White House petitioned to label Catholic Church a ‘hate group’ :: Catholic News Agency (CNA)

I just read this article from the Catholic News Agency about a petition that is collecting signatures trying to get the White House to designate the Catholic Church as a “hate group” for its views on marriage.

This is an example of how individuals are completely misreading the Church’s teachings on marriage and the complementarity of the sexes. Perhaps it would be better said that they read into what the Church has always taught, and what they read into it is itself filled, dare I say, hatred.

The Church teaches that all men and women are children of God and deserve respect, compassion and love. This is true regardless of sexual attractions. The Church consistently has held that sexual activity is to be between one man and one woman who have entered into a marital relationship, and that marriage is a unique relationship defined as the union of a man and a woman. Individuals with same-sex attractions need and are called to strong chaste friendships, as are individuals with opposite sex attractions who cannot or do not marry. This is not injustice. It is rather the recognition of difference and a respect for the body/mind/spirit unity of the human person.

Here is the link to the article for you to read.

White House petitioned to label Catholic Church a ‘hate group’ :: Catholic News Agency (CNA).

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You Want to Have a Good Chuckle Today? Take a Look!

I have to pass this one on to all of you. It’ll bring a smile (if not more) to your life today!

Log on and see:  http://youtu.be/4gSOnnv2I64

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Epiphany: A Light Has Shone to the Whole World!

The Osservatore Romano, the newspaper of the Holy See had a short article today on the Epiphany. Worth your time to read. I am presenting the original Italian text, with my English translation below it.

Happy Epiphany, everyone!!

Oggi è apparsa la luce inaccessibile

 

di Manuel Nin


La festa dell’Epifania in tutte le tradizioni orientali è incentrata su due punti fondamentali. Il primo è la dimensione battesimale con la santificazione delle acque del Giordano per la discesa in esse di Cristo e delle acque battesimali per la venuta dello Spirito Santo invocato su di esse nel giorno dell’Epifania e ogni volta che si amministra il battesimo. Il secondo punto è l’incarnazione del Verbo di Dio, manifestatasi nella venuta di Cristo come vero uomo.
Il battesimo di Cristo e come conseguenza il battesimo dei cristiani è dono di illuminazione per coloro che lo ricevono. La presenza del salmo 26 all’ora di prima dell’ufficiatura della vigilia (“il Signore è mia illuminazione e mio salvatore”) e diversi tropari della festa sottolineano appunto il battesimo come nuova creazione, dono di luce e di vita nuova: “Si è manifestato oggi il salvatore, la grazia, la verità, tra i flutti del Giordano, e ha illuminato quanti dormivano nelle tenebre e nell’ombra: perché è venuta, è apparsa la luce inaccessibile”.

 
Today has appeared an unapproachable light
by Manuel Nin
 
The feast of the Epiphany in all the eastern traditions is centered on two fundamental points. The first is the baptismal dimension with the sanctification of the waters of the Jordan by means of Christ entering into them. The Holy Spirit was invoked upon these waters the water on the day of the Epiphany and every time baptism is administered.  The second point is the incarnation of the Word of God, manifested in the coming of Christ as a true man.
 

The baptism of Christ and consequently the baptism of Christians is a gift of illumination for those who receive it. The presence of Psalm 26 at the first hour of the vigil (“The Lord is my light and my savior.”) and diverse other strophes of the Feast perfectly underscore that baptism as a new creation, a gift of new light and life: “Today the Savior manifests himself, the grace and the truth in the waves of the Jordan, and has illuminated all those who sleep in the darkness and the shadows. He has come, and has appeared as an unapproachable light.”

It is worth our meditation, i.e., the whole theology that Christmas, Epiphany and the upcoming feast of the Baptism of the Lord are all interconnected, all having to do with light, life, and grace, all tied into baptism the sacrament of redemption. Jesus Christ is the sacrament of redemption, and that is why baptism for us is so important, for it brings us into the life, death and resurrection of Jesus; it conforms us into Jesus Christ. Christmas, Epiphany and the Baptism of the Lord are all revelatory of who Jesus is, and who we are to become. Each one of these feasts are “epiphanies”, i.e., manifestations of the God, Emmanuel.

