Category: The Church Year

  • Monday of the Fourth Week of Lent

    Monday of the Fourth Week of Lent

    Today's readings [display_podcast]

    At the heart of our practice of prayer has to be trust in God. We don't – or shouldn't – need signs to convince us of God's love and care for us. But just as the royal official trusted that Jesus could cure his son, so we too need to trust that God in his goodness will work the best for us, in his time, in his way. Isaiah tells us today that God is about to create a new heavens and a new earth, where there will always be rejoicing and gladness. It can be hard for us when we look around and don't see it. But that is our hope, and we must continue to yearn for it.

  • Fourth Sunday of Lent

    Fourth Sunday of Lent

    Today's readings [display_podcast]

    Now this sounds like a horrible thing for a priest to be telling you in Mass, but I’m going to say it anyway. Who on earth cares about the healing of a blind person? Well, the blind person, sure, and maybe some of his relatives and the people who know him, but what do we care? Why spend so much time telling the story and have our feet aching as we stand here listening to this Gospel? You’ve probably figured out by now this is a rhetorical question, and you must know that I’m about to give you the twist that makes this all relevant. The reason we care about the story of the healing of the man born blind is that the story isn’t about the man born blind. It’s about us.

    We might be sitting here thinking, just like the Pharisees, “surely we are not also blind, are we?” And the answer is YES. We are blind. That’s what Lent is about: the realization of our blindness and our yearning for the healing power of Christ. So it’s in that spirit that we have to roll up our sleeves and dig into the story, because there’s more here than meets the eye, if you’ll pardon the pun.

    I want to begin this reflection by looking at our first reading today. Whenever I hear it, it makes me remember my dad. He was a man who always seemed to see the best in people. The best in me and my sisters, certainly, but also in just about any person he’d ever met. Which, believe me, was a considerable list – Dad was that typical Irish guy who never met a stranger. When we had his wake back in May, we were all overwhelmed by the incredible number of people who came and shared with us how they were inspired by him and encouraged by him, all because Dad saw something special in them.

    That’s what was going on in today’s first reading. Everyone thought the very good-looking Eliab was the one that Samuel came to anoint. Everyone, that is, except for God who quickly pointed out that Samuel and the others were seeing as human beings see: that is, they were seeing the outward appearance and maybe even the superficial parts of the personality that come across on a first impression. But God sees deeper than that – God sees into the heart. He sees beyond that outward appearance, and the superficiality of our first impression personality, and deep into the heart of who he created us to be.

    That’s the kind of vision I often wish I had. Dad seemed to have that kind of ability to see people as God sees them. I try, but quite often fail. I’m sure many of us wish that we could see beyond the pettiness of the things that irk us about other people, and to see those people as God created them.

    This is the kind of thing that highlights the blindness we all have, the kind of blindness that makes today’s Gospel reading really about all of us. We may or may not have some kind of physical blindness. And even if we did, that wouldn’t be so bad as far as Jesus is concerned. Indeed, he heals the blindness of the man in the first minute of the story and then goes on for a long time to give him sight in other ways and to expose the blindness of the others in the story. The worst kind of blindness that we can have is to not even desire to see things and especially other people as God sees them. To reject God’s vision for us and for our world is a kind of terminal blindness that leaves us in some ways without any hope whatsoever.

    This kind of blindness is what St. Paul meant when he said to the Ephesians in today’s second reading, “you were once darkness.” Notice how he didn’t say you were once IN darkness, no – you were once darkness. Darkness itself. That’s how blind we are when we come into the world – we are all the men and women born blind, and we must turn to Jesus because he is the only one who can restore our sight.

    But maybe restore isn’t the best word to use here. Because the blind man had never even seen at all – he was born blind. So his healing was not so much a cure as much as it was a creation, or better, re-creation. The very act that Jesus used to heal him gives us a clue about this: he makes clay from the earth in much the same way that God formed Adam, our first parent, from the clay of the earth. The healing of the blind man then takes us back and re-creates us from the inside out. We are all re-created in baptism, and that’s why the man is then sent to the pool at Siloam – which is a name that itself means “sent” – just as we are sent to the font to be baptized. It is baptism that heals the blindness we are all born with.

