Mary of Nazareth

Here is what promises to be a wonderful film put out by Ignatius Press. It is entitled, Mary of Nazareth. You can view the trailer below. I for one will be awaiting its showing locally.

 

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Quote for the Day

“You must not grow weary of praying but soar aloft in ardent prayer till you enter the wonderful dwelling place, the house of God.” – St. Bonaventure, OFM

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35th Anniversary of John Paul I’s Election as Pope

imagesToday marks the day 35 years ago when Albino Luciani was elected Pope John Paul I. As my readers know so well, this was a day etched in my memory as I was there for it all that day.

Perhaps it is my own reading into things, but I really do see Papa Luciani’s papacy actualized through the papacies of John Paul II, Benedict, and Francis. I personally have no doubt that Luciani began what his three successors have completed or are completing.

Luciani’s restoration of the Church is being accomplished. (Actually, it isn’t his restoration, but rather, the restoration envisioned by the Second Vatican Council. His focus on catechesis – and thus evangelization of the peoples, a new evangelization for which he called the day he died – and his initial emphasis on the three virtues of faith, hope and charity, have taken 35 years to bring into the Church’s continual consciousness and parlance.

Luciani called for renewal. He asked us to know the faith, to live lives of faith, hope and charity. Benedict was the pope depicting faith; John Paul II depicted hope, and Francis depicts charity.

May God richly bless the Church Luciani lived and died serving. May Papa Luciani pray for us now and always!

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Quote for the Day

“As the sun by its rays adorns the leaves and branches of plants with colors and keeps each vigorous in its proper species, so the grace of God by its illumination adorns man with virtues, enkindles in him the fire of love, makes him beautiful in God’s sight and brings his nature to perfection.” — St. Joseph of Cupertino, OFM Conv.

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Church of the Week

 

photo                St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, Pentaluma, California

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Random Thoughts….

Another Sunday morning completed, and a bright sunny afternoon ahead. There is so much ahead, if I let myself go there in my mind. A wake in a couple of days, a communion service, a business trip, a busy week in the office seeing patients, family get-togethers this coming weekend and the next, and preparing a day- long workshop for the diaconal community of the Diocese of Winona, the lawn out back wants a trimming, and so on.

Any time I begin to think in this way, what also comes to mind is the two Greek concepts of time, chronos and kairos. I often get caught up in chronos which is to say caught up in accomplishing one thing after another. St. Paul would probably say I get caught up in the world. Those kairos moments (when time as we typically know it seems to suspend itself) are rare comodities. It is kind of amazing to me, really. I was reading something recently about diaconal spirituality – the source I have forgotten – which talked of the importance of contemplation in diaconal ministry. Kind of difficult to do when you have so many things to do. That gifted and acquired ability to see beyond the chronos and into the kairos no doubt is vital for a deacon, as it is for anyone dedicated to God. It just that those gifted times are taken from us by the demands of daily life. Maybe a few prayers to Blessed Mother Teresa would help, or maybe St. Stephen, deacon and protomartyr of the Church.

Today’s Gospel talks about the inevitability of division in the Christian life. These are difficult words for many of us to hear. We tend to bend our ear to a different message of peace and tranquility. But God doesn’t hide much, if anything from us really. He is informing us in this Gospel passage from Luke that to be his follower will result in some people distancing themselves from us because our lives will become a challenge to them, if we are living out the Gospel message. In a couple of weeks, we will hear in the Gospel that if we don’t hate our families, even our own lives, we cannot be disciples of the Lord. Hate that word hate, I do. Don’t like using it, yet the Scriptures used it. I looked it up in the original Greek, and yes, the Greek word means hate. I do suspect Jesus, being a Semite and a Jew of his era, used the word as his people did back then, i.e., for emphasis and accent rather than a literal command. The idea being, of course, that we must make a free and radical decision to follow him, and our choice must be consciously given after discernment and consideration. Anyone who has ever done this finds out they end up giving everything back to God…. they become poor and free to follow. Did not the Apostles all do this when Jesus called them? Did not Cardinal Jose Bergoglio do this recently when he was elected Pope Francis?

Amazing stuff, this Christian living. Wonderful, actually. Splendid in so many ways.

God bless each of you abundantly!

