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Easter Triduum – Happy Holy Week

Easter Triduum is upon us for a three-day commemoration of the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.  It is the Lord’s victory over sin and death.  It is however not only a time to look back but also to bring forward that same passion, death, and resurrection into our lives, a cleansing of our own sin, and a renewal of our baptismal promises to live a life of holiness. 

Easter Triduum includes Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday in the Easter Vigil.  Jesus takes the Jewish feast of Passover and transforms it into Holy Thursday with his own body and blood in the bread and wine we celebrate each time we come to Mass.   Jesus makes of this feast his own last Supper before his death and the first Supper of the new kingdom he is bringing into the world.  This night the Church recognizes its call to be servants of its people by the washing of the feet.  The evening is given to time in Adoration till midnight to be with the Lord in anticipation of his death.  This night the church is being born not simply as an institution but within the hearts of God’s people. 

Good Friday recalls the Lord’s Passion in which he hung on the cross from noon till 3:00 when he breathed his last.  It is the only day we do not celebrate Mass as we pause to honor the Lord’s death in which he descends to the dead to set captives free.  We also mourn with him our separation from God by the nails of our sins.  Jesus final words on the cross, “Father, into your hands, I commend my spirit”.  Jesus’ self-surrender, no one takes it from him but he lays it down for us.  We are called to self-surrender to God and hold nothing back.  This act is a daily struggle to overcome the concupiscence of our own passions and carry the cross with love.  This night we receive Holy Communion of previously consecrated hosts as the only time the Church does not celebrate the Mass. 

Holy Saturday is our “quiet time” as the Lord was laid in the tomb before his resurrection.  The silence of the day is transformed into the victory over death as the evening begins with the lighting of the Paschal Candle and the singing of the Exultet in recalling the Lord’s sacrifice and victory.  The darkness of the evening however gives over to the “light of Christ” in his resurrection from the dead bringing that light to all who had died before and to all the living in anticipation of being raised up to the glory of heaven.  This night the stone of the tomb has rolled open to reveal the emptiness of the tomb, the emptiness of a life without Jesus Christ.  It is the night of rejoicing and exultation with a return to the singing of the Alleluia!  

Easter has arrived!  A new day has dawned upon God’s people.  The glory of his name is exulted above every other name.  He is risen!  He is risen and we are called to rise up to be heirs of his kingdom remaining true to our faith by word and deed.  This is the love, mercy and glory of God poured out on his people.  This is also the great joy from God for those who have responded to his sacrifice and his calling.  The work of Lent becomes the fruit of our salvation.  It is not by our merit but by his grace.  Not only is Jesus risen from the dead but by his rising he raises us up with himself.  He is risen to bring salvation to the world.  He is risen to heal, redeem and sanctify our souls.  He is risen to fill us with himself that we may be one with the same sacrificial love that is ready to surrender to God’s will.  He is risen and will fulfill the promise that we will also rise again from sin to holiness, from mortality to immortality, from the limits time and space to being outside of time and space, from death to eternal life. 

Praise be to God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit! Happy Holy Week!  Happy Easter!

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Palm Sunday of the Lord’s Passion

Lk. 19:28-40; Is 50: 4-7; Ps. 22:8-9, 17-20, 23-24; Phil. 2:6-11; Lk. 22:14—23:56

It has begun, the beginning of the end so that a new day may arise in heaven and on earth.  The Lord’s Passion begins to bring an end to death, not the death of the body but an end to the death of the soul so that a new day arises to unite with Jesus “the first born among the dead”.  The Lord’s Passion is his sacrifice as a sin offering for our sins that we may receive mercy and forgiveness.  The Lord’s Passion is also the way of the cross for us to follow in his footsteps as we carry our own cross and make of ourselves a sacrifice for love of God.  It is in giving that we receive mercy, love, and new life. 

While many are ready to claim victory by riding on the coat-tails of Jesus’ passion they avoid to take up the cross that comes with following him.  It is the misconception that “Jesus suffered so that I don’t have to” proclaiming a gospel of prosperity filled only with blessings and avoiding the cross.  Jesus did not promise his disciples a life without suffering and history proves the great suffering and sacrifice of their lives as his apostles to the world.  Why would we assume anything less for ourselves?  Jesus proved that with faith we can have the courage to not be afraid of the cross, face our sacrifice and trust in God who hears and answers our prayers. 

In scripture we get the basic story of the crucifixion without to agonizing suffering of the Lord.  In the movie The Passion we get a greater sense of the Lord’s suffering, his excruciating pain “drop by drop” drowning in his own body fluids, lifting himself up by the nails on his feet to breathe.  It was the most humiliating form of death turning the pain of the body into the passion of the soul, transformed into the love of the Spirit and ending in the mercy of redemption for humanity. 

