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23 April 2011

My Schedule For Week Beginning 4/23/11

Holy Saturday, 4/23:
9:00 pm - Con-celebrating Mass with Fr. Lou at Our Lady Of Lourdes

Easter Sunday, 4/24:
9:00 am - Mass at Most Blessed Sacrament
11:00 am - Mass at St. Joseph's

After Easter Sunday, I will be taking a very much needed break, and will be on vacation until Thursday, May 5.

May you all have a very blessed and joyful Easter season!



19 April 2011

Adult Faith Classes Will Resume In May

Beginning Thursday, May 12, I will offer a 6 week course on the Catholic Mass, which will include the structure of the Mass, Christ's Presence, and Response of the Faithful.

We will meet from 6:45pm-8:00pm at St. Joseph's parish center.

16 April 2011

How Does One Know God's Will? Part II:

What one needs to know to do God’s will was outlined in the previous post. Now let us ask the more difficult question:  How does one do God’s will, or enter into God’s will?

The spiritual life is not essentially a matter of knowledge nor of information, but of loving practice.  Loving practice is first and foremost the renunciation of self in all of its forms.  How does one do God’s will?  As noted previously, by loving aright.  But let us descend into our hearts and consider the process more closely.

To begin to do God’s will, one must want to do God’s will.  The will to will God’s will is essential.  One must have the attitude which Jesus displayed clearly in the Garden of Gethsemane:  “Father, let this cup pass by me; but not my will, but yours be done.”  The will to do God’s will begins with a free renunciation of one’s own will.  “You cannot serve two masters.”  This means that one cannot want what one wants and at the same time, to the same degree, want what God wants.  God, not oneself, must be placed first, held in higher esteem, respected, loved, worshiped.  

More concretely yet:  To do the will of God, one must begin in prayer or in quiet thought.  In this utterly simple condition, one asks for nothing, demands nothing, thinks about nothing in particular.  But one can usefully begin a prayer of quiet or silent thought by making explicit acts of renunciation.  One gives up oneself to God, for God, and even by the unseen grace (help) of God.  One proceeds in utter trust, expecting nothing else but to enter into God.

Let us give an example of a beginning meditation to do God’s will:  “I renounce hatred, including of the person I most dislike.  I renounce a desire for revenge.  I renounce, or let go, of all desires for power, for fame, for money.  I renounce the desire to escape into a world of my own, into what I want.  I renounce my freedom apart from God.  I renounce all that I hope for, my dreams, my wishes, my plans.  I let go of attachment to what I most love, to my family, to my friends.  I renounce the attachment to all of my possessions, even those I most like and love.  I renounce attachment to myself, to my desires, to my past, to my memories, to the ways that I like things.  I renounce for God all that I have been or hope to be.   LORD God, it is You I want above all else, regardless of whatever You do with me.  I place myself completely at your disposal, to do with me as You think best.  Not my will, but yours be done.”

That renunciation of self, and free giving of oneself to God, is, I believe, the essence and foundation of “doing God’s will.”  All else is secondary, and must be built on this foundation, to which one must return and again and again.  And why?  Because self-love, self-will, self-absorption in all of its forms is part of the human condition, and the primary force against which each of us must struggle again and again, if indeed we wish to love God first and foremost, to do God’s will.

15 April 2011

My Schedule For Week Beginning April 16, 2011

Sat. 4/16:
4:30-5:00pm - Confessions at Most Blessed Sacrament
5:30pm - Mass at Most Blessed Sacrament

Sun. 4/17:
9:00am - Mass at St. Luke's
2:00pm - Vigil service for Paul Kuntz at St. Luke's

Mon. 4/18:
10:00am - Funeral Mass for Paul Kuntz at St. Luke's followed by burial and reception

Tues. 4/19:
10:30am - Mass at the Rainbow
5:30pm - Mass at St. Luke's

Wed. 4/20:
7:00pm- Mass at St. Joseph's

Thurs. 4/21:
7:00pm - Preaching at the Mass of the Lord's Supper

Fri. 4/22:
3:00pm - Good Friday service at Most Blessed Sacrament

14 April 2011

How Does One Know God's Will?

A First Note on this question.
 
In the past several days, a parishioner asked me, “How do you know what is God’s will?”  In the context, she was asking, in effect, “How do I know what God’s will is for me?”  And she was implying the question, “Can anyone know God’s will?”  These questions are very good ones to ponder, especially because some of us may be going through various trials in our lives, and we wonder, “What is God’s will in this?”  or “What would God have me do?”

At the outset, I must offer a disclaimer:  The question of “knowing God’s will” is extremely vast, and leads one into theological speculation on Who is God, on whether or not God is or has a “will,” on how one can know God at all, and whether or not “God’s will” is truly knowable for a human being.  Or in more simple terms, the question of God’s will raises far more questions than I can adequately handle.  So this note is a mere beginning, a highly imperfect and necessarily incomplete attempt to throw light on the question, “How do I know what God’s will is for me?”

