The Mustard Seed of Faith

Today’s Gospel is the well known account of Jesus’ parable of the mustard seed, its smallness in size yet the manner in which it grows and produces a tree capable of welcoming various birds to its branches. It is an apt way of describing the universality of the Church that blossoms from small acts of faith in the daily lives of its members.

The Church seems always to be  a Church of contrasts. While it is true that salvation comes solely through the Catholic Church, it is also true that those who through no fault of their own have never heard the Gospel or known Jesus, can also be saved if they live morally upright lives in accord with the grace given them by God. While it is true that the Church is holy, it is also true that the Church, in its individual members, is marked by sin. While it is true that the Church is one, it is also true that it is many in its expressions and its cultural imprint.

It is good for us to remember that it only takes faith the size of a mustard seed to change the world, our world, the world in which each of us lives. The size of a mustard seed.

Maybe we don’t want to think that way because if we do then we have to accept the responsibility which is ours to plant that seed, to spread that faith, to evangelize in our immediate surroundings. No one can exclude him or herself by claiming weakness of faith or poor knowledge. It only takes faith the size of a mustard seed. Others of us may not want to think this way because if we do, then we have to reverence each human person who searches in any way for God and the truth. We have to put aside our petty differences. We have to quit judging and being arrogant and self-serving because who knows, God may very well take someone whose faith is tiny and use that person to do great things, for greater things than he uses us. Thinking this way demands humility. It demands that we recognize that God is God and we aren’t him as the slang says.

There are a lot of those mustard seeds out there. Lots of them dropping to the ground awaiting a little sun and rain.

Nourish them, my friends, in the family, friends and parishes to which you belong. Nourish those whose faith is small… never judge.

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Quote for the Day

“One ‘Glory Be’ said in adversity is worth more than a thousand thanksgivings in times of success.” — Blessed Mother Mary Angela Truszkowska, SFO

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St. Mother Marianne Cope!

The Holy Father this past weekend canonized Mother Marianne Cope, OSF. She, along with St. Damien of Molokai, cared for the lepers of Kalaupapa on the island of Molokai in the late 1800s into the early 1900s. After Damien died of leprosy, she and her sisters carried on his ministry.

The people of Molokai went en masse to Rome for the canonization Mass, led by Bishop Larry Silva of Honolulu. In preparation for the canonization, St. Francis Church  in Kalaupapa received a new roof and a paint job to the tune of over $350,000. I recall vividly my pilgrimage there earlier this year, and learning for the first time about St. Marianne Cope.

There is another church on Kalaupapa (St. Philomena, built by St. Damien) and the chapel of St. Elizabeth. I was unable to visit the chapel, as it is reserved I believe for the sisters, but St. Philomena was inspiring to say the least. It had been brought back to its original state a few years ago when St. Damien was canonized.

We rejoice with the people of Hawaii, especially those living on Molokai for they now have two saints who lived and worked on this small island.

St. Damien and St. Marianne Cope, pray for us!

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Quote for the Day

“What is religion? Ah! The science of Heaven come down to Earth: the science of our happy dependence on God and one another, the science whereby Almightly God makes men like to Himself.” — Venerable Solanus Casey, OFM Cap.

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No, I Haven’t Died

I haven’t been posting because I am insanely busy. At the moment, I am sitting in a conference on how to treat psychopaths. Yes, I have had a few on my caseload over the years. In short, I have been to three conferences in three cities in five days.

I’ll be back to normalcy tomorrow.

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Vatican Radio: Papa Luciani (Pope John Paul I)

A couple of days ago, the Vatican Radio did a piece on Papa Luciani, interviewing his niece Pia Luciani, and several others.

Log on to this link to hear the radio broadcast: http://media01.radiovaticana.va/audiomp3/00339007.MP3

It is no secret to any of my readers that I am particularly devoted to Papa Luciani. He was a great and largely undiscovered gift to the Church. May we never forget his goodness!

