HAPPY NEW YEAR!
&
HAPPY FEAST OF MARY MOTHER OF GOD
(Don't forget it is a holy day of obligation this year!)
Masses at St. Sebastian
7PM vigil
9AM
5:15 extraordinary form
7PM
Of course, I am not as young as I used to be and staying up
for the Midnight Mass is a little more of a challenge than it used to be. (Why doesn’t anyone ever call up and ask what
time the 4:00 o’clock Mass is?) The
priests and seminarians here went down into the common room to watch a movie
together to help pass the time. It
probably wasn’t the best choice of movies.
Definitely not a warm fuzzy Christmas movie. But believe me it kept us awake if not a
little shaken.
Back at the ranch there were stirrings. Everyone who stays the night at St. Sebastian
at Christmas gets something to open on the morning. You just have to no matter how silly or
small. Sebastian ripped into his
packages with reckless abandon, paper flying and wagging tail destroying the
bottom half of the Christmas tree.
This is also my favorite time to get into conversations with
non-Catholic experts on Catholicism. One
of my favorites that usually takes place over the last cup of eggnog is the
person who pushes back in his chair with a crooked grin and announces, “Well,
you know, Christmas is just a pagan holiday that Catholics are celebrating.” Then, for some inexplicable reason, Catholics
feel they have to save the honor of the Church by fighting this accusation. 
In the end – who cares?
God is so powerful in can purify any day. He is so awesome that He is not disappointed
in us if for 2,000+ years we celebrated His birth on the wrong calendar
day. And so to the guy trying to be the
(birthday) party pooper, the only response needed is, “And isn’t it so cool
that God is so good and powerful that that doesn’t really matter?”
God is so cool. In
the same way He allows us to make up for sin by our asking forgiveness just as
He allowed us to sin by an act of our own free will, so also is Salvation
brought about. In Eve, we have a person who
chose to act against God by an act of her free will. In Mary, we have a person who chose to radically
unite man and God together by an act of her free will. Thus, as Scripture says that Eve became the
Mother of all the living since she was our first mother, Mary again becomes our
Mother since it is she, through saying yes to God, brought all of us a life of
grace.
I love the whole idea that the Church is some great, well
oiled mega power bent on taking over the world spawning books and movies about
secret societies and codes and spying and etc . . . Conveniently enough it keeps minds off our
own government that is spying on us .
. .
But again I digress.
So starting on this day, we start praying the “O Antiphons” during
vespers (the official evening prayer of the Catholic Church) just before
proclaiming the Magnificat. The O
Antiphons give the titles of the coming Messiah as presented in the Old
Testament – one for each day. You know
these. You sing at least some of them
every year in the carol, “O Come, O Come Emmanuel,” which is most appropriately
sung starting December 17th, not the first day of Advent.
So here are the titles; O Sapientia (Wisdom,) O Adonai (O
Sacred Lord,) O radix Jessi (O Flower of Jesse’s Stem,) O Clavis David (O Key
of David,) O Oriens (O Radiant Dawn,) O Rex Gentium (O King of All Nations,) O
Emmanuel (a name which means God with Us.)
Now take the first letter of each title: SARCORE and on the last day,
the day before Christmas, reverse the letters and you get EROCRAS or, in Latin,
“Ero cras.” Translated into English this means, “Tomorrow
I come!”
IF your town still has a newspaper, and IF you still get it,
and IF on Sunday they still have the Parade Magazine (will someday I have to
explain what a magazine was to kids?) this past weekend you would have seen an
article about Mark Wahlberg. The short
article is under a weekly feature called, “Sunday With . . .” In it, they interview a famous person and
there is at least one question that they ask every week: “How do you spend
Sunday?”
FINDING TRUTH WHEREVER IT MAY BE FOUND: "You don't always have to destroy a wounded animal. Sometimes you just remove the thorn." from the show "Dexter" season three finale.
From the Diocese of Cleveland Enewsletter: "Pope Francis received a group of non-resident Ambassadors to the Holy See on Thursday in the Clementine Hall of the Apostolic Palace at the Vatican. The Holy Father focused his remarks to his guests on the scourge of human trafficking, denouncing the practice as a “real form of slavery” and calling for renewed and concerted efforts to end the inhuman trade." See more here.
Now here’s a case when I will use the term “the spirit of
Vatican II” and think it has merit. As
we head into the last throws of advent (or perhaps slow boil of advent would be
better,) we enter that part of Lumen
Gentium that makes clear Mary’s role in salvation history – Totally
unplanned which makes it cool.
The story concerning Mary goes back to Genesis (para 55 of
LG). