The tenor of your letters, which evinces a religious spirit and the earnestness of a pious mind, causes us not only to commend the purpose of your request, but also to grant willingly what you demand. For indeed it would ill become us to refuse what Christian devotion and the desire of an upright heart solicits, especially as we know that you demand, and embrace with your whole heart, what may both protect the faith of believers, and work no less the salvation of souls. Accordingly, greeting your Excellency with befitting honour, we inform you that to Leuparic, the bearer of these presents, through whom we received your communication, and whom you described as a presbyter, we have handed over, according to your Excellency’s request, with the reverence due to them, certain relics of the blessed apostles Peter and Paul. But, that laudable and religious devotion may be more and more conspicuous among you, you must see that these benefits of the saints be deposited with reverence and due honor, and that those who serve in attendance on them be vexed with no burdens or molestations, lest perchance, under the pressure of outward necessity, they be rendered unprofitable and slow in the service of God, and (which God forbid) the benefits of the saints that have been bestowed sustain injury and neglect. Let, then, your Excellency see to their quiet, to the end that, while they are guarded by your bounty from all disquietude, they may render praises to our God with minds undisturbed, and that reward may also accrue to you in the life eternal. — Book VI, Letter 50, from Gregory, Bishop of Rome to Brunichild, Queen of the Franks.
Let, therefore, your solicitude towards your subjects be worthy of praise. Let discipline be exhibited with gentleness. Let rebuke be with discernment. Let kindness mitigate wrath; let zeal sharpen kindness: and let one be so seasoned with the other that neither immoderate punishment afflict more than it ought, nor again laxity impair the rectitude of discipline. Let the conduct of your Fraternity be a lesson to the people committed to you. Let them see in you what to love, and perceive what to make haste to imitate. Let them be taught how to live by your example. Let them not deviate from the straight course through your leading; let them find their way to God by following you; that so you may receive as many rewards from the Savior of the human race as you shall have won souls for Him. Labor therefore, most dear brother, and so direct the whole activity of your heart and soul, that you may hereafter be counted worthy to hear, Well done, thou good and faithful servant: enter thou into the joy of your Lord. — Book V, Letter 57 from Gregory, Bishop of Rome to John, Bishop of the Corinthians.
First reading: Isaiah 56:1,6-7
Psalm: Ps 67:2-3,5,6-8
Epistle: Romans 11:13-15,29-32
Gospel: Matthew 15:21-28
for my house shall be called
a house of prayer for all peoples.
Today we face lessons that are both off-putting and welcoming. We come to meet Jesus and find that He is full of conflict like that.
We try to understand Jesus in various ways. At certain points in our life we reach a comfortable place. I get Jesus. I see what He was trying to say, how He was trying to teach. Then we reach a conclusion. We place Jesus into a category that works for us.
Jesus is my brother.
Jesus is my teacher.
Jesus is my savior.
Jesus is my friend.
Jesus is my confidant.
Jesus is my healer.
Jesus is my judge.
We could spend a day walking through the Litany of the Holy Name. We could spend a lifetime studying Christology – the names and roles of Jesus. Whatever the approach, we place Jesus into a category that works for us.
Then, certain readings and especially a certain number of the Gospels come along and turn that notion, that category, on its head. Today is like that.
the woman came and did Jesus homage, saying, —Lord, help me.—
He said in reply,
—It is not right to take the food of the children
and throw it to the dogs.—
Wait — did Jesus just call this woman a dog? Did He imply that she was somehow sub-human? Did He refuse to help at her plea, as she probably lay prostrate before Him, sobbing and weeping, worried for her daughter, and at the end of her rope?
Wow!
There goes the notions of Jesus as brother, teacher, savior, healer, friend, and confidant. There goes our tidy Jesus corner. That category that worked so well for us — it’s down the tube, or at least has been upset quite a bit.
Now there are a few of us for whom this Jesus fits very nicely. Yeah, we like this Jesus – judgmental, angry, mean, put ’em in their place Jesus. No soup for you Canaanite. A few would say: —Thankfully, a reading that finally puts my notion of Jesus front and center. Angry Jesus works for me.—
Brothers and sisters,
Not one of these is correct because Jesus cannot be a tidy corner in our lives. Jesus doesn’t fit into our lives nicely and cleanly. Jesus upsets every notion we have and every category we have created. Recall in Matthew 10:34 Jesus says:
“Do not think that I have come to bring peace on earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.—
This is a sword of destruction. It destroys everything we think, believe, and hold dear. It destroys our notions, our thoughts, the ways we categorize, because none of this is based on the salvation of Jesus, but rather on our tendency to sin, to make ourselves comfortable at the expense of Jesus and His Gospel.
