Wednesday, January 19, 2011

December 8, 2010


The Immaculate Conception

Genesis 3:9-15,20; Psalm 98:1-4; Ephesians 1:3-6,11-12; Luke 1:26-38


Popular imagination has added an interesting slant to the story of the woman taken in adultery.

You know the story:

The Pharisees bring the woman before Jesus for judgment and Jesus says, "Let the person who is without sin cast the first stone."

They fell silent, and then, all of a sudden a stone came flying from the crowd. Jesus looks up, surprised and amused, and then says, "Hold it, mother? I am trying to make a point, here."

This joke likens the sinlessness of Mary to the sinlessness of good women and men we have known.

For we have known many good men and women who think that their holiness of life is their personal achievement.

As a result they develop a certain holier-than-thou attitude toward others who have not attained their level of holiness.

They become intolerant, angry and judgmental toward those they regard as sinners.

People like that would not hesitate to throw the first stone at a sinner caught red-handed, like the woman in our story.

That is why the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, which we celebrate today, becomes a very important one.

It reminds us that Mary's sinlessness is not something that Mary achieved by her own power.

It is a gift of God, given to her right from the very moment of her conception.

It is in the genes, as they say.

In the same vein, those of us who happen to be holy, who sin less than the average sinner, should regard our holiness as basically a gift of God and not an achievement.

Our attitude should then be characterized by two basic attitudes, thankfulness to God, and humility before those who are naturally and spiritually less gifted than we are.

The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception tells us something about who Mary is. But maybe it tells us more about who God is and who we are in light of God's providential love.

Belief in the Immaculate Conception of Mary is belief in a provident God, i.e., a God who provides for the future,

who prepares His children for their assigned task in life even before they are born, a God who foresees and equips us with all the natural and supernatural qualities we need to play our assigned role in the drama of human salvation.

God anoints them already in the womb those men and women whom He created to be His prophets.

As He told Jeremiah, "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the nations" (Jeremiah 1:5).

God does not just throw us into this world wide wilderness and then leave us to fight it out among ourselves.

The theory of evolution with its doctrine of the survival of the fittest may describe human nature in its fallen state, in the state of original sin,

it does not describe life for the people of God redeemed by grace from the unbridled effects of the Fall.

As we rejoice with Mary, God's most favored one ("full of grace") on the feast of her conception,

let us thank God for His love and mercy which embraces us right from the moment of our own conception.

As Scripture says, "For who makes you different from anyone else?

What do you have that you did not receive?

And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though you did not?" (1Corinthians 4:7).

Everything is gift, everything good in us is God's grace.

For we all, children of God, are also favored ones and heirs of God's grace.

Yet Mary remains the most favored one, the mother of all favored ones, the one that enjoys the fullness of grace.


December 12, 2010


Advent 3 Cycle A


Isaiah 35:1-6a, 10; Psalm 146:6-10;James 5:7-10; Matthew 11:2-11


In the 1980 movie, Urban Cowboy, John Travolta played the character Bud Davis. After moving from a small town in rural Texas to a Houston suburb, Bud falls in love with Sissy (whom he met at a local honky-tonk) and marries her.

Lovers' quarrels, bar fights, a separation in which they each move in with someone else, and an eventual reconciliation comprise the plot of the film.

At one point in the movie, a song is playing in the background and Bud cries out, "Hey! Turn that up! That's my favorite song!"

The song, "Lookin' for Love" sung by Johnny Lee, went on to become the number one song on the country music charts in 1980.

The famous lines of the chorus go, "I was lookin' for love in all the wrong places / Lookin' for love in too many faces, / searchin' their eyes and lookin' for traces / of what I'm dreamin' of."

In this weekend's Gospel, John the Baptist isn't exactly lookin' for love, but he does send his disciples to find out whether Jesus really is the One to come.

Jesus' response uses the prophetic vision of Isaiah to describe what is happening.

The dream of restoration is being fulfilled: the blind see, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor hear the good news.

Advent is the season of hopes and dreams.

Throughout the season we hear the prophetic visions of Isaiah, filled with hope for a renewed creation and the fulfillment of God's promises.

Next Sunday we'll hear the story of Joseph's dream about a child who will save people from their sins.

During these weeks, children dream of Christmas gifts that will appear under the tree. And many parishes fulfill the hopes of the needy through the collection of gifts and food to help them at this time of year.

The baptized act as Christ in the world, having been anointed priest, prophet, and king at their baptism.

And so like Christ in the Gospel, members of the church today are called to help the blind see, the lame walk, the deaf hear, and to actively pursue the coming of God's kingdom whose fulfillment we await in joyful hope.

In his first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est, Pope Benedict XVI reflected on the work of charity by the church.

He said, "Christian charity is first of all the simple response to immediate needs and specific situations: feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, caring for and healing the sick, visiting those in prison, etc." (#31a).