Crucifixion is the Lord’s “Passover” from the dying to self in the mortal body into the presence of the Father.  We will undergo our own “Passover” from death of our humanity to judgment in the mercy of God for eternity.  

The life of Passover begins with the Passover through all the stages of life from infancy to our mortal death.  The final Passover is into eternity.  In each stage of life, we leave something behind but we also carry something into the next stage in the formation of the soul.  Do you recall the bedtime prayer “No I lay myself to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep, if I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take”.  Some believe this is an awful prayer to contemplate death each night.  There is as part of living that has an element of death every day.  Death can also be a welcome companion.  Who would want to go back and do it all over again in life?  We may want things to have been different but a “restart” is a little like asking for a heavier cross to bear.  The restart is not going back but going forward with the mercy of God.  This is our Passover. 

There is a human sentiment that the more you enforce justice the less you display mercy and the more mercy is shown the more you suspend justice.  Do you agree?  Divine mercy and justice are not either/or but both/and happening together.  It is the love of Jesus atoning for our sins received by the Father through mercy in the cross.  It involves all of the Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit to save one human, to save you and me.  Divine justice through Jesus raises humanity to be in union with the Trinity as an act of love and mercy. 

In the Seven Last Words (7 phares on the cross) by Jesus he pours out his mercy.  We will reflect on his love and mercy in these statements. 

The seven phrases: “Father forgive them, they know not what they do”; “Today you will be with me in Paradise”; “Woman, behold your son…Behold your mother”; “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”; “I thirst!”; “It is accomplished; “Father, into your hands, I commend my spirit.” 

  1. “Father, forgive them, they know not what they do.”  Abba – daddy vs. Father – Jesus uses the formal name as an expression of an obedient Son.  Forgive “Them” includes now “us”, all we do to the Father; the effect of our sin on us, on others, and on our relationship to the Father.  The words “know not what they do” imply some innocence or ignorance.  Sin is about knowing, being voluntary and willful.  This however speaks that on judgement day we will know all the effect we had good or bad in totality.  We look at things in microcosm but God sees everything as it is connected to each other, the tapestry of life.  Consider someone you went out of your way to help like the good Samaritan. The difference you made is apparent for the immediate but God sees all the ripple effect of our act of mercy.  Scott Hawn quotes “Jesus paid a debt he didn’t owe because we owed a debt we couldn’t pay”.  We all need to seek mercy for what we know and don’t know what we have done. 
  • “Today you will be with me in Paradise” (Lk. 23:23) When the “good thief” says “remember me” it is more than just “don’t forget”, it is a cry for forgiveness, it is seeking a lasting change, an act of conversion on his “death bed”.  What is the name of the “good thief”?  His name is St. Dismus.  A saint!  He lived his last moment on the cross as an act of sanctity compared to the other thief.  Not only does he confess his guilt but he does a good work in admonishing the sinner “have you no fear”; and he makes a public profession of faith.  So, did he steal heaven?  Yes and No.  a) When Jesus dies, he “descended to the dead/hell” (purgatory) and purgatory is both the mercy and justice of God.  b) some translations say he descended into hell; hell is the generic word for two places, one is purgatory where there is hope of heaven and the second is the place of the damned where there is no hope.  Ther is no reason for Jesus to go to the damned.  They are lost.  Dismus was saved from the hell of the damned.  c) We can also say where God is there is paradise. So, Jesus promises Dismus that today he would be with him in paradise.  We tend to think it is either mercy or justice; the more justice you show the less room for mercy and the more mercy the more you suspend justice.  Justice marries mercy on the cross to be one act of divine love.  Confessing both forgives and heals opening the door to God’s grace.  Divine mercy is our medicine. 
  • “Woman behold your son…Behold your mother” The love of Jesus for his mother was to care for her even in his dying moments at the same time entrusting on her God’s children to be not only the disciple’s mother but our mother as well.  Jesus gave Mary a purpose to continue on for years after his death.  Sometimes when we lose a loved one, we feel we have no purpose in living especially if it is those closest to us but God is not done with us yet.  We too have a purpose even to our dying moments to bring forgiveness, healing, reconciliation, and peace to everyone we love, to be that witness of love and mercy.  As the song by a group called Super Chicks says to those who remain after we lose a loved one “What do we do next?  We live, we love, we forgive and never give up because the days we are given are gifts from above and today we remember to live and to love”.  This is living in the mercy of God.
  • My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”  “Eloi, Eloi, Lama Sabachthani”?  It is possible that Jesus’ humanity questioned God the Father in his despair and agony with an expression of abandonment.  It is also true that in our humanity we question God in our suffering “where are you God”. Jesus being fully human expressed a human emotion of sorrow.  It is also true that Jesus is expressing his hope and belief in God the Father by quoting the beginning of Psalm 22.  It would be like us saying “The Lord is my shepherd”.  It implies the whole prayer not just the beginning.  Psalm 22 begins with an expression of lost hope and suffering but ends in victory.  Jesus often in the bible refers to God the Father as “Abba” a personal connection of love as “daddy”.  Here however, Jesus calls God “Eloi” meaning “Father” with a sense of separation from the Father.  It is the same sense of separation Mother Teresa of Calcutta expressed in her diary.  Jesus also felt abandoned by his disciples.  We too can accept God’s divine purpose for us in our suffering, trusting his Divine mercy that this too will be for his glory and our salvation. 
  • “I thirst” We cannot minimize the suffering of Jesus on the cross and his asphyxiation, struggle to breathe and thirst for drink.  We also cannot simply humanize his words and not look deeper to his message.  Jesus taught us to hunger and thirst for righteousness and what would be more valid than a call for righteousness on the cross.  Who would not feel “this is not fair”.  Who would say that it is fair for one person to pay for the crime of another and yet Jesus does that for us. Jesus prayed in Gethsemani “Father, remove this cup from me; yet not my will but yours be done”.  Jesus also thirsts for consolation.  His mother and disciple are a consolation by his side.  Today Jesus thirsts for you and I to come to be at his side.  Jesus thirsts for a more intimate communion with you and I.  This is Divine mercy to be one with God. 
  • “It is finished”.  The gospel writers avoid getting into the detail of the crucifixion perhaps because of their own sensitivity of how grewsome it was and also because most of the disciples stayed away from witnessing all of it.  The movie “The Passion” however does a great work of recreating for us how bloody and painful it is to go through a crucifixion.  How much could Jesus have known all that he would suffer in detail before it happened perhaps, he was spared from this.  Jesus however had the power to surrender his life, it was not taken from him.  It is finished, all that the Father asked of him.  It is finished revealing the love and glory of the Father to humanity.  It is finished, to do the will of the one who sent him.  In the end of our life, we hope we can also join Jesus in proclaiming it is finished with a sense of peace and joy.  We have overcome the cross of our lives, our suffering and all the obstacles that we came across.  I have done all that I could do as a parent, spouse, employee, in a career and have a sense of completion.  We trust in God that others will carry forward the mission as disciples.  However, Good Friday makes no sense without Easter Sunday.  We may have finished our work having children but we hope to be grandparents; our time is done here in this work but the work continues.  There can be no “new beginning without the old being finished. 
  • “Father, into your hands, I commend my spirit”.  Jesus’ self-surrender, no one takes it from him but he lays it down.  We are called to self-surrender to God and hold nothing back.  We are called to live in imitation of Jesus. What are we holding back wanting to remain in control of, our family, our wealth, our pride, our “self-actualization”, “look at me”?  Look at him not me!   How about we surrender to the future of the unknown with trust in God, placing everything into his hands.  The disciples did not know the future after Jesus’ death but they trusted and waited for the Lord to reveal himself to them.  Jesus can also reveal himself to us in mysterious ways when we seek, we shall find.  Waiting until our final days to offer ourselves to God is a life poorly lived.  We are to offer ourselves daily and we can close our day praying “into your hands I commend my spirit.”  Live with the end in mind.