Jesus brought the sword so that He could tear us down, so that He could make us uncomfortable in complacency. In doing that He offers the one thing we truly desire, but are afraid to ask for – over-reaching mercy.
Friends,
Something happened to this Canaanite woman in the region of Tyre and Sidon.
What we know is that she came and called out. It is likely that she had been pestering the disciples for some time else they would not have said: —Send her away, for she keeps calling out after us.— She kept at it and finally threw herself down in front of Jesus.
I think she had a tidy explanation for Jesus too. Jesus is my healer. She came with her cries, her long pleading, and her tidy explanation, and laying there she might well have thought – this prophet just called me a dog. Yet, even after all the calling, the sobbing, the pleas, and the groveling, topped off by Jesus’ refusal to help, something amazing happened.
The Canaanite woman changed. She asked for over-reaching mercy. Her notion of Jesus was suddenly and irrevocably changed and the light of faith dawned.
Then Jesus said to her in reply,
—O woman, great is your faith!—
We need to change our notion of Jesus. We need to change into the people Isaiah saw.
The foreigners who join themselves to the LORD,
ministering to him,
loving the name of the LORD,
and becoming his servants—”
all who keep the sabbath free from profanation
and hold to my covenant,
them I will bring to my holy mountain
and make joyful in my house of prayer
We are all foreigners in the Kingdom. Like the Canaanite woman we keep crying and pleading. We come to church and we humble ourselves, and still, all seems silent. Life is difficult. The little compartment we created for Jesus is broken and we can’t find the answer.
Like the Gentiles of old we are foreigners on the outside. We are being put-off. Grace keeps working at us until we see, and in that moment we will recognize God’s absolute, all powerful, over-reaching mercy. We will be pulled inside. When the light of faith dawns in our lives, when we call for over-reaching mercy, it will be given to us. We will hear Jesus say: —great is your faith!—
Then everything will change. Jesus will be all-in-all in our lives. His word will take precedence. His name will be our only hope. Sin will die, hopelessness will end, and healing will occur. There will be no compartments. Grace will be in our lives in all its fullness. We will live and act as children of God, in the house of the Lord. Amen.
These things, then, I have set shortly before you, O Theophilus, drawing them from Scripture itself, in order that, maintaining in faith what is written, and anticipating the things that are to be, you may keep yourself void of offense both toward God and toward men, “looking for that blessed hope and appearing of our God and Savior,” when, having raised the saints among us, He will rejoice with them, glorifying the Father. To Him be the glory unto the endless ages of the ages. Amen. — Paragraph 67.
You can read lots of stories on this. The Weekly Standard has a good analysis (ok – basically neo-cons, but even neo-cons can make sense from time-to-time) in Poland’s New Missile Defense.
The first few articles I read yesterday, primarily from the Press in the United States, were so horrible, both historically and factually, that I wanted to correct a few of the inaccuracies and further extend and clarify their statements.
- Poland will be a nuclear target (because of this new system). Sorry scary Russian General but that is just a fact and has been a fact for 50 plus years. Poland’s geographic position between the ill-named Warsaw Pact and NATO just made this so. Russia and the United States would have cleared Poland off the map in any conflict – and would do so today. Likely that Poland’s Warsaw Pact allies would have been the first to nuke it.
- Poland is a Eastern European Country. It depends upon who you quote. The CIA Factbook puts Poland in Central Europe. The UN notes Poland as being in East Central Europe. Religiously Poland is Western European. Central European is a better term.
- Poland has “traditionally [been] under Russian influence.” Only if your historical perspective is 200 years plus or minus, you believe that invasion is a welcome event, or you follow a Pan-Slavic philosophy. Poland fell under Russian “influence” several times, in the partitions of the late 18th century until World War I, during World War II when Russia and Nazi Germany cooperated in the invasion of Poland, and following World War II when Poland was involuntarily thrown under Russian control by its Allies (England and the United States). Influence is also a poor choice of words. Better to say control. Those Russian ‘influences’ were not welcome.
- Poland was communist. Technically and historically correct but misleading. It’s like a reporter stopping at saying that the United States was an English Colony. Poland was more than that and wasn’t a communist country by its own choice. The statement is not reflective of what Poland was and is in a larger context.
