Showing posts with label Richard Rohr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Rohr. Show all posts

Sunday, September 3, 2023

Homily: 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time


Before I get into this weekend’s homily – my apologies, as it seems that the blog software made a change months ago which prevented my work from being sent to you!  So, feel free to roam on back to see what you missed – and hope you will stay connected!

Meanwhile…

This Sunday we heard the conclusion of the Gospel story that began last week when Jesus said he would build his Church upon the rock of Peter. But a few lines later Jesus calls Peter, ‘Satan’ and he is told to get behind Christ and follow him. So how did Peter get it so right to the point where Jesus will use Peter as the foundation of his Church and then in the next moment Peter gets it so wrong as to be called Satan? The answer and, indeed our lesson, is rooted in the two types of thinking that we face every day. What are they? How do we distinguish them?  Check it out…

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of today


Saturday, July 23, 2022

17th Sunday in Ordinary Time


Luke speaks about prayer more than any of the other Evangelists…and in this weekend’s gospel we hear the disciples, asking Jesus to teach them how to pray and he responds with a simple version of the Lord’s Prayer. With prayer being so foundation to who we are, how do you pray? But the bigger question may have to do with how we view prayer.  In other words, do we come to prayer as a transactional or a relational activity? Do we spend our time in prayer looking for something from God…or are we desiring a connection with God?

Leave it to my grandson Oliver to open my eyes to what prayer is really all about.  Check it out and see what I mean…

Click here for the podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the day

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Homily: Second Sunday of Lent


 

I invite you to just focus on the God encounter that takes place in the Gospel story of the Transfiguration. It is when God appears in the form of a cloud which casts a shadow over those gathered – a cloud that, although frightens them, they still entered.  What about the darkness and clouds that we face in our lives? For it these types of God encounters where lives are changed - encounters that break you open and rearrange what you think you knew and wanted.

So, take a few minutes to enjoy a few stories that have nothing to do with answers - but more so with encounters.  Stories about hiker Trevor Thomas, Franciscan Richard Rohr and my recently departed brother-in-law Vincent – all which, like this Gospel, just may bring light into the darkness you face. Check it out…

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the day

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Eulogy for Julian Tao Knipper - 1st Anniversary

 


It is hard to believe that it has been a year since my grandson Julian died.  While my wife and I were fortunate to be able to travel during COVID to France for his funeral that following week...it wasn't until months later that I was able to sit down and write a homily/eulogy to honor him. There was an intention that at some point we would have a memorial mass for him in the States...but not sure that will happen and if it does, I doubt I would be able to deliver these words. But I did include them in the award winning book of  homilies that was published last fall - which can be found here: https://bit.ly/JulianTao831 

Our extended family gives our deepest thanks and blessings for everyone in our lives who has walked this journey of grief past year with us, and grateful for all the donations made to the Fund that we established in Julian's name, and which we will foster over the coming years at UVA Children's hospital: https://bit.ly/JulianTao

And so, here is the eulogy, from my heart and soul, on the life, death and resurrection of my sweet Julian... 


Over the past four years, I have begun to realize the depth of love we can have for our grandchildren. I have four sons, who are all married to wonderful spouses and all of whom I love a great deal. But my grandchildren are different, as I can sense and feel the Divine Flow move between us when we hold onto each other. Given the nickname Buelo by my eldest grandson, I enjoy watching, with awe and wonder, my four young grandchildren grow—and feel the deepest love I could ever imagine.

But what I soon found out is deep love and deep grief are woven together from the beginning.

It was on the morning of August 31st, as I was watching the sun rise in Cape May, that I received the first text from my son in France that there had been an accident on his family farm, that my grandson Julian was seriously injured, and to say prayers as they rushed him to the hospital. It was not even an hour later that the next text I received simply said, “He’s gone.” And with that, our lives were turned upside down. A void opened in my heart and soul that frankly will never fully mend.

Numerous calls were made, family notified, and heart-wrenching conversations shared with my son and his wife as we all tried to wrap ourselves around the loss of Julian. Wanton neglect on the part of a local French contractor led to the senseless death of a beautiful boy...leaving us with the deepest grief any of us have ever experienced.