Conclusion: 

The Lord’s Passion is not an end to human suffering but the way of the cross to eternal life.  At the same time, Jesus went about healing, teaching, praying, and instructing his disciples.  He even raised Lazarus from the dead only for him to later die again.  Jesus’ ministry was primarily bringing us a renewal of life in God the Trinity.  God who seems unknowable becomes knowable through Jesus. 

On the cross Jesus the Son images the Father’s perfect love as not only a just Father but a merciful Father as one in the same with the Son.  This is the work of redemption done by all three persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit bringing everlasting joy.  We play a role in redemption when we join our cross to the cross of Jesus as St. Paul states in his letter to the Colossians 1:24 “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh, I am filling up what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ on behalf of his body which is the church…” What is lacking is our part in carrying that message of salvation, his mercy, and love.  Christ is waiting on us. 

“The mercy of God is love reaching out to misery”, the misery of humanity by its’ fallen nature.  Surrender our misery to his love and mercy will follow us all the days of our life until we come into his glory in heaven.

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5th Sunday of Lent – Gracious and Merciful

Is 43: 16-21; Ps. 126:1-6; Phil. 3:8-14; Jn. 8:1-11

Gracious and merciful is the Lord to those who seek him… “with your whole heart”.  With God there is no bartering, no compromise, no holding back, only a complete giving of our ourselves heart, mind, and will.  This is impossible to do alone in our humanity but with God all things are possible if we just trust in him, he will bring us closer to himself for that is his will.  God is so gracious and honors our humanity that we live in freedom to choose to give ourselves to him or to remain captives of our limited capacities.  God is also so merciful that in our freedom to fail as often as we do, he waits to give us his mercy if we return to him. 

