Archive for December, 2011

I Done It For Love 12-25-2011

Sunday, December 25th, 2011

It was Christmas Eve and a young mother was busy wrapping the very last package. She asked her little boy to polish her shoes for the next morning’s Christmas Mass. And off he went.
The little fellow was gone quite awhile, but when he returned he was beaming as he presented the shined shoes to his mother. “What a perfect shoe shine!” she said. And with that she gave him a shiny new quarter for working so hard and doing so well.
The next morning when she was dressing for church, she found something lodged in the toe of her shoe – something tiny, wrapped in a crumpled piece of paper.
Carefully she opened the tiny package, and inside she found the quarter she’s given her little boy for shining her shoes.
Written on the crumpled paper in his childish scrawl were these words, “Dear Mama, I done it for love!”
As we gather this night (this day) and hear again the story of Jesus’ birth in a stable, and as we remember with sadness where this wonderful child’s life came to its conclusion on the cross — we have to ask God — “Why did you do it, God? Why did you give us all you have and hold nothing back? Why did you give us your Son?”
From out of the stillness God is whispering a response — “I gave you all I have, because I want you to know, and never forget, how much I think you are worth; I done it for love.”
This incredible message is God’s Christmas gift to each one of us – what we do with it is our gift to God.
Let me share with you a beautiful poem, which I feel lays before us all the real challenges of Christmas — I pray we take it to heart and live it.
When the song of the angels is stilled,
When the star in the sky is gone, when the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flocks
The work of Christmas begins:
To find the lost,
To heal the broken,
To feed the hungry,
To release the prisoners,
To rebuild the nations,
To bring peace among brothers, sisters, and family,
To make music with the heart.
“I done it for love — I done it for love,” says the God of Creation.
What will we do Christmas 2011?
I close with a short meditation written by a former inmate at Tehachapi Prison.
The shepherd brought wooly lambs to the stable where He lay.
The Wise Men gave him gifts so rare from their own homes far away.
The keeper of the village inn lent the manger and the hay.
But what have I to offer at Mass this Christmas Day?
The blanket that I had planned to weave lies raveled and not done.
’Twas made of good intentions but I broke them one by one.
The pillow I was going to fill and place beneath his head,
held not the feathers of good deeds, but thorns of sin instead.
Time after time, I’ve promised great presents for my King.
Just as many times again, cold empty hands I bring.
Now gazing at that child with Mary standing near,
The answer comes from deep within and banishes all fear;
I give to you these eyes of mine, let them see those in need.
Accept my hands, they now are yours, for only worthwhile deeds.
My feet I give, that they may walk the right path and not stray.
Take my arms, let them support others on the way.
My heart, my mind, my will I give with the humble prayers I say,
These are the gifts I offer you; accept them all today.

What will we do Christmas 2011?

Impossible to Possible! Deacon Patrick Conway 12-17-11

Saturday, December 17th, 2011

One day in second grade the teacher was asking her students what they wanted to be when they grew up. The children gave the usual answers – doctor, nurse, firefighter, teacher, baseball player, astronaut. But as the teacher went around the room she noticed that little Timmy, who was usually the most vocal and active of the students, was just sitting there quietly, looking very serious. “Timmy,” the teacher asked, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” Timmy gave big sigh, furrowed his brow and said, “Possible.” “Uh, I’m sorry,” the teacher said, “What did you say?” Timmy took a big breath and said, “When I grow up, I want to be possible.” “You want to be ‘possible’?” the teacher asked, mystified. “What do you mean, you want to be ‘possible’?” “Well,” Timmy sighed, “My mom always gets mad at me and says I’m impossible, so when I grow up I want to be possible!”

Like little Timmy and his mom, we all struggle with the impossible, in ourselves, in others and in situations. Sometimes it is a relationship with a spouse, a child, a parent, a friend, a boss or co-worker that seems impossible. We have to deal with medical conditions, our own and others’, which seem impossible. We have financial situations that seem impossible.

Last Sunday we presented our new parish pastoral plan that hundreds of us helped to create over the past year through the sharing of our needs, hopes and dreams and through our prayers. It contains some big things that seem impossible – evangelization to increase our membership, greater commitment to discipleship and stewardship by all of us, increased giving so that we can afford to expand our staff and remodel Markey Center and meet our growing needs and realize our hopes and dreams.

What do we do with all these impossible situations?

Mary of Nazareth, a first-century peasant girl in an obscure town in Palestine, also faced some impossible situations. She lived in a very dangerous time and place controlled by military and political forces that were far beyond her influence. The future was uncertain, and it was impossible that someone like her could have any impact on that world. Then, one day she is visited by an angel. Impossible! Who would believe her? And the angel tells her that she is to be the mother of the Son of God, with no human father. Impossible! He also tells her that her cousin Elizabeth, who is way too old, is now six months pregnant. Impossible! And then he tells her one more thing: Nothing is impossible for God.

Mary, who had faith in God, accepted this. She accepted that what was impossible for human beings is possible for God. But this is much more than simply believing that God can do things that we can’t do. Mary understood that with God we could do things that we can’t do. With God, we can do the impossible!

Well, this is a beautiful and lofty theological concept, but how does it work in real life? This spiritual truth is useless to us unless it takes on flesh and blood in our daily lives, in our impossible situations. How do we bring the power of God into our powerlessness?

