized who He was.
                • If someone were to ask you "prove to me that God exists by your life", what would you say?
                • Where would you start?
                • If you had a year's warning of that challenge, would this past year have gone any differently for you?
              • Preparation for Reconciliation:
              1. Where is God doing a work of rebuilding in my life that I need to help?
              2. Where can my prayer get closer to the heart of God?
              3. What events of this last week should I spend some time pondering?
              4. Where is God calling me to be His glory?
              Shalom!

              Sunday, December 13, 2020

              4th Sunday in Advent

              Our readings for 4th 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
              • Why are you here?
                • "What's the use?"  Especially when things do not turn out the way that we had planned/hoped, we want to know whether there was any purpose or reason behind what did happen.
                • Think of a great disappointment in your life.  How did that change you?
                • Looking back on it now, if you were to live through that same disappointment now, how might it change you?
                • How many other decisions about how you responded to a disappointment would you like to change?
                • How can you prepare for your next disappointment?
              • Litany of saints
                • God has taken care of His people through the centuries in many ways, maybe most notably in the form and person of His various saints and prophets who have arisen to call His people to deeper awareness.
                • Who are some of your ancestors in faith who have gone before you, preparing the way in one way or another for who you are today?
                • Do you ever thank God for them?
                • Who do you think is looking up to you, right now, and gaining inspiration from the life that you are leading?
              • Finding holiness in obedience
                • Why do you try to obey God?
                  • You know that if you do, things will work out in the end?
                  • You know that if you do not, people will get hurt?
                  • You know that this is the way for you to be most fulfilled as a person?
                  • You love God and you want to get closer to Him.
                • Come up with some answers of your own, and rank them.
                • What does that tell you about your relationship to God?
                  • Jesus among us
                    • God comes to you in a dream, and tells you that He has a very important message for you, and that He is going to send Jesus Himself to your door to deliver that message.  God doesn't tell you when Jesus will come, or how to even recognize Him.
                    • How would you prepare?
                    • How would you know that this person at your door was Jesus for you?
                    • How would you receive them?
                    • What makes you think this is just conjecture?
                  • Preparation for Reconciliation:
                  1. Where is God inviting me to be transformed through my sufferings?
                  2. Who is that great cloud of witnesses cheering me on right now?
                  3. How can I deepen my prayerful obedience to God?
                  4. Where is God talking to me right now?
                  Making Time
                  Sacred art is replete with nativity scenes
                  In which everyone is stock still.

                  I've seen young infants in action, 
                  I've seen their parents striving to keep up with their needs.

                  No one is ever that calm around a baby,
                  Unless one or both of them is asleep.

                  So, just what are these icons meant to portray?
                  What inner reality beckons?

                  Maybe those scenes depict contemplation.
                  The picture of prayer

                  Prayer conducted after all of the immediacy of the day
                  Prayer that picks up the scattered moments,

                  Weaving them back together into the larger whole,
                  Seeing the unseen for what it was,

                  Camouflaged against the backdrop of the urgent and necessary,
                  Hidden in plain sight, yet accessible to anyone with eyes to see.

                  A silent invitation to each of us,
                  To take nothing for granted in the busyness of life.

                  To see the grander scope of the incarnation,
                  In the next spoonful of food offered to the hungry

                  In the welcome given to those with nowhere to go,
                  And the light offered to those who realize they are lost.

                  Shalom!

                  Sunday, December 6, 2020

                  3rd Sunday in Advent

                  Our readings for 3rd Sunday of Advent are:
                  1. Isaiah 61: 1-2a, 10-11
                  2. Luke 1: 46-48, 49-15, 53-54
                  3. 1 Thessalonians 5: 16-24
                  4. John 1: 6-8, 19-29
                  • What breaks your heart?
                    • Jesus tells us in Matthew 5:4 that those who mourn are blessed.  Normally we associate mourning with mourning the dead.  But Jesus has a different type of mourning in mind.
                    • What brings you sorrow?
                    • What have you received from God in prayer about those things?
                    • Are they the same things that made you mourn five years ago?
                    • Why is that?
                  • How much mercy do you need?
                    • All of us try really hard to be good, and we probably feel as though we are at least modestly successful.  But before we are able to really receive the mercy of God, we have to first see how much we need it.
                    • When has God been merciful to you in the past?
                    • Did you ever find the time to thank Him for it?
                    • How/when have you been able to show mercy to others?
                    • Was that mercy extended to them generously, or reluctantly?
                  • Praying or being in prayer
                    • Do you ever pray without words?
                    • Some get to that place with God out of desperation.  Life seems so overwhelming that words seem inadequate, or worse, pointless.  Others get there as the fruit of long hours spent in prayer, finally leading them to contemplation.
                    • Is it possible to pray at the same time that you are doing something else as well?
                    • Is that a good thing? 
                      • Jesus among us
                        • John told his followers that Jesus was among them, anonymous, unheralded.  That might have been because Jesus was trying to "lay low" until He was ready to "make His move".  Or it could have been that He simply vanished in plain sight.
                        • Why do you think that Jesus was so unnoticed?
                        • What does that say about our attitude when our good deeds go unnoticed?
                      • Preparation for Reconciliation:
                      1. Out of all that is going on around me, what should be breaking my heart?
                      2. How ought I to live, given the mercy that God has shown me?
                      3. How is my prayer life deepening lately?
                      4. How much attention should my accomplishments be getting?

                      Shalom!