Deacon Bob

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The Assumption of Our Lady

Today is the Solemnity of the Assumption of Mary, the Mother of God, body and soul into heaven. It is a wonderful feast day in which we see that which lies in store for us if we remain faithful to the will of God in our lives. Yes, we too will one day rise to our heavenly home and our bodies and souls will be reunited.

Mary, of course, never experienced the tomb, which is to say, she never underwent physical corruption. Whereas the Church has never formally defined that she experienced physical death (as the Latin Church typically has believed) or whether she fell asleep (which the Eastern Churches have called her Dormition), the universal Church has always believed that Mary was assumed body and soul into heaven at the end of her earthly life, and is now Queen of heaven and earth. This is only fitting for God’s creature who by singular grace was made a worthy vessel for the Incarnation of God’s only Son Jesus.

Pope Francis has a wonderful homily today that I would like to share with you. This is the Vatican’s official English translation.

 Dear Brothers and Sisters!

At the end of its Constitution on the Church, the Second Vatican Council left us a very beautiful meditation on Mary Most Holy. Let me just recall the words referring to the mystery we celebrate today: “the immaculate Virgin preserved free from all stain of original sin, was taken up body and soul into heavenly glory, when her earthly life was over, and exalted by the Lord as Queen over all things” (no. 59). Then towards the end, there is: “the Mother of Jesus in the glory which she possesses in body and soul in heaven is the image and the beginning of the church as it is to be perfected in the world to come. Likewise, she shines forth on earth, until the day of the Lord shall come” (no. 68). In the light of this most beautiful image of our Mother, we are able to see the message of the biblical readings that we have just heard. We can focus on three key words: struggle, resurrection, hope.

The passage from Revelation presents the vision of the struggle between the woman and the dragon. The figure of the woman, representing the Church, is, on the one hand, glorious and triumphant and yet, on the other, still in travail. And the Church is like that: if in heaven she is already associated in some way with the glory of her Lord, in history she continually lives through the trials and challenges which the conflict between God and the evil one, the perennial enemy, brings. And in the struggle which the disciples must confront – all of us, all the disciples of Jesus, we must face this struggle – Mary does not leave them alone: the Mother of Christ and of the Church is always with us. She walks with us always, she is with us. And in a way, Mary shares this dual condition. She has of course already entered, once and for all, into heavenly glory. But this does not mean that she is distant or detached from us; rather Mary accompanies us, struggles with us, sustains Christians in their fight against the forces of evil. Prayer with Mary, especially the rosary – but listen carefully: the Rosary. Do you pray the Rosary every day? But I’m not sure you do… [the people shout “Yes!”] Really? Well, prayer with Mary, especially the Rosary, has this “suffering” dimension, that is of struggle, a sustaining prayer in the battle against the evil one and his accomplices. The Rosary also sustains us in the battle.

The second reading speaks to us of resurrection. The Apostle Paul, writing to the Corinthians, insists that being Christian means believing that Christ is truly risen from the dead. Our whole faith is based upon this fundamental truth which is not an idea but an event. Even the mystery of Mary’s Assumption body and soul is fully inscribed in the resurrection of Christ. The Mother’s humanity is “attracted” by the Son in his own passage from death to life. Once and for all, Jesus entered into eternal life with all the humanity he had drawn from Mary; and she, the Mother, who followed him faithfully throughout her life, followed him with her heart, and entered with him into eternal life which we also call heaven, paradise, the Father’s house.Mary also experienced the martyrdom of the Cross: the martyrdom of her heart, the martyrdom of her soul. She lived her Son’s Passion to the depths of her soul. She was fully united to him in his death, and so she was given the gift of resurrection. Christ is the first fruits from the dead and Mary is the first of the redeemed, the first of “those who are in Christ”. She is our Mother, but we can also say that she is our representative, our sister, our eldest sister, she is the first of the redeemed, who has arrived in heaven.