Truly, unapproachable light, a mysterious revelation of God, and the wedding of man with God for all eternity!

To read the article, log on to: www.vatican.va/news_services/or/or_quo/text.htmll#3

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Holy Father’s Epiphany Homily

Here is the full text of the Holy Father’s homily today for the Solemnity of the Epiphany. The English translation is the official one from the Press Office.

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

For the Church which believes and prays, the Wise Men from the East who, guided by the star, made their way to the manger of Bethlehem, are only the beginning of a great procession which winds throughout history. Thus the liturgy reads the Gospel which relates the journey of the Wise Men, together with the magnificent prophetic visions of the sixtieth chapter of the Book of Isaiah and Psalm 71, which depict in bold imagery the pilgrimage of the peoples to Jerusalem. Like the shepherds, who as the first visitors to the newborn Child in the manger, embodied the poor of Israel and more generally those humble souls who live in deep interior closeness to Jesus, so the men from the East embody the world of the peoples, the Church of the Gentiles – the men and women who in every age set out on the way which leads to the Child of Bethlehem, to offer him homage as the Son of God and to bow down before him. The Church calls this feast “Epiphany” – the appearance of the Godhead. If we consider the fact that from the very beginning men and women of every place, of every continent, of all the different cultures, mentalities and lifestyles, have been on the way to Christ, then we can truly say that this pilgrimage and this encounter with God in the form of a Child is an epiphany of God’s goodness and loving kindness for humanity (cf. Tit 3:4).

Following a tradition begun by Pope John Paul II, we celebrate the feast of the Epiphany of the Lord also as the day when episcopal ordination will be conferred on four priests who will now cooperate in different ways in the ministry of the Pope for the unity of the one Church of Jesus Christ in the multiplicity of the Particular Churches. The connection between this episcopal ordination and the theme of the pilgrimage of the peoples to Jesus Christ is evident. It is the task of the Bishop in this pilgrimage not merely to walk beside the others, but to go before them, showing the way. But in this liturgy I would like to reflect with you on a more concrete question. Based on the account of Matthew, we can gain a certain idea of what sort of men these were, who followed the sign of the star and set off to find that King who would establish not only for Israel but for all mankind a new kind of kingship. What kind of men were they? And we can also ask whether, despite the difference of times and tasks, we can glimpse in them something of what a Bishop is and how he is to carry out his task.

These men who set out towards the unknown were, in any event, men with a restless heart. Men driven by a restless quest for God and the salvation of the world. They were filled with expectation, not satisfied with their secure income and their respectable place in society. They were looking for something greater. They were no doubt learned men, quite knowledgeable about the heavens and probably possessed of a fine philosophical formation. But they desired more than simply knowledge about things. They wanted above all else to know what is essential. They wanted to know how we succeed in being human. And therefore they wanted to know if God exists, and where and how he exists. Whether he is concerned about us and how we can encounter him. Nor did they want just to know. They wanted to understand the truth about ourselves and about God and the world. Their outward pilgrimage was an expression of their inward journey, the inner pilgrimage of their hearts. They were men who sought God and were ultimately on the way towards him. They were seekers after God.

