Showing posts with label Pentecost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pentecost. Show all posts

Sunday, May 27, 2007

SUNDAY VIDEO ON TAP - XV

Happy Pentecost!







IN OTHER NEWS:

Paul sent this over to Adam's Ale. It is an article well worth reading from Yahoo! news.

Did you ever want to know what different people are celebrating on this (or any other day) of the year? Or what group was having national (you-name-it) week, or national (whatever) awareness month? This site will tell you!

Need a little spiritual reading for Pentecost Sunday? Look here.


Saturday, May 26, 2007

THE RICHEST MAN IN THE WORLD

Some more meandering thoughts over a busy weekend.
At the University of Akron there was a sociology professor who taught me a thing or two about life. One of the most helpful things he taught was that “class” was a state of mind, not a monetary designation. Someone can be filthy rich, but be a terribly low class person. Conversely another could be dirt poor and have that class and dignity that we like to attribute to royalty.

When imagining being happier, so many people begin with the idea of having more money. I won’t argue that a certain amount of it sure makes life easier, but it does not necessary have much of a correlation with happiness. The richest person in the world is not the one with the most stuff. Wealth is relative. The wealthiest people in the world are those who are satisfied with what they have.

One of my sisters is like that. It drives me nuts. She doesn’t want or need anything. In fact, she wants less than what she has. As gracious as she may be, it makes birthdays and Christmas a real pain trying to find a perfect gift for her. She is rich beyond all accounting.

These wealthy people cannot be bribed. It is difficult to tempt them. What more could you give them? If you accidentally break something that belongs to them they do not get upset. They say, “Oh well,” and move along. My Mom was famous for this. If she lost something, even something she particularly liked she would simply say, “I hope whoever finds it needs it more than did,” and happily go on with life.

Catholics, we are so rich. You have more wealth than you even know what to do with. You were baptized into the Body of Christ and made priests, prophets, and kings. At your confirmation you received the Holy Spirit and empowered as a soldier of Christ. This weekend your birthday is being celebrated along with over one billion of your closest friends. If you have your soul set for heaven, you have been successful in this life even if you achieve nothing else.

Pentecost is a time to celebrate this great fortune. Being satisfied and celebrating it is in itself an act of gratitude to God. Why not celebrate by doing something outrageously Catholic this weekend. Make it a challenge.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

LUCKY SEVEN SAMPSON

It is a busy weekend so there will be just quick meandering thoughts over the next couple of days.

This weekend is Pentecost and time to count your blessings, all fourteen of them; seven gifts and seven fruits of the Holy Spirit.

Seven is a cool number. There are seven sacraments, seven deadly sins, seven virtues, and seven joys and seven sorrows of Mary.

Christ commands us to forgive not seven times, but 70 times seven times. He does not mean 490 times but perfectly. Seven is a perfection number, a number of completion. Ten symbolically is a commandment number (as in the ten commandments.) So Jesus takes a perfection number, multiplies it by a commandment number and multiplies it by perfection again. Translated Jesus is asked, “Shall we forgive perfectly?” and He replies, “I mean seriously perfectly.” (Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.) This still holds even for our horrible new translation which simply states “77 times.”

The Catholic Source Book asks, “Why seven? A solar year, and a lunar month, and a twenty-four hour day are naturals, but a seven-day week is a supernatural. Seven is holy. Seven is magic. Seven days make one week. This was determined even by the author of Genesis – or God Himself – who created the world, and rested from it on the seventh day, or one ‘week.’ So this seven-day cycle from the beginning was religious. The Romans’ week was also seven days, naming them as they did after the heavenly bodies of the sun, the moon, and the planets (five of which they knew). Seven . . . one weeks worth of days.”

There are seven arch angels, St. Michael, St. Gabriel, St. Raphael, Uriel, Jophiel, Chamael, Zadkiel, and Jophkiel.

There are seven traditional names of God; El, Elohim, Adonai, Yahweh, Ehyeh-asher-Ehyeh, El Shaddai, Zebaot.

There is (very unofficially) a seven tiered hierarchy of beatitude in heaven as in, “I am in seventh heaven!”
Traditionally when the bishop comes to visit, there should be seven candles on the altar.

There are the last seven words of Jesus, Seven sign from St. John, Scriptures record Mary speaking seven times, in Revelation Seven spirits before the throne of God, seven candlesticks, stars, trumpets and seals on the Book of Life, every seventh day is the Sabbath, after seven weeks is a jubilee day (the fiftieth day), every seventh year a sabbatical year, every seventh sabbatical year is followed by a Jubilee year (fiftieth year).

It was also the most difficult of the times tables for me to learn as a kid.








This is all either really significant or it means absolutely nothing. Either way, it is still really cool.