In Urban Cowboy Bud Davis and Sissy eventually return to each other and find their love in the right place, in the reconciliation of their hearts.

John the Baptist wanted to know if Jesus was the One, and the answer was found in the actions of the Messiah: restoring sight, cleansing lepers, proclaiming the good news.

The hope of so many at this time of year finds fulfillment in the loving actions of Christians.

They look for love in the service we offer and the charity we give.

But what we do during this Advent season cannot be the only expression of love we give.

If it is, those in need really have been "lookin' for love in all the wrong places."

But if our love continues through Christmas and into the New Year,

if our dedication to acting like Christ endures, then the needy will have found "what [they're] dreamin' of."

January 7, 2011





Isaiah 42:1-4,6-7; Psalm 29: 1-2,3-4,9-10; Acts 10:34-38; Matthew 3:13-17


The contrast between the old and the new is a consistent feature of the New Testament.

Everything before Jesus is "old;" he came to usher in the "new."

This is expressed both by what Yahweh does—law in the past, love now—

as well as how he does it—sending prophets in the past, the Son in the present.

The notion is picked up in the Gospel;

in the past Jesus would have baptized John,

but now John, "to fulfill all righteousness" baptizes Jesus.

If we see ourselves as Gentiles, then we will know that God’s love and mercy is ours only by his gift, not by our deserving.

If we think of ourselves as God’s chosen people today,

then, too, we are God’s because he chose us.

In either case, our lives will reflect who we are and whose we are.

C.S. Lewis wrote the following in a "The Weight of Glory," a sermon preached June 8, 1941:

"…the dullest and most uninteresting person you talk to may one day be a creature which, if you saw it now, you would be strongly tempted to worship,

or else a horror and a corruption such as you now meet, if at all, only in a nightmare.

All day long we are, in some degree, helping each other to one or other of these destinations.

It is in the light of these overwhelming possibilities, it is with the awe and the circumspection proper to them, that we should conduct all our dealings with one another,

all friendships, all loves, all play, all politics.

There are no ordinary people….it is immortals who we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit

—immortal horrors or everlasting splendors."

If that is so in any fashion, if that is what we are, and what others are,

because of what God has chosen us to be in Christ,

then our task is clear: to manifest who we are in Christ so others may become what they have been chosen to be in Christ.

Today we celebrate not only Jesus baptism’, but also ours!

As we once again make our baptismal vows Let us make them with full awareness that they commit us once again to living the life Christ calls us to

so that we can be beacons of light for those searching for their God

January 16, 2011




2nd Sunday Ordinary Time Cycle A

Isaiah 49:3,5-6; Psalm 40:2,4,7-10; 1 Corinthians 1:1-3; John 1:29-34


What’s wrong with second place? What's wrong with playing second fiddle?

First place is worth fighting for, isn’t it?

Don’t we want our kids to be all they can be?

To be the best, achieve the most, get the highest marks, get into the best schools, live in the best neighborhoods?

What’s wrong with that after all?

I guess the greatest second fiddle of all time is John the Baptist.

I’m going to tell you something about John that some might not know.

John the Baptist had disciples.

He had people who followed him just like the disciples we know so well followed Jesus.

They were devoted to their master, John, but they faced a crisis.

When Jesus came along, John says, "Here’s the guy I was telling you about. Leave me and follow him."

John could well have ignored his calling to point to Jesus and had a great ministry. It’s great when people follow you and it could have gone to his head.

But it didn’t, the moment Jesus arrived on the scene John pointed him out and took a back seat.

We don’t even read about John’s death in John’s gospel, he just disappears.

And that’s what we learn from John.

We learn from John how to point.

When someone goes hunting for grouse or pheasants, the best thing he can take with him is a dog.

A dog trained to point.

Pointers can smell and hear the game and they point towards it and the hunter knows where the bird is and can make the kill.

We Christians are the pointer dogs of the world!

Our job is to point the hunters to the prey - Jesus Christ.

The hunters of course are the seekers of truth.

The hunters are those on a quest for justice or peace.

The hunters are sometimes broken sinners whose lives are being flushed down the toilet.

The hunters are sometimes broken-hearted people.

They all need God.

John pointed people to them.

So are we to.

How then do we point, its all very well that I tell you this but what do we do is point to Jesus.

Remember that we should always play second fiddle to Jesus.

That means that we should allow Jesus to guide the way we handle things and not ourselves.

Jesus says that if we should follow him that we should deny ourselves.

It means that when some one who we don’t like so much or that we know is incredibly different from us shows up

that we should still reach out to them…even if it makes us uncomfortable – deny yourself.

This is the hard part though, it is so much easier and more comfortable to be alright with our personal spirituality and not to worry that others also need Christ.

You and I stand in second place.

We’ll never get higher.

Because Jesus is in first place.

Our job is to point to him.

To be witnesses. (Acts 1:8)

It’s okay to play second fiddle, when first chair first is Jesus Christ