A second precaution must be recognized:  Can anyone say with certainty, “I know God’s will for me?”  Even if one allowed that in a few cases, a particular person may know “for certain” what God’s will is for his or her life, I think it far wiser, and far truer to say:  Certain knowledge of God’s will is beyond us mortals, because God is utterly beyond our intellectual understanding.  We can know God’s general will towards all creatures, but asserting that one definitely knows exactly what God wills for one of us smells of pride and self-assurance, not of childhood trust, the essence of faith.  Or again, in truly loving, one can perhaps come as close as is humanly possible to knowing and doing God’s will.  For the rest of us, we must be content with struggling through faith to gain some knowledge, some understanding, of what the Almighty may “have in mind” for all of creation, or for an individual human being.  

Most directly, I claim no certain knowledge of God’s will for me, yet I seek to know and to do God’s will.  What is required is “faith working through love,” and not certain and absolute knowledge.  I believe that in Christ Jesus we see as much of God’s will for each and for all as is humanly possible, and as much as is needed to bring us to complete life in God.

Having said this, as men and women in Christ we can acknowledge a few guideposts to help us discern and to do God’s will:

First, because God is supremely good, and wills only good, and no evil, to do God’s will one must do what is truly good in any concrete situation, and renounce all desires to do harm to any creature.  Consider two basic assertions from the First Letter of John:  “In Him is light, and no darkness at all,” and “Anyone who says that he knows God and hates his brother or sister is a liar.”  God’s will is utterly good.

Second, all of the commandments of the Law, and the teachings of the great spiritual traditions, flesh out what Stoic philosophers and Christian theologians have called “the natural law,” the basic principle of which is utterly simple:  “Do no harm.”  In positive words, one must always seek to do what brings and supports life, goodness, peace, justice, love, spiritual growth.  Hence, it is quite easy and clear to see what is not according to “God’s will,” namely:  Hatred, killing, cruelty, infidelity, rejection of the truth, deceiving another, pretending to be what one is not, wishing harm to anyone, causing division in a person or in a community.  (Note that the literal meaning of the word in Greek translated “devil,” diabolos, means, “divider.”  And note the assertion in the writings of John, “The devil is a liar from the beginning.”)  Again, in positive terms, God’s will would support harmony, peace, good will among human beings, “speaking the truth in love” (Ephesians).  Truly to love God and neighbor is indeed to do God’s will, for “God is love” (I John), and “Knowledge puffs up, but love builds up” (I Corinthians).  And again, “Love does no harm to the neighbor; therefore, love is the fulfilling of the law,” or God’s will (Romans).  

Third, in light of Christ, we can confidently say that it is God’s will that each human being seek the salvation, the eternal well-being, of every other creature. (“God wills that all be saved, and come to a knowledge of the truth.”).  In the person and work of Christ, we see God’s will for every creature, and as disciples of Christ, we must seek to imitate that will, that plan, to the best of our abilities, with God’s assistance (“grace”).  Consider the words of Jesus:  “Love one another, as I have loved you” (Gospel of John), and a particular form of love, “Forgive one another, as Christ has forgiven you” (Colossians).  And it is evidently God’s will that we “bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ” (Galatians).  

To pull these brief remarks together, let us simply consider:  As we celebrate the events of Christ’s suffering, death, and Resurrection, let us realize that we are seeing God’s will for humankind made visible, and each of us is being invited to conform to the image of divine love made plain in Christ.  We must see, acknowledge, and imitate the love of God for all in Christ, most visible in His suffering, death, Resurrection.  What is God’s will for us here and now?  It includes this much, surely:  To suffer and to die with Christ, that we may “rise with Him to newness of life,” and to help others attain to “fullness of life in Him.” 

11 April 2011

Assignment for April 14, 2011

Because next week is Holy Week, this is the final class in this series. We'll meet at Most Blessed Sacrament Church beginning at 6:30pm on Thursday, April 14. We will discuss the readings from Holy Thursday, and the Passion reading for Good Friday:

Mass of the Lord's Supper (4/21):
Reading 1 - Ex 12:1-8, 11-14
Reading 2 - 1 Cor 11:23-26
Gospel - Jn 13:1-15

Good Friday (4/22):

08 April 2011

On Giving The Kiss Of Peace At Mass

How do you treat your neighbor in a worship service?  What do you do if you are near someone whom you really do not like, or someone who treats you badly?

More particularly, what do you do at the Eucharist or in another Christian gathering if circumstances would require you to give the “kiss of peace,” or sign of Christian fellowship, to someone with whom you are at painful odds?