    And we can see the effect of the baptism on the man in the story. He is sent to Siloam to wash and on coming out, he can see. He then is questioned by the people who knew him as a blind man about whether he was in fact the man who was blind. He replies “I am.” Now this answer is a Scriptural red flag and I want you all to mentally bookmark it because I’m going to come back to it in a minute. But right now I want you to notice what he says about Jesus: this man called Jesus restored my sight, but I don’t know where he is now. Later he is questioned by the Pharisees, and when they suggest Jesus is a sinner because he does not respect the Sabbath, the blind man rejects this and says “he is a prophet.” He is questioned a second time by the Pharisees, and this time he goes a little further, he suggests that he is a disciple of Jesus, and when he meets Jesus after being thrown out of the synagogue, makes a beautiful confession of faith and says, “I do believe, Lord.” His faith has grown from being in total darkness, to recognizing Jesus as a man who healed him, to seeing him as a prophet, to acknowledging him as Lord and God.

    We, too, must come up out of the waters of baptism – sent as we are – to witness to Jesus at work in our world. We might at various times of our lives have a limited view of God and an infant faith. But we are given the gift of Lent over and over again in our lives to be continually converted and to walk in the light of our baptism in new and more profound ways. Our annual observance of Lent calls us to grow in faith with every passing year and see God and others in deeper and clearer ways.

    When the people asked the blind man if he was the man born blind, he said, “I am.” That probably is a familiar Scriptural phrase for you. Because whenever you hear it, it’s always in reference to God. When Moses asks God who he should say sent him to deliver the Israelites from Egypt, God says, “tell them I am sent you.” In the Gospel of John, the phrase “I am” is used many times, but only by Jesus. Except for this one time. Here it is used by the man re-created from darkness to light. Why would that be? Well, nothing in the Gospels is ever an accident, so we can dismiss that thought – it’s certainly no mere coincidence.

    What I think it means is that this man is presented now as another Christ, who has been healed and forgiven and converted from darkness to light and now sent into the world to witness to his faith and draw others to faith in God. And that’s why the story is not merely about this man. The story is about all of us who reject the devil’s darkness, who reject seeing and labeling people in negative ways, who reject racism and hatred, who reject violence, terrorism, war and crime, who reject the idea that life is expendable, who reject the darkness this world calls us to in all its forms. This story is about all of us who submit to God’s re-creating power in our lives, who go to the pool of baptism and are sent into the world to bathe the darkness in the light of God’s presence. This story is about all of us who need Lent to deepen our faith
    just like the formerly blind man’s faith grew in the story. This story is about all of us who will stand up and say with the formerly blind man, “I do believe, Lord.”

  • Friday of the Third Week of Lent

    Friday of the Third Week of Lent

    Today's readings[display_podcast]

    “You are not far from the kingdom of God.” That, to be honest, has to be an extremely reassuring comment. To know that you’re on the right track, that your thoughts and heart’s desires are in line with God’s will, that would be a wonderful thing to know. And today’s Scriptures give us the roadmap for finding that reassurance.

    Step one is repentance. The prophet Hosea wrote of Israel’s repentance. Israel, as a nation, as we well know, had turned away from the God of their ancestors Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. They had turned to the false gods of their neighbors and had worshipped idols. Hosea’s prophecy had been all about calling them back, urging them to return to the Lord who loved his people and yearned for them like a spurned lover. In today’s first reading, Hosea prophecies the promise that God will accept back his wayward lover and will restore the people of Israel to his own loved possession.

    Step two is to hear the voice of God. “If only my people would hear me,” the Psalmist says, “and Israel walk in my ways, I would feed them with the best of wheat, and with honey from the rock I would fill them.” God longs to fill his faithful people with everything that they need to sustain life and live their faith. All they have to do is hear his voice, to follow his commands, and walk in his ways. This hearing the voice of God requires a steadfast faithfulness that will not be enticed by strange gods or flashy idols. There is a single-mindedness that is called for here: the faithful are called not to hear God as one voice among many, but to hear God alone.

    And step three is love. In today’s Gospel, Jesus famously boils the commandments down to two: love of God and love of neighbor. Again, there is an underlying single-mindedness: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength.” Love of God and neighbor isn’t a third or fourth priority, if you ever get around to it. Love is prime: love is the first inclination of the heart, thought of the mind, and action of life.

    What does it take for us disciples to be not far from the Kingdom of God? It takes a Lent of repentance, a desire to hear and meditate on God’s Word and his presence in our lives, and then to love like there was nothing else to do in the whole world. Maybe we’re not there yet, all of us, as we approach our Easter joy. But at this mid-point of Lent, maybe we can come a little closer by asking God for the desire to change our hearts.

