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8th Sunday Ordinary Time –   The sting of death!

Sir. 27:4-7; Ps. 92:2-3, 13-16; 1 Cor. 15:54-58; Lk. 6:39-45

“The sting of death is sin and the power of sin is the law.”  Where is the law?  “In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God” (Jn. 1:1).  The law is the word of God.  It is given to us in the ten Commandments, in the teaching of Jesus, in the natural law of creation, planted into the heart of the believer by God.  The law is always present to give power in order to produce the good fruit through obedience to the law but sin came into the world through disobedience and the world is filled with rotten fruit. 

“For every tree is known by its own fruit.” What is in the heart is revealed in the tongue clothed in either corruptibility or incorruptibility, in the sting of death through sin or “swallowed up in victory’ for immortality.  Guard the tongue from sin that remains in the heart until the sin of vice is conquered by the virtue of the law.  Pride is conquered by humility, lust by chastity, wrath with kindness, gluttony with temperance, sloth with diligence, greed with charity, and envy with patience.  This is what we believe is our life journey of purification from sin to take this opportunity and be cleansed of our sins for the greater victory of immortality. 

Old age has a way of creeping up on life like a “sieve” shaken and revealing if our husk is good fruit “vigorous and sturdy” or rotten at the core from a life of sin.  God in his mercy allows for the soul who has rotted from sin to receive forgiveness but forgiveness is the beginning of the purification process that if not gained in this life comes from the state of purgatory with its fire and justice as the potter molds us in the furnace.  For the one who says, “God will forgive me and I will go to heaven” don’t be surprised if at death when all truth is revealed that God’s forgiveness in his promise of heaven comes through his mercy by way of purgatory.  The justice of the Lord is the cleansing of any stain of sin for heaven is for the pure of heart, perfect in love, and fruitful in service.  Are we there yet or is God still working on us? 

We have a small dog who loves to go outside and roll in the grass.  He also likes to chase birds and if he could we would run into the lake behind our house.  No matter how much we love Trigger he is not allowed into the house dirty and smelly.  He has to be cleaned first.  In the same way we cannot enter into the house of the Lord dirty from sin.  Our cleansing must come first in this life or in purgatory for nothing impure can be with the purity of love and God is love. 

“Tribulation is the test of the just” and this day the world is in tribulation.  The sins of the world in a culture of death have risen from death to the unborn; death to religion in the public square; death to the biology of the body in sexual identity; death to free speech against the mantra of public opinion; death to humanity in genetic manipulation to create life in a test tube.  While the culture war battles itself there are those who seek to gain power by violence in the streets, violence in the name of religion, and violence by weapons of destruction.  As one nation rises against another the test of the just will be a reminder that when one part of the body suffers the whole body suffers. 

The voice of freedom must respond for the just.  From the call of Pope Francis for prayer and fasting for peace to the action of leaders to recognize evil and not be weak but stand for truth and justice by the authority entrusted to them.  We all have the power of prayer.  We all can make a sacrifice as an offering for peace.  Lent is coming upon us and this is the moment to make an offering of sacrifice for an end to war, an end to hate, a victory for peace before it spirals out of control.  The evil one has unleased his power taken possession of the souls of the weak who are filled with vices. 

Every soul has power and strength grows in times of tribulation as we sacrifice for a greater good and the sting of “death is swallowed up in victory”.  Victory comes “through our lord Jesus Christ” as we dedicate ourselves to “the work of the Lord” in whatever state of life we have been called to serve.  The work of the Lord is for everyone beginning with prayer that leads to action.  Pray and God will reveal the action needed of each of us and we need not to fear for God is with us and who can be against us.  Part of our mission is to be ready for the attack to come.  We are to prepare our children not just with an understanding of evil but with the faith, hope and love to fear not and be ready for the Lord comes.  He is our consolation and this world is but a passing moment in God’s plan of salvation. 

In war there are many casualties but also many martyrs who do not fear death but believe in a just cause.  Jesus is the just cause in who we must believe and trust.  He died for us that we may live for immortality.  The early church suffered many martyrs and persecution but with each death the number of followers only grew and we have received the inheritance of faith and freedom.  May we have the same love to live for the just cause our Lord has given us to fulfill the law of love, the law of the Word, the natural law, and the law of freedom.  Freedom is not free and without casualty but the victory has been won by Jesus and we are called to follow him. 