Of course no Press outlet will take notice of my corrections and clarifications, but there you are.
Rod Watson, a columnist for the Buffalo News gets it. From his column: Never happen here? Guess what — it has
As one of its many shifting rationales for starting a war, the Bush administration constantly reminded Americans about the freedoms we take for granted.
That argument will be much less compelling next time for one simple reason: We won’t have nearly as many freedoms left once this bunch leaves office.
The outrageous new policy of seizing electronic devices at the Peace Bridge and other crossings purely on the whim of a border agent is just the latest example of our government doing to us what we’d fight to the death to prevent a foreign power from doing.
Think about it: No warrant. No probable cause. No judge.
Just a vague suspicion —” real or fabricated —” is pretext enough to seize your laptop, cell phone or iPod and all of the personal or business-related information in it. A local entrepreneur’s trade secrets, a journalist’s confidential information from a whistle-blower, your private medical records —” all fair game for any snooping government agent.
No appeal. No ability to challenge it. And no idea when, or if, you’ll ever get it back.
If you walked into a room in the midst of a discussion of this abuse, the reaction would be, —Wow, I’m sure glad I live in America, where nothing like that could happen.— It’s the kind of story that, when it occurs in other countries, prompts U.S. leaders to wag their fingers.
In the last few years, slowly, silently, we’ve become those other countries.
While there have been protests as the administration’s oil buddies rob consumers to rake in record profits, we’ve been robbed of something much more precious with hardly a whimper…
Read the rest. It’s worth time in reflection because look at the next step. From today’s Washington Post: U.S. May Ease Police Spy Rules. More Federal Intelligence Changes Planned
The Justice Department has proposed a new domestic spying measure that would make it easier for state and local police to collect intelligence about Americans, share the sensitive data with federal agencies and retain it for at least 10 years.
The proposed changes would revise the federal government’s rules for police intelligence-gathering for the first time since 1993 and would apply to any of the nation’s 18,000 state and local police agencies that receive roughly $1.6 billion each year in federal grants.
Quietly unveiled late last month, the proposal is part of a flurry of domestic intelligence changes issued and planned by the Bush administration in its waning months. They include a recent executive order that guides the reorganization of federal spy agencies and a pending Justice Department overhaul of FBI procedures for gathering intelligence and investigating terrorism cases within U.S. borders.
Taken together, critics in Congress and elsewhere say, the moves are intended to lock in policies for Bush’s successor and to enshrine controversial post-Sept. 11 approaches that some say have fed the greatest expansion of executive authority since the Watergate era…
Funny they should mention Watergate. Of course that’s scarry to a lot of folks because it stood their trust of government on its head. At the time of Watergate Congress and the Press stood against an abusive Executive. They stood to defend core principals. That doesn’t happen so much anymore. In fact, it is non-existent. This is far scarier and, in comparison, Watergate was limited to a proverbial “Keystone Kop” affair through checks-and-balances.
These measures are not just an abuse of “Executive” authority, but a steady movement toward the authority of dictators. It is simply a license to do whatever the person in charge pleases without accountability.
Now, concerning the tribulation of the persecution which is to fall upon the Church from the adversary, John also speaks thus: “And I saw a great and wondrous sign in heaven; a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars. And she, being with child, cries, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered. And the dragon stood before the woman which was ready to be delivered, for to devour her child as soon as it was born. And she brought forth a man-child, who is to rule all the nations: and the child was caught up unto God and to His throne. And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she has the place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days. And then when the dragon saw it, he persecuted the woman which brought forth the man-child. And to the woman were given two wings of the great eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness, where she is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent. And the serpent cast (out of his mouth water as a flood after the woman, that he might cause her to be carried away of the flood. And the earth helped the woman, and opened her mouth, and swallowed up the flood which the dragon cast) out of his mouth. And the dragon was angry with the woman, and went to make war with the saints of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus.”
