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2nd Sunday of Lent – “Listen to him”

Gen. 12:1-4a; Ps. 33:4-5, 18-20, 22; 2 Tm. 1:8b-10; Mt.17:1-9

“Listen to him!”  This Lent when God speaks to us in his word, in our prayer, and in our relationships, we listen to him in order to respond to his call.  When we listen to him with our heart and mind, he tells us to “rise, and do not be afraid” to take the right next step in our faith journey.  That step is rooted in the love of God and other.  It is rooted in mercy and forgiveness.  God is calling us to a conversion of greater love and mercy.  “Listen to him” forgive and you will be forgiven, give and it shall be given to you, be humble and you will be lifted up.  To listen is to desire something greater in our lives, more of God and less of this world.   

When the Lord called on Abram, he asked him to leave behind his homeland, his comforts and “go forth” to a land he will show him.  He did not promise it would be easy, without sacrifice, but he would bless him and a great nation would come from him.  God never promises the easy road, and Jesus chose the via dolorosa, the way of suffering to make of us a great nation of followers of the way of salvation. 

Thus, we are reminded to “bear your share of hardship for the gospel.”  Alone it is unbearable but our strength comes from God when we listen to him and live according to his own design.  His design is for a life of holiness and holiness destroys death and gives life immortal.  We ask ourselves this Lent to bear our share of the gospel through prayer, fasting and almsgiving.  Our prayer is efficacious, it makes a difference but we out to know how to pray. 

Recall the acronym of prayer ACTS, adoration, contrition, thanksgiving and supplication?  Adoration is our worship of God, contrition our desire for mercy for our sins, thanksgiving recognizes the blessings we have received, and supplication is for our needs and the needs of others by the will of God not our will.  “God if it be your will let it be done.”   This is prayer that is efficacious for our good, the good of others and of this world. 

Fasting is not only good for the soul but good for the body.  Our bodies are filled with toxins that build up from our indulgence.  The reality is that we consume more than we need and all that consumption creates inflammation, brain fog, and by chronic consumption leads to early disease and death.  We are out of balance in our consumption and fasting helps to detox our bodies, restore our mind-body control, and open our soul to listen to him. 

I propose to you a different kind of fasting than what we normally think of with food.  Try fasting from what consumes our time outside of our commitments to work, school or family.  Is it television, social media, talking on the phone, or try putting down that golf club, fishing pole or rushing to the bingo hall.  Discover the withdrawal for all those activities that have become our addiction to this world and left so very little time for God.  Imagine your world without the novela, without the news channel, without tik-tok, without gaming, without gossip, without that obsession that is taking over our time.  Now we’re talking, now were fasting the mind and body. 

Almsgiving is going beyond our pocket change to the person on the street.  Almsgiving is taking from what we have and letting go from our feeling of dependency on having more.  Do we really need that many pairs of shoes, hats, tools, coats, blankets, or whatever clutters our drawers and closets.  Ask a man and you can never have enough screw drivers; ask a woman and you can never have enough shoes; or ask a child these days and you can never have enough memory for all their gaming toys.  Almsgiving is also about letting go and giving to those who have not. 

In many ways the message does not change.  What changes is our readiness to listen to him and to respond “Here I am, Lord ready to do your will.”  Lent is this invitation for us to face the enemy of our salvation.  The enemy is threefold, the flesh, the world, and Satan.  They do not operate separately but are always at work together for what we experience in one area is an opportunity for the participation from the enemy in other areas. 

The flesh is our appetite from within as the mind seeks to satisfy the flesh in all its passions, physical, sexual, and psychological.  The flesh triggers the mind to crave self indulgence to the degree that whatever the flesh desires then become the god of the flesh, destroying the body and corrupting the soul.  The person becomes the slave of the flesh. 

The world is its own god seeking to finds its slaves.  Its temptation is to all the riches and beauty the world has to be conquered but this is a false illusion.  The world will not be conquered by becoming part of the world.  We are in the world but not of the world meaning we serve our God in the world and the world can be of service to us but not our quest.  We learn, work, and participate in the world in order to bring to the world the gospel message by the way we live our lives. 

