Homilies

Second Sunday of Easter (Low Sunday) – B

First reading: Acts 4:32-35
Psalm: Ps 118:2-4,13-15,22-24
Epistle: 1 John 5:1-6
Gospel: John 20:19-31

But these are written that you may come to believe
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God,
and that through this belief you may have life in his name.

Christ is risen! Alleluia!
He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

Things are written so you may come to believe, but who can?

We wonder.

In this week after Easter we may feel a little like the disciples, with a sense of wonderment. That wonderment is mitigated by the long history, the things that have passed since Jesus’ resurrection. We try to understand things in light of what Jesus said, did, and accomplished. Chief among these are His sacrificial death and His resurrection on the third day. Yet we still wonder. We still have a hard time understanding this resurrection thing.

How can this be?

Imagine sitting in your living room and suddenly a beloved relative, who has died, is standing before you. Imagine too that you know that you are sober and sane. Would you be able to wrap your mind and emotions around that experience? Would you know what to make of it, or how to react?

I think that I would be much like the Apostles. I’d be running around in circles, like a dog chasing its tail, not knowing what to do. Imagine what it was like for the Apostles. At first sullen, then things unexplained, and then WOW! I would hope that my relative would say —peace be with you.— Maybe that would calm me down.

After time passed, and our shock subsided, we might find context for the experience. At least we have knowledge of Christ’s rising. We have context based on the testimony of the witnesses, and our faith, that Jesus conquered death. Jesus is our context for life after death.

We know death.

The Apostles had no context. The Jews who lived during Jesus’ time on earth saw death as finality. Of the Jewish groups, only the Pharisees believed in the resurrection. The Sadducees believed that the soul died with the body. Jewish sacred texts and literature have little to say about what happens after death. The Torah and other Jewish writings on death indicate that the soul goes to Sheol, where the soul continues to exist in some way, but not consciously. The Apostles likely thought that Jesus went to Sheol, to the place of the ancestors, or simply was no more.

We all know death and loss. Death is ever real for us as well. We are saddened by death, depressed by death, and hurt by the death of our loved ones. Death is real because we can see it; we have personal knowledge of its implications, its pain.

We do not know death anymore.

There is Jesus! Imagine the wild scene when Thomas returned.

Thomas! Thomas! Guess what! Wow! You missed it! Jesus! Oh man! You shoulda been here…

Once he cut through the ruckus, and got everyone calmed down enough to understand what they were saying, Thomas would probably have said: Jesus what?

The others were trying to explain the thing we look at so calmly: Jesus lives, He has been raised, death is no more. The Gospel tells us that the Apostles said those things, but we read it in the context of history, and a recitation of words. The Apostles didn’t know the words, they didn’t have the history, and nothing in history could have prepared them for this.

History is the problem.

Jesus has been looked at, disected, examined, philosophized over, theologized on, and has been run through the gauntlet of human examination from the moment he was conceived in the womb of our Blessed Mother, Mary. In biblical studies, a field caled hermeneutics, there are at least six major approaches to understanding the Bible, and the whole point of the Bible, Jesus’ ministry. There’s a Lexical-syntactical method dealing with the words of the bible; a Historical-cultural method; a Contextual method; a Theological method; various Literary methods studying the genres found in Scripture: narratives, histories, prophecies, apocalyptic writings, poetry, psalms and letters; and the Historico-grammatical method.

Each of these approaches to God, to Jesus, depends on our knowledge, on our study. We approach Jesus, much like the Apostles, based on our experience and knowledge. The problem is -—“ we cannot know, not from our experience, not from our limited knowledge, not from all the other stuff that has occurred in history.

Jesus is history and beyond history.

Jesus is God. He is history and is beyond history. He is everything and beyond everything. We cannot put a context, based on our experience, around Jesus and His resurrection. We cannot grasp resurrection based on what we know, based on our study, based on any other historical event. That makes it easy for man to do his all to disprove, to impeach every source, every word on the resurrection. We cannot even match up the accounts from the scriptures. How many women went to the tomb? How many Apostles ran to the tomb? Were Peter and John running to the tomb while Jesus walked with the other disciples on the road to Emmaus? Was Jesus standing by the tomb in the guise of a gardener? The Sea of Tiberias and the fish fry? Was Thomas there, when Jesus walked into the locked room, or not? Nothing agrees, and some assume that the conflicting histories disprove the event.

Remember what I said about the deceased relative showing up and how I would be like a dog chasing its tail, not knowing what to do? So it was with these accounts. Was Jesus raised? Surely as I stand here. Can we analyze it and understand it? Can we get it? Not so easy!

We know.

St. John tells us:

for whoever is begotten by God conquers the world.
And the victory that conquers the world is our faith.

My friends, we are a people born of faith, a people begotten by God. Conquering the world has nothing to do with argument, with armed conflict, with disproving the naysayers and the analysts. Conquering the world has nothing to do with history and a historical analysis of what happened 2,000 years ago. They are not bad things to do, but we can only conquer when we say that we know based on faith. When we come to believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, when we are regenerated, we win. In that we have life…eternal life.

These are written so you may come to believe. Holy Scripture helps to get us there; it helps us in coming to believe. Faith brings it home. Scripture and faith allow us to give our testimony, to tell all the reason for our hope: Christ has risen! Alleluia!

LifeStream

Daily Digest for April 18th

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New blog post: Daily Digest for April 17th http://tinyurl.com/cyf8fq [#] 5:00pm | via Twitter
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New blog post: Cover your Jesus http://tinyurl.com/d99gs2 [#] 5:18pm | via Twitter
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New blog post: April 17 – The Breath of Love by Rafael Marí­a de Mendive http://tinyurl.com/c2daw8 [#] 7:46pm | via Twitter
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New blog post: April 18 – Lightning flashes over the Tatras by Janko MatíºŁ¡ka http://tinyurl.com/d3jnqp [#] 9:41pm | via Twitter
Poetry,

April 18 – Lightning flashes over the Tatras by Janko MatíºŁ¡ka

Lightning flashes over the Tatras,
the thunder pounds wildly.
Let them pause, brothers,
they will surely disappear,
the Slovaks will revive,

This Slovakia of ours
has slept until now,
But the thunder and lightning
will wake it up.

Firs are still growing
in the direction of KriváŁˆ.
Who feels like a Slovak,
let him hold a sabre
and stand among us.

Slovakia is rising,
tearing off its shackles.
Hey, dear family,
the hour has struck,
Our Slavic mother lives.

Translation from the authors of the Wikipedia article: Nad Tatrou sa blí½ska

Nad Tatrou sa blí½ska,
hromy divo bijíº.
Zastavme ich, bratia,
veď sa ony stratia,
Slováci oپijíº.

To Slovensko na١e
posiaľ tvrdo spalo,
ale blesky hromu
vzbudzujíº ho k tomu,
aby sa prebralo.

EŁ¡te jedle rastíº
na krivánskej strane.
Kto jak Slovák cí­ti,
nech sa Ł¡able chytí­
a medzi nás stane.

Uپ Slovensko vstáva
putá si strháva.
Hej, rodina milá,
hodina odbila,
پije matka Sláva.

Poetry

April 17 – The Breath of Love by Rafael Marí­a de Mendive

At the kiss of the breath the flowers pour out
Their abundance of fragrance
With gentle candor;
And the woods, the land, the breeze and the heavens,
Filled with fragrance, life and joy,
Exhale perfumes of peace and love.

And the first essence exhaled
By the modest flower
Is pure and holy;
As innocent as the pure tear
Sparkling in the eye of chaste beauty
At the first kiss of the breath of love.

The simple maid, gentle and innocent.
Who sees on her brow
The glow of modesty.
Sighs and longs to be inspired,
And in divine dreams to pour
The first essence of the breath of love.

And in sweet deliriums to behold
Life and the hours temptingly
Roll by without sorrow,
As the lucid waves of the clear river
Roll quietly in the summer nights
At the light breath of the kiss of love.

The bird allures us with its bright feathers;
The sea with its foam;
The flowers with their odor;
The earth with her brilliant and beautiful pomp,
And the sky with its clouds and bright stars,
Celestial torches of peace and love.

But what would become of their chaste delights,
Their pure tears.
Their eternal radiance.
If the pure wings of the breath of love
Were never to come in rapid circles
Lightly to shed their sweet sighs?

The oceans and stars would horrible seem,
And the sad complaints
Of the birds and the flowers;
And faint would seem the gentle caresses
That fill the soul with affable delights,
And hardly feel the breath of love.

The world allures us with a thousand seraphs
And its rich gardens
Of angelical fragrance;
And while we feel its sweet aroma
The joys of the soul give us poetry,
And eternally say to us : “Life is love!”

