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Christmas Day – Holy of Holies

Is.52:7-10; Ps.98:1-6; Heb. 1:1-6; Jn 1:1-18

The “Holy of Holies” has been revealed Alleluia!  Alleluia!  We rejoice to give testimony for we have been redeemed and receive Him in the fullness of grace and truth.  In the past the tabernacle where God’s presence appeared remained covered by a veil that held the Ark of the Covenant containing the Ten Commandments.  It is now born in the flesh to bring us glad tiding of comfort and joy. 

“The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us…full of grace and truth”. This is our Holy of Holies.  We have been celebrating our Blessed Mother Mary who the angel proclaimed “full of grace” that is without sin in preparation to receive her son Jesus, the Word made flesh to dwell among us, the unblemished lamb, perfect in grace and truth.  Jesus is born let us sing his praises.  Jesus is the “imprint” of God who walked the earth both human and divine.  Jesus is the King of glory.  He came and “accomplished purification of sins”.  It is done through his birth, death, and resurrection and we are to follow this plan of salvation.

We are born again in baptism, die to ourselves in redemption and rise to new life in grace and truth.  “Hail, full of grace!” “for nothing will be impossible for God” do we believe this?  King David wanted to build a house for the Lord but the Lord has built his own dwelling place not of stone and pillars but of the flesh.  The Holy of Holies has come to transform us into a tabernacle for himself by grace and truth. 

Jesus born in a manger received the gifts of the Magi, we are born of water and spirit receive the gifts of grace and truth through him to become children of God.  The Lord of salvation has come to save us but he cannot save us without us accepting his gift of redemption.  While the world follows its own path seeking to save itself from the evils of disease, injustice, environmental tragedy and asks “where is God?” their eyes remain closed to the radiance of his presence.  God is with us with his saving power. 

The Lord comes to save us from the evils of sin.  Unfortunately, “sin” is not at the top of the world’s concerns at least not until death comes calling and we begin asking “where will we spend eternity?”  There is a “dicho” in Spanish “Poco veneno no mata nomas ataranta” translated literally says “a little poison doesn’t kill only staggards”.  Often, we have learned to tolerate some sin in our lives as long as we think it does us no harm.  Think again. 

Jesus saves!  He brings “glad tidings, announcing peace, bearing good news, announcing salvation”.  This is the joy of Christmas as we receive him into our world, we receive the good news of salvation and the peace of entering into his eternal glory of heaven.  If you have seen the 1978 movie Heaven Can Wait, Warren Beatty is mistakenly taken to heaven by his guardian angel and takes on someone else’s body in order to return to live out his time and dream to win a Super Bowl.  You can say it is a movie of second chances and we see a God of second, third, fourth and more chances to say “yes, Lord, I repent” before mortal death comes.  Why wait?  This is the day of his coming into the world and if death should come suddenly, are we ready? 

Heaven is a state in which we begin to enter into the Holy of Holies now.  When we come to confession there is a healing from heaven.  When we receive communion there is a taste of heaven.  When we receive the Word there is a beginning of conversion into the divine state for heaven.  When we serve God in acts of mercy to our neighbor, the poor, the hungry, the suffering, we build a treasure for heaven.  When we gather together in the sanctuary to celebrate Mass, heaven doesn’t wait, it comes in the Spirit and in the body and blood of Jesus. 

It is said that in Mass the angels descend and ascend at the altar at the side of the Lord in the Liturgy of the Eucharist.  It is being in heaven but not fully yet.  Two years ago, in a pilgrimage to Spain during Mass while kneeling during the epiclesis of the Eucharistic prayer I had a vision of an angel sitting on my shoulder.  As I was looking at the Host being lifted by the priest, I saw these little feet from the left side of my head and as I turned, I saw a little angel baby that reminded me of the cherubim, sitting on my left shoulder looking to the lifted host.  I looked back to the host while still able to see the feet sticking out and at the end of the epiclesis it was gone. 

These angels are with us today and we thank our guardian angel who is always with us to guard us and guide us.  In the baptism class I will ask the group if they know the prayer to their guardian angel.  Unfortunately, few recall it and many have not even heard it.  “But do you recall the most beautiful prayer of all (melody)?”  No, not Rudolph.  I said prayer not Reindeer.  The most beautiful prayer is the prayer of the Mass.  We have many beautiful prayers in the church tradition but we are losing some of our traditions in a culture of secularism. 