Here we come to the question: What sort of man must he be, upon whom hands are laid in episcopal ordination in the Church of Jesus Christ? We can say that he must above all be a man concerned for God, for only then will he also be truly concerned about men. Inversely, we could also say that a Bishop must be a man concerned for others, one who is concerned about what happens to them. He must be a man for others. But he can only truly be so if he is a man seized by God, if concern for God has also become for him concern for God’s creature who is man. Like the Wise Men from the East, a Bishop must not be someone who merely does his job and is content with that. No, he must be gripped by God’s concern for men and women. He must in some way think and feel with God. Human beings have an innate restlessness for God, but this restlessness is a participation in God’s own restlessness for us. Since God is concerned about us, he follows us even to the crib, even to the Cross. “Thou with weary steps hast sought me, crucified hast dearly bought me, may thy pains not be in vain”, the Church prays in the Dies Irae. The restlessness of men for God and hence the restlessness of God for men must unsettle the Bishop. This is what we mean when we say that, above all else, the Bishop must be a man of faith. For faith is nothing less than being interiorly seized by God, something which guides us along the pathways of life. Faith draws us into a state of being seized by the restlessness of God and it makes us pilgrims who are on an inner journey towards the true King of the world and his promise of justice, truth and love. On this pilgrimage the Bishop must go ahead, he must be the guide pointing out to men and women the way to faith, hope and love.

Faith’s inner pilgrimage towards God occurs above all in prayer. Saint Augustine once said that prayer is ultimately nothing more than the realization and radicalization of our yearning for God. Instead of “yearning”, we could also translate the word as “restlessness” and say that prayer would detach us from our false security, from our being enclosed within material and visible realities, and would give us a restlessness for God and thus an openness to and concern for one another. The Bishop, as a pilgrim of God, must be above all a man of prayer. He must be in constant inner contact with God; his soul must be open wide to God. He must bring before God his own needs and the needs of others, as well as his joys and the joys of others, and thus in his own way establish contact between God and the world in communion with Christ, so that Christ’s light can shine in the world.

Let us return to the Wise Men from the East. These were also, and above all, men of courage, the courage and humility born of faith. Courage was needed to grasp the meaning of the star as a sign to set out, to go forth – towards the unknown, the uncertain, on paths filled with hidden dangers. We can imagine that their decision was met with derision: the scorn of those realists who could only mock the reveries of such men. Anyone who took off on the basis of such uncertain promises, risking everything, could only appear ridiculous. But for these men, inwardly seized by God, the way which he pointed out was more important than what other people thought. For them, seeking the truth meant more than the taunts of the world, so apparently clever.

How can we not think, in this context, of the task of a Bishop in our own time? The humility of faith, of sharing the faith of the Church of every age, will constantly be in conflict with the prevailing wisdom of those who cling to what seems certain. Anyone who lives and proclaims the faith of the Church is on many points out of step with the prevalent way of thinking, even in our own day. Today’s regnant agnosticism has its own dogmas and is extremely intolerant regarding anything that would question it and the criteria it employs. Therefore the courage to contradict the prevailing mindset is particularly urgent for a Bishop today. He must be courageous. And this courage or forcefulness does not consist in striking out or in acting aggressively, but rather in allowing oneself to be struck and to be steadfast before the principles of the prevalent way of thinking. The courage to stand firm in the truth is unavoidably demanded of those whom the Lord sends like sheep among wolves. “Those who fear the Lord will not be timid”, says the Book of Sirach (34:16). The fear of God frees us from the fear of men. It liberates.

Here I am reminded of an episode at the very beginning of Christianity which Saint Luke recounts in the Acts of the Apostles. After the speech of Gamaliel, who advised against violence in dealing with the earliest community of believers in Jesus, the Sanhedrin summoned the Apostles and had them flogged. It then forbade them from preaching in the name of Jesus and set them free. Saint Luke continues: “As they left the council, they rejoiced that they were considered worthy to suffer dishonour for the name of Jesus. And every day… they did not cease to teach and proclaim Jesus as the Messiah” (Acts 5:40ff.). The successors of the Apostles must also expect to be repeatedly beaten, by contemporary methods, if they continue to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ in a way that can be heard and understood. Then they can rejoice that they have been considered worthy of suffering for him. Like the Apostles, we naturally want to convince people and in this sense to obtain their approval. Naturally, we are not provocative; on the contrary we invite all to enter into the joy of that truth which shows us the way. The approval of the prevailing wisdom, however, is not the criterion to which we submit. Our criterion is the Lord himself. If we defend his cause, we will constantly gain others to the way of the Gospel. But, inevitably, we will also be beaten by those who live lives opposed to the Gospel, and then we can be grateful for having been judged worthy to share in the passion of Christ.