  • Thursday of the Third Week of Lent

    Thursday of the Third Week of Lent

    Today's readings [display_podcast]

    Today's Scriptures address another one of the ways that we fallen human beings tend to avoid the truth. Today we see that the issue is one of obfuscation, trying to confuse the facts. It's a case of "the best defense is a good offense" and so we attack the truth wherever we see it addressing our lives and our mistakes.

    The prophet Jeremiah takes the nation of Israel to task for this in today's first reading. These are a people who have heard the truth over and over. God has not stopped sending prophets to preach the word. But the Israelites would not listen. They preferred to live in the world, and to attach themselves to the nations and their worship of idols and pagan gods. They had been warned constantly that this was going to be the source of their demise, but they tuned it out. They "stiffened their necks," Jeremiah says, and now faithfulness has disappeared and there is no word of truth in anything they say.

    Some of the Jews are giving Jesus the same treatment in today's Gospel. Seeing him drive out a demon, they are filled with jealousy and an enormous sense of inadequacy. These are the men who were religious leaders and they had the special care of driving away demons from the people. But they chose not to do so, or maybe their lukewarm faith made them ineffective in this ministry. So on seeing Jesus competent at what was their special care, they cast a hand-grenade of rhetoric at him and reason that only a demon could cast out demons like he did.

    We will likely hear the word of truth today. Maybe it will come in these Scriptures, or maybe later in our prayerful moments. Maybe it will be spoken by a child or a coworker or a relative or friend. However the truth is given to us, it is up to us to take it in and take it to heart. Or will we too be like the Jews and the Israelites and stiffen our necks? No, the Psalmist tells us, we can't be that way. "If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts."

  • Wednesday of the Third Week of Lent

    Wednesday of the Third Week of Lent

    Today's readings [display_podcast]

    There's something about us human beings that just doesn't like to be told what to do. We don't like rules and regulations, we frown on laws that curtail our freedoms, we turn up our noses at religious precepts which inform our actions. And so we look eagerly for someone or something to come along and wipe them all away so we can do whatever we want. Now, I'm not saying we are all criminals, but even the most law-abiding among us wants to be freed from rules that constrain us when that constraint is inconvenient or burdensome.

    And so, I think, the Jews had that same sort of longing going on when they looked to Jesus. They wanted Jesus to be a Messiah of their own making. They wanted him to free them from oppression – which he would – but also to bring Israel to glory and let them lord it over the nations – which, of courses, he would not. Most of all, they wanted to be freed from the six-hundred-plus regulations of the Law and live on their own terms. And that was not in Jesus' game plan.

    Not a single iota of the law would pass away, because he came to bring the law to its fruition. Therefore, blessed are we when we obey the law and teach others to do so. And when we ignore the law, well then, we are ignoring God himself, the wise one above all other gods who gives us this whole law.

    Certainly, we are not constrained by some of the nitpicky parts of the Jewish law, but the heart of them is still in the heart of us. We follow the Ten Commandments, we remember that God is God and we are not, we worship God alone. Those commandments form the basis of who we are as a Christian people; they are the law that Christ came to fulfill and underscore. To the extent that we live that Law, the world may in fact be moved by our wisdom to follow Christ as well.

  • Tuesday of the Third Week of Lent

    Tuesday of the Third Week of Lent

    Today's readings [display_podcast]

    The book of Daniel the Prophet is one of my favorite books of Scripture. If you haven't read that book, that would be your homework today. It won't take terribly long, but be sure you read it from a Catholic edition of the Bible because other editions won't contain the whole thing.

    The story goes that Azariah, Hannaniah and Mishael were in the king's court along with Daniel. They had been well-educated and cared for, and in turn advised the king on matters of wisdom and knowledge. They were better at doing this than anyone in the king's court, except for one thing. The king, who worshiped idols, had crafted an idol that each person in the kingdom was to bow down and worship several times a day. But Azariah, Hannaniah and Mishael were good Jews and would only worship God alone. So they were bound up and cast into the fiery furnace, to their certain demise.

    Now you may know this as the story of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, which were the names the king gave them when they entered his service. If you know the story, then you know the flames did not harm them, and an angel appeared in the furnace to protect them. During that time, Azariah prayed the beautiful prayer we have in our first reading. He acknowledges that his people have been sinful, but prays that God would deliver them because the people currently have no prophet or anyone who could lead them. God's deliverance of Azariah, Hannaniah and Mishael from the fiery furnace is a symbol of God's planned deliverance of the people from their captivity, which in turn is a symbol of God's deliverance, through Jesus Christ, from our captivity to sin.

