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Thy Kingdom come, and so it has!

The Kingdom of God is at hand in the “multiplication” of the sacraments as parents, sponsors, and children prepare for 1st Communion at St. Francis Xavier in La Feria, Texas, and it is already at hand.  The gift of the kingdom we hold as a treasure unlike the treasure of the world is everlasting.  Earthly treasure makes a poor man rich and a rich man poor because it is limited and in the exchange some gain and others lose within limited resources.  Heavenly treasure is seen in the multiplication of the loaves, as Jesus makes visible the miracle of his creation as a gift in the lives of those who come to receive the sacred now transformed into temples of the sacred kingdom.  Faith is in action, in obedience, and in the joy to be called children of the Most High. 

The Kingdom is celebrated in the Universal Church and in the domestic church at home when we gather together to pray, share a meal of thanksgiving, and celebrate life. 

Viva Cristo Rey! 

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Third Sunday of Lent 2017

Ex 17:3-7; Rom 5:1-2, 5-8; Jn 4:5-42

Where you focus your heart will follow.  This week I had the blessing and honor of baptizing two children and in the celebration after there were some newborn infants among the extended family.   The joy of being able to hold an infant was seen in the gazing eyes upon each child, both in a tangible sense of growing love in the eyes and warmth in the arms as each person took turns carrying a child.  At the moment a focused heart on that child was all that was important. 

Lent is that invitation to have a focused heart for “the love of God has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit” and it does not disappoint.  Jesus is focused on our salvation waiting our response.  This Lenten journey is an invitation to refocus from distractions and temptations through a discipline of abstinence, fasting, and “other forms of penance, especially works of charity and exercises of piety” (Canon 1253).  Focus on the face of God on the cross for our sins, on the face of God in the poor, homeless, orphan, widow and the greater sense of suffering in the world with love that leads to acts of charity. 

Focus on the deeper sense of sinfulness in the silence of our hearts revealed through scripture study, in prayer, and in communion.  In the Lenten discipline we can enter into the Exodus experience of the people who hunger and thirst and are tempted in weakness to harden their hearts away from God.  Our awareness of suffering is a challenge of faith but also an opportunity to turn to God in repentance, humility, and trust in God’s mercy.  Do you believe? 

In contrast the Samaritan woman living in sin had faith to believe.  The encounter is with a stranger, a Jew who does not follow the cultural norms of avoiding a Samaritan but engages her.  Jesus’ thirst for water is both an act of humanity and divinity as he prepares her heart for living water after confessing her sinful lifestyle.  Jesus arouses her faith as she responds, “Are you greater than our father Jacob?”  How often we encounter someone of a different faith but share a belief in one God.  Is not our search for the same living water and our encounter an opportunity to draw water from the well of faith in the other?  In dialogue a Christian, a Jew, and a Muslim is an encounter with “a spring of water welling up to eternal life”.  The faith of our ancestors meets at the mountain of God to do the will of the Father. 

Our mountain is the altar of sacrifice in the Eucharist where we offer our sacrifice of worship and thanksgiving in spirit and truth to “acclaim the rock of our salvation”.  With joyful praise our hope and focus is to turn to the one who says, “I have called you friends” (John 15:15) and invite him to stay with us.  St. Thomas calls friendship a virtue which is an excellence of attention to love of God and love of neighbor. 

In the celebration event following the baptisms there was plenty of deserts to eat.  One young man asked his mother if it was ok to cheat a little and have some desert.  Apparently he had given up sweats for Lent.  The mother responded, “that’s between you and God.”  His focus shifted to a conversation and he passed on the temptation.  Let us keep our focus on him in trials and temptation and listen to the voice in our hearts where the spirit dwells ready to well up our souls with spiritual food for eternity. 

 

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Reality is not a pinball game

Reality is not a pinball game in search of a prize.

In search of objective reality begins and ends with God in the life cycle of a creator and a creature transformed into his reality behind the veil of mystery waiting for the rapture of love as a gift not a pinball prize. 