Freedom begins in the mind of the believer where the battlefield is fought against the enemy.  The natural law is in the science of truth as a creation of God.  The law of the Word is in the incarnation born to set us free from slavery where we are invited to join him by baptism.  The law of love is in the heart with the generosity to respond to the call to be the best God created us to be.  This is how we clothe ourselves with incorruptibility and the sting of death is “swallowed up in victory”. 

Tribulation reveals who is “planted in the house of the Lord” and who languishes in the world.  In tribulation “the just one…shall bear fruit even in old age; vigorous and sturdy…declaring how just is the Lord, my rock”.  Our justice is from the Lord so be not afraid when tribulation comes and the roaring waves of war, disease, and destruction is all around us.  Keep bearing fruit and trust in the Lord for even the sting of death is not the end but the beginning of a greater glory. 

Tribulation in life reveals what is in the heart of a person.  The gospel today reminds us how easy it is to be blinded by tribulation and begin to notice the splinter in everyone’s eyes.  It is easier to blame than to accept responsibility or recognize how did we contribute to the problem.  God’s reminder to remove the sin of our lives before we look into the sin of others is so we may see clearly and recognize the fruit we are consuming that is good and not rotten.  There is a lot of rotten fruit the world that is feeding us.  “Fake news”, half-truth, justified behavior for killing are all part of the menu.  Pontius Pilate asked Jesus what is truth?  Jesus says by their fruit you shall know.  Jesus was killed to protect the institution that felt threatened by his ministry even as he preached the love of God.  Today there are many institutions who would rather enter into the culture of death than into the dialogue for life.  The fruit of the means does not justify the end and if the fruit is rotten and evil then it comes from the heart of an evil person. 

The fruit of the evil one creates division, confusion and the sting of death.  The fruit of “a good person out of the store of goodness in his heart produces good” with right thoughts, right speech, and right action.  Let us keep in mind that “one’s speech disclose(s) the bent of one’s mind” and our mind must be well trained in the way of the Lord.  Speak the word of God with faith, hope, and love.  Pray for those who belong to the culture of death and are waging war against humanity.  Let us stay focused on the work of the Lord.  Let us be ready and recall the sacrifice of love by Jesus, by his disciples, and it is our turn now.  Lord may your love be in our hearts and word on our lips that we may proclaim your glory for ever and ever, Amen. 

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3rd Sunday of Lent – God commands “You shall not!”

Ex. 20:1-17; Ps: 19:8-11; 1 Cor. 1:22-25; Jn. 2:13-25

“You shall not” is given eight times by the Lord in issuing the ten commandments with only twice speaking in the affirmative.  “You shall not” does not leave any discretionary judgment in following the Lord’s commandments.  The two affirmative statements include “keep holy the sabbath” and “Honor your father and mother”.  As clear and direct as these statements are, we see in the gospel of John “But Jesus would not trust himself to them (Jews or Gentiles) because he knew them all, and did not need anyone to testify about human nature.  He himself understood it well.”  What does Jesus understand well of human nature?  Could it be that human pride stands in the way of obedience with a humble heart?

Regardless of how clear the word of God is human nature looks for signs and wisdom to believe the word but the true sign of the power of God’s word is Jesus crucified, “a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles”.  In other words, human nature looks to itself to transform the word into its own wisdom when Jesus crucified is the call to a transformation of self by faith.  Let’s consider the wisdom of human nature.

God says, “You shall not have other gods besides me” but it is said the world revolves around money so that remains a priority and major concern of life so much that we value “climbing the financial ladder” more than climbing the spiritual ladder to the kingdom of God. 

God says, “You shall not take the name of the Lord, your God in vain” but it is said if I am upset and cry out in in frustration “Jesus Christ” at least my anger is misdirected at him and not at someone else, besides it is only a common expression many others say. Normalizing sin does not make it right.

God says, “Remember to keep holy the sabbath day” but it is said if it is between coming to church or sleeping in on Sunday as the only day of rest then God understands we need our rest, or does he?  It reminds me of scripture where two shall be in bed, one will be taken to heaven and the other not. 

God says, “Honor your father and your mother” but it is said I have a right to live my life first after all they lived their lives and made their choices, now I have to make mine.  It reminds of the Pharisees who were called “hypocrites” because they accepted money as atonement for the people not taking care of their parents, widows, and children.  Is there any justification for neglect of those who cared for us in our youth? 