By the woman then clothed with the sun, he meant most manifestly the Church, endued with the Father’s word, whose brightness is above the sun. And by the “moon under her feet” he referred to her being adorned, like the moon, with heavenly glory. And the words, “upon her head a crown of twelve stars,” refer to the twelve apostles by whom the Church was founded. And those, “she, being with child, cries, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered,” mean that the Church will not cease to bear from her heart the Word that is persecuted by the unbelieving in the world. “And she brought forth,” he says, “a man-child, who is to rule all the nations;” by which is meant that the Church, always bringing forth Christ, the perfect man-child of God, who is declared to be God and man, becomes the instructor of all the nations. And the words, “her child was caught up unto God and to His throne,” signify that he who is always born of her is a heavenly king, and not an earthly; even as David also declared of old when he said, “The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit at my right hand, until I make Your enemies Your footstool.” “And the dragon,” he says, “saw and persecuted the woman which brought forth the man-child. And to the woman were given two wings of the great eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness, where she is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent.” That refers to the one thousand two hundred and threescore days (the half of the week) during which the tyrant is to reign and persecute the Church, which flees from city to city, and seeks concealment in the wilderness among the mountains, possessed of no other defense than the two wings of the great eagle, that is to say, the faith of Jesus Christ, who, in stretching forth His holy hands on the holy tree, unfolded two wings, the right and the left, and called to Him all who believed upon Him, and covered them as a hen her chickens. For by the mouth of Malachi also He speaks thus: “And unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in His wings.” — Paragraphs 60 and 61.
From Wikipedia: Battle of Warsaw (1920)
The Battle of Warsaw (Russian: ВаршáвÑкое Ñражéние, Polish: Bitwa Warszawska; sometimes referred to as the Miracle at the Vistula, Polish: Cud nad Wisłą) was the decisive battle of the Polish-Soviet War, which began soon after the end of World War I in 1918 and lasting until the Treaty of Riga (1921).
Before the Polish victory at the Vistula, both the Bolsheviks and the majority of foreign experts considered Poland to be on the verge of defeat. The stunning, unexpected Polish victory crippled the Bolshevik forces. In the following months, several more Polish victories secured Poland’s independence and eastern borders.

August 15th was the turning point. Polish forces at Warsaw routed the Russian army. It is said that an apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary above the Wisła was the inspiration for the victory by the Polish forces.
“Who Was Born by (de) The Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary.” This nativity among men is in the way of dispensation, whereas the former nativity is of the divine substance; the one results from his condescension, the other from his essential nature. He is born by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin. Here a chaste ear and a pure mind is required. For you must understand that now a temple has been built within the secret recesses of a Virgin’s womb for Him of Whom erewhile you learned that He was born ineffably of the Father. And just as in the sanctification of the Holy Ghost no thought of imperfection is to be admitted, so in the Virgin-birth no defilement is to be imagined. For this birth was a new birth given to this world, and rightly new. For He Who is the only Son in heaven is by consequence the only Son on earth, and was uniquely born, born as no other ever was or can be. — Paragraph 9.
At all times they showed themselves enemies and betrayers of the truth, and were found to be haters of God, and not lovers of Him; and such they shall be then when they find opportunity: for, rousing themselves against the servants of God, they will seek to obtain vengeance by the hand of a mortal man. And he, being puffed up with pride by their subserviency, will begin to despatch missives against the saints, commanding to cut them all off everywhere, on the ground of their refusal to reverence and worship him as God, according to the word of Esaias: “Woe to the wings of the vessels of the land, beyond the rivers of Ethiopia: (woe to him) who sends sureties by the sea, and letters of papyrus (upon the water; for nimble messengers will go) to a nation anxious and expectant, and a people strange and bitter against them; a nation hopeless and trodden down.”
But we who hope for the Son of God are persecuted and trodden down by those unbelievers. For the wings of the vessels are the churches; and the sea is the world, in which the Church is set, like a ship tossed in the deep, but not destroyed; for she has with her the skilled Pilot, Christ. And she bears in her midst also the trophy (which is erected) over death; for she carries with her the cross of the Lord. For her prow is the east, and her stern is the west, and her hold is the south, and her tillers are the two Testaments; and the ropes that stretch around her are the love of Christ, which binds the Church; and the net which she bears with her is the layer of the regeneration which renews the believing, whence too are these glories. As the wind the Spirit from heaven is present, by whom those who believe are sealed: she has also anchors of iron accompanying her, viz., the holy commandments of Christ Himself, which are strong as iron. She has also mariners on the right and on the left, assessors like the holy angels, by whom the Church is always governed and defended. The ladder in her leading up to the sailyard is an emblem of the passion of Christ, which brings the faithful to the ascent of heaven. And the top-sails aloft upon the yard are the company of prophets, martyrs, and apostles, who have entered into their rest in the kingdom of Christ. — Paragraph 58c through 59.