Through a petition filed with the French consulate, my wife and I were granted permission to fly to France in the midst of COVID-19 pandemic so that we could be present for Julian’s funeral. While there, we also were able to celebrate the first birthday of Julian’s younger sister, Bloom...who spent a good part of the day looking around for her brother, who was now gone. No one should ever experience burying their own young child, or grandchild—and yet, unfortunately, this is an event that has happened before in our family. So, we know all too well that it is a loss that you never get over, or move on from, nor one that heals with time...although many well-intentioned people, looking for something to say, have told us so.

This death of an innocent three-year-old son and grandson is a death that changes you for the rest of your life, for there will be empty spaces at the tables of family gatherings, and holidays, and birthdays. Empty spaces in our family pictures. Empty spaces at graduations, weddings, and other celebrations. This is the kind of emptiness that lasts a lifetime—a ripple effect that seems endless. So now, nearing three months since his death, many of us in the family still wake each day wondering, “How will I live this day? How do I attempt to mend my heart and my soul? How will I interact with others?”

Perhaps some answers can be found in today’s Gospel, where, as we hear so often, Jesus invites a child to come forward and reminds his followers that to enter the kingdom of heaven, we must change ourselves. We must be transformed, so we will be like a child. It is a necessary reminder for all of us that it is the children who know what it is to love another without any strings attached, with no expectation for anything in return. It reminds me of one of my favorite Fr. Richard Rohr quotes, where he writes: “We are not human beings trying to become spiritual. We’re already spiritual beings—our job is learning how to be a good human.”

Even at his young age, Julian already had both the spiritual and the human aspects of life figured out. All you had to do was watch him with his mom and dad, or his baby sister, or his maternal grandparents (who lived next door to him), or even the short times he had with my wife and me—for you found yourself a recipient of an endless amount of his love, laughter, and kindness. Julian knew how to love, better than most adults I know—for he lived a life filled with much joy, which was expressed in so many ways.

This joy was really evident when his two cousins, who live nearby, would come over and visit. Even though they’re a few years older than Julian, they would spend hours playing with him. It would not take long before the three boys were down to their underwear, dancing around the room to one of Julian’s favorite songs, “Despacito.” There they would just be lots of laughing, singing, dancing, and enjoying life and loving each other.

Because of the pandemic, the last time my wife and I saw Julian was Thanksgiving of  2019, when our entire family gathered for a week at our Florida home. Then, barely two and a half years old, he announced upon his arrival that he would be sleeping by my bedside. So, every morning, about 45 minutes before the sun would rise, he would call out to me to come and cuddle with him. Soon after, we would go out on the porch and hold onto each other as we would wait for the sun to rise.

At the end of that week, on the last day he was with us, hours before he had to go, he was in the pool with my wife and me, sandwiching himself between us, with his arms wrapped around us and telling us that we needed to relax...just relax.

Then, the summer of 2020, Julian’s family, due to COVID-19, vacationed near to their home, along the western shores of France. During their stay, I received a few videos of Julian. In one, he was looking out across the sea, just calling my name, knowing that I was somewhere on the other side of the ocean, confident that I would hear his voice. In another, he let a feather go into the strong winds, watching it carry itself out over the ocean, assured in his mind that it would end up on my lap.

So, in turn, I sent him a video back, holding onto a feather and thanking him for sending me the gift, and reminding him how much I love him and always will. It was soon after that his mom sent me a video of him watching my video (for the twelfth time!) and beaming with joy over our connection, then telling me that he loves me, “So much, forever time.” Little did I know that it would be the last video I would receive from him.

When we arrived at the family farm in France for the funeral, it did not take long before we started sharing stories about Julian. Many were told, but there was one in particular that reminded me what an old soul Julian was—is—and how he knew what love and even resurrection were all about. For Julian had a deep connection with his maternal grandfather—Papé—who lives right on the farm, next door to my son’s family. The two were inseparable, every single day. But, a short time before Julian died, his conversation with Papé went something like this:

Julian: Papé, you are very old!

Papé: Oh Julian, I am not as old as I look!

Julian: So, Papé, what will happen when you die?

Papé: What did you ask, Julian?

Julian: What will happen when you die?

Papé: Oh Julian . . . well, I will no longer be here with you, but I will be up in the stars and shining down and watching over you.

Julian: Well Papé, not to worry, because when I am old enough, I will reach up to the stars and bring you back to myself.

Not even three and half years old and, somehow, Julian already knew what death and rebirth were all about.