The Wise Men followed the star, and thus came to Jesus, to the great Light which enlightens everyone coming into this world (cf. Jn 1:9). As pilgrims of faith, the Wise Men themselves became stars shining in the firmament of history and they show us the way. The saints are God’s true constellations, which light up the nights of this world, serving as our guides. Saint Paul, in his Letter to the Philippians, told his faithful that they must shine like stars in the world (cf. 2:15).

Dear friends, this holds true for us too. It holds true above all for you who are now to be ordained Bishops of the Church of Jesus Christ. If you live with Christ, bound to him anew in this sacrament, then you too will become wise men. Then you will become stars which go before men and women, pointing out to them the right path in life. All of us here are now praying for you, that the Lord may fill you with the light of faith and love. That that restlessness of God for man may seize you, so that all may experience his closeness and receive the gift of his joy. We are praying for you, that the Lord may always grant you the courage and humility of faith. We ask Mary, who showed to the Wise Men the new King of the world (cf. Mt 2:11), as a loving mother, to show Jesus Christ also to you and to help you to be guides along the way which leads to him. Amen.

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Rebuttals to arguments for same-sex marriage

I can’t say this better than what has been said here in this article in the Our Sunday Visitor. It is written by Brandon Voigt. He does an excellenct job cogently explaining why same-sex relationships are not and cannot be marriages.

Click here: Rebuttals to arguments for same-sex marriage.

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Quote for the Day

“We do well to remember how very short, after all, it is till our suffering — and our time of merit too — will be over.” — Venerable Solanus Casey, OFM Cap.

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Quote for the Day

“Direct your soul to the splendor of Christ’s glory.” — St. Clare of Assisi

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Quote for the Day

“Highest, all powerful, good Lord, yours is the praise, the glory and the honor, and every blessing. They belong to you alone, Most High, and no one is worthy to speak your name.” — St. Francis of Assisi

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The deacon: Servant of the New Evangelization

I will be conducting a retreat for the diaconal community of the Diocese of La Crosse, Wisconsin in February centered on the New Evangelization and the Transmission of the Faith. Please pray as I prepare.

With that in my mind a lot in recent weeks, I happily got an email from a brother deacon in Minnesota, alerting me to an article written by Deacon Joe Michalak of the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis. It is a splendid, short piece on the deacon as a servant in the New Evangelization. Take a look by clicking on this link: The deacon: Servant of the New Evangelization.

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Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God and the World Day of Peace

mary-mother-of-god-iconHere is the Holy Father’s homily for the Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of God. As you know, this day is also dedicated to world peace. I truly pray for peace in our communities, families, and among our nations. I am thinking this morning of all our persecuted Christian brothers and sisters in the Mideast, especially in Syria. So many are dying simply because they are Christians. They are being driven out of their homelands and martyred. Please remember them in your prayers.

Here is the Holy Father. Click on the video link if you wish to see the Mass.

HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI

Vatican Basilica
Tuesday, 1st January 2013

[Video]

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

“May God bless us and make his face to shine upon us.” We proclaimed these words from Psalm 66 after hearing in the first reading the ancient priestly blessing upon the people of the covenant. It is especially significant that at the start of every new year God sheds upon us, his people, the light of his Holy Name, the Name pronounced three times in the solemn form of biblical blessing. Nor is it less significant that to the Word of God – who “became flesh and dwelt among us” (Jn 1:14) as “the true light that enlightens every man” (1:9) – is given, as today’s Gospel tells us, the Name of Jesus eight days after his birth (cf. Lk 2:21).

