Month: October 2005

Christian Witness, Perspective

Nostra Aetate – Blowing Away the Cross

I was scanning the front page of the Evangelist, the official newspaper of the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese and was struck by the picture found there.

The picture featured a group of Buddhist monks creating a mandala – an ‘artwork’ made of grains of sand individually placed. These works are very intricate and once they are completed and viewed they are blown away, ‘dust in the wind’ so to speak. The creation and destruction of the mandala are supposed to represent the Buddhist concept that “the world is an impermanent place.”

OK, so they have their mandala. The irony of the whole thing was that the mandala was in the shape of a Jerusalem Cross. In addition it was being created in the chapel of the Doane-Stuart School, a joint Roman Catholic – Episcopal private school (that has a Buddhist meditation center in it).

I thought, wow, the Buddhists get it. Symbols – what many Roman Catholics and Episcopalians have forgotten. Symbols stand for something and invoke meaning. The Buddhists got it. In the middle of an institution founded in the name of two great Christian faith traditions they created and blew away the Cross.

In today’s Times Union, the Inter-religious Affairs Coordinator of Albany’s Roman Catholic Diocese noted this event in his Religion Page ‘Voices of Faith‘ article on Nostra Aetate’s 40th Anniversary.

Now Doane-Stuart is no longer a sectarian institution, has disavowed its Christian foundations, and is basically a public school with high tuition and two chapels, but never-the-less, should not the Christians there, the editorial board of the Evangelist, and the Roman Catholic Diocese’s Inter-religious Affairs coordinator have taken a bye on lauding this event. Can’t they see that by giving attention to the event they implicitly condone its message and its irony.

Nostra Aetate was indeed a pivotal document for the Roman Catholic Church. It discussed the relationship between the Roman Catholic Church and other religions (Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism). In a positive sense it set aside perceived doctrines of hatred. It stated that all humanity is created in God’s image and that each person has within him/herself the Divine calling to unity with God.

Indeed the PNCC said the same thing almost a century before Nostra Aetate in its Confession of Faith, especially in Principals 9, 10, and 12:

I BELIEVE that all peoples as children of one Father, God, are equal in themselves; that privileges arising from differences in rank, from possession of immense riches or from differences of faith, sex and race, are a great wrong, for they are a violation of the rights of man which he possess by his nature and the dignity of his divine origin, and are a barrier to the purposeful development of man.

I BELIEVE that all people have an equal right to life, happiness and those ways and means which lead to the preservation of existence, to advancement and salvation, but I also believe that all people have sacred obligations toward God, themselves, their nation, state and all of humanity.

I BELIEVE in immortality and everlasting happiness in eternity in union with God of all people, races and ages, because I believe in the Divine power of love, mercy and justice and for nothing else do I yearn, but that it may be to me according to my faith.

The Principals of the PNCC and Nostra Aetate created an environment of respect between Catholic Christians and members of other religions. What it did not create, at least in my estimation, is a license to disavow the Christian faith or to find salvation in other religions. They do not allow us to stand by as others take the stage to blow away the cross as a symbol of impermanence.

The great Christian Saints, the contemplatives and mystics, did not need labyrinths, yoga, tai-chi, a mandala, reiki, energy fields, or crystals. They had the great prayers of the Church, the Divine Office, the Rosary, and most importantly the Eucharist and the Gospels. They had Jesus Christ, the God-man within them. They spent hours, days, months, and years meditating on him long before the yogis and Buddhists were known.

The thought that the East has taught us something is a canard. Thomas Merton brought nothing back from the East that was not already present in the Church. People just had to look for it within the Deposit of Faith.

On the 40th anniversary of Nostra Aetate, let us pray that Catholic Christians renew their own self respect and stand up to proclaim the truth of Jesus Christ crucified, the everlasting symbol of our salvation. Let us also pray that we remember that Principald 9, 10, and 12 must be seen in light of Principal 7:

I BELIEVE that the Church of Christ is the true teacher of both individual man as well as of all human society, that it is a steward of Divine Graces, a guide and a light in man’s temporal pilgrimage to God and salvation; in so far as the followers and members of this Church, both lay and clerical, are united with the Divine Founder through faith and life proceeding from this faith.

Someday, in God’s good time and through His graces we will be united as one flock under one shepherd, Christ the Lord.

Homilies

30th Sunday in Ordinary Time

—Teacher which commandment in the law is the greatest?—
He said to him,
—You shall love the Lord, your God,
with all your heart,
with all your soul,
and with all your mind.
This is the greatest and the first commandment.