So, we are reminded this day—and every day—of the great love Julian had for all of us—and also reminded of the Gospel call for all of us to become like little children, which requires a change of heart. That is what conversion is truly all about. Such a change of heart will transform the way we live and love—a gift that Julian gave us each day of his short life.

In his book, The Wild Edge of Sorrow: Rituals of Renewal and the Sacred Work of Grief, Francis Weller writes, “Grief and love are sisters, woven together from the beginning. Their kinship reminds us that there is no love that does not contain loss and no loss that is not a reminder of the love we carry for what we once held close.”

The depth of our collective grief will allow us, one day, to experience joy like no other joy, for our love for Julian will never die, nor will his spiritual presence in our lives ever diminish. Grief and love are indeed interwoven, but it is we who are blessed to have had Julian in our lives for 1,220 days and to have learned from him what Divine Love looks like, and feels like and sounds like.

Julian was cremated wearing one of his favorite shirts that read, “Live Simply.” So, I encourage all of you to take the time to do just that: to be more like a child...to live simply...to dance in your underwear to your favorite song...to send a loved one a wish over the ocean breeze...and to hug someone you love and tell them to relax.

Our days will never be the same, but we will always carry Julian’s love, a love we are called to share with each other, this day and always, “So much, forever time.”




Saturday, August 29, 2020

Homily: 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time

 

In last week’s Gospel Peter got it so right to the point where Jesus will use Peter as the foundation of his Church and then in the next moment, we hear this week, Peter gets it so wrong as to be called Satan? Peter goes from a foundational rock – to a stumbling block.

So why the big swing with Peter?  There seems to be competing voices going on in Peter’s head.  So what does this mean to us and the voice we need to be listening to each and every day?  Check it out…

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text to the homily

Click here for the readings of the Sunday


Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Homily: The Wedding of Carole Moore and John Wagner


This past weekend I had the honor to officiate the wedding of a longtime friend, Carole Moore, who has directed the Children’s Choir at our parish of St. Paul Church in Princeton for over 30 years. Having lost her husband, and my dear friend, to cancer some 10 years ago – it was one of the first funerals I served as a Deacon.


Allowing God to open her eyes, Carole met a wonderful man, John Wagner, whose 40 year marriage ended with the death of his wife from cancer a few years ago. With a combined 65 years of marriage to their former spouses, they came to this new union as people who have learned that marriage requires you to bear all things, believe all things, hope all things and endure all things in good times and bad…and certainly in sickness and in health. Their earlier marriages gave them knowledge and insight as well as a broken and mended heart. So walking alongside John and Carole this past year has been a blessing for me as I have had a front seat to witnessing their “seasoned love.” So let me tell you a bit of what that looks like…

To listen to the recording of the homily, click here

To read a transcript of the Homily, click here

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Homily: Fifth Sunday of Lent



This weekend’s Gospel is the story of the adulterous woman who is about to be stoned with the scribes and the Pharisees having Jesus caught between a rock and a hard place (bad pun). We all know how the story ends – but what was Jesus really teaching those gathered in the Temple?  Take a second look and you will find the deeper lesson of this Gospel – one that is so often missed…because it just may be hitting too close to home.  Check it out…

To listen to a pod cast of the homily, click here

For a text of the homily, click here

For the reading of this Sunday, click here

Sunday, May 6, 2018

Homily: 6th Sunday of Easter



In this Sunday’s Gospel we hear the three most important words given to us in the Bible. By far, it is the greatest and hardest thing Christ asked us to do...but truly…it is all that really, really matters.

What are those words…and why do we find it so hard to follow them?

Check it out….
 
For the podcast of the homily, click here

For the transcript of the homily, click here

For the readings of this Sunday, click here

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Look Into the Face of Another


Look into the face of another, and what do you see?

Ongoing research in neuroscience continues to open our eyes to a deep new understanding of how we develop our capacity to become human beings. It all starts with a gaze. It begins with what we see as an infant entering the world, blessed with a welcoming, life-sustaining environment. It is initiated at birth with our first look into our mother’s eyes. It is then reinforced with the gaze of our father, our grandparents, and others to whom we learn to return that gaze. No word is spoken, and we carry no memory of that time. But before language, before any conscious memory, there is this seeing into the eyes of the other—and of being seen by the eyes of the other. It is a mutual beholding of the other’s sacred being, of knowing that we are loved. I witness this myself every time I hold my six-month-old grandson: smile to smile, breath to breath, voice to voice, heartbeats in sync with a deep realization that some sort of energy flows freely between us...and then from us to others.