It is in this Name that we are gathered here today. I cordially greet all present, beginning with the Ambassadors of the Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Holy See. I greet with affection Cardinal Bertone, my Secretary of State, and Cardinal Turkson, with all the officials of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace; I am particularly grateful to them for their effort to spread the Message for the World Day of Peace, which this year has as its theme “Blessed are the Peacemakers”.

Although the world is sadly marked by “hotbeds of tension and conflict caused by growing instances of inequality between rich and poor, by the prevalence of a selfish and individualistic mindset which also finds expression in an unregulated financial capitalism,” as well as by various forms of terrorism and crime, I am convinced that “the many different efforts at peacemaking which abound in our world testify to mankind’s innate vocation to peace. In every person the desire for peace is an essential aspiration which coincides in a certain way with the desire for a full, happy and successful human life. In other words, the desire for peace corresponds to a fundamental moral principle, namely, the duty and right to an integral social and communitarian development, which is part of God’s plan for mankind. Man is made for the peace which is God’s gift. All of this led me to draw inspiration for this Message from the words of Jesus Christ: ‘Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God’ (Mt 5:9)” (Message, 1). This beatitude “tells us that peace is both a messianic gift and the fruit of human effort … It is peace with God through a life lived according to his will. It is interior peace with oneself, and exterior peace with our neighbours and all creation” (ibid., 2, 3). Indeed, peace is the supreme good to ask as a gift from God and, at the same time, that which is to be built with our every effort.

We may ask ourselves: what is the basis, the origin, the root of peace? How can we experience that peace within ourselves, in spite of problems, darkness and anxieties? The reply is given to us by the readings of today’s liturgy. The biblical texts, especially the one just read from the Gospel of Luke, ask us to contemplate the interior peace of Mary, the Mother of Jesus. During the days in which “she gave birth to her first-born son” (Lk 2:7), many unexpected things occurred: not only the birth of the Son but, even before, the tiring journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem, not finding room at the inn, the search for a chance place to stay for the night; then the song of the angels and the unexpected visit of the shepherds. In all this, however, Mary remains even tempered, she does not get agitated, she is not overcome by events greater than herself; in silence she considers what happens, keeping it in her mind and heart, and pondering it calmly and serenely. This is the interior peace which we ought to have amid the sometimes tumultuous and confusing events of history, events whose meaning we often do not grasp and which disconcert us.

The Gospel passage finishes with a mention of the circumcision of Jesus. According to the Law of Moses, eight days after birth, baby boys were to be circumcised and then given their name. Through his messenger, God himself had said to Mary – as well as to Joseph – that the Name to be given to the child was “Jesus” (cf. Mt 1:21; Lk 1:31); and so it came to be. The Name which God had already chosen, even before the child had been conceived, is now officially conferred upon him at the moment of circumcision. This also changes Mary’s identity once and for all: she becomes “the mother of Jesus”, that is the mother of the Saviour, of Christ, of the Lord. Jesus is not a man like any other, but the Word of God, one of the Divine Persons, the Son of God: therefore the Church has given Mary the title Theotokos or Mother of God.

The first reading reminds us that peace is a gift from God and is linked to the splendour of the face of God, according to the text from the Book of Numbers, which hands down the blessing used by the priests of the People of Israel in their liturgical assemblies. This blessing repeats three times the Holy Name of God, a Name not to be spoken, and each time it is linked to two words indicating an action in favour of man: “The Lord bless you and keep you: the Lord make his face to shine upon you: the Lord lift up his countenance upon you, and give you peace” (6:24-26). So peace is the summit of these six actions of God in our favour, in which he turns towards us the splendour of his face.