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The Hidden Ministry of the Deacon

I want to thank a brother deacon, Scott Dodge from Salt Lake City (www.scottdodge.blogspot.com) for sparking my thoughts on this topic. He has a splendid post today of the ministry of the deacon written by a guest blogger, Deacon Norb over in Toledo, Ohio. Log on over at Deacon Scott’s blog site and take a look.

I also am spurred on today by this morning’s diaconate gathering in Rochester, Minnesota of a number of the Diocese of Winona’s deacons and their wives, during which their particular ministries were discussed.

It is always amazing to me how much of our ministry is out of sight and out of mind of the  majority of people and, dare I say, other clergy in the dioceses which deacons serve. Deacons serve largely without pay, recognition, and even without due credit. Theirs is largely a hidden and misunderstood vocation. I suspect this is in part due to the nature of who we tend to… the  forgotten and marginalized, the disenfranchized and invisible in our midst. I left today’s meeting in awe of the many ways these local deacons reach out to those to whom our brother clergy – priests and bishops –  cannot or do not.

Egos have no place in diaconal or presbyteral ministry. When they do, unhappiness and bitterness have an open door. Comparisons get made, and politics take center stage. The people of God are left without the shepherding they so desperately need.

Thank God for our deacons! Pray for the deacon assigned to your parish, and forget not his wife who sacrifices greatly in her support of his ministry.

St. Stephen, protomartyr of the Church, pray for us!

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Minnesota Marriage Minute – Look at Europe

Here is a video explaining what has happened in European countries that have redefined marriage as something other than the union of one man and one woman. Before you view it, I want to pass on that I recently saw that as of the last poll, 47% of Minnesotans are supporting the Marriage Protection Amendment and 46% oppose it. Seven percent are uncertain. PRAY, PRAY, PRAY that this amendment passes. Remember, vote “yes” on the ballot; leaving the amendment blank counts as a “no” vote due to a quirk in Minnesota law. Put simply, the state forces you to vote on it, either intentionally or unintentionally.

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I Was There…. Pope John Paul II is Elected 34 Years Ago Tonight

Today is the 34th anniversary of the election of Karol Woityla as Pope John Paul II. I was there that night and remember it as if it were last week. Here is a video clip of what I and hundreds others heard and saw that surprising night.

(By the way, see if you can make me out in the crowd at 3:18-19. I am the guy with the instamatic camera up snapping a couple of photographs!)

Blessed John Paul II, pray for us!

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Quote for the Day

“Let us begin to do good, for as yet we have done little.” — St. Francis of Assisi

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Quote for the Day

“Let us love our most loving Father in heaven with the greatest love and let our obedience be the proof of our perfect love which we put into practice especially when we are asked to give up our own will.” — St. Maximillian Kolbe, OFM Conv.

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Quote for the Day

“Each of us know his or her own wolf: fear, envy, impatience, greed, doubt, laziness, apathy. Only when we greet our own ‘Wolves’ with the sign of the cross, and bid them the Lord’s peace, can we be agents of peace in our world.” — Michael Harvey, OFM

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The Holy Father Speaks on the Opening of Vatican II 50 Years Ago

The Holy Father gave an off-the-cuff talk to the faithful in St. Peter’s square three days ago. He spoke of the beginning of the Second Vatican Council and spoke from the heart about how in the last 50 years the Church has experienced the reality of effects of sin. Here is the video, along with the English translation of the pope’s remarks.

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Deacon Bob’s Homily 28th Sunday of Ordinary Time – Cycle B

Here is my homily for this weekend.

Audio: 28th Sunday of Ordinary Time 

 28th Sunday of Ordinary Time – Cycle B

October 13/14, 2012

Wis. 7:7-11; Heb. 4: 12-13; Mk. 10: 17-30

My dad was quite a card player. He loved to play a game called Pfeiffer which some of you may know. It was similar to Hearts. My dad was a guy that when dealt a hand of cards the rest of us would refuse to bid on, he would “bid’em up” as he would say. He would bid high, take big risks because he wanted the prize. Invariably, he would win with cards the rest of us would have thought would have gotten him nowhere. Dad was brave enough to take the risk. He was willing to let go of what he had so that he might pursue what was greater and more splendid.