The Gospel suggests to us the third word: hope. Hope is the virtue of those who, experiencing conflict – the struggle between life and death, good and evil – believe in the resurrection of Christ, in the victory of love. We heard the Song of Mary, the Magnificat: it is the song of hope, it is the song of the People of God walking through history. It is the song many saints, men and women, some famous, and very many others unknown to us but known to God: mums, dads, catechists, missionaries, priests, sisters, young people, even children and grandparents: these have faced the struggle of life while carrying in their heart the hope of the little and the humble. Mary says: “My souls glorifies the Lord” – today, the Church too sings this in every part of the world. This song is particularly strong in places where the Body of Christ is suffering the Passion. For us Christians, wherever the Cross is, there is hope, always. If there is no hope, we are not Christian. That is why I like to say: do not allow yourselves to be robbed of hope. May we not be robbed of hope, because this strength is a grace, a gift from God which carries us forward with our eyes fixed on heaven. And Mary is always there, near those communities, our brothers and sisters, she accompanies them, suffers with them, and sings the Magnificat of hope with them.

Dear Brothers and Sisters, with all our heart let us too unite ourselves to this song of patience and victory, of struggle and joy, that unites the triumphant Church with the pilgrim one, earth with heaven, and that joins our lives to the eternity towards which we journey. Amen.

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Quote for the Day

“The Immaculata is the peak of all created perfections.” — St. Maximilian Kolbe, OFM Conv.

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Deacon Bob’s Homily for the 19th Sunday of Ordinary Time – Cycle C

Here is my homily for this weekend. God bless each of you!

Audio:  Here it is. Sorry it took so long to post!  

Text:

19th Sunday of Ordinary Time – Cycle C

Wis 18: 6-9; Heb 11: 1-2, 8-19; Lk 12: 32-48

August 10/11, 2013

 

“Do not be afraid any longer, little flock, for your Father is pleased to give you the Kingdom.”

My, O my! These are words our world desperately needs to hear, a world so overcome by fear. God is telling us not to fear any longer what we have feared for so long, because He is giving us his Kingdom, no less!

What role does fear and faith play in your life? Some say it is fear that keeps us from the Kingdom. Some say that fear is the activator of all the vices in life. We fear getting caught, therefore we lie. We fear not having something, so we steal it. We fear loneliness, so we commit adultery. We fear the future, so we become stingy and lacking in charity. We fear what people have done to us and others in the past, so we lose hope in humankind. And on and on…

Whereas fear gives rise to the vices in life, faith gives rise to all virtues.

We speak the truth because we believe truth is from God. We love because we have faith in love’s power to redeem. We are generous with others because we have faith in God’s providence, in his care for us. We are patient with others because we have faith and believe all things work together in God’s will. We have hope because we believe and trust God’s promises.

Yes, faith and confidence are the opposite of fear, it would seem. WE MUST NOT FEAR!!

It is only when we overcome our fear with faith, it is only then that we can, as the Gospel says, “Gird our loins and light our lamps and await the Master’s return.” It is only when we banish fear from our lives, only then can we with hopeful, faithful expectation be prepared to immediately open the doors of our lives when He comes and knocks. It is only when we have faith, real faith, will we be able to avoid the sins that fear generates in our lives, sins against God’s will that are described in today’s Gospel.

So I ask you, “Do you believe? Do you have faith? Do you truly believe that God loves you so much that He has given you his Kingdom, and nothing less?

Yes, God has given us the Kingdom and because of this, we need not fear. He has called us, and continually calls us to embrace, to accept His Kingdom.

What is the Kingdom? God’s Kingdom is a kingdom of peace. It is a kingdom of justice. It is a kingdom where there is neither Jew or Greek, slave or free. It is a kingdom of unity where all are one and share in the same Holy Spirit. It is a kingdom of joy, a kingdom of love, a kingdom of hope. It is an everlasting kingdom.

Where is God’s kingdom? Gods’ kingdom is here and now. It is present on earth and in heaven. “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” It is present everywhere where God’s will is accomplished. It is present deep within you if you are in a state of grace. It is present within a sacramental marriage, in your families, in our parish, in our diocese, indeed in our Churc[h.

Who is the Kingdom? God’s Kingdom is his Son Jesus. Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is the Kingdom, the full revelation of the Father on earth. He is the full expression of God’s will, the full expression of God’s love to each and every one of us. When we listen to and see Jesus, we listen to and see everything that God the Father wishes to reveal to us this side of heaven. Jesus is the way to the Father. Jesus is the way to heaven where we will see God face to face in all his glory and splendor, in an unveiled manner, in a brilliant and unimaginable way. Jesus Christ, and the Church he established on earth, the Mystical Body of Christ, is the Kingdom of God now present to us, given us by God the Father for our salvation.