Gracious is the Lord in making all things new, merciful in his love to forgive us of our sins.  God does not ask of us anything less than he gives us of himself.  This was the example and message of Jesus on the cross.  There is something “new” through Jesus and it is the way to the love of God. 

With his whole heart God rescues his people of old opening by “way in the sea” he save them.  All creation obeys him and he does it for you and I with his whole heart.  This is the love of a Father who is perfect in all things.  The Lord does great things for us but often we lack that same love of heart for him.  Where is our thanksgiving?  Where is our joy for his gift of our life?  We have set aside the first and greatest commandment to love God with all our heart, mind, and soul in order to live our lives our way. 

To come to Christ with our whole heart puts everything else in perspective.  It makes everything else easier to accept. St. Paul says he considers everything else “rubbish” in comparison to the “supreme good of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord”.  Life begins as if it was all about us until we come to realize it is all about God and his plan of salvation for us.  We build a treasure on earth only to see it age, decay, and need to be replaced until we end up giving away what is left.  What we are left with is our hope for heaven if we have lived a godly life.   To be godly is to give our whole heart to him and he does to us. 

Gracious and merciful is Jesus to the woman “caught in adultery”.  The accusers claim righteousness by law but Jesus makes clear if we are held to the law, it then applies equally to all present, “Let the one among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.” None of us are righteous under the law and we all are subject to death from our sin.  We live by the mercy of God who forgives us of our sins if we also follow his will to avoid sin.  The will of God is always to call us to perfection.  Perfection can only happen when we join our will to his will, put on the mind of God by his revelation given to us in his word, and surrender our whole heart to his love.  As we have heard in the past “Jesus cannot save us without us” and we certainly cannot save ourselves by ourselves. 

It has often been speculated what did Jesus write on the ground with his finger?  Some suspect the sins of those present but perhaps something brief and appropriate would be “mercy comes to the merciful”.  They were ready to condemn the woman but in doing so were they ready to hold themselves to the same standard?  Apparently not! We all need the mercy of God and he is gracious in pardoning us if we humble ourselves and ask. 

I always find it interesting how many will judge themselves as “a good person” with little sense of being a sinner.  Any act of free will to sin is justified as “being human” with the excuse that “no one is perfect”.  Then there is the weakest of all excuses “I have not killed anybody”.  Somehow this now sets the sinner free by normalizing all other behavior.  Sadly, what is lost is the truth that all humanity is a fallen nature in which we are seeking to escape our sinfulness by regaining our sanctity, becoming holy as God is holy.  Our “normal” is not God’s normal for us. 

Lent is God’s call to come and receive his mercy.  We demonstrate our true desire for it by our active participation in prayer, fasting and almsgiving, by reflecting on his passion with the Stations of the Cross, and in our commitment to the sacramental life of the Church.  Mercy is not simply forgiveness, it is a cleansing of our soul, a healing of our wounds, and a renewal of our love for God.  In mercy we are made whole by the gracious love of God.  God’s graciousness is that we all become his saints, fully human but also divine in his image. 

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4th Sunday of Lent – Lost and Found

Joshua 5: 9a, 10-12; Ps. 34:2-7; 2 Cor. 5:17-21; Lk. 15:11-32

Lost and found is at the heart of today’s gospel but it “lost” to the extent that the soul is dead, dead by sin, dead by choice, dead by consequence of God’s righteousness.  The soul that was dead has returned to life by the sacrifice of Jesus, found his way back by consequence of his own suffering from rejecting God the Father, found his way back by confessing the truth of his sin.  This is the human condition in which we struggle between our will and the call to follow God’s will. 

The first reading reminds us of the Israelites who were lost in the desert, after suffering the “reproach of Egypt” and the hardness of their hearts, but now entering the land of Cana reconciled to the Lord.  The Lord is merciful in search of hearts who desire his mercy.  The mercy of the Lord cannot be taken for granted simply because we were once baptized into the Lord but now live a life that is self-centered insensitive to the other and the key “other” is God. 

In a culture of death, God has been evicted from the public square, rejected by agnostics and atheists, ignored by the “spiritual” minded, and taken for granted by those who claim to believe in a God but have little understanding of who God is.  These are lost in themselves in the desert they have created for themselves.  The promise land is close but they choose to turn and go their own way. 

As baptized Catholics we can very much be like the two sons in the gospel parable.  We can turn away from God and live a life governed by our own will without the grace of God’s blessing.  We see it in both sons, each driven by their own will.  The son that left the Father to indulge in his passions suffered the greatest consequences as we do when we go about living our life without going to Church, without even a prayer.  It is all about us and our passions.  The son who remained was the complaint one but his heart was resentful of the Father, angry at his brother, and bitter with his state in life.  We too can be faithfully compliant claiming “I’m a good person” and yet resentful of our state in life angry at God for our troubles. 