My sisters and brothers in Christ,

What follows this statement, —You shall love your neighbor as yourself.— is often the focus of the homily on this Sunday. We focus so much on —You shall love your neighbor as yourself.— that we often overlook the first part, the greatest commandment —You shall love the Lord, your God—. Or we see —You shall love your neighbor as yourself!’ as an equal substitute for loving God.

Of course our neighbor is easy to see, sometimes even to love. Look around you. This Church, this community are filled with your neighbors. You’ll shake their hands at the sign of peace.

But what about God? God is in your neighbor of course, but your neighbor is not God. Nothing on earth is God, or anything in the heavens. God is the infinite and the ultimate. He cannot be contained in anything, not even in everything created. The created can only point to Him.

So my family in Christ, let’s focus on God.

You’ve all heard of the terrible term WMD’s, weapons of mass destruction. Today I will talk about an equally terrible weapon we all carry, IMD’s.

What is an IMD? An IMD is the tool of evil in our life. It is intimidation, manipulation, and domination. It is the set of
tools that evil gives us to make us feel secure in our own power and sense of control.

Intimidation, manipulation, and domination.

Perhaps we use these tools with our spouse, perhaps with our children, maybe with our co-workers or subordinates. Intimidation, manipulation, and domination make us feel secure and in control.

Evil in our lives, the force of evil in the world, leads us to believe that we need power and control. It tempts us, and when we sin, when we acquiesce to the idea that we need to gain knowledge, power, and control by using IMD’s, we discard the greatest commandment. God is not in charge anymore. We are. There is no God. We are not loving God heart, mind, and soul. When we sin we are not loving Him at all.

So what of God? Isn’t He the most powerful, most almighty, most everlasting. Isn’t He the ultimate IMD, the mother of all IMD’s.

No.

When we think of God we think, He can fix it, he can make it better, He has the power. And we disappoint ourselves, because we did not gain power and control over our situation through God’s hands. We didn’t get the power to control and understand what is happening. We didn’t change the outcome.

What does God give us? How does He act? Does He use I MD’s?

Well, He gave us His son, He allowed himself to be brutally killed so we could have everlasting life.

That is why the cross is a stumbling block. It does not represent intimidation, manipulation, and domination. It represents sacrifice, suffering, and love. Jesus did not promise us a honkey-dory existence. He did not promise us a rose garden. When we suffer, when we sacrifice, when we are in pain and need, we are ever closer to Him. When we realize our sin and repent from it, His death on the cross becomes real for us. When we set aside our need for control and put all in God’s hands, then we are Christian.

God gives us Himself in the presence of His Son in this tabernacle. His Son gave us all we need. He did not guarantee us power and control —” quite the opposite. He did however open the doors of heaven to us. He guaranteed our everlasting life. And He left us with the gift of the Holy Spirit.

The point of all this is who do you believe? Do you believe in God, in Jesus Christ, in the Cross and the power of the Holy Spirit? Do we love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul and mind? Or do you believe in yourself and your ability to use IMD’s.

The next time you are tempted, put down the IMD’s and follow the greatest commandment. Love God, that all may be well with you.

Everything Else

85th Anniversary of the founding of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Czestochowa Parish

I welcome you on this joyous occasion, the celebration of the 85th anniversary of the foundation of this parish under the patronage of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Czestochowa.

In preparing my opening remarks, I was led to reflect on the words found in the 103rd Psalm.

The psalmist proclaims:

Bless the LORD, my soul; all my being, bless his holy name!
Bless the LORD, my soul; do not forget all the gifts of God,
Who pardons all your sins, heals all your ills,
Delivers your life from the pit, surrounds you with love and compassion,
Fills your days with good things; your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.

This parish is a gift from God and is a light to the world. God has blessed us with His many graces over the years. In His love he has not left us alone, but has joined us together to be a light to each other, and to our community. He has created this sacred place where we reflect upon God and do not forget Him. Where our sins are pardoned and all that troubles us is healed. It is a place where we are given every good thing, and where we are surrounded by love and compassion.

God himself inspired the brave founders of this parish to seek freedom and self determination. Not the false freedoms that the world offers, but true freedom found in the Kingdom of God that is now and is yet to be.

Our Lord Jesus led the people of Scranton to step forward in freedom. With Bishop Hodur as their spiritual guide, people across the country broke with the prevailing power structures of the church. They broke free, not to do as they pleased, but rather to transform the face of the earth. To transform the world through Faith in God and respect for each other. To transform the world through truth, work, and struggle.