God says, “You shall not kill” but it is said if the law allows it then it is acceptable after all it is my body, my choice to give birth or have an abortion or even to end my life when I determine my suffering I cannot bear. The gift of life comes from God and in rejecting his gift we reject him also.  In birth God’s gift of life is a treasure, what we do with this treasure is our gift back to him.  Killing is a rejection of his love. 

God says, “You shall not commit adultery” but it is said if someone was unfaithful to you then you have a right to move on with your life onto another relationship. How many husbands did Jesus claim the woman at the well had and the one she was with at the time was not her husband?  Breaking the bond of marriage opens the soul to a life of infidelity not just to the other but to oneself.  We can convince ourselves “this is the one” only to recognize we have lied to ourselves. 

God says, “You shall not steal” but it is said if it is for a good cause to follow the “Robinhood” rule, steal from the rich to give to the poor then it is right because it is wrong for the rich to be so rich. Remember the parable of the laborer who was hired early in the day and those who were hired later, they all received the same pay. To human nature it seems unfair but God is generous according to his purpose.

God says, “You shall not bear false witness” but it is said that if spoken as a “white” lie to protect yourself and others then there is a good cause.  It reminds me when Jesus claimed it is not what comes into the mouth that is defiled but what comes out of the mouth.  Silence is a virtue. 

God says, “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house” but it is said that it is only natural to have “healthy competition with the Jones’s” for being the best on the block.  Then again when we live beyond our means it does have a way of coming back to “bite” us. 

God says, “You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife…nor anything else that belongs to him” but it is said a little jealousy cannot be helped.  But it is also said jealousy is a sign of unfaithfulness and without faith we die. 

But who says these things anyway?  Now it seems human nature is able to find qualifiers and disqualifiers to the commandments. There is always a loophole human wisdom can create to allow for what is being denied.  This comes from the “stubbornness” of the human heart not ready to follow the sign of Jesus crucified but wanting justification for the exception to the commandment rather than recognizing “The law of the Lord is perfect” and “the command of the Lord is clear”. 

When we create our own justification, we turn the temple of the Lord into a “den of thieves”.  The “temple” Jesus speaks of is his own body crucified on the cross which we carry in our lives and “destroy” when we sin.  If we accept the words of scripture “Zeal for your house will consume me” let us consider how Jesus is also consumed by his love for each of us knowing we allow sin into his house in our souls to destroy his temple in us.  He desires not one to be lost but all to be saved.  God has a “zeal” to bring us to salvation that we may celebrate the “feast of Passover” meaning the Passover of death into life eternal and into his glory this Easter by turning away from our sins, our justifications, our human understanding and returning to serving God as a people of faith.   

We return to him when we keep holy the “sabbath”.  This day for the Christian is represented as the day of the resurrection Easter Sunday and every Sunday we come to celebrate his passion, death, and resurrection in the Mass.  It is the Mass that is the pinnacle of worship as we bring our brokenness, our confession of sin, our offering of our charity represented by all we have done during our week and God receives it in atonement for our sins to wash us clean by his body and blood in the Eucharist. 

In a time when churches still remain with limited attendance, we see that even with the limits enforced there remains empty sitting where many of the faithful once attended.  Have they simply “lost faith”, remain in fear, or live in a world of qualifiers and disqualifiers that represent human nature?  The time of re-evangelization is now.

We honor God when we honor our father and mother.  Father and mother are the visible sign of our parents representing our heavenly Father and Mother Mary.  If we cannot honor the visible signs of our parents through who we receive our earthly body how can we honor our heavenly Father through who we receive our soul or our heavenly Mother who gave birth to the redeemer? 

“Yes, but” there are parents who abandon their children, abuse them, and neglect them of their physical, emotional, and spiritual needs so do they fall into the “disqualified” or do they?  We continue to honor them with an act of charity by praying for them even when a relationship cannot be sustained.  This is what bring us the peace we seek when we honor God this way. 

Then there is the question “why Mary, when we can go directly to the source in Jesus Christ?”  When we get married, we not only give honor to our spouse with our love but also by honoring the in-laws we demonstrate our commitment to our spouse.  We married into an earthly family thus in loving God we accept all the family in communion with the Holy Family, Jesus, Joseph, and Mary, the Holy Spirit, and all the extended family in the communion of saints and angels.  No one can be left out of our heavenly family, not even the souls in purgatory who we honor when we pray for them, these too give honor to God. And by the way don’t forget your guardian angel so often neglected in our prayers.

