Monday, April 24, 2017

Where Are You From?



Washington is full of people who are from somewhere else.
So it's not uncommon to find yourself asking or being asked,
Where are you from?
My standard answer would be that I've been in DC for 40 years.
And I'd lived in Cincinnati and Hartford and Boston before that.
If they went on to ask,
But where did you come from originally?
I'd say, CovingtonKentucky.
… And I'd probably be right.

Probably right, because that question usually means:
Where were you born?
Where did you spend your early years?

If I was engaged in a deep philosophical or spiritual discussion
And someone asked,
Where did you come from—originally?
I'd probably seem wiser and more thoughtful
If my answer was more lofty than ... Kentucky.

We're a lot like Nicodemus.
We're usually focused on this earthly, physical, material life we're living.
We're not usually looking beyond that day-to-day life
To the bigger questions and meanings.

Jesus can't seem to pull Nicodemus up
To that higher plane of discussion.
Even with his poetic words: You must be born from above.
The wind blows where it wills, and you can hear the sound it makes,
but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes;
so it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.

We're born of the Spirit.
We're like that wind.
Where did we come from?
Where are we going?

Science tells us a lot about where we came from.
Biology shows us that, most directly, we came from a fertilized egg.
And further back, our species evolved from earlier, simpler life forms.
Chemistry and astronomy might take us even further back.
They make a good case that we're originally from stardust.
That takes us all the way back to the beginning, the Big Bang.
At least as the source of our animated, physical, material being.

But where did that Big Bang come from?
And where did our individual, intelligent spirits come from?

Two thousand years ago,
Nicodemus already knew the basic answer to that—from God.
But neither he nor we know the full, detailed specifics.
Only Jesus has the experience and complete knowledge
Of spiritual, heavenly things.

And he wants to share some of that knowledge with us.
He wants us to ponder those bigger questions and meanings.
And as we listen to him and talk with him,
We grow in understanding of the Spirit.
We gain some insight on those big questions.
A better grasp on where we're originally from.
And where we're ultimately going.


Monday, 2nd Week of Easter




Sunday, April 9, 2017

Passion



Over the years, we’ve become familiar with all the details
Of the Passion.
But every time we hear it, it leaves us with so much to think about.

For example,
One question that struck me again this year was, Why?
Why did Jesus go through this Passion?
He gives one answer in this reading today.
He says he could call on legions of angels to stop it.
But he didn’t, because All this has come to pass
That the writings of the prophets may be fulfilled.

But the prophets didn’t make the plan.
They merely spread the word of God’s plan.
Why did God come up with this plan?
If I was God, I’d have gone a lot easier on myself.
Why did God choose this dramatic, awful suffering?
We might find some answers to that question if we ask another.
Who did God choose to do all this for?

What detail or thought or question jumped out at you today?
Pursue that—see what message God has for you.

We could (and should) spend hours
Thinking about all we’ve heard today.
Praying—meditating, contemplating.
Let’s each make some time during this Holy Week to do that.
And let’s take a minute or two now to get started.

Palm Sunday



MT 26:14-27:66   Read this Scripture @usccb.org


Thursday, April 6, 2017

Are You Really In There?





When did Jesus become fully confident that he was God?
When he was born? 
When, as a boy, he talked with the elders in the temple?
When he turned water into wine?
When he left the tomb on Easter morning?

Our faith and our Church tell us
That Jesus was true God and true man.
One person, a single individual—but with two natures.
Human and Divine.
With one nature as the Son of God.
God the Son who always was and always will be.
And another nature as a human being with a beginning in time.

Throughout history, and for us today, this is a difficult concept.
Indeed, we can’t even begin to grasp it as truth, except through faith.
There have been heresies—
Some claiming Jesus was man only.
Others saying he was God, taking on only the appearance of a man.
But, we believe Jesus is the only begotten Son of God.
God from God, Light from Light.
True God from true God.
Consubstantial with the Father.
And also that He came down from Heaven, and by the Holy Spirit
Was incarnate of the Virgin Mary and became man.

It’s not easy to wrap our minds around that.
In the early days, the Church struggled.
Great theologians—Doctors of the Church—Church Councils,
All have struggled to understand this mystery.

Still today, when we think of Jesus in a particular situation,
Like delivering the sermon on the mount,
We have a tendency to think of him as either God or man—not both. 
We might have to remind ourselves
To reconsider the story or the lesson from the other perspective.

Most of the world’s 7 billion people don’t have the truth about Jesus.
They don’t believe that he was God.
Many don’t even know or believe that he existed.
Many others, including the 1.6 billion Muslims,
Believe he was a nearly perfect man, a great prophet—but only a man.
Many of the world’s 2.3 billion Christians have the truth.
But even some nominal Christians deny that he’s fully God.
And others deny that he was fully human.
The old heresies live on.

Today’s Gospel passage is one of those where
Jesus makes a clear claim that he is indeed God.
He says that he existed before Abraham,
Who had already been dead for nearly 2,000 years.
He calls himself I AM, a name reserved for God alone.
He’s confident, but are his claims based on knowledge—on certainty?
Or on great faith in what he has heard the Father telling him?

That dual nature, human and divine in one person, remains a mystery.
Our own human nature presents some mystery too, its own duality.
Humans have always had a dual essence—we’re body and soul. 

When Jesus ascended into Heaven,
He reached back and elevated our human essence.
He made us not just body and soul; but body, soul, and temple of God.
He brought us a step closer to his own dual nature.
He sent his Spirit, the Spirit of God, to dwell within us.
Not giving us a divine nature like his own,
But putting a touch of that Divinity within us.
At our best, we can now rise to being little less than Gods.

The world today needs us to exercise that power of the Spirit.
To spread the love and mercy and truth that that Spirit brings.
Believing in that Spirit, working with that Spirit,
We can help to end the disregard and blatant denial of truth.
Help to end war and hatred and injustice.
We can heal the world.

When will we become fully confident
That we have the powerful Spirit of God dwelling within us?


Tuesday, 5th Week of Lent