The Father says to us, “My son (and daughter) …everything I have is yours”. The Lord is ready to fill us with his blessings but we fail to ask, to seek, and to trust.  We want the control and don’t know how to let go and let God be our guiding light.  The Lord will not mislead us but he will set the path of our greatest good, the path of the greatest treasure for heaven.  Earthly treasure has its purpose to serve and be multiplied that we may be of greater service to others as we are reminded, it’s not about us but about God.  When we offer ourselves and our treasure to God then there is no limit to what he can do in our lives.  Right purpose leads to the best outcomes and a life well lived. 

We become lost in our world, a world of everyday challenges and we lose focus on the “Big picture” purpose of even existing.  We are God’s creation, created to participate in God’s salvation plan.  When we order our life in line with his plan we enter into God’s “new creation”.  The old way of looking at things no longer carries the same meaning or serves the same purpose.  Jesus makes all things new.  This is our Lenten call to come and be reconciled with God.  Give him our sins, our failures, our selfishness, our control and accept his will.  The Lord who makes all things new will also change us from within.  In God we find our true self and we will never be misled. 

Warning!  God does not seek to simply make a “correction” in our life.  God seeks a transformation of our souls.  He is patient, he is kind, he is merciful, he is the fullness of love and the transformation he wants is for us to live in the image of Jesus fully human but also fully called to the divine life. 

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3rd Sunday of Lent – Chosen One

Ex. 3: 1-8a, 13-15; Ps. 103:1-4, 6-8, 11; 1 Cor. 10:1-6, 10-12; Lk. 13:1-9

The Lord picked Moses as the Chosen One to rescue his people from the Egyptians.  God is kind and merciful and hears the “cry of complaint”, he knows the suffering of his people and he sends us his messengers to rescue us in our time of need.  Moses prefigures Jesus as has many a prophet and other chosen ones, Joseph, son of Israel, King David, even John the Baptist at the time of Jesus.  The mercy of the Lord is endless but it comes in the form of a messenger, someone ready to set aside their life and respond to the call. 

The call to be a chosen one is not just for a few “chosen ones”.  It doesn’t just apply to priests or the Pope, it applies to all baptized Christians called to make an impact in this world, the world in which we live in, our family, neighborhood, and community. Our calling is to bring the mercy of God to others with the love that meets the need of the moment. 

The second reading points this out “our ancestors were all under the cloud” in a humanity where we all have our own free will God wishes all to be saved.  He used Moses to guide them all “through the sea”, that is the waters of baptism, “baptized into Moses in the cloud” of the Holy Spirit that was working to increase their faith and “in the sea” of the waters of baptism that God opened up to save them.  Just as they passed through the Red Sea, we have passed through the same waters of salvation in our baptism. 

They “All ate the same spiritual food (of manna in the desert) and drank the same spiritual drink” of the rock to quench their thirst now made manifest to us in the Eucharist.  St. Paul tells us that “rock” was “the Christ” present then and before time began to save them and yet “God was not pleased with them for they were struck down in the desert” something to contemplate. 

In our time there are many who have come to the fountain of baptism to be received into the kingdom of God.  Many of us find ourselves in the desert of life’s hardships, like many of the Israelites in the desert and fall away from the practice of the faith.  Could it be that in the same way many become struck down by their own sins and die prematurely not as a punishment but as an act of mercy to save us from ourselves while there is still a small light of hope for God to keep us from damnation.  As scripture says, “these things happen as examples for us” to remain close to our God who rescues us not only from this world but from the temptations of our own humanity in order not to fall into the pit of sin. 

Now is the time to repent.  Jesus gives us an interesting question in the gospel for us to ponder.  He speaks of the guilt that we all carry and separates it from the suffering of the people.  He wants us to understand that “bad things happen to good people” and it is not a sign of their sin.  This was often the view of ancient times.  When something bad happened, it was a punishment from God for their guilt. In Jesus time, leprosy was seen as a punishment form God.  Jesus wants to correct the record bad things happen because there is evil in this world.  Often it is the evil that comes from the heart of a person and not from nature.  In other words, we can be our own worst enemy and our downfall. 

Why is there a rise in autism in children?  It is not a punishment from God but a consequence of how we may be manipulating nature as a society.  Why is there a rise in childhood obesity?  It is not because of bad parenting but a consequence of what we are adding to foods to trigger hunger, change hormones, and add preservatives that affects our metabolism.  Why is there a new concern with fluoride used to prevent cavities?  Fluoride can also lead to stiff and weak bones.  God didn’t do it, we did it.  So, let us not look to God when things go bad. 