To ask, “What is real?” or to imperatively declare “Get real!” is to search for identity in the real presence of God, not within the subjective reality that begins and ends in the mind of a fools pinball game launched into random chance of striking success as the ball becomes a target itself by set barriers that propel it into new directions in hopes of a prize only to inevitably fall helplessly back to its starting point for a new beginning with the same mindset that propelled it from the start in search of the prize. 

Objective reality is in the mystery of “Other”, God is other, and in the unity of a triune God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit we encounter him in the other before us in our presence, in the innocent child, the sacrifice of a parent, the sick, the elderly, the poor and the hungry, and more visibly in the veil of the Eucharist in silent adoration and in the unity of the assembly gathered for worship and thanksgiving as a sacrifice of love, it all becomes revealed in truth, goodness, beauty, and love, the true nature of self as an identity through him, with him, and in him, the crown of glory, a gift not a prize.  

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Ash Wednesday at OLLU

Ash Wednesday 2017

1 Jl 2:12-18; 2 Cor 5:20-6:2; Mt 6:1-6, 16-18

In an acceptable time I heard you, and on the day of salvation I helped you.  Behold now is a very acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation.” 

Today we fulfill the 1st reading, history is alive in us his ambassadors.  We assemble at Our Lady of the Lake University as those elders in professors, students, staff, family, and friends to proclaim our faith.  We make an altar of sacrifice as a people of God and God cannot deny himself in his righteousness.

Christ fulfills the sacrifice we are to receive in the Eucharist for righteousness that we may receive the gift of his mercy.  What is our gift on the altar?  A confession of faith, the recognition of our sinfulness, obedience to his will so we may be his ambassadors to the world.  Through us, with us and in us we become the righteousness of God in him.  This is our purpose and our destiny through the gifts he wills to multiply and spread each according to his providence.

South Texas is a windy area, especially if you go out to the gulf.  Imagine being a sailboat out in the waters of the Gulf.  The boat is your soul.  Where is your soul headed?  It is being guided by the sail of faith.  What is the wind that drives it?  The wind we seek is that of the Holy Spirit.  It strengthens our faith and grows stronger through the sacramental life on the journey.  There is also another wind that can misguide us like a hurricane it can enter our sail and cause havoc.  It is the wind of temptation.  Our destiny is the shore of salvation but there also an anchor that can stop our mission.  It is the anchor of sin.  This image was given to us by professor Dr. John Bergsma, Franciscan University of Steubenville in a Deacon’s conference.  What anchor of sin has been dragging us down?   Behold now is a very acceptable time to rend our hearts and say “Father be merciful to me for I have sinned.”

There is another anchor Christ is ready to give us.  It is the anchor of salvation in Christ, “sure and firm, and which reaches into the interior behind the veil (Heb. 6:19).  This is the encounter we seek in the “secret” of our daily actions of prayer, generosity, kindness, forgiveness, patience, and celebration of life and love.  He sees it all with a just reward.

This a great challenge of our times, in a culture that hungers for individuation, recognition, self-actualization, and empowerment to “be all I can be”.  Today God’s call is “Be all I created you to be.”  Today let us be his image in the world.

As we prepare for this Lenten season let us keep in mind the Church guidance.  Fasting is one full meal per day and two small meal “sufficient to maintain strength”.  Eating between meals breaks the fast but drinking liquids does not.  Canon 1253 however allows “substitute of other forms of penance, especially works of charity and exercises of piety”.  “Abstinence refers to the eating of meat of warm blooded animals (beef, lamb, chicken, pork).  Ash Wednesday and Friday of the Passion and Death of Our Lord are days we do both fast and abstinence.  All Fridays in Lent are days of abstinence”. (Diocese of Brownsville 2017 Guidelines for Lent)

In every action there is a consequence and accountability.  In the natural law of physics it says that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.  Our sin nature has consequences, some we see immediately and other we fail to see until later.  Sometimes to our heartache we recognize the impact of our sin in those we love the most.  There is a song that gets repeated in many homes.  The story is of a father who in his demands from work and bills spends little time with his son.  The child grows up and moves away, gets married and enters into his own demanding lifestyle.  The father wishes he would visit but the son tells him they will get together some day, not now.  Recall the song?  “Cats in the cradle”.