Deliberately to avoid the other person is a sin against charity, is it not?  Does not Jesus say, “Love your enemy,” and “Pray for those who spitefully use you?”  Can a human being, who asks mercy from God, and who seeks to imitate God’s generosity, refuse a sign of charity, such as the kiss of peace, to another human being?


While living in the monastery years ago, we practiced the custom of bowing to one another as  we left the church after the Eucharist.  Such bowing is a distinctive Benedictine custom.  Well, I was often paired up on leaving the church with a brother who clearly disliked me, who wanted nothing to do with me, who would never say a kind or pleasant word to me.  And he steadfastly refused to bow to me, hence breaking our tradition.  His action forced me to think about what I was doing, and why.  I regularly bowed to him, and with the kind of bow customary in our monastery:  a full half-bow, showing clear reverence.  Why did I bow to someone I found it so difficult to like, who wanted nothing to do with me?  I bowed to him because I realized that we are bowing to the Real Presence of Christ in one another, and not merely to the particular human being.  Once I realized to Whom I was showing ultimate respect, I never had difficulty offering this gesture of charity, even as the brother would refuse me the same sign of charity.

The same awareness should suffuse our actions in public, and particularly in worship.  If you are standing near someone with whom you have real personal difficulties, you still extend the kiss of peace.  But again, in the spirit of St. Benedict, one does not “offer a false peace,” such as flashing a fake smile and speaking empty words (Rule of St. Benedict, chapter 4, #25).  On the contrary, you and I need to seek and to pray to make our kiss of peace genuine, truly to wish to the other all the blessings of God we want for ourselves, and for our dearest loved ones:  “Peace be with you.”  In overcoming our own thoughts of dislike and perhaps ill feelings, we are truly dying to ourselves and living to Christ.  And surely in such action consists the essence of Christian spiritual life.

Then if the other person does not receive your words graciously, or refuses to offer a charitable greeting to you, you have done your part to fulfill the law of Christ:  “Love one another, even as I have loved you,” and “While we were still enemies of God, Christ died for us” (Romans 5).  Or again, “Whatsoever you do to the least of my brethren, you do to me.”  The other person may have broken his or her communion with the indwelling Christ, but that is all the more reason to show them mercy, and speak to their heart, “The LORD be with you.”  Then we are being faithful disciples of our LORD.

07 April 2011

My Schedule For Week Beginning 4/09/11

Sat. 4/09:
4:30-5:00pm - Confessions at St. Luke's
5:30pm - Mass at St. Luke's

Sun. 4/10:
9:00am - Mass as Most Blessed Sacrament
11:00am - Mass at St. Joseph's

Tues. 4/12:
5:30pm - Mass at St. Luke's

Wed. 4/13:
11:00am - Confessions at Most Blessed Sacrament
11:30am - Mass at Most Blessed Sacrament followed by the Lady of Perpetual Help Devotions

Thurs. 4/14:
9:00am - Mass at St. Luke's
6:30pm - Faith class at Most Blessed Sacrament

Fri. 4/15:
11:00am - Confessions at Most Blessed Sacrament
11:30am - Mass at Most Blessed Sacrament

03 April 2011

Christ the Light, and Human Blindness

The Gospel appointed for the Fourth Sunday of Lent (Year A) is the well-known story of “the man born blind.”  It is at once a miracle story, a healing story, an analysis of a human being coming to faith in Christ, and a study in the practice of human beings avoiding coming to the light of divine truth.   But above all, this Gospel presents Jesus Christ as “the light of the world,” and so seeks to reveal Light to those who seek light.

You may recall that in last Sunday’s Gospel, the story of “the woman at the well” (John 4), I emphasized that the decisive disclosure was of the God in and through Jesus Christ.  In a climax to the dialogue between Jesus and the woman, she admits that “the one called Christ will come.”  According to the translation read in the liturgy, Jesus says, “I am he, the one speaking with you.”  But the underlying Greek text is more revelatory, more powerful, more significant.  Jesus discloses to the woman the God of Moses at the Burning Bush, for he says to the woman, literary:  “I AM--the one speaking with you.”  Jesus brought the woman from a state of sin and spiritual dullness into a direct encounter with the God beyond all creation, the God who said to Moses, “I AM WHO AM.”  The power of Jesus to bring a human being from darkness of sin into the light of communion with HE WHO IS was demonstrated in that carefully constructed story.  Indeed, that was the main point of the story of “the woman at the well.”

The story of the man born blind is both similar and different.  It is similar to the “woman at the well” in that a particular human being (unnamed in each case, allowing the reader / hearer to see himself or herself in the story) is brought to faith.  But the faith that one is opened up to is not mere creedal belief; it is not the kind of religious belief that seems to content too many in the churches (for a while, anyway). Rather, the living faith (“living water”) that Jesus incites in both the woman at the well and the man born blind is a radical trust in Jesus Christ as the One who brings a person into faith-union with the God beyond the cosmos, beyond the world, beyond all that can be grasped or known:  “They who worship Him must worship in spirit and in truth.”  Nothing else will do justice to HE WHO IS.