It is no longer politically correct to say Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays is the accepted norm.  We see slowly the erosion of God out of the culture and the rise of sin in a culture of death with abortion, euthanasia, gender neutrality, and now genome-edited babies with the recent case of a Chinese scientist modifying the genes of twin girls (nature.com, March 11, 2019, “The CRISPR-baby scandal: what’s next for human gene-editing”).  Science seeks to enter into the world of creation of life with “Designer babies” but all it can do is manipulate life for true creation comes from God. 

Remember heaven doesn’t wait for us, it has entered the world this day in the child Jesus ready to enter our lives in the Holy of Holies, in our daily prayers, and in our daily life when we call upon the Holy Spirit to be with us, when we invite our guardian angel and all the angels to protect us, when we pray to our Blessed Mother to be with us, and when we remember the souls who have already been separated from this world on the journey to heaven in purgatory or celebrating the beatific vision of heaven.  In these days of political correctness, we dare to say Merry Christmas to all and to all a blessed day! 

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4th Sunday of Advent – Full of Grace!

2 Sam. 7:1-5, 8-12, 14a, 16; Ps.89:2-5, 27, 29; Rom. 16:25-27; Lk 1:26-38

“Hail, full of grace!” “for nothing will be impossible for God” do we believe this?  The blessed Mother Mary historically has been a stumbling block for many believers of the Trinity.  Those who oppose her as the “Mother of God” see through the eyes of humanity a woman, mother of the incarnation of Jesus humanity but not his divinity.  Jesus is one, fully human and divine and not divided in two.  For Jesus coming the angel prepares Mary in her humanity born “full of grace” meaning without sin to be the dwelling place of Jesus, second person of the Trinity, one God for nothing is impossible for God.  Full of grace has no room to allow sin to enter united to Mary’s fiat she remains full of grace for the entirety of her earthly pilgrimage as she is assumed into heaven. 

In the Davidic history the king sat on the throne and to his right side the seat was reserved for the woman.  This woman was not his wife but his mother had her rightful place next to the king.  When the mother of his disciples, James and John approaches Jesus seeking to have her sons sit at the right and left side of Jesus in his kingdom, Jesus corrects them all in announcing “to sit at my right and at my left is not mine to give but is for those for whom it has been prepared by my Father” (Mat 20:23-24) Without disclosing for who this place of honor is reserved Jesus remains silent yet we see in salvation history it is the woman Mary who comes to us in apparitions calling us her children, interceding for us with her son as she did in the wedding of Cana and delivering the good news for those who believe.  Born full of grace she remains for all eternity without sin, the bride of the Father through the Holy Spirit she is now the mother of the children of God.  She is also the chosen dwelling place of the Son of God our Lord Jesus Christ. 

“Thus, says the Lord: Should you build me a house to dwell in?”  It is the Lord, the God of the impossible who has given David his kingdom “settled in his palace, ready to build the Lord a house who has prepared to come into the world through the womb of Mary to dwell in our midst.  This is the “revelation of the mystery kept secret for long ages but now manifested” in the birth of Jesus.  The revelation that God comes to create a dwelling place for himself within our being as one body in the kingdom of God.  We are united one soul to another in the one true God and his kingdom will last forever. 

Though we are not born full of grace, baptism is the first seed of grace to grow into the fullness of grace, that is to be perfect as called to be by the Father and blossom by the gifts of the Holy Spirit into the fruit of salvation.  Grace comes through prayer, ask and you shall receive, seek and you will find not to be hidden but to give light in the darkness of this world.  Grace is a gift to be multiplied as an offering back to the Lord.  When the Lord comes what will we give as testimony for the many blessings in our life?  The Lord recognizes his grace through the works of salvation.  It has been said “the Lord saves” but the Lord cannot save us without us giving our own fiat to his work in us. 

The question is often asked in the world “What is the secret of success?”  The foundation of success comes through obedience, discipline, and work to create the perfect kingdom for heaven and earth.  Obedience recognizes that there is a greater power at work beyond us and we learn to recognize this power.  As a child enters the world it recognizes by its nature the natural law at work in hunger, pain, pleasure and grows to recognize the divine law of beauty, goodness, truth, and unity.  In obedience it unites the two laws into one reality of the love of God and learns to be obedient to the great commandment of love of God and love of neighbor and receives grace.

Obedience to “other” takes ownership through discipline to be one with the other.  It gives its own “fiat” to what is right, just, and merciful.  It learns to recognize sin and reject it rather than be tempted into it.  Discipline is the BFF (Best Friend Forever) of obedience accepting grace and allowing it to transform us from our state of sin into the fullness of grace by the discipline following the Word made flesh, the teachings of the bride, the church and the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  In discipline we learn what is right, just and merciful is not the easy road up the mountain of the Lord yet we walk by faith and discipline to the revelation of truth. 

