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

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Homily: 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time


Catechetical Sunday...Parable of the Vineyard Workers...Alicia Keys and Richard Rohr.  How do they all come together in order to shed light on your salvation and possibly a new found focus on your life?

Well, 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

Monday, July 2, 2012

Purgatory

This past month my wife, Teresa, attended a funeral of one her Master Gardener friends.  After more than 15 years battling cancer, the good Lord called her home.  The funeral mass took place in my diocese, but not my parish.  Unable to attend myself, I called Teresa later that day to see how it all went.  Her quick reply was, “Be glad you were not there.”  The full conversation went something like this:
J: How bad could it have been?
T: Well the priest and the deacon were both wearing Roman vestments that were purple.
J: Purple?  You mean white, with a bit of purple trim?
T: I mean all purple, like Advent
J: Why?
T: Funny you should ask, as the priest made it central to his homily
J: Did what?
T: He said he was wearing purple to remind us that her soul is not in heaven yet, rather it is in Purgatory.  He went on to explain that this was a good thing since it meant that she was destined to heaven but is in Purgatory receiving the final cleansing…and since she is no longer able to advance her own cause, we who remain must pray for her soul.
J: (Deleting expletives for purposes of keeping this blog family friendly:) Really?  I mean Really?  I have yet to find a website that delineates the length of time, if any, in Purgatory based on our earthly lives!  I would love to be enlightened as to who gets more or less time: Clergy? Blogging Deacons? Sisters/Nuns? Divorced? Gay? A 60 year old lady who loved to garden, loved her family and friends and loved her God?
T: Oh no, I feel a new blog post being written…
While the good practice of praying for/to those who have died predates Christ, the naming of “Purgatory” as a place or state of “being cleansed” dates to c 1170 and formalized in the Councils of Florence (1431-1435) and Trent (1545-1563).  There are three paragraphs in the Catechism of the Catholic Church that outline the tradition of the Church as it relates to Purgatory. Nowhere does it state, obviously, where or how, or who, or certainly how long anyone goes to Purgatory. 
But I would assume based on what Jesus said on the cross to the criminal hanging next to him, "I tell you the truth, today you will be with me in paradise." (Lk 23:43) that he was not going to be spending much time stopping off in Purgatory. The great Franciscan theologian John Duns Scotus (1256-1308) took the position that the final cleansing of the soul took place instantaneously upon death, after all God’s love is immeasurable and unconditional.  Rome never embraced his theological concept as whole.  Then again to have done so would have given God all the power, all the control and all the grace to forgive immediately and unconditionally.  Instead Rome, in the middle ages, favored the theology of time in Purgatory and its corresponding indulgences which supported their own egos and their own coffers.
So I am at a loss as to how one in 2012, preaching to a family who is mourning the death of their loved one, takes the position with words and colored vestments that her soul hasn’t made it to heaven yet.  He knows this?  By taking this homiletic action, the priest moved the focus of this Mass of the Resurrection away from God’s salvational action and focused on Church control.  This is simply another example of Catholic egos running rampant.  It is another example of some clergy, as well as the Church, stuck in what Richard Rohr, OFM. calls the first half of life. Stuck on building its ego. Stuck on power and control. Stuck on defining who they are by knocking down others.
Indeed, nothing wrong with praying for those who have died.  I, for one, am always looking for their graces and those of the entire Communion of Saints.  But my prayer today is that the Church will move in an opposite direction by shedding its ego and focusing on the risen Christ, who “holds all thing in unity…who reconciles all things through him and for him, everything in heaven and on earth” (Col 1:17, 19-20)  ...all without our help.  Imagine that.
And the purple vestments? They can stay in the closet till next Advent.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Easter Sunday - Things Hidden



Every year before our family Easter dinner, we hold our annual Easter Egg Hunt.  Over 125 eggs are hidden in the back yard.  Some contain candy, some coin and a select few contain paper money.  As the kids got older (top picture = 2000, bottom = 2011), they quickly learned to pick up the egg, shake it and if it didn’t rattle, assumed it to be paper money and kept that egg.  If it rattled, they placed it back and continued on the search. So, in time, the Easter Bunny got smarter and would always include a coin or two in order that all would rattle and thus fool the teen seeker.
God is like that.  God is hidden where you least expect to find God. Where, you ask?  Author Paula D’Arcy writes, “God comes to you disguised as your life.”  Our challenge is, like the Blind Man in the gospel story, we need to have our eyes opened!
Lent was a time for introspection, a time to scrutinize oneself, to look internally at our own darkness so that we may be open to the light of Christ.  But it is now Easter!  Christ is Risen and Christ is among us!  Easter is the time to look outward and to open our eyes to see Christ in our lives.
Christ is in your spouse, your child, your family, your co-worker, your neighbor, your church family.  Christ is also in your estranged friend or loved one, in your hurts, your wounds and your ‘enemy.’  Christ is found in those at the top of their lives and those who are at the bottom.  Christ is found in you and me.
Fr. Richard Rohr reminds us in his classic book, Everything Belongs, that spirituality is all about seeing.  During this Easter season, open your eyes to all that is hidden, whether it rattles or not.  For it is there that you will find God waiting for you!
Christ is Risen!  He is risen indeed!
Happy Easter!

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Mary, Mother of God


Mother of God
by Michael O’Neill McGrath, OSFS.  www.beestill.org

This Sunday we celebrate the Feast of Mary, Mother of God. In the past four weeks we have heard a number of times Luke's Gospel where Mary is told that she is to bear a son and name him Jesus and he will be called the Son of the Most High. The angel Gabriel tells Mary that the Lord is with her – literally and physically!  Thus Mary becomes the new Ark of the Lord. Did you ever notice that Mary does not say she’s “not worthy”?  She just asks for clarification.  She never asks if, whether or why!
Clearly this reveals her lack of ego.  She becomes the archetype of perfect receptivity – without a concern about whether she is worthy.  She does it alone, quietly, and with courage. This young teenage girl simply says, “Let it be!” 
Which brings us to this new day and New Year.  Take a moment to pause and remember that this same Jesus the Christ dwells within all of us, without exception – regardless of how worthy we may be!  This God loves us for who we are.  As the Franciscan Richard Rohr says, “God does not love you because you are good; you are good because God loves you.” 
Blessings to you and your families in this New Year!!