Do you believe this?

Only with faith will we be able to, as the Gospel tells us we must do, place our real treasure in heaven and not in things of this world. Only if we come to believe that the Kingdom of God is among us and is immensely richer than anything we now have, will we be prepared to do his will and act with mercy toward others, especially those who are most difficult to love. Only if we believe that it is in Jesus Christ and in his Church that we find grace, mercy and salvation, will we come to dispel all our fears. Only if we come to know that Jesus is the Christ and the Church is his faithful true witness will we be able to come to true faith and peace in this our world.

“Fear not little flock, for your Father is pleased to give you the Kingdom.”

Yes, with faith we cast out all our fears and we grow in virtue. With faith in Jesus and in his Church we come to know the Kingdom of God. Without faith, without virtue, without Jesus, without the Church we succumb to worldly fears.

Let us not fear. Let us live in the presence of God all the days of our lives, and expectantly await our entrance into the heavenly presence of God, with all his angels and saints.

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State of the Diaconate in the United States

The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) out of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. released its 2012-2013 report entitled A Portrait of the Permanent Diaconate. This report is a study for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). It is a national survey of arch/dioceses and arch/epharchies in the United States commissioned by the Secretary of Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations of the USCCB.

It is an interesting read. In it we learn that there are almost 19,000 permanent deacons in the United States, over 14,000 of which are in active ministry. Also, over 94% of active deacons are over the age of 50 years. Over 25% of them are over 70 years old. Ninty-three percent of deacons are married. As a group, permanent deacons are much more ethnically diverse than are U.S. priests, but not as diverse as is the U.S. Catholic population.

I would encourage you to read the report for yourselves. It doesn’t take a long time, and it is worth the time you will spend. Here is the link: http://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/vocations/diaconate/upload/Diaconate_Post-ordination_Report-Web-2013.pdf

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Pope Francis on Encountering the Poor

Here is my translation of an excerpt of the Holy Father’s comments in his video message for the feast of St. Gaetano. It is a good reflection for all of us.

The original language used was Spanish, and the Vatican website translated that into Italian. I, in turn, translated them into English.

One time, I asked someone, “Do you give alms?” They said, “Yes, father.”

“And when you give alms, do you look the person in the eye?”

“Oh, I don’t know, it doesn’t occur to me.

Well, then, you haven’t encountered the people. You have thrown an alm and gone away. When you give alms, do you touch their hands or toss the coin?”

“No, I toss the coin.”

“Then, you haven’t touched the man. And if you haven’t touch him, you haven’t encountered him.”

That which Jesus teaches, above all else, is to encounter him, and encountering, help. We must know how to encounter. We must build, create, construct a culture of encounter…. To go out is to encounter ourselves. The theme is, “Encounter the most needy,” that is those who have the most need of me. With those who are going through a difficult moment, worse than what I am going through. There is always someone going through worse times that me, right? Always! There is always someone…. With these people, it is these persons we must encounter.”

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Quote for the Day

“In Jesus, I begin to discover the truth about myself, my true identity, my real relationships with others. Like Jesus, I am a beloved son or daughter, someone with whom the Father is well pleased!” — Marie Beha, OSC

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August 6, 1978

Thirty-five years ago tomorrow, I was standing at a train station in Oslo, Norway along with three of my colleagues from the North American College. We were on a European month-long holiday, touring Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. Our intention was to catch a train departing for Bergen, Norway to see the fiords. It was a bright, sunny summer day in the late afternoon, very pleasant in terms of temperature. We were milling around, waiting, and talking about all the things we were about to do when we arrived.

I happened to glance at a newpaper kiosk in the vicinity. The front page was filled with a photo of Pope Paul VI. I didn’t know Norwegian at all, but I could make out  from the headlines a word that was very similar to the German word for “dead.” I told the guys I thought something was up with the pope, and I found a passerby who spoke both English and Norwegian. He confirmed that the pope had died.

This led to a bit of a conflict among us traveling together. One of us (not me) wanted to go on to Bergen, and return to Rome in a week or so. The rest of us said we wanted to climb on the train bound for Rome later that day. The majority ruled and on the train we were for over 36 straight hours, much of which was laying in the aisles and standing because all the seats and cabins had been occupied, but Rome we came.  Little did we know what the following 2 1/2 months would hold for us all with the funerals of two popes and watching the elections of two. A period of grace for us and the whole Church.