Translation by Ernest S. Green and Miss H. Von Lowenfels

Portrait by Antonio Ferrer Cabello

Al beso del aura derraman las flores
Sus copas de olores
Con suave candor;
Y llenos de aroma, de vida y consuelo,
El bosque, la tierra, la brisa y el cielo.
Exhalan perfumes de paz y de amor.

Y es pura y es santa la esencia primera
Que vierte hechicera
La tí­mida flor;
Como es inocente la lágrima pura
Que brilla en los ojos de casta hermosura
Al beso primero del auro de amor.

La cándida niña, donosa, inocente,
Que mira en su frente
Brillar el pudor;
Suspira y ansia sentirse inspirada,
Y en sueños divinos verter perfumada
La esencia primera del aura de amor.

Y en dulces delirios mirar seductoras
La vida y las horas
Rodar sin dolor,
Cual ruedan sencillas en noches de estí­o
Las ondas ligeras del diáfano rio
Al leve suspiro del aura de amor.

El ave nos brinda sus ní­tidas plumas,
El mar sus espumas,
Las flores su olor;
La tierra sus galas brillantes y bellas,
Y el cielo sus nubes y blancas estrellas.
Antorchas divinas de paz y de amor.

Empero, ¿qué fueran sus castas dulzuras,
Sus lágrimas puras.
Su eterno fulgor
Si nunca vinieran en rápidos giros
Vertiendo ligeras sus dulces suspiros
Las cándidas alas del aura de amor?..

Horrible nos fueran los mares y estrellas,
Las tristes querellas
Del ave y la flor;
Y lánguidas fueran las suaves caricias,
Que llenan el alma de afables delicias.
Apenas sentimos el beso de amor.

El mundo nos brinda sus mil serafines.
Sus ricos jardines
De angélico olor;
Y en tanto sentimos su dulce armoní­a,
Los goces del alma nos dan poesí­a,
Y eternos nos dicen : ” ¡la vida es amor! “

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Political

Cover your Jesus

From CNA: Georgetown students react to White House request to cover Jesus’ name

Georgetown University’s decision to comply with a White House request to cover up the —IHS— monogram representing Jesus’ name at President Obama’s speech on Wednesday is drawing fire from the Cardinal Newman Society and Georgetown students, who are charging the university with —sacrificing— its —Catholic and Jesuit identity.—

Reports surfaced today from attendees at President Obama’s speech on the economy that the White House asked Georgetown University to cover up several emblems, including an IHS monogram above the president’s head during his speech at the Jesuit university.

Although President Obama focused his speech on his administration’s plans to spur economic growth, some in attendance noticed that the IHS monogram—”an early 3rd century abbreviation for the name of Jesus—”was covered up for the speech.

CNA attempted to confirm the report with Georgetown officials, but no one available for comment before press time.

However, Julie Green Bataille, associate vice president for communications at the university, told CNSNews.com that the covering up of Jesus’ name was prompted by —logistical arrangements for yesterday’s event.— According to Bataille, —Georgetown honored the White House staff’s request to cover all of the Georgetown University signage and symbols behind Gaston Hall stage.—

She said the —signage and symbols— were covered up because —the pipe and drape wasn’t high enough by itself to fully cover the IHS and cross— and that it seemed more —respectful to have them covered— so that viewers wouldn’t see them —out of context…—

IHSFrankly I do not blame the Obama Administration. They are being true to who they are and to what they represent. If they believe they have the savior on-hand why bring up the name of the other One.

I could say that the real fault lies with the Administration at Georgetown. By covering the name of Jesus they are not being true to who they are. But, is that so?

As Christians we hope that other Christians will be true to who they are. We feel a great sense of disappointment when our brothers and sisters fall short of our expectation. We hope and wish that Christians in academia, in politics, in ordinary life will set an example in relation to the immutability of their Christian faith. When they do not meet our expectation, as in this case, we are left to sort out who is being true to their beliefs. We point to the martyrs who chose death over denying Jesus, and we are left to wonder.

Our conclusion does not yield blame. Our conclusion must free itself of expectation, of false notion. The early Christians had a system of codes so that they would know their fellow travelers. We need to re-establish the outward marker, the sign by which we will know. Intellectual faith, the faith of the academics, has its place, but that doesn’t make one a Christian. The sign on the wall does not make one a Christian. Hanging a cross in the classroom doesn’t make one a Christian. What we do (or don’t do), for all to see, makes it so.