Our ancestors in Albany walked the same path. They led and have taught us to bear faithful witness to the way of Christ.

They led in teaching that a Church is not a closed society of clerics, but rather a faithful representation of the Kingdom to come, the clergy and people working side-by-side, of one heart and mind, focused on Jesus Christ. They led and taught us that the Church is universal, that is open to all. They led in teaching that democracy is not the acceptance of everything and anything, but rather a means. They led and taught that democratic participation resists totalitarianism and that what the Church teaches is not its own vision of what is possible for humanity, but God’s vision —“ God’s freedom.

The prophet Zachariah tells us: Not by an army, nor by might, but by my spirit says the Lord of hosts.

Our community has succeeded not by bring the biggest or strongest, not because of intellectual achievement or hard work alone, but because we shine the light of Christ on all we do. The Spirit of the Lord of hosts dwells in this place and we do not hide it.

The old saying ‘w jednosci sila’ —“ ‘in unity there is strength’ is proven by our unity as a community, our unity in faith.

The psalmist concludes:

But the LORD’S kindness is forever, toward the faithful from age to age.
He favors the children’s children of those who keep his covenant, who take care to fulfill its precepts.
The LORD’S throne is established in heaven; God’s royal power rules over all.
Bless the LORD, all you angels, mighty in strength and attentive, obedient to every command.
Bless the LORD, all you hosts, ministers who do God’s will.
Bless the LORD, all creatures, everywhere in God’s domain.
Bless the LORD, my soul!

Homilies

The Solemnity of the Christian Family – The Christian Family, A Fiery Reflection

In this week’s news:

41 year old actor Nicolas Cage and 20 year old Alice Kim have a new baby which they named Kal-El. That’s right, for those who do not recognize it, Kal-El is Superman’s original Kryptonian name.

My sisters and brothers, my family in Christ,

Today the PNCC celebrates the Solemnity of the Christian Family. A remarkable and righteous celebration of what is good in God’s creation.

Our first reading explains God’s design. He created us in His image. Both men AND women, in God’s image. As a family, in God’s image. How amazing, the all powerful, everlasting, just, God created us in His image. Jesus Christ stood there at creation, the co-eternal Son of the Father, and the Holy Spirit moved across the waters —“ and life was brought forth. Life in the shape of the family is life in God. Jesus came to us as a child, part of a family. Jesus built community around Him in his disciples and Apostles —“ the family of the Church.

Thinking on this is wonderful. It is all warm and fuzzy because we can relate to family. Whether it is nuclear, single parent, or extended, whether our family is represented in our friends, co-workers, in the Church, in a mentoring relationship, our experience of community tells us —“ this is right. This is God’s plan.

But, I bring you a sad message and a call to action. God’s creation is in great danger, and Jesus message, the Gospel, is being threatened at every turn.

The Hollywood agenda —“ pure selfishness. Name your son after a fictional character, carry on the fiction of your relationships, and all the while feed and expound on your own ego. Obviously wrong —“ but we accept it. We even support it in the guise of being open minded and artistic.

The new world order and its affect. We have to respect whatever any individual dreams up, because it is part of their ‘cultural’ imperative. We have to respect each person’s SELF-determination, accent on the self part. Obviously wrong —“ but we accept it. We even support it in the guise of being open minded and democratic.

The ongoing fight to destroy the institution of marriage, to make it something it is not, the culture of death, it’s all ok, it’s my right.

As a matter of fact none of it is right, and it is not ok. It is sin. It is placing man, and mans’ desires before God. It is denigrating God to a philosophical construct at best. It seeks to destroy the Christian family.

Is the Gospel of Christ getting uncomfortable for you yet?

It really shouldn’t matter; for today the Gospel is no more than the philosophical ramblings of a guy named Jesus. He lived a few thousand years ago, talked a lot about love (oh, forget the responsibility and repent part), and he ate and drank with sinners, because he thought sin was cool.

Is this what we believe?

Are we judgmental —“ in fact yes, and we are prejudiced too. We have the ultimate standard to judge by. That is God’s standards as taught to us in the Holy Bible. We have the words and teachings, the example and light of Jesus Christ. And that is the key. Our Church family, our Christian way of life is opposed to the way of the world. The answer to the world’s ways is Jesus. Buddha is not god, nor is Shiva, nor the Great Spirit or Mother Earth, nor money, nor the world.