Thus, what begins as obedience and is put into practice by discipline becomes the plan of salvation by the work put into our daily practice of life.  We work the plan of salvation given to us in our individual and collective calling to be one in the kingdom of God, though there are many gifts of grace we encounter the fullness of grace in the one body of Jesus Christ. Work the plan and we grow into the fullness of grace, into the perfection we are called to live, into the one revelation of our true self in the image of God. 

Seek and you will find, ask and it will be given to you, follow and you will arrive at the fullness of grace.  Let this be our prayer.  Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with you.

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3rd Sunday of Advent – Who are you?

Is. 61:1-2a, 10-11; Lk 1:46-50, 53-54; 1 Thes. 5:16-24; Jn 1:6-8, 19-28

Who are you?  In today’s world of identity politics, the question is “who do you identify as?”  It places the question of self-identity on solely self-determination as the source of reality without question.  Thus, some claim to be female or male, others transgender, LGBTQ, or “Other” among a list of categories.  This introspection on responding to “who are you?” fails the test of reality based only on self-determination.  Born into one gender by all genetic standards a child is asked to self-determine their own identity by choice and explore the possibility of being something other than who they were born to be. 

The revelation of our identity is based on who God created us to be and then go forth and be the best of ourselves.  It is in relationship to him that we come to know our true self and from it our purpose.  Those that find themselves in the role of “Questioning” need to seek to find themselves in God the true source of identity and reality.  The first reality of our identity is recognizing we are created in the image of God.  This sets the precedent for our discovery of ourselves by following the path of recognizing God in our lives and if we must ask the question of “who am I?” then it follows to ask God to reveal himself to us to best know ourselves. 

In today’s gospel we hear how the Jews sent priests and Levites to ask John the Baptist “Who are you?”  His answer was what God created him to be “I am the voice of one crying out in the desert, ‘Make straight the way of the Lord’ as Isaiah the prophet said.”  Who we are, our identity comes from God and in relationship to God’s purpose for our very existence.  To know thyself is to discover our purpose in serving the greater good of humanity and of salvation history.  John the Baptist came to deliver a message and set the stage with the baptism of repentance while waiting for Jesus to reveal himself in the baptism of the Holy Spirit.  We too have a divine purpose for bringing the good news and the greater good that can come from it in our homes, our work and in the church. 

In baptism we have all be anointed and given the robe of salvation with a duty to serve.  We have received the “mantle of justice” to proclaim the greatness of the Lord.  Jesus receives us as his brothers and sisters thus it is fitting for us to receive his mother as our mother by doing the will of the Father.  We are all one in him and in him to recognize “The Almighty has done great things for me and holy is his Name”.  There is power in the name of Jesus. 

What good does it do a person to say “I know myself” without a purpose to be beyond thyself?  Consider that Satan turned the tables on humanity when he tempted Adam and Eve into eating of the forbidden fruit to discover their identity saying “when you eat of it your eyes will be opened and you will be like gods, who know good and evil” (Gen. 3:5).  The temptation to know thyself without knowing God’s divine purpose creates for an indulgence into self absorption or as Eve saw “that the tree was desirable for gaining wisdom” (Gen. 3:6).  The Lord in the first commandment teaches we shall have no other gods but “God alone” yet we have become a secular world in search of being our own gods.  Wisdom does not come from the apple of the world but from the inspiration of God himself. 

Rejoice in who God created us to be.  Rejoice in him who sets captives free, brings us glad tidings, heals our broken hearts, and gives us liberty from the chains that bind us captive in our own sin and sickness.  Rejoice when we recognize God in our presence giving thanks for the blessings of our day, the challenges to fight the good fight when temptation, sickness, or persecution come our way.  Rejoice because we are never alone in our battle and the power of the Word brings us peace in difficult times.  Until we rejoice in our creation in the image of God we are left to ponder in our restlessness or as St. Augustine said “until we rest in him”. 

Advent is our time to ponder where are we in our identity as the image of God in anticipation of his coming. Are we living up to the divine standard set in his word and multiplying the gifts we have received by grace?  In our honesty we recognize how easily it is to lose sight of our greater purpose, to get caught up in serving the world which is never satisfied and forgetting to “Test everything” as we are told in the second reading.  We test everything through prayer meaning “Pray without ceasing” and listen for the “prophetic utterances” that come from God.  In God all things matter! 