It is easy to quote scripture in relation to what has been done. This scripture is key:

“So every one who acknowledges me before men, I also will acknowledge before my Father who is in heaven; but whoever denies me before men, I also will deny before my Father who is in heaven.” — Matthew 10:32-33

What does our doing and not doing say? This scripture is the measuring stick. I do not think that our Lord will count the number of Ph.D.’s we have obtained, or the number of books and scholarly articles on our C.V. Here is the test. Did you acknowledge Me beforeIn front of and above. men?

Christian Witness, PNCC, ,

Prayer vigil for Blue Star families

From the Stratford Star: Prayer vigil April 26 for Blue Star Families

1bluestar

The Blue Star Mothers and Families of Stratford Inc. will hold its fourth annual prayer vigil service honoring the men and women of the U.S. military Sunday, April 26, at 4 at St. Joseph’s of Stratford National Catholic Church, 1300 Stratford Road.

The theme for the vigil is —Wake Up the Pride,— and will include patriotic songs and religious hymns, interfaith prayers, a candlelight ceremony, and brief addresses by state and local officials.

The ceremony is open to the public.

Mothers and fathers, spouses and children of local military personnel will be recognized during the prayer vigil in the church, then will be received at a coffee and cake fellowship in the parish hall.

The Blue Star Mothers and Families of Stratford was founded in 2003 by mothers who had children serving overseas as a support group for the families of servicemen and servicewomen. It is not affiliated with the Blue Star Mothers of America.

Among its activities, the Blue Star Mothers and Families of Stratford Inc. collects goods to send to soldiers overseas. The organization also maintains an honor board on the green of the Stratford Town Hall that bears the names of those who are currently serving from the town and some nearby communities.

This is the third time this annual vigil has taken place at St. Joseph’s of Stratford National Catholic Church. Several mothers from the parish are active in the Blue Star Mothers and Families of Stratford.

More information may be obtained from Kathy M. Sullivan at (203) 377-0676.

Christian Witness, Poland - Polish - Polonia,

Polish immigrant priest and Auschwitz survivor leaves $1.5 million estate

From the Charleston Daily Mail: W.Va. priest lived as pauper but left princely estate

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A priest who spent his retirement years in Cedar Grove led a pauper’s life but had secret assets totaling more than $1.5 million, officials from the Sheriff’s Tax Department said.

Chief Tax Deputy Allen Bleigh and members of the tax department are currently handling the estate of Father Anthony Wojtus, a priest who ended up in the Kanawha Valley in 1997.

Wojtus died in June 2007 at the age of 77, leaving behind no known family or will. The county was appointed as estate administrator in July 2007.

He was a Polish immigrant and survivor of Auschwitz, one of the Nazi concentration camps during World War II, according to a 2005 newspaper story.

Bleigh and employees of the tax department have put in hundreds of hours since his death, trying to uncover all the assets of the estate and see if there was anyone who could take it over.

The estate included one home and one residence used as a chapel, known as St. Anthony’s Retreat. Both properties are located on Alexander Street in Cedar Grove. However, judging by the condition of the properties, Bleigh said no one expected to find what they did.

“At the time, no one knew that there was an estate of the magnitude there is,” Bleigh said. “The house he lived in was appalling…”

I have friends with relatives in Poland who survived the Nazi German concentration camps. Like this priest, they horde things, live frugally, do all they can to protect what little they have — the psychological consequences of all they endured.

From what I read in the comments to this story this was a fine priest who served his people with great grace and charity.

This article notes that he continued to offer the Tridentine Rite Holy Mass in his private chapel and in 1993 was suspended by his diocese for ministering to those who wished to attend that Rite of the Holy Mass. It appears that workers in the diocese refer to him as “eccentric” and a “loner.” He was likely a priest more attuned to the thinking of the Bishop of Rome than his own bishop.

Offer a prayer for him this evening:

Eternal rest grant unto him O Lord and may the perpetual light shine upon him.
May his soul and the souls of all the faithful departed rest in peace. Amen.

Wieczne odpoczynek racz mu dać Panie, a światłość wiekuista niechaj mu świeci.
Niech odpoczywa w pokoju, Amen.

Réquiem ætérnam dona eis, Dómine, et lux perpétua líºceat eis.
Requiéscant in pace. Amen.

LifeStream

Daily Digest for April 17th

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