For sacred Scripture, contemplating the face of God is the greatest happiness: “You gladden him with the joy of your face” (Ps 21:7). From the contemplation of the face of God are born joy, security and peace. But what does it mean concretely to contemplate the face of the Lord, as understood in the New Testament? It means knowing him directly, in so far as is possible in this life, through Jesus Christ in whom he is revealed. To rejoice in the splendour of God’s face means penetrating the mystery of his Name made known to us in Jesus, understanding something of his interior life and of his will, so that we can live according to his plan of love for humanity. In the second reading, taken from the Letter to the Galatians (4:4-7), Saint Paul says as much as he describes the Spirit who, in our inmost hearts, cries: “Abba! Father!” It is the cry that rises from the contemplation of the true face of God, from the revelation of the mystery of his Name. Jesus declares, “I have manifested thy name to men” (Jn 17:6). God’s Son made man has let us know the Father, he has let us know the hidden face of the Father through his visible human face; by the gift of the Holy Spirit poured into our hearts, he has led us to understand that, in him, we too are children of God, as Saint Paul says in the passage we have just heard: “The proof that you are sons is that God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts: the Spirit that cries, ‘Abba, Father’” (Gal 4:6).

Here, dear brothers and sisters, is the foundation of our peace: the certainty of contemplating in Jesus Christ the splendour of the face of God the Father, of being sons in the Son, and thus of having, on life’s journey, the same security that a child feels in the arms of a loving and all-powerful Father. The splendour of the face of God, shining upon us and granting us peace, is the manifestation of his fatherhood: the Lord turns his face to us, he reveals himself as our Father and grants us peace. Here is the principle of that profound peace – “peace with God” – which is firmly linked to faith and grace, as Saint Paul tells the Christians of Rome (cf. Rom5:2). Nothing can take this peace from believers, not even the difficulties and sufferings of life. Indeed, sufferings, trials and darkness do not undermine but build up our hope, a hope which does not deceive because “God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been given to us” (5:5).

May the Virgin Mary, whom today we venerate with the title of Mother of God, help us to contemplate the face of Jesus, the Prince of Peace. May she sustain us and accompany us in this New Year: and may she obtain for us and for the whole world the gift of peace. Amen!

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Take a Look at This…..

Whoever you may be, whatever age you may be, read this article in the New York Times. It tells the tale of love and human life. You won’t regret the time you spend on reading it.

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/24/laws-of-physics-cant-trump-the-bonds-of-love/?smid=pl-share

Posted in Human Development and Life, Marriage and Family | 1 Comment

No, Prayers, You’re Not Crazy

CNN in its religion blog today has an interesting article written by T.M. Luhrmann on prayer and the common experience of hearing God speak to those who are well disciplined in prayer.

While it certainly is true that most of us do not have this experience, some do, and the Scriptures attest to this. Many other people will tell you the same. Some in the mental health field will attribute it to a mental imbalance or some neurobiological event. I disagree with the knee jerk assumption about mental illness (in most cases) and I cannot help but agree with the neurobiological reality with the additional reminder that neurobiological realities do not exclude the spiritual….. the Incarnation is the best example.

Here are a few paragraphs from the CNN article. Log on to this link to read it in its entirety.

http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2012/12/29/my-take-if-you-hear-god-speak-audibly-you-usually-arent-crazy/?hpt=hp_c1

(CNN)—In the Bible, God spoke directly to Abraham. He spoke directly to Moses. He spoke directly to Job. But to your neighbor down the street?

Most people reading the ancient scriptures understand these accounts of hearing God’s voice as miracles that really did happen but no longer take place today, or maybe as folkloric flourishes to ancient stories. Even Christians who believe that miracles can be an everyday affair can hesitate when someone tells them they heard God speak audibly. There’s an old joke: When you talk to God, we call it prayer, but when God talks to you, we call it schizophrenia.

Except that usually it’s not.

Hearing a voice when alone, or seeing something no one else can see, is pretty common. At least one in 10 people will say they’ve had such an experience if you ask them bluntly. About four in 10 say they have unusual perceptual experiences between sleep and awareness if you interview them about their sleeping habits.