But these two stories differ in one vital particular:  Whereas the woman whose heart Jesus “unveiled” (the meaning of “revelation”) has been living in sin (adultery / idolatry, with her “five husbands,” five gods), the man born blind is suffering physically, which is not sinful.  This man represents all humankind without the light of Christ:  living in spiritual blindness.  The man born blind is Adam, every man, every woman, until he is enlightened or even re-created by Jesus Christ.  Once again, in both stories the decisive figure is “Jesus Christ and the One who sent him,” that is, the God beyond the world.  Before unfolding the story of the man born blind, Jesus proclaims:  “I AM the light of the world,” and as the story unfolds, we see what it means to come to the light, to be illumined by faith in Christ, and to be brought into a living union with the I AM, who alone creates, redeems, sanctifies, restores, refreshes humanity.  Christ the Light is the re-creator of wounded humanity.

The man Jesus heals, who had been “blind from birth,” is a study in one who comes to faith, and provides an example of living the Christian life in an alien culture.  Step by step Jesus leads the man from not knowing who Jesus is, to knowing his name, to thinking him “a prophet,” and finally to openness to Christ as “the Son of God,” the One who brings humankind contact with the divine I AM, because Jesus is both fully human and fully one with God.  Christ is the divine Light breaking forth into the human soul laid open by the Word, pierced by the Spirit, humbled by its turn from personal sin.  As for the blind man with restored sight, he represents every Christian who has come to living faith (and perhaps been baptized, symbolized through the anointing Christ gives him).  As a representative man-in-Christ, we see the blind man literally “stand up for Jesus” as some other believers and unbelievers would tear him away from his loyalty to Christ, even to the point of throwing him out of the community.  

The story presents two types of human beings who are dabbling in darkness, although they probably do not know it, and surely would not admit it.  First, “the Pharisees” in the story represent all human beings who are self-satisfied, who think that they are “good religious people,” who claim to “know God,” perhaps, and who are convinced that they do God’s will.  Although they claim to know God, “to see,” they are in truth blind, and hate the truth, “and refuse to come to the light because their deeds are evil” (John 4).  Their “religious” souls are utterly closed to the truth and reality of the living God, and so they are haters of Jesus Christ, and of the genuine Christian (in this case, the man healed of blindness).  These folks are so smug, so arrogant, that God-in-Christ has no place in them:  “You would instruct us?  You’re nothing!” they effectively tell the man healed of his blindness.  The one they really hate is God, demonstrated by their hatred of Jesus Christ, “the Light of the world.”  These haters of the reality of God, the divine light, may be found among people who presume that they are “good Christians,” or devout believers in other faith traditions.  As Jesus tells his disciples, “By their fruits you will know them.”  They do the deeds of darkness, convinced that they are spiritually alive, in the light.

At the same time, this story also presents to us the rather “charming” picture of the blind man’s parents.  In the context of the story, the parents represent supposed disciples of Jesus who will not take the consequences for their faith.  They are afraid of being “cast out” of the community, as the healed-blind man was “cast out.”  They protect themselves behind a wall of silence.  They will not speak out for the truth, lest they be exposed to the wrath of the God-haters.  So although they consider themselves disciples, and know something of the truth, they will not act on their faith, for they are moved by their fear to do so.  They want safety, security, “the crown without the cross,” as some have said.  

And you?  And I?  Where do we stand in light of Christ?  “For judgment I have come into this world, that those who do not see may see, and that those who see may be made blind!”  That is Christ’s warning to us, to all who go by the name, “Christian.

--Fr. Wm. Paul McKane, O.S.B.

My Schedule For Week Beginning 4/02/11

Sat. 4/02:
4:30-5:00pm - Confessions at Most Blessed Sacrament
5:30pm - Mass at Most Blessed Sacrament

Sun. 4/03:
9:00am - Mass as St. Luke's
6:00pm - Mass at St. Luke's

Tues. 4/05:
5:30pm - Mass at St. Luke's
6:30pm - Faith class at St. Luke's

Wed. 4/06:
7:00pm- Mass at St. Joseph's
 
Thurs. 4/07:
9:00am - Mass at St. Luke's

Fri. 4/08:
7:45am - Mass at St. Joseph's
7:00pm - Stations of the Cross at St. Joseph's

Assignment for April 5, 2011

Because of a cluster-wide listening session to be held on Thursday, April 7, faith class has been rescheduled to Tuesday, April 5 at St. Luke's beginning at 6:30pm. Class will be held in classroom #1.  Our assignment will be the readings for Sunday, April 10:

Reading 1 - Ez 37:12-14
Reading 2 - Rom 8:8-11