The evil one is the least powerful in our lives because by the cross we have been redeemed unless we open ourselves up to him and sadly many unwittingly have done just that.  From taking up astrology to the Ouija board, from palm readers to “curanderas”, it is all part of the culture of death.  The evil one desires our death, and he relies on the world to be its weapon of destruction to bring about hopelessness.  “See how good the world is, indulge and be lost in the world” or Satan can just as quickly turn it around and say, “See how bad the world is today, there is no god that can save it” and lead us to hopelessness.  Satan is the master of lies but Jesus is revealing to us the eternal truth this day. 

The secret is out in the transfiguration today.  The vision of Moses and Elijah next to Jesus is a vision of immortality.  They are alive and they share in the light of God.  The secret of the vision is the divinity of Jesus “true God and true man”.  This is our faith that Jesus is one divine person with two natures.  The sign of Moses and Elijah is that we too are invited to rise above our human nature into the divine life through the waters of baptism.  This is a great hope, and many have come to listen to him, some with the red robe of martyrdom and others with the white robe of perfection, through blood and water. The secret is out “the Son of Man has been raised from the dead” and we are invited to enter into the divine life. 

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15th Sunday Ordinary Time

Is.55:10-11; Ps. 65:10-14; Rom. 8:18-23; Mt. 13:31-23

The Quantum Zeno Effect (QZE) of Christianity is the “seed sown on rich soil”.  What is the QZE of a Christian?  It is the “mental act of focusing attention…on your mental experience, whether a thought, an insight, a picture in your mind’s eye*” of the presence of God despite the distraction of “worldly anxiety” or “the lure of riches” to do the will of God.  Saint John Paul II proclaimed “faith and science are two wings of a bird”, they must work in harmony to fly.  The world focuses on science while church leaders focus on faith but in our times we need a language that freely integrates both to rise in the splendor of God’s creation. 

In QZE is said “attention density shapes identity”.  This “identity” comes from the willingness to deepen our focus and keep our eyes centered on God who is always present in order to “hear and understand”.  It can be said that the density of our focused attention brings us out of darkness into the light of wisdom as evidenced by all the great saints and mystics.  This identity is shaped in the image of God in his creation by the gifts of the Spirit. 

Must we all drape ourselves as monastic hermits seeking to isolate ourselves to benefit from QZE?  No, QZE is a discipline practiced by anyone who exercises faith to be great arts, culture, business, love, and sanctity.  As Mother Angelica often said on her EWTN program “we are all called to be great saints” and QZE is the discipline of faith through prayer to open up our souls and rise to the grace and greatness God is calling us to be. 

QZE is how we approach our daily life with “God First” at the center of our focused attention in the present moment of our experiences.  St. Theresa of Lisieux “The Little Flower” understood this simply as “Remember nothing is small in the eyes of God.  Do all that you do with love”.  It all matters so it is worthy of our focused attention to see God’s work before us and through us.  Today God is working in each of us to be the greatest he created us to be. 

A child is born with focused attention to the wonderment of the world before him, learning with focused attention to speak the language of his parents, to ride a bike and to listen, learn, and understand the gifts that they are blessed with in order to grow in the joy and love of God.  QZE is a natural gift of childhood that is either nurtured or lost by overstimulation, constant media messaging, and a loss of learning skills for problem-solving and synthesis of ideas when we try to serve a child with all the answers “on a silver platter”.  Allow the child to wonder and create on their own their version of “Lego” ideas rather than simply following a pattern of numbered parts to represent the picture-perfect box display is critical thinking QZE best practices.  The is the meaning of “think outside the box”. 

What if we would pray outside the box!  Make a holy hour in adoration before the blessed sacrament with focused attention on Jesus and you begin to pray outside the box.  In an age where every self-help author has their list of seven, ten, or twelve steps to a better “whatever”, we are convinced that it only takes this formula to get to our desired “whatever”.  All answers are personal to our state in life.  For a Christian there is simply the first step of faith which is prayer and let God be God in our lives for what follows.  Prayer is focused attention to God who is the way, the truth, and the life we seek as our center of being.  In God all things are possible as Philippians 4:19 reminds us “we can do all things through Christ who strengthens us”, strengthens our focused attention to God’s purpose for our being and the action that must follow. 