It happens often that that parents will raise their children in the faith, go to Church and teach them good morals and values.  The children grow up and decide they are not interested in church, not sure if they believe in God at all.   Parents are left wondering “where did we go wrong?”  Imagine all the love God has for us, the guardian angels he sends us to protect us, the mercy to forgive us of our sins, the blessings he desires to pour out in us and our response is?   “I don’t get anything from coming to church”, “I prefer to spend my time doing other things that I enjoy”, “I don’t have time for church, I’m too busy!”  This is the struggle within many families. 

God is patient, God in kind and today in the parable we see how God is also merciful with us.  He waits on us to bear fruit.  Jesus is our advocate asking God the Father to allow time to cultivate our faith, to forgive us of our sins “for they know not what they do.”  This was part of Jesus prayer on the cross “Father, forgive them for they do not know what they do” even as they crucified him.  Some ask “why do you Catholics keep Jesus on the cross?  He is risen.”  He remains on the cross for our sins many of which we do know and keep doing and some that we don’t even realize that brings him great sorrow. 

You may have heard it said in reference to age that 60 is the new 40’s living longer and younger.  When it comes to growing in our faith 40’s may be the new adolescence, still rebellious, living for ourselves, waiting for another day to mature in our faith.  This lent is our call to repentance, to remain among his chosen ones let us not miss this opportunity before it is gone. 

Finish with this story I shared during the Lenten talks.  When I was a little boy living in the barrios of Houston.  My mother went to visit a friend of hers along with me.  The woman had a child of my age, and he had many toys.  We were poor so my joy was waiting for the Salvation Army to bring me a box of toys for Christmas otherwise like in those days you used your imagination to create your toys.  Coming home my mother must have seen something in my behavior.  She asked what was wrong.  I said “nothing”.  She asked three time and each time I denied anything was wrong but at the same time I walked backwards to the bedroom.  When I got to the bed, I pulled out a toy car from under the pillow.  Back to the woman’s house to return that toy.  How many sins did I commit that day?  Stealing, lying, envy to start.  How many sins before and since then I hate to imagine.  Thank God, God is merciful. 

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7th Sunday Ordinary Time – Love one another

1 Sam. 26: 7-9, 12-13, 22-23; Ps. 103:1-4, 8, 10, 12-13; 1 Cor. 15:45-49; Lk. 6:27-38

Today in the gospel the Lord makes clear what it is to truly “love one another”.  When he calls us to “love your enemies and do good to those who hate you” he is reminding us of what we as humanity did to him and how he responded to our rejection of him then on the cross and now by our sinfulness.  Jesus prayed to the Father to forgive us of our sins. 

Jesus loves us even when we strike him on the face with our sins.  He continues to give to us who ask for his mercy, to those of us who forget to show our gratitude for our very life and all we have.  Instead, we judge, we measure what we give, we refuse to forgive, and in doing so we limit all that God desires for us to receive in his abundance of grace. 

David recognized that Saul was a chosen one of God even as Saul sought to persecute and kill David.  Saul chose to act mercifully in return and not kill Saul when he had the opportunity instead, he acted with love and brought about the conversion of heart in Saul.  David acted in the image of Christ for the goal is not to conquer the enemy but to bring about a conversion from the desire to sin to the desire to love and bring peace.  This is what it means what it means to go from being “earthy” to “spiritual”.  The earthy destroys while the spiritual builds up what is good to something better. 

We are being called to bear the image of the “heavenly one” and shed the sins of the “first man, Adam” by taking on the call from the heavenly one and bear his image.  This we cannot do alone but with Christ all things are possible.  It is possible through our surrender to Christ so that by seeking we will know the way, and by the love of one another will we also rise with him every day and in the final coming. 

Jesus is ready to reveal himself to us but are we ready for him?  It is difficult to shed the scales of earthly life when we prefer to excuse ourselves for our weakness, faults, and sins claiming “I’m only human”.  Our definition of being “only human” is a false view of God’s creation for our humanity.  To be fully human in God’s eyes is to be perfect as he created us to be in his image.  God’s “perfect” is love, love one another. 

To be fully human is to rise above our weaknesses, faults, and sins and seek something greater for ourselves not something less.  The greater part can only come through our creator who gives us the power and grace to move mountains that stand in the way of becoming God’s great saints.  To settle for earthy beings is to settle for sin and sin leads to death. 

We are born earthly, that is with the fallen nature of the first Adam but God provides us his spiritual nature through Jesus by coming to receive him in the sacraments of the church.  Baptism washes away our sins and covers us with the spiritual blessing to enter into the spiritual life but we must also mature in this life to be all that God created us to be.  This requires our will for God cannot save us without us.  In his image we were given a soul to unite our mind to his, our heart to unite our love to his heart, and our will to accept the will of the Father through obedience, the obedience that guards and helps us to reach the promise land, the heavenly kingdom, the love that lasts for eternity.  Love one another! 