 And if you ask them in a way that allows them to admit they made a mistake, the rate climbs even higher. By contrast, schizophrenia, the most debilitating of all mental disorders, is pretty rare. Only about one in 100 people can be diagnosed with the disorder.

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Random Thoughts at the End of the Year

It has been a long while since I sat down and posted my own thoughts. Life has been very busy and the demands of family, employers and church have been significant.

I can’t help but reflect on the past year and all that has occurred since January 1, 2012. Mid-year, I was asked by the bishop to become the assistant director of the diaconate, a position that requires a great deal of emotional and mental energy. We are in the process of gathering a new cohort of men to begin formation next year. So far, 27 men have shown interest. The screening of inquirers begins soon. Days of reflection and retreat have been and need to be scheduled and planned for the current diaconal community. Healing and reconciliation always needed.

The clinic remains a place of great challenge. For nearly 30 years now, I have been practicing clinical social work. (In case you don’t understand what that is, it is psychotherapy.) I continue to love the work I do and am honored so many open their lives to me in our interviews. It is very much a part of my diaconal ministry. People bring to me today the same problems they did 30 years ago,  with a few different wrinkles. What has changed is the value system that so many now have. What could be assumed as valued in terms of family and marriage 30 years ago cannot be assumed today. It is very sad. I find also an increase in the acceptance of Wiccan and other forms of paganism (yes, Buddhism.) More than once I have quietly wondered, “What did you expect?” when someone who practices satanism ends up with a very disordered and unhappy life.

I find myself amazed at how much money dominates people’s lives, including my own. It takes a lot of money to survive, given our lifestyle. I am not talking about extravagance here, just basic middle-class living. People are always asking for money. Bills are always there. It really is a comment on our culture. We easily can be enslaved to the dollar. Think of it, all money is now-a-days are numbers. Numbers get exchanged. Seldom cash. An electronic transaction with power, and we get ourselves enslaved to it. The first commandment against idolatry should be a frequently confessed sin.

More and more, I am called to diaconal service. I mentioned becoming the assistant director of the diaconate. There are funerals and baptisms, home and hospital visits. God seems to be calling me more and more to the ministry of the Word. Preaching is frequent and demanding of time and preparation. Prayer becomes the hinge upon which the day transpires.

Having said all of that, I conclude: LIFE IS GOOD! We are so richly blessed. We are never forgotten, and God loves us beyond all telling.

Deo gratias!

 

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Did You Know….?

The Vatican Radio has reported that in this past year 105 thousand Christians have been killed for their faith in various parts of the world.

One hundred five thousand martyrs.

I’ll bet you didn’t know that.

It could happen here too, if we are not careful, if we do not live out fully the dictates of our faith.

May God bless us all.

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Icons, Steve Jobs, and the Noetic Aspect of Human Understanding

Iconagrapher Lynette Hull talks in the video below of the Icon as a means of knowing that is direct and not filtered through the rational. She speaks of the noetic aspect of human understanding that is experienced via what the Eastern Churches call human nous coupled with beauty (which consists of integrity and fusion of the spiritual with the material). She then talks about how Steve Jobs tapped into this non-rational human experience of knowing by developing the icons now used in graphic user interfaces of modern computers. She called Jobs’ use of the icon as a “great step backward.” He understood the ancient human way of knowing something deeply via symbol (icons) which are layer with many truths, realities and possibilities, and he moved away from a rationalistic approach of the DOS command lines that Bill Gates had developed in his system.

This whole thing about icons, and her comments about it, leave some food for thought, I think, about the nature of a deacon’s evangelistic activity. We are to be “Icons of Jesus the Servant.” Perhaps our presentation of the Gospel, and of Jesus the Servant, is best accomplished by truly becoming icons in the true sense of the word. Perhaps we are to be men upon whom people gaze and understand something of God that cannot be expressed in human thought alone. Sounds like a tall order, doesn’t it?

Fascinating stuff….. Take a peek at the video and let me know what you think!

 

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