The “seed sown on rich soil” is the one who hears, understands, and does the will of God.  Christianity is based on hearing the Word of God, receiving understanding by grace and responding with courage to live the Word despite “worldly anxiety” or the “lure of riches”.  Quantum Zeno Effect is the seed to bear fruit. 

Let us look to our Blessed Mother Mary who kept her eyes on Jesus with focused attention in the density of her loving heart as a great witness of the QZE in her earthly life with the rewards of her ascension into heaven. Today we receive the rich soil of the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the Eucharist with focused attention in the density of the Spirit of God to go out and bear fruit.  As Saint Padre Pio often said, “Pray, hope and don’t worry”.  It is all about God, we are invited to come, take, and learn how to follow. 

* Article (The Neuroscience of Leadership, David Rock and Jeffrey Schwartz; Eight Great Ideas Organizations, March 2010)

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Ash Wednesday

Joel 2:12-18; Ps. 51:3-6, 12-14, 17; 2 Cor. 5:20-6:2; Mat. 6:1-6, 16-18

“Rend your hearts…now is the day of salvation.  And your Father who sees what is hidden will repay you.”  These lines coming from the three readings of today summarize today’s message of Lent.  Which is harder to make a spiritual inventory of our lives and reveal all the hidden sin we have covered up or to make a sacrifice of the flesh through fasting and almsgiving?  It is the former that is more difficult to make and it creates the “gift at the altar” for the latter to follow.  God’s blessing upon the latter is multiplied by the work of the former in a fearless moral inventory we rend our hearts to Jesus. 

To “rend your hearts” requires honesty of the ego to squeeze our hearts of the full significance of our sin.  It reveals the impact not only on the sinner but on everyone impacted by the sin.  It is tempting to reason “no harm done” when we skim the surface of our hearts than to consider the harm that does happen to our relationships with God and with others.  “Rend your hearts” to the truth that sin is the weapon that destroys our image of Christ and opens the wounds on the cross.  Bleeding is our integrity, honesty, faithfulness and our hope of salvation.  “Once saved always saved” is the lie of the evil one to deceive us and bring complacency and denial to our sins.  If sin is a rock that strikes the calm waters then the ripple effect is an honest appraisal of all impacted by that one act of sin. 

In the field of recovery from addictions there is the “Fourth Step” of the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions.  It states, “Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves”.  If fear is considered as inverted faith then our fears drive us away from faith and right action.  “If today you hear his voice harden not your hearts” with the courage of faith to search for the divine will ready to be the spoken word.  Faith delivers God’s mercy to liberate us of sin and bring truth to our moral compass. 

The liberated go forth to offer gifts of sacrifice in the form of prayer, penance, and charity.  It is surprising that the “old” tradition of fasting that has lost its brilliance in an age of indulgence is resurfacing for its great health benefits.  It is being promoted as a form of detoxifying the body yet the body and the soul are one.  What is good for the body is good for the soul and vice versa.  In fasting the soul is also being cleansed of its hunger for indulgence in the form of a spiritual discipline.  It is the one body and soul that is the temple of the Lord and together there is a purification in fasting to strengthen the virtue of temperance, that is regaining the right balance as the temple of God.  Who would of “thunk it” that the old returns as new again?  That is a recognition that there is one truth and it lies in God.  God is the creator of natural law we are called to follow.

In the perfection of obedience to the natural law of God we are purified to offer our gifts of charity and see them multiplied by grace.  It is the perfect way into the spiritual law of God to open our hearts to the great commandment to love God above all and our neighbor as ourselves.  In this is revealed the true image of Christ in us to be holy and perfect as your heavenly Father is holy and perfect.  It begins this day for those who take up the call to “rend your hearts…now is the day of salvation.  And your Father who sees what is hidden will repay you” beyond what our eyes have not seen and our hearts have not felt, what he has prepared for us. 

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