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6th Sunday Ordinary Time – Blessed are you

Jer. 17: 5-8; Ps. 1:1-4, 6; 1 Cor. 15:12, 16-20; Lk. 6:17, 20-26

Blessed are you who believe all that the Lord has proclaimed for great is your reward in heaven and the beginning of heaven is now.  Now has the kingdom of God come to those who believe and are firmly planted on fertile ground.  This is the promise of God from the beginning of time for those who trust in the Lord.  Blessed are you when trust leads to hope and hope to the revelation of God with us. 

Blessed are you who witnessed Christ raised from the dead that we may hope and believe that our day is coming.  Recall how not only Jesus rose from the dead but with him the graves were opened and many witnessed the souls who had fallen asleep rise with him.  Death was conquered on the cross and with it, judgment came into the world that our death is now our personal day of judgment before the Lord.  If we have died with Christ then we are certain to rise with him.  The lesson of dying to ourselves is the teaching Jesus gives today in the gospel. 

Blessed are you who recognize your own poverty corporal and spiritual.  Corporal because all we have is a gift from the Lord to be shared and spiritual because we recognize our own weaknesses, brokenness, and sinfulness.  We are humbled wounded warriors for Christ that in our poverty he may dwell to bring us our victory in battle. 

Blessed are you whose hunger cannot be satisfied with food only but with righteousness in doing he will of God.  The essence of food is to nourish both body and soul in order to rise up against the enemy and conquer evil with good. 

Blessed are you who weep for your sins and the sins of the world.  Your joy and laughter are the mercy and forgiveness from the Lord.  Prayer, fasting, and charity are the weapons against sin that all may come to the truth. 

Blessed are you when you stand firm in your faith in a world that seeks to “cancel”, intimidate, and even persecute you for resisting the lies that are treated as norms of social acceptance that are anti-religion and separate God from the world. 

This is the Christian way that opens the gates of heaven.  Many have chosen to go their own way hoping to insulate themselves with a simple belief that a good God will bring all to heaven so “just live and let live”.  Others have become the resistance in opposition to God’s law disguised as serving the good of society by accumulating power and control for themselves.  Jesus did not say “all roads lead to heaven”.  He came to show us the way, his plan of salvation and we are wise to listen and to follow.  

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Feast of the Presentation of the Lord

Mal. 3: 1-4; Ps. 24:7-10; Heb. 2:14-18; Lk. 2:22-40

 Mary and Joseph take Jesus the infant to present him to the Lord in the temple to comply with the Law.  Simeon recognizes the child as the Lord’s “salvation…a light of revelation”.  He also foretells to Mary that she will be tested through suffering with the words “you yourself a sword will pierce”.   How are we prepared to face the test of suffering? 

Jesus tested through suffering comes to help us being tested in our own suffering.  This is the way that the Lord God prepares the way for himself sending his “messenger” of the covenant that he desires to have with his people.

Jesus comes through great joy as the joy we experience at the birth of a child but he also comes through suffering as we encounter him on the cross in his suffering for our sins.  We prepare for both by being a people of faith, hope, and love.  In faith we believe that even our suffering has merit in the salvation of our souls.  It is the “refiner’s fire” spoken of in the first reading reminding us of our mortality and destiny as suffering helps purify our souls. 

Our hope lies in knowing that our suffering even in death is not the final ending of our lives but another of the tests we must endure to enter into the glory of God.  God is love and love is our final destiny that is now and is coming in greater force.  Love allows the cross of suffering to be bearable in the most difficult of conditions.  Love sets us free from suffering and from the evil one. 

The presentation of the Lord represents our faith, hope, and love of God and like Anna the prophetess in “prayer and fasting” we wait upon the Lord and speak of this child Jesus as the beginning and the end of our salvation.  Jesus a “light for revelation…and glory” for his people. 

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Third Sunday in Ordinary Time – A Jubilee Year

Neh. 8: 12-4a, 5-6, 8-10; Ps. 19:8-10, 15; 1 Cor. 12:12-30; Lk. 1:1-4; 4:14-21

Jesus proclaims “a year acceptable to the Lord” and this is our Jubilee Year because he is with us to bring the “glad tidings” to his people.  Pope Francis has declared this our Jubilee Year to pour out special graces upon God’s people and upon this world. We come to him as one body to celebrate because “Today is holy to the Lord your God”.  Let us recognize God’s holiness in his mercy and love as he cleanses us of our sins and restores us in our own call to holiness. 

“Rejoicing in the Lord must be your strength!”  A Jubilee year is a year of rejoicing giving thanks for all the Lord’s blessings.  The Lord comes to set us free, free of sin, free of evil, free of fear.  The Lord comes to be our strength in a world that remains lost within itself, he guards us against the temptation to follow ideologies of human creation.  Truth comes from the Lord in perfect law, clear commands, right judgment, and lifegiving word.  It is up to us to trust and to follow. 