What did I learn from my dad’s card playing? There are times in life when you simply have to make a decision.  Do I go for it or do I play it safe? Do I let go of everything, or do I hang on to what I have? Do I go for what is promised but as of yet is unseen?

The young man in today’s Gospel reading faced those questions. He could have taken the risk, accepted the challenge and taken the plunge. But he stayed safely behind.

Are you willing to risk it? Are you brave enough?

“There is something more you must do. Go sell what you have and give to the poor; then come follow me.”

When we hear those words, we will want to think Jesus was just using a hyperbole, an exaggerated expression, to get the point across that we must be attentive to poor people. But you know something, Jesus meant exactly what he said, no hyperbole. He said it to the young man, and the young man understood full well Jesus meant what he had said. That is why he walked away from the challenge; that is why he couldn’t take the risk; that is why he refused the invitation to a deeper calling, to a deeper relationship with God.

“Master, what must we do to inherit eternal life?” The Gospel tells us that we all must obey the Ten Commandments and the laws of human nature. That is common to all of us. What is particular to us as individuals will be the answer God gives us when we ask, “What must I do to share in eternal life?” Each of us must ask God this question. You must ask it. God will give you an answer that is particularly suited to you and your vocation just like he did with the young man. His answer will be challenging.

Our second reading reminds us that the Word of God cuts deeply. It is incisive. It penetrates and divides. It distinguishes what is true from what is not. God’s word goes deeply. It is not superficial or temporary. It does evaporate in seconds nor minimal in its effects. No, the Word of God, Jesus Christ, risked all for our sake. He gave everything away so that we might live, and live fully.

In our first reading from the book of Wisdom, did you listen to the beginning of each of the sentences: “I prayed.” “I pleaded.” “I loved.” “I chose.” The writer of this book in the Bible is referring to the Wisdom of God. He says that we must pray for and plead to receive God’s wisdom, his plan in other words for our lives. He says that once we are given that wisdom, that plan, we then must choose to follow it and love what God has planned for us. God’s plan is true wisdom.

So plead, pray, chose and love God’s plan for your life.

Are you willing to take the risk and follow God’s plan? Are you brave enough? Look at all the opportunities we have today to do this. God’s plan is that marriage by its very nature consists of the union of one man and one woman. Are we willing to protect it? Are we willing to vote “yes” on the Marriage Protection Amendment this November?  God’s plan is that all human life, which he creates, be loved and accepted into life. Are we willing to eliminate abortion in our nation? Are we willing to support pregnant women so they can bring those unborn babies into the world? God’s plan is that we live in peace, not war. Are we willing to forgive one another? Really forgive even if it costs us everything? God’s plan is that we feed the poor, clothe the naked and shelter the homeless. Are we willing to sacrifice our comfort so that the alien in our midst may be warm and well-fed? God’s plan is that we respect our elders. Do we visit those in nursing homes and hospitals? Do we ask for the advice of our parents and grandparents?

Yes, obey the commandments and accept the teachings of the Church and respect the natural law given us by God. Then pray, plead, choose and love that to which these commandments and laws point, for they point to the love of God and the love of neighbor.

God asks you today, “Are you willing to take the risk? Are you willing to go the distance? Are you willing to go into the deep, to plummet the depths, and to reach out to heaven itself? Will you settle for something less that eternal life?”

Accept nothing less… not gold nor silver, not lands nor possessions. Don’t be distracted and deceived by the things of this world! Accept God’s challenge. Trust him. Love him.

“There is one more thing you must do. Go, sell what you have and give to the poor; then come follow me!”

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Church of the Week

St. Charles Borromeo Mission Church

Carmel-by-the-Sea, California

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