    We forgiven and delivered people have to be people of forgiveness, though, as we hear in today's Gospel. Our own redemption is never complete until we untie the others in our lives whose sins or offenses against us we have bound up. Until we forgive from our hearts, we will never really be free from the bondage of sin.

  • Monday of the Third Week of Lent

    Monday of the Third Week of Lent

    Today's readings [display_podcast] 

    Why is the human heart so much opposed to hearing the truth and acting on it? I remember as a child I used to hate it when my parents would tell me something and turn out to be right. If the truth be told, I probably still struggle with that a little today. Who wants to hear the hard truth and then find out that it's absolutely right? The pride of our hearts so often prevents the prophet from performing his or her ministry.

    The message of Lent, though, is that the prophets – all of them – whether they be Scriptural prophets, or those who spoke the truth to us because they want the best for us – all of these prophets are right. And our task during Lent has to be to give up whatever pride in us refuses to hear the voice of the prophet or refuses to accept the prophetic message, and instead turn to the Lord and rejoice in the truth.

    The prophets of our native land – those prophets who are closest to us – are the ones we least want to hear. Because they know the right buttons to push, they know our sinfulness, our weakness, and our brokenness. And we desperately want to avoid being confronted with all that failure. Yet if we would hear them, then maybe just like Naaman, we would come out of the river clean and ready to profess our faith in the only God once again.

    Athirst is my soul for the living God – that is what the Psalmist prays today. And that is the true prayer of all of our hearts. All we have to do is get past the obstacles of pride and let those prophets show us the way to him. Then we would never thirst again.

  • Saturday of the Second Week of Lent

    Saturday of the Second Week of Lent

    Today’s readings

    Something that often gets overlooked in this very familiar parable is that both of the sons are sinful. We take it on faith that the youngest is sinful: taking half of his inheritance before his father is even in the grave, living a life of dissipation and sexual excess, using up all that money in a short time, content to eat among the swine which no good Jew would even think about touching, and finding himself very, very broken. But the so-called good son is sinful too. On his brother’s return, he refuses to go into the house to welcome him back, and takes his father to task for showing mercy and love. Failure to forgive is itself sinful.

    Both sons are sinful in their own way. Both need the father’s love and mercy and forgiveness. And both receive it. Far from the way a proper Jewish father would act, he runs out to meet both sons where they are. Protocol would have them come to him, and not he to them. He comes out twice, once to meet the younger son who is on the way back to him, and once to meet his older son who refuses to come to him.

    But as it stands, the younger son is more likely to receive forgiveness. Why? Because he is content to be on the way to his father and put himself at his father’s mercy. The older son isn’t even aware that he needs to be forgiven. He puts himself above his younger brother as the sinful black sheep of the family.

    But Jesus cautions us in so many places that we cannot be so immersed in others’ sins that we miss seeing our own. That’s the message for us today. Wherever we are, whoever we are, whatever we are, we need God’s mercy and forgiveness. And he is faithful in giving it. All we have to do is agree to come into the house.

  • Thursday of the Second Week of Lent

    Thursday of the Second Week of Lent

    Today’s readings

    The great sin of the rich man may not have been the sin of neglecting poor Lazarus, although that was certainly bad. His greatest sin, though, was that he trusted in himself and not in God. He had everything he needed in life, because he was able to trust in himself to get it. But he never had a relationship with God. Now in death, he wants the good things God will provide for those who trust in him, people like Lazarus for example. But he has already made his choice, and unfortunately now, trusting in himself doesn’t bring him anything good. Blessed are they, the Psalmist says today, who hope in the Lord.

  • Wednesday of the Second Week of Lent

    Wednesday of the Second Week of Lent

    Today’s readings

    Be careful what you wish for, is kind of what Jesus says to the sons of Zebedee today. Those of us who are disciples will indeed drink of Jesus’ same chalice, but when we take it we must remember that it is a chalice of suffering and persecution. So we are never given the guarantee of trouble-free days. We will have suffering in this life. But we drink of that chalice in order to gain the reward of everlasting life. That was the only hope for the prophet Jeremiah in today’s first reading, and that is our hope as well.