Yes, August 6 is the 35th anniversary of the death of Pope Paul VI, the last pope to be coronated with the tiara. It was the first day of the sede vacante 1978, to be followed all to shortly by the sede vacante settembre in only about six weeks. It was the beginning of the year of three popes, all of whom I saw and heard with my own eyes and ears.

We entrust the soul of Papa Montini to the mercy of God. May God bless him and welcome him into his presence with all the angels and saints.

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Courage and EnCourage – The Church’s Ministry to Men and Women with Same-Sex Attraction

I recently had the opportunity to attend the 25th annual Courage Conference at St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in Mundelein, Illinois, accompanied by several priests from the Diocese of Winona. A few years ago, Bishop Quinn desired to establish a Courage chapter in our diocese, as has been done in over 100 other dioceses in the United States and throughout the world. I was asked to become involved in this diocesan ministry both as clergy and as a clinical therapist.

You may be asking, “What is Courage?” Courage is spiritual support for Catholic men and women with same-sex attractions who desire to live chaste lives in accordance with the teachings of the Catholic Church. It is also an expression of the Church’s maternal concern for same-sex attracted individuals who often have this unique and difficult struggle and who desire to experience the grace of Jesus Christ and his Cross. Courage extends the Church’s care for men and women with same-sex attraction, many of whom feel isolated and misunderstood within the Church, uncertain how to find people who will take a real interest in them and show them the love of Christ and the Church’s affection for  them.

It is the aim of each Courage chapter to help men and women live chaste lives and to learn what the Church teaches about human sexuality and the nature of the human person. Courage offers the opportunity for those with same-sex attractions to come together, under the guidance of a chaplain, to develop chaste friendships, pray together, support each other, and experience God’s forgiveness and love especially in the sacraments of Reconciliation and Eucharist.

Just like our Lord Jesus, the Church and the Courage apostolate treat each person as a unique individual. It offers fraternal support and encouragement to persevere in virtue, and break through the isolation that is often felt in the Church. Courage members give each other the encouragement that is needed to grow in virtue, especially the virtue of chastity.

Chastity is often thought of nowadays as burdensome, but in fact it is directed toward freedom, true freedom coming from peaceful minds and hearts. It is not a worldly freedom that gives in to self-indulgence, but rather a freedom oriented toward generosity and self-forgetfulness. It is a freedom to love purely, generously, and selflessly. It is a virtue necessary for true friendship. Indeed, one of the goals of Courage is development of chaste and enduring friendships that serve as sources of encouragement and hope for those struggling with same-sex attractions. In the context of chaste friendship, people with same-sex attraction need never lose hope or be locked into shame; rather, they can rejoice in the love God has for them as men and women made in the image of God himself.

It is important to know that Courage is a spiritual support apostolate. It is not a therapy group. It does not focus on changing one’s sexual orientation. It does encourage everyone to embrace their masculinity (in the case of a man) or their femininity (in the case of a woman). Thus, we avoid the labels of “gay” or “lesbian.”

Along with Courage there is EnCourage. Whereas Courage is for same-sex attracted men and women, EnCourage is aimed at the parents, siblings, relatives and friends of same-sex attracted individuals. Many times parents will express confusion and uncertainty how to respond to and love as child who is involved in same-sex relationships. EnCourage provides them the support then need to maintain loving relationships. It helps them come to a greater peace of mind and heart and relief from disquieting feelings of confusion and shame. It helps them understand that they are not responsible for adult childrens’ decisions to pursue homosexual activity but they can encourage them to live chaste lives. EnCourage offers faithful witness to Catholic teaching on sexual morality while meeting the needs of its members with charity and compassion.

In short, Courage and EnCourage are reminders that the Church does not reject persons with same-sex attractions; all persons with same-sex attraction have a right to be welcomed in the Church community. We come to the Church as we are, with the intention and desire to do God’s will.

To quote soon-to-be St. John Paul II: “Courage is the work of God.”

For more information, log on to: www.couragerc.org

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Quote for the Day

“As often as we see someone in need let us recognize Christ in him because he is a needy member of Christ. And let us not turn off our heart’s compassion from him; thus we will know that God’s love survives in us.” — St. Bonaventure, OFM

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