Jesus Christ is God and unless we can fall before Him in praise and adoration, declaring and believing with every part of our being that He is the everlasting, the Alpha and Omega, the Just Judge and ruler of all, then there is no sense in being here. If he is not the center of our family life, if we as parents are not holding our children accountable for their faith, if we are not modeling the Christian behaviors and attitudes we want to see in our families, our children, and in the world, then we possess no more than an interesting philosophical debate for dinner parties.

This is your call to action. This is your call to, as the title of the homily suggests, be a Christian family —“ a fiery reflection of God’s light. As Christian families, and as a church family, we are called to reflect the light of Christ. To be a light to the world, and to face some hardship in doing so. In the fire of the world’s desires we will be tested and refined. We will be purified for the heavenly kingdom.

Therefore, affirm Jesus Christ as God and live as a Christ centered family. By doing so you will change all that may be hurting you and you will bear witness to Christ before the world.

As a family let us reflect and pray,

Lord, Jesus, today’s psalm tells us that those who fear You and walk in Your ways are happy. Help us to lead exemplary lives as Christians, as Christian families, and as a Christian community. Grant us the grace to resist the promptings and ways of the world for You are all we need. Give us and our world a spirit of responsibility and repentance. Help us to remember that You forgive our sins, and have washed us in Your blood. In all things gather us together, as a family, under the banner of this Church, and grant us the blessings and happiness reserved for those who fear You and walk in Your ways. Amen.

Homilies

27th Sunday in Ordinary Time – The Blame Game

Listen again to the words of Isaiah:

Then he looked for the crop of grapes,
but what it yielded was wild grapes.

What more was there to do for my vineyard
that I had not done?
Why, when I looked for the crop of grapes,
did it bring forth wild grapes?
Now, I will let you know
what I mean to do with my vineyard

My brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus,

If you notice, the landowner looked for a good crop. He expected it. He did everything necessary to bring about a good crop. And, he asks a very important question. —Why did it bring forth wild grapes?—

He moves right from the question to the action. —Now, I will let you know what I mean to do with my vineyard—

What’s missing?

We should see it very easily. It is the unanswered question. Where does the blame lie? The landowner asked the question, —Why did it bring forth wild grapes?— Doesn’t he deserve an answer?

Look sir, perhaps it was the soil, the fertilizer, the type of grapes (they’re not right for the climate). Maybe it was the workers or the foreman —“ he had crazy ideas about how you should grow grapes.

What’s missing is the blame. But, Isaiah and Jesus did not have to lay blame. The expected results were known because God is the landowner. He has given every opportunity and every good thing to His people. The people of Isaiah’s time and Jesus’ time are our living, breathing, cautionary tale.

The cautionary tale has three components.

The first caution is that we must know that we have been given every good thing. The Gospel is our instruction book. The Body and Blood of Jesus Christ is our food and strength. And, within us, we have the constant, unconquerable desire for God. God, thank you for these gifts. They are all we need. Caution! Remember that God gives us all we need.

The second caution is that we must trust. Maybe our life situation is not exactly to our liking. Maybe our family and friends are less than we expect. Maybe we have experienced tragedy and sorrow. Maybe everything is honky-dory and we are successful, rich, blessed, and happy.

Regardless, of the circumstances, can we place our complete trust and faith in God? Jesus gave us the instruction, not a blade of grass withers or a bird falls from the sky without His Father’s knowledge. God, our trust is in you alone. You are the center and purpose of our life, not just in the big picture, but every minute of every day. Caution! We better trust in God alone.

The third caution is that we must act. Frankly, you need to be a radical. We are not here to adjust to our environment or to make compromise, but to deliver all and everything to Christ the Universal King in accord with His teaching and that of the Church.

—Teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you—

When you wake in the morning, give thanks for the gifts of the day. For food which is real food unto eternal life, for the Word, for the Gospel. Give thanks for your joys and your sorrows. In your next breath, resolve once again to place your full trust, your full faith and credit in Jesus Christ.

The world will not take kindly to you as a radical for Christ. Our Lord promised us, —You shall be hated by all for my name’s sake— But, caution! Act in accord with Christ and His Church.

We can believe Jesus and we can learn from these cautions, trusting in the reward He promises, or we can heed his admonition.

—Therefore, I say to you,
the kingdom of God will be taken away from you
and given to a people that will produce its fruit.”

Let us reflect and pray.

Lord, grant us your grace. We ask only for this, for you love us completely and give us all we need. We thank You for what you give us. Inspire us to thank You more and more. Give us the grace to put You first and to fully trust in You. Do not let us be tempted to lay blame but inspire us to act in union with You and Your Church.

Amen.