“And the cat’s in the cradle and the silver spoon; Little boy blue and the man in the moon.  ‘When you coming home, son?’ “I don’t know when; But we’ll get together then, dad; We’re gonna have a good time then.”  (Harry F. Chapin, Sandy Chapin)

We may think of the sin we have done but often forget what we have failed to do, the sin of neglect.  Today the Lord reminds us he is above the natural law.  He is in the supernatural and his name is Mercy to give us a clean heart.

In the beginning of the song “Cats in the cradle” the son seeks the father and in the end the father seeks the son.  In our lives it begins with the Heavenly Father wanting us and we push away like the prodigal son.  In the end we his sons and daughters need Him and he does not push away.  He embraces us.  Let us receive Him today.

No return, no regrets, make it count!

(Distribution of ashes at Our Lady of the Lake University, La Feria, Texas; March 1, 2017)

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Sophia filled with grace in the Word

Once was a “word”, a friend of Sophia able to carry meaning sent forth to generate life and come to rest in understanding. 

A life of relationship and unity of purpose to reveal truth and true meaning was defined in the word.

The word’s flight ascended higher above and descended deeper within creating a bond between other words as soul mates on a journey of understanding. 

Then the enemy comes who undefined any meaning by redefining a flight of meanings through individuation, isolation, and rationalization in a complexity of contextual uses ever changing. 

The intent of the enemy is confusion in an essence of purposeless subject and purposeful objects for power to be gained in one instant and discarded the next for a new intent ever fleeting. 

The “new” word wills to cannibalize Sophia into prostitution; with image distorting mirrors of vanity for the kingdom of One…hell. 

The original word filled with grace and beauty allowed Sophia to unite faith and reason to ascend to heaven. 

The “new” word is symbolic in obscene gesture with self-defined technical innuendos to distort meaning in flight through reflective colored lenses. 

The enemy hears himself alone.

Our hope is in the hollowed Word made flesh and not the flesh filled words that grackle in meaningless noise. 

The silent word has landed and lowered the anchor into our soul sure and firm breaking into consciousness the lost meaning, the word revealed in its’ full splendor. 

The original Word; 

The Word made flesh.

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History is buried alive!

History is buried alive!

It cries out to those that walk the earth unaware of the strands of life reaching out from the earth to rescue the walking dead.

Guiding the pilgrim through trails of safe passage and from the trials of repeated suffering it offers its wisdom in pain.

Found in the voices of prophets, philosophers, theologians, teachers, parents, and the voice in the desert it is apart from contemporary views and trends in the mainstream of experience.

Linked in the science of evolutionary life living within the ancestral DNA link from the past to the present it calls for perfection of mind, body, and spirit.

It is the kerygma, a proclamation of salvation announcing the resurrection from the dead and the kingdom to come.

Buried in scripture it waits for discovery, to nourish the soul and to bring light to the spirit in the image of its creator.

It is the Word incarnate in the Eucharist to be incarnated in humanity and bring life everlasting.

The path less traveled has laid the trail of footsteps to follow in the interior life where we exist in Him, alive!

“Incarnatio Vivo”

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Third Sunday of Ordinary Time 2017

Is. 8: 23-9; 1 Cor. 1:10-13, 17; Mt. 4:12-23

To the universal church, wherever you go God is there.  Have you received a warm embrace from heaven today?  Perhaps it came through the hug of a spouse, a child, a parent or perhaps in a word that reaches into the heart.  Perhaps it is simply an act of kindness when it reaches into the interior as a gift of grace from the Holy Spirit. 