We follow best when we follow together as one body bring our God given gifts to the service of our faith in God.  As we read today “all the parts of the body, though many are one body” and we all live in the one Spirit of God.  We are each given a different state of life to serve the different needs of the one body.  Even among clergy, a bishop cannot live an isolated contemplative life and neglect his flock, nor a married man ignore his call to work for the support of his family, nor a woman spend her time in prayer when her children need to be fed.  We are each living a different state whether single, married, widowed, young or elderly yet each state offers us an opportunity to be a voice for God right where we are.  It all begins with a state of being a person of love that transcends God’s love for each other. 

In God’s divine wisdom we were all given different gifts in the service of one body that requires of us to come together in support of each other.  We need the other in our life and cannot be living in the illusion of “self-sufficiency”.  There is an inherit interdependence in humanity that we may be humble in receiving and giving of each other to one another with love and generosity.  The body though one is most reliant on the head which is our high priest who reveal himself today as the word made flesh.  Jesus is our Godhead, the source of our life and our salvation.

Jesus’ revelation of himself comes to “proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord”.  Are we ready to celebrate his victory over death and to enter into his glory?  Are we ready to be the difference in our time, in our state of life, with those who share our space, our world, our hopes and dreams?  Our hope and dreams are for the eternal joy to come and it begins now in this our Jubilee year.   

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The Baptism of the Lord – My chosen one

Is. 42: 1-4, 6-7; Ps. 29:1-4, 59-10; Acts. 10:34-38; Lk. 3:15-16, 21-22

Jesus is “my chosen one” whom the Lord is well pleased.  When we speak of the baptism of the Lord, we refer to Jesus being baptized by John but we should also recognize the words of John who states “he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire”.  Through Jesus’ baptism of us we become his chosen ones.  To be chosen is to be called for a greater good into the kingdom of God.  We are chosen to fulfill a purpose in salvation history.  Jesus “my chosen one” came to free us from sin through his passion, death, and resurrection.  Do we recognize our chosen purpose? 

We are chosen to live holy lives in the practice of our faith.  To give to God our praise and worship and to allow him to work through us in the care, conversion, and covenant of his people.   Care comes through the corporal and spiritual needs of others with the understanding that if one part of the body of Christ suffers, we all share in that suffering and so we lift each other up.   Conversion by our witness in the way we live our lives that gives testimony to our faith.   Covenant by obedience to the commandments and the moral and ethical choices that place God first.   Our “right actions” are to be right before the eyes of God. 

In Jesus we find “the victory of justice” and live in covenant with him.  Jesus came to show us the way and he did it by his care for the people, calling them to conversion by offering himself up to the Father for our salvation and always being one in covenant with the Father and the Holy Spirit, three persons in one God.  The victory of justice is to always remain as one with God in the Trinity by doing the will of God.    

Justice is the right action before the eyes of God.  Peter recognizes that the right action of a follower of Jesus is to “show no partiality” based on a person’s state of life that is Jew or Gentile.  Partiality is for the separation of sin from the sinner.  Jesus comes to free us from our sinfulness through “fear” of the Lord and by “acts uprightly”.  “Fear” of the Lord is not the Old Testament view of fear of punishment but fear of separation from the Lord as revealed by Jesus.  Upright acts come through love of the Lord and neighbor.  Love desires and acts for what is in the best interest of the other. 

The love of God for his people meant that what was in their best interest was sometimes a difficult road to travel as we see the Israelites wander in the desert for forty years.  Their final destination was relatively a short distance compared to the years they spent in the desert but it allowed their souls to be purified.  Love of God often comes with cross to carry for our own salvation that we too may act uprightly and be called his chosen ones.  How do we handle our hardships of life?  Some may question God with “why God”, others may find it as a punishment coming from God, while others may simply believe it has nothing to do with God and blame it on “bad luck”.  None of these attitudes serve God’s purpose which is to prepare us for his coming, to free us from sin, and to lead others to himself. 

John points to Jesus as the chosen one who will baptize with “the Holy Spirit and fire”.  Thus, the Spirit of fire comes through Jesus to us by that same baptism of water and the Holy Spirit.  We are anointed priest, prophet and king into the priesthood of Jesus.  We are given the fire to proclaim his word in upright action and to live within the kingdom of God even as we live our earthly pilgrimage.  For this reason, we claim to be in the world but not of the world.  The Passover has been given to us and death has no power in our souls.  In time we shed our mortal bodies to rise up to immortality.  To be among the “elect” is to fulfill a purpose greater than ourselves, to lay down our lives at the feet of Jesus and let God by our God and we be his chosen ones. 

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