What energy would this be? In his most recent book, The Divine Dance, Fr. Richard Rohr writes of the Trinity being seen as the energy between the three “persons” rather than just the “persons” themselves. In other words, we are invited to look at the Trinity using the early Christian image of a circle dance—an unending flow of giving and receiving between Father, Son, and Spirit—as being the pattern of reality. Rohr writes, "God is not only a dancer, but the dance itself—reminding the world of our interdependence and our inherent union with what is. The Trinity teaches us how to live in creative collaboration, valuing and honoring our differences while also serving each other with humility and compassion." The power of this Trinitarian Flow is rooted in its mutuality and inclusion of all people. God freely gives this love to all of us, asking only that we pass it on to others.

I think this is why, when Jesus was looking to sum up the Law of Moses and the teaching of the prophets, his directive of how to love was to "do to others as you would have them do to you" (Lk 6:31). Thus it would seem love involves mutual mirroring of the Divine gaze—allowing Divine energy to flow. That there is this form of give and take—I do to you and you do to me—with no expectation of reward or gain. Simply a command to share the gaze of God, to share God's love. 

Soon we will celebrate Christmas—the birth of Jesus—God fully human and fully divine.  The Word became flesh, and thus the face of God is seen in Jesus. It is a time to remember that we truly are created in God’s “image and likeness,” much more than we ever imagined. Before we begin this new way of seeing another, we might start by looking into a mirror. What we see is the image of who we are. For some of us, this may expose an increase in wrinkles or perhaps lines of anxiety, or maybe the curling lips of a smile. But old or young, we will view the face made in the image of God. It is the image of who we are in God. The face God gazes upon and accepts and loves without judgment.  For God includes, accepts, forgives, and loves each of us unconditionally, just as we are—warts and all. All we can do is receive the gaze and share it with all others. In doing so, God's way of loving us, if we allow it, becomes our model for loving others. Thus, the Golden Rule calls for us to love others as we allow God to love us, which in turn should lead to a chain reaction, fostering a loving world.

Philosopher Emmanuel Levinas said the only thing that really connects people at a deeper level is seeing the face of the other. In his words, "If one could possess, grasp, and know the other, it would not be other."

Coming off an election cycle that fostered language from both sides of the aisle devoid of any sense of love, compassion, or mercy—maybe it is time to pause and ponder the gift of the Divine gaze. For we need to believe in it, celebrate it, receive it, trust it, allow it, and then pass it on to those whom we see—allowing ourselves to be open to new relationships and living in communion with those we gaze upon and who gaze upon us. Or in the words that Jesus gave us: to do unto others as we would have them do to us.


Look into the face of another, and what do you see?

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Homily: 28th Sunday in Ordinary Time



This weekend’s Gospel is the familiar story of Jesus healing ten lepers and only one comes back to give thanks.  But there is another reason that Luke records this story, for while the gift of gratitude is important – the returning, grateful leper has much more to teach us about how to live our lives.  Check it out….


Click here for the podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of this Sunday


Saturday, August 13, 2016

Homily: 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time


Jesus says that he did not come to establish peace, but rather division...and that he came to set the earth on fire, and how he wishes it were already blazing!  Was he just having a bad day with his disciples…or hitting home a point that we often miss? Take a minute and check it out and see what Jesus was really talking to you and me about!

For a podcast of the homily, click here 

For the text of the homily, click here 

For the readings of this Sunday, click here

Thursday, July 14, 2016

More of The Good Samaritan


In light of all that has been happening these past few weeks in Orlando and Dallas and the ensuing protests across the country and the growing political debates, it would seem that the timing of this past Sunday’s Gospel – the story of the Good Samaritan - hit home for many preachers and listeners.  Echoes of various homilies are still being replayed as many look to make sense of the violence and discerning the same question asked by the lawyer in the Gospel: “Who is my neighbor.”

So as you spend time in prayer this week, you may want to hear what others were preaching this past Sunday.  Since homilies are meant to be heard, the following links (just click on the person’s name) will take you to the audio of each message.  None are more than 11 minutes…each person having a different slant on the topic.  Some may be somewhat shocking…but then again, so is the true Gospel.