Our goal is to be open to God’s utterances to make us “perfectly holy…spirit, soul, and body…blameless for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ”.  This may seem an impossible goal for us as a sinner but consider this.  When we come to receive Jesus in the Eucharist, we receive perfect holiness into our spirit, soul, and body to be transformed into his image in perfect holiness.  Take this moment of perfect holiness to ASK for his holiness and begin to see how our lives will “retain what is good” and “Refrain from every kind of evil”.  God does not promise something he will not deliver.  It is up to us to ask for his grace, mercy, and wisdom to discern and unite our will to his in perfect charity. 

Today We are a people who “Rejoice always” in being the children of God “sent to bring glad tidings” for the conversion of souls.  “In all circumstances give thanks, for this is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus” as we read in Thessalonians.  Not only in the good and prosperous but in the sacrifice and suffering we are called to give thanks by coming to the table of thanksgiving at the altar of God in the Mass.  The question remains for us to answer as posed to John the Baptist, “What do you have to say for yourself?” 

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2nd Sunday of Advent – Prepare the way of the Lord

Is. 40:1-5, 9-11; Ps. 85: 9-14; 2 Peter. 3:8-14; Mk. 1:1-8

Prepare the way of the Lord!  Has the Lord come to us this day?   Have we prepared to receive him?  The Lord sends out his messenger, first it was John the Baptist then came the Lord and now it is our turn to “make straight in the wasteland” of a sinful world “a highway for our God!”  “Let it begin with me” is the appropriate prayer in creating a human highway of souls ascending to the Lord by making straight our own lives as a channel of grace. 

Prepare the way of the Lord as a channel of grace by caring for his people.  The Lord comes in the “other” to be received by how we treat our neighbor.  Grace comes from the Hebrew “to show favor” as the Lord will show favor in us to care for his people.  His grace is the gifts we receive to minister to others of the love of God with spiritual and corporal works of mercy.  As we prepare the way of the Lord in service to others by virtue of our fiat we are being prepared for our own highway to God. 

In scripture we see how angels appeared to his people to prepare their way and give knowledge in the path to follow.  He did this to Mary, to Joseph, and to the disciples.  He can do this for us for he promised even greater things to those willing to serve as instruments in salvation history.  Be the difference.  Invite the Lord to send you his messenger but don’t look to the sky, look to the other who is being a channel of grace for you.  The Lord works through us to bring about his kingdom and manifest his love.  “If today you hear his voice harden not your hearts” (Psalm 95) make a difference. 

In the 1980’s my wife and I were heading the youth ministry at our parish.  We had planned a summer trip for them at Garner State Park.  On our way back home, we stopped in San Antonio at the Alamo.  I told my wife I only had $10 left for gas.  These days we carried no credit cards.  My son needed to go to the bathroom so we went looking for a place and found one.  Inside the stall he said to me “Dad, I found a penny on the floor”.  I looked down to the floor instinctively and saw a wallet.  I opened the wallet and it had no identification, it was empty except for one folded bill.  I pulled it out and realized what it was.  I told my son, “Hey Mark, I found $100 dollars”.  As we made our way back to the group, I told my wife what I had found and was sitting on the wall of the Alamo when from the crowd an old ragged looking man approached me quietly and placed his hand out.  Immediately I thought God provided me money for our needs and now out of all the crowded people this man comes to me.  I pulled out my $10 dollars and gave it to him.  He did not say a word to me, just turned and disappeared back into the crowd.  This was my God encounter of the day.  God comes for our salvation when we are watchful for his coming. 

“The Lord does not delay his promise…but he is patient” with us in the ever presence of the moment seeking our salvation that we may turn from our sins and see the face of the Lord and not perish.  For the Lord time is as if yesterday, today, and tomorrow are all one “one day is like a thousand years and a thousand years like one day”.  This is our time to be mindful of our ways, come to repentance and remain in the spirit of sanctity.  Our wait and bringing about that day of righteousness comes with victory over death in life by “conducting yourselves in holiness and devotion”.  This is our day for us to claim our victory over death by living the sanctity of life.  Live it! 

“Do not ignore this one fact…that the day of the Lord will come like a thief, and the heavens will pass away…and all the elements will be dissolved by fire…”  The Lord has come in history, he is coming this day for us and he will come again at the end of time when time will end and eternal begin.  Eternal glory or eternal fire is coming and this is our time to prepare the way of the Lord and be received into “the new heavens and a new earth” of righteousness or receive the fire the unrighteous.  Prepare the way of the Lord. Jesus is the way.

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