In the magisterium of the Church there are many Fathers and the Church is also our mother to be honored.  Our Holy Father Pope Francis has called for this year to be the year to honor Saint Joseph.  Many have made a consecration to our Blessed Mother Mary so does that mean we cannot consecrate ourselves to Saint Joseph?  The answer by now should be clear, we can love them both and need to love them all.  The Church is seeking the intervention into our world through Saint Joseph as there is a great need to have his witness to faithfulness in obedience as Saint Joseph gave testimony as earthly father to Jesus and husband to Mary.  His testimony was simple yet profound, he was the guardian of the treasure of the lives of Jesus and Mary and today we need to recognize the treasure we have been given in our homes, our families, and church, and ourselves.  Saint Joseph pray for us.   

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Sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Sir. 15:15-20; Ps. 119:1-2, 4-5, 17-18, 33-34: 1 Cor. 2:6-10; Mat. 5:17-37

Keep the commandments by choice to the greatest potential and you too shall live.  Today we are reminded “life and death, good and evil” we receive by choice, we sin by choice, and we walk in the law by choice.  The best choice is to “Let your ‘Yes’ mean ‘Yes’, and your ‘No’ mean ‘No’.  Anything more is from the evil one”.  “Yes” and “No” are absolutes without preconditions in obedience to the law of God.  What is fear of the Lord?  It is fear of the disobedience of the “law” of God.  “Blessed are they who follow the law of the Lord!”  Follow the law and the choice is the water of holiness and life but choose to disobey the law and the consequence is the fire of sin and death.  The human experience is conditional, negotiable, self-justified. 

The conditional experience asks “What’s in it for me?”  Negotiable in seeking the greater reward for the least sacrifice.  Self-justified with a sense of entitlement.  Conditional, “Going to church every Sunday but what do I get out of it?”  It is negotiable, “As long as I confess my sins God will forgive my sins in the end.”  It is self-justified, “No one is perfect, I have a right to still be angry” as the sun sets on life with no guarantees of tomorrow.  How can we simply do the right thing when our feelings are not there yet ready to accept that choice?  It is an act of the will to say, “I go to church…I avoid the near temptation to sin…I forgive despite my hurt.”  This is following the law of the Lord by choice and the blessings will pour into our lives.  These are conscious free will decisions we choose for the greater glory of God.  Nobody said it was an easy road. 

The “easy road” we follow is to do the least, a minimalist like a child who is told to clean their room and they push everything under the bed that is on the floor.  Is the room clean or simply giving a false illusion?  In the “easy road” we bargain with ourselves, minimize the fault, blame the other, share the guilt, “after all everyone does it” we tell ourselves. We must ask ourselves, “Is this the best of us we offer our God?” 

The best of us begins by making the right choice and trusting in God to get us there.  Choose to go to Mass and expect to receive a blessing from God.  When we expect the best of us, we receive the best God desires to pour into our lives.  Choose to avoid the near occasion of sin even when tempted by the circumstances and our heart remains focused on the good not the bad.  It is tempting to want to blame the other for our weakness rather than to take responsibility for growing in virtue.  Choose to forgive the other so God may heal our hurt and we return to the joy of living.  The right choice produces the right results in the natural law of God, not complicated but challenging. 

The early church was called “the Way”.  It was the way to fulfill “the smallest part of a letter…until all things have taken place.”  To surpass the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees Jesus spoke of was a low bar since it was based on doing the least often in the interest of those same scribes and Pharisees who had the most to gain in their indulgence.  The Way demands the greatest out of us for the “Spirit scrutinizes everything”.  How do we teach others to break the commandments or follow them?  By our example we normalize behavior for the water of blessing or the fire of suffering our sin.  The seed of sin for anger, adultery, swearing, lust lies not in the world for the world is food for the sinner who eats of this flesh.  The seed of sin is already dormant in humanity and waits for the moment to be given life. 

What is wisdom but the foundation of truth!  It is eternal truth that passes through time from generation to generation when we put our trust in him.  Wisdom is seen in our Blessed Mother Mary who chose obedience in the Spirit and was given the crown of glory.  Wisdom “God has revealed to us through the Spirit” received through love of God and the fulfillment of the law of God.  The choice we make makes us unto itself.  Choose laughter and find joy, choose kindness and find peace, choose generosity and find wealth, choose the commandments and find yourself, finally choose prayer and find God.  Do the next right thing and grow in righteousness.  Trust and see by the choice we make “the mysteries of the kingdom”.  Alleluia!  Alleluia!

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