Fr. Richard Rohr, OFM
(link includes the reading of the Gospel, homily begins at the 3:00 mark)


Saturday, February 20, 2016

Homily: 2nd Sunday of Lent


Instead of focusing on the meaning of this Sunday’s Gospel of the Transfiguration, what happens when you take the time to just focus on the God encounter which occurs at the end of the story? Have you ever noticed how many of the God encounters in the Bible involves a cloud that overshadows and obscures the light?

So take a few minutes to listen to stories of a newborn baby, a blind hiker and wise Franciscan visiting the 9/11 memorial.  Three vignettes which may just help you to have the courage to step into the darkness in your life and allow an encounter with the mercy and grace of God.

For the podcast of the homily, click here
For the text of the homily, click here
For the readings of the day, click here

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Homily: 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time


This weekend we hear a gospel from Matthew which is broken into three basic parts: the parable of the sower…Jesus’s reasoning for using parables… and then lastly, the explanation Jesus gave his first century followers of what this parable was all about.  But there is something so obvious to see in this story that even Jesus omitted it from his explanation. 
What did Jesus leave out of his elucidation of this gospel?  And how can that missing piece of the puzzle change your life? 

Click and listen to how the answer to these questions is found….in the soil.

Click here for the podcast of the live recording of the Homily
Click here for the text of the Homily
Click here for the readings

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Ascension Thursday


If it has been 40 days since Easter it must be Ascension Thursday, a Solemnity of the Church. It is the day we commemorate the bodily ascension of Jesus into heaven.
 
In the words of Richard Rohr:

The Ascension is about the final reunion of what appeared to be separated for a while: Earth and Heaven, human and divine, matter and Spirit. If the Christ is the archetype of the full human journey, now we know how it all resolves itself in the end. “So that where I am, you also will be” (John 14:3)

It is no surprise that most artist renderings of the Ascension show the eyes of the crowds looking upward to the sky. I guess that is where heaven is supposed to be.

But as we celebrate the Feast I think it is also important that we do not take our eye off the body of Christ that dwells among us, in us, and through us. And what better example of this than the article written by my friend Mike Leach about the battle his beautiful wife Vicky has fought for so many years with Alzheimer’s. As her caregiver Mike writes, “Some people spend thousands of dollars to take courses on living in the present moment. In Alzheimer's there is only the present moment.

Perhaps on this Feast day were we celebrate the moment of the ascension of Christ, we can also take some time to recognize the daily moments in our lives where Christ dwells.


Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Hungry, And You Fed Me


Artwork by Brother Mickey O'Neil McGrath


So what does Richard Rohr, Jim Martin S.J., Meredith Gould, Michael Leach, Deacon Greg Kandra and a dozen other homilists have in common?  They are all part of a project that comes to fruition this week!

As a deacon in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton, New Jersey, I’m passionate about great homilies. For those of us privileged to preach, homilies provide us a unique opportunity to break open the gospel message. Over the past decade, through various occasions and contacts, I’ve been blessed to encounter Christian clergy and laity who are gifted with the ability to spark transformation, touching people’s lives through their homilies, sermons, and reflections.

A year ago I launched this project, leading me to eventually reach out to handful of men and women who are some of the best of the best when it comes to breaking open the Word of God. My goal was to compile and edit a book that would feed the heart and souls of the readers and act as a vehicle to raise money to feed the hungry and homeless.

My hope and prayer is this book will do both.  Starting today we begin shipping: Hungry, And You Fed Me: Homilies and Reflections for Cycle C.

Under the moniker of Homilists for the Homeless, these writers and preachers have generously donated their material so that proceeds from this book can be given to the four charities selected for this volume. This first of three books begins with Year C of the Lectionary for Mass, which begins with the First Sunday of Advent 2012 (and every three years thereafter).

As Christians we are called to use the gifts that God has given each of us. Called to spread the good news of Christ. Called to reach out to those who live on the margins. Called to clothe the naked, shelter the homeless, and feed the hungry.

Please click here to find out more about this book and to place an order.
If on Facebook, I invite you to follow us at: www.facebook.com/homilists


My prayer is that some of the gifted words in this book may open your eyes in a new way to the Good News of Christ and bring blessings to you and yours!