The answers are right around us. These Advent banners hanging here in our sanctuary are not just for decoration. They proclaim to us how God turns the impossible for us into the possible with God.

Faith. First of all, it takes faith. Faith is more than just belief. Faith is putting our belief into practice. For example, we can believe that airplanes can fly – and never fly! Faith is getting into the airplane and betting our lives on our belief that airplanes can fly. It’s the only way to fly!

In a similar way, it’s not enough to just believe that nothing is impossible with God. We have to act as though nothing is impossible with God. We have to have faith that our impossible situations are possible with God.

This leads us to hope. If we have faith that God is going to get us through the impossible, then we have hope for the good outcome that God will empower us to create.

Hope gives us joy, spiritual joy that surpasses understanding, what our senses and mind tell us. We can have joy in the midst of our impossible situations because of the hope given to us by the good God in whom we have put faith.

Then there’s the greatest of all these, love. Love is both the journey and the destination. The way through our impossible situations is always the way of love. When in doubt or confusion, choose the way of love. Choose to do the loving thing. Choose the love that we have committed ourselves to. Choosing love leads us to God who is love and to loving communion with others.

I want to leave you with one final image. How many of you don’t know how to fly a plane? Me neither. Now imagine if a friend took you up in his private airplane, but then became very sick and unable to fly the plane. You’d be in an impossible situation. What would you do? Well, panic and prayer come to mind first, but hopefully you’d be able to call the control tower and ask for help. (We’ve all seen this one in movies, haven’t we?) With the guidance of a pilot in the control tower who was familiar with the plane you’re in, you could safely do what seemed impossible to do – fly and land the plane.

When we find ourselves in impossible situations of life, we need to call the control tower and ask for help. We have to put our complete trust in God and let God guide us safely through. And God will, if we allow him to.

This is the life of discipleship. We look for God’s guidance in prayer and in prayerful reading of scripture. When we can’t figure it out on our own, we seek the counsel of others who can help us. And, God may or may not send us an angel to guide us. But God will always send us his Holy Spirit if we ask.

But actually, we need to do this always, not just when we’re in trouble. And perhaps we wouldn’t have quite as much trouble if we allowed God to guide us always.

That’s what we celebrate in Mary’s life. In the midst of seemingly impossible circumstances, she allowed God to guide her safely through. And look at her now! Her journey strengthens our faith, gives us hope and fills us with joy and love.

Let us recommit ourselves today and every day to allowing God to guide us safely through the impossible, as he did Mary, into his kingdom of faith, hope, joy and love. For with God, nothing is impossible!

Remember You Always Walk With God 12-11-2011

Sunday, December 11th, 2011

A few weeks before Christmas, a woman who lived in a New York apartment building found a greeting card taped to her door. “Merry Christmas from the custodial staff”, it said.
“How nice”, she said to herself and promptly forgot about it. A week later she came home to find another card taped to her door. It was the same message, “Merry Christmas from the custodial staff”. But this time stamped right in the middle in big red letters, were the words, “Second Notice”!
Many of us are terribly forgetful. We immerse ourselves in our daily tasks of life as we must-we can forget almost anything: birthdays, anniversaries, appointments, our bank balance, our glasses. You name it, we forget it. We make lists so we won’t forget and then we forget the list.
But our forgetfulness isn’t limited just to the little things. We forget the big things as well; who our real friends are, what really matters in life, who loves us, who needs us, what we were made for. We just forget.
I believe that is why we need to gather here – week after week; to help each other remember who we are, remember what really matters, and remember that we aren’t walking this long road alone. We’re walking it with the Lord who is right at our side.
And what is this Lord like who walks at our side? Does God walk with us as a critic? A police officer? A judge? Or maybe just an impartial observer? In fact the Lord is none of the above.
The Lord walks with us as a partner and mentor who wants to see us succeed and who understands that it’s going to take us a while. Now what more could we ask? How can we not celebrate and rejoice as today’s liturgy urges us. How can we not be confident and hopeful and put all fears behind us. After all, God is with us and for us!
And there’s still more. Having God walking with us as partner and mentor gives us the opportunity to be in close conversation hourly. With simple words like, “Well, Lord, what do you think about this?” Or, “Lord can you help me see this clearly?” Or simply, “Help, Lord, I can’t do this one alone.” Those are the kinds of words that partners and friends speak very often.
All of that is what we have to come together here to remember. First, remember to rejoice and forget all your fears because God is with us. And second, remember to listen to and talk to God about the real stuff of our lives because God cares more than anyone else…and God knows the way home.
I would like to close by sharing with you my idea of what God’s special Christmas card would say to each one of us;
“Remember what you’ve seen me do”, says Jesus. “…the blind see, cripples walk, lepers are cured, the deaf hear, and dead men raised to life”. If you’ll let me, I’ll do the same for you”, he says. “I’ll heal what is sick in your spirit, if you’ll let me”.
“I’ll open your eyes and your ears so that you’ll know what really matters so you’ll know that happiness and peace are available to you everyday, even on the worst days. I’ll show you that and let you experience that, if you’ll let me.
“I will not insulate you from adversity, challenge, or pain. But I will always see you through them, and never let you come to ultimate harm. I’ll take you by the hand, and raise you up; I’ll help you to walk and I’ll walk with you until your journey is complete, if you’ll let me.
“All that is my promise to you, my solemn pledge. And I will not take it back”, says the Lord. We have a lot to rejoice about today! Don’t we!!