Having attended the Deacon’s retreat for deacons and their wives at the Basilica of Our Lady of San Juan del Valle in San Juan, Texas this past weekend, our retreat master was Fa. Greg Labus.  Fa. Greg focused on the kerygma, which is the apostolic “proclamation” of salvation through Jesus Christ, coming into our lives.  It is founded as the simple but profound message, “Do I have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ?”  This is a common calling from our separated brothers and sisters from other denominations but somewhere between the call and the summit, Jesus Christ in the Eucharistic celebration of the Mass we have not dispelled the darkness that hovers over the “land west of the Jordan” our land in a culture of death.  Is “The Lord my light and my salvation”? 

The Catholic call for a “New Evangelization” began with (Saint) Pope John Paul II, continued with Benedict XVI (Emeritus), and now Pope Francis challenges us to be witnesses to the light.  The challenge is not anything new but a return to a process of evangelization that begins with that embrace from heaven in the knowledge of Jesus Christ.  

We also reflect in today’s readings from 1 Corinthians that what is current among Christianity is not new.  We could place ourselves back in time and say, “I belong to Paul the Evangelicals;” or “I belong to Apollos the Baptists” or “I belong the Cephas the rock of the Catholic church” or simply “I belong to Christ in the Mega churches, no sacraments just Christ and me.  Yes what is new is not new.  It remains a struggle for unity of faith when we separate Christ into pieces and claim to have Him for ourselves.  We want to hold onto Him when it is He who holds us in his embrace. 

Paul’s writing to the Corinthians does not resolve the potential division when he says, “Christ did not send me to baptize but to preach the gospel”.  Is Paul minimizing the sacrament of baptism and potentially all the other sacraments in favor of the Kerygma?  Is he the founder of proclaiming the Word as “scripture only” authority?  A definite “No”!  Paul is understood in the historical contextual meaning of the Word in place and time.  Corinthians was known for its sea side “C’est la vie” such is life filled with sin and corruption as a major hub of commerce.  Baptism was the opening of the heart to Christ to allow the gift of the Holy Spirit after repentance of our sins.  Thus the soul was then receptive to the kerygma through the gifts of the Holy Spirit, those infused virtues to grow in faith, hope, and love.  Paul understood the baptized as a “child” of faith in need of catechesis in order to grow in the word or division would prevail among the community.  

What was then is now as more and more people claim to be atheist according to gallop polls and as a culture of death rises in genocide of the unborn, and as science races to be the first in man’s search to clone himself as his own God.  Meanwhile, the essential core of human goodness, truth, beauty, and love is shattered and replaced by a core value in separation of church and state. The new evangelization is a need to go forth into the world with the kerygma, the “proclamation of the word” to the unbaptized and the baptized to grow in their faith, hope, and love through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. 

The kerygma is a call to conversion in which we evangelize before the mind is prepared to be catechized to live a life sacramentalized least we become scandalized when faith and reason don’t meet with truth, goodness, beauty, and love.  The process of conversion, the kerygma is to be a voice in our times for truth, goodness, beauty and love comes in the person of Jesus Christ.  The witness of the “sacramentalized” is beyond any preaching as pastors, parents, or friends.  It is being the light of Jesus to others, to know Him and to bring others into an encounter with Him.  Then our sacraments in how we “deal” with Him become how we allow Him to deal with us. 

As fishers of souls we must begin anew with our evangelization, not in the practice of “catch and release” but in the call to “come home”.  If we catch and baptize only to release to a culture of death our institutions will continue to decrease in faith in souls who do not hunger for Him.  Christ himself in the church, the sacraments, and the faithful is always present.  Wherever you go He is there.  Catch and release becomes baptized paganism for souls who appear for baptisms, weddings, and funerals, but whose lifestyle and values appear more secular than a testimony of faith and life in Jesus Christ. 

It has become a tradition to attribute to St. Francis of Assisi the expression, “Preach always, and speak when necessary” but there appears to be no official record to verify this.  Still in the spirit of St. Francis of Assisi I would say, “Preach always by your witness and proclaim the kerygma”, that is the whole life and ministry of Jesus Christ by your faith in action. 

