Thursday, February 23, 2012

Choose life

Behold I set before you the blessing and the curse...  Deuteronomy  11:26
Choose life!  What does that mean for one who desires to spend this season of Lent aspiring to wholeness and holiness.   Perhaps some time of prayer and silence can lead us to a deeper appreciation and determination to remove from our live, our hearts, our schedules, our list of things to do... to embrace only those things that will give us  life.   I am going to make this choice... when asked to do something, I will choose to pause, ask for time to pray about it, and embrace only those things where I will experiencelife, not death---feelings of have to, guilt, responsbility I will discard.  Now I know some things that we think are death turn out to be very lifegiving. Anywhat, I choose life!

What about you?  Is there something in your life that you need to do to choose life?  Lent is not something we do for ourselves alone, was the message of my Ash Wednesday homily.   Let's do it together--- choose life! 

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

How to remain faithful

The journey of Lent 2012 begins today with Ash Wednesday.  Much to ponder about how to get to Easter fully resurrected with Christ.  The Paschal Mystery is necessary.  I invite you to reflect with me on this holy season of Lent by praying with this poem by Lynn Ungar.

What will you give up for the season
to help life along
in its curious reversals?

As if we had a choice.
As if the world constantly shedding us
like the feathers off a duck's back--
the ground is always littered with our longings.

You can't help but wonder
about all the heroes, the lives sacrified
in the compulsion toward the good.

All those who dropped themselves
upon the earth's hard surface--
Weren't they caught in pure astonishment
in the breath before they shattered?

Forget sacrifice.
Nothing is tied so firmly that the wind
won't tear it from us at last.

The question is how to remain faithful
to all the impossible,
necessary resurrections.

-Lynn Ungar

Monday, February 20, 2012

Astonishment better than information

"Overexplanation separates us from astonishment."  - Eugene Ionesco

Have you ever had the experience of being asked a question and found yourself expounding and suddenly realize that the answer is really discover in the person's own inner experience?   I think we need less people with answers and more people with the skill of leading others to transformation and astonishment!  You know many words are just that-- intellectual words or coziness.  D. H. Lawrence, a British-American author, once said that "the world fears a new experience more than anything because a new expeience displaces so many old experiences."  Ideas are not a problem, they are easily discounted and dodged. But a true inner experience is something else.  It changes us and far be it from me to delight or welcome change!  Astonishment is an invitatin to see with new eyes.  May I suggest that you use less words today and be open to moments of astonishment! 

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Make a good choice today!

Being chosen by God seems attractive, but God’s choice is less entitlement to special favors and more being selected for a commission—given a job to do. God does not usually choose as we might. We find God picking, for example, David, the runt of the litter; Mary, an unknown girl from Nazareth;  you and me, stubbling weak sinners.. This day try to be aware of how you make choices: how you will treat a troublesome co-worker or that driver who is tailgating or how gentle, helpful, hurtful or honest you will be. Like God, who chose you to be one in Christ, make decisions based on what is inside the other—and who dwells within you. Choose Christ and be get free!  May you have a blessed day and be a blessing for another!


Monday, February 6, 2012

In gratitude for SISTERS and BROTHERS

WORLD DAY FOR CONSECRATED LIFE
The Church established a special day to recognize the gift of consecrated life to our world. We pray for and give thanks to the men and women who publicly profess to live the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. Monks, hermits, contemplatives, and religious priests, sisters, and brothers represent the diversity of consecrated life recognized by the church. Those who choose this life are committed to imitating Christ, engaging in his ministries of spreading the Good News, and showing that “the world can be transfigured with the spirit of the beatitudes” (Catechism 932). Their witness reminds all of us that our lives have purpose and meaning beyond this age, their lives also draw attention to how we live our present days wisely.

Take the time to recall a person who witnessed consecrated life in your journey of faith and drop them a written note of gratitude for their witness!