As we reached the second day of our retreat we were “sent forth” with a message from our bishop, Daniel Flores.  He reminded us of the three pillars of the church, preach, worship, and charity.  We preach the Word that leads to the summit of worship in the Mass with our acts of charity.  Today as yesterday we have many poor in our churches, homes, and among the homeless.  Yes that includes those without the means of food, clothing, and shelter but we also face the greatest poverty in our community, that of spiritual poverty who have not accepted the embrace of heaven. 

That today we hear his voice and feel his embrace.  Come home to holiness in Jesus Christ.  Come home to the fullness of truth, goodness, beauty, and love.  Come home to the universal church in his body, his sacrifice, his love, always present.  Come home to Jesus Christ.  Wherever you are, He is there.     

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Mission Eternal

In the beginning God IS and I am not…and “Holy is His Name, and Holy is His Name”.  Now there came a time in the year of the Lord he destined out of love to call ME into Mission Eternal.  Created from humanities creation, Father and Mother he called them to be for ME in common union with them, the world, and HIM.  Present as he is wherever I am He is to be there with purpose, divine providential purpose, Mission Eternal.  How can this be that moisture, dust, and air become body, blood, and spirit in the image of beauty, goodness, truth, and love?   Devine Will Is!

God’s Devine Will, free to release, to bind, and multiply.  Release ME now, what joy, gifts, mission eternal awaits the free will; now the journey is in progress.    Now is the time given, respond now, yesterday is gone to memory and tomorrow lies in hope and mental vision.  “My heart is steadfast, God; my heart is steadfast.  I will sing and chant praise.”  (Psalm 108:2)

Released is the freedom to act, meaning every action carries ME into mission eternal with accountability, communion, and time. 

Accountability to self, neighbor, and God for in every action there is a transcendent reaction.  As the rock skips over the water, the ripples extend beyond the seen and unseen.  Now be “rock” with keys upon which “the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail”. (Mathew: 16:18)  This is the freedom called to be in harmony. 

Communion with Saints and Souls enter in to common union through the Holy Spirit with the Father in the Son to be one. 

Time is God’s time the Alpha and the Omega in the fullness of all grace and truth now present:

“Bind” is the power to reject evil and triumph.  Love triumphs anger, resentment, and injury.  Abandonment into Devine Will triumphs lust, laziness, and licentiousness the sins of the intellect.  Servitude triumphs over greed, envy, and pride the sins of the emotions.  Fortitude triumphs over fear, failure, and fraud with the power of fire over the sins of the will in the flesh.  “We will triumph with the help of God, who will trample down our foes.” (Psalm 108:14)

Multiply the gifts and graces of every birth, talent, and heavenly treasure. 

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For Holy Matrimony

Beloved a prayer for us!  Our God who has blessed us with this gift of each other in sacred unity of love both in the seen and unseen come to us in this mystery to see your face in each other; to hold your hand as we hold hands; to feel your embrace as we embrace and your gentle kiss as we kiss. 

How I look forward to the silence from all the distractions that prevent hearing the sound of our hearts in a musical beat with the rhythm of two instruments but one melody.  The melody does not seek understanding it is self-evident as one love.  In its simplicity the vision is clear.  Love goes out and love returns and with each beat it is strengthened “as an anchor of the soul, sure and firm”. 

The anchor is lifted and the journey has set sail with the wind of the spirit of God to land on the shore of salvation.  The veil is lifted and as bride and groom there is a radiance of light and eternal joy.  Light is a blending of many colors of life which beneath its veil lies our faith, hope, and love into this light we enter and our joy is complete.  Amen. 

 

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Blessing Prayer

BLESSING PRAYER

Bless o’ Lord the work of your hands in your servants to be an instrument in the seen and unseen.  Thank you that you hear the prayer of the faithful and in the mystery of life bring us your truth, goodness, beauty and love for we all are sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, fathers and mothers in the care of this world.  May we serve you in gratitude with courage and trust united with all the angels and saints and our Blessed Mother Mary in consecration to Jesus Sacred Heart and Mary’s Immaculate Heart.  We ask this blessing for the power and glory are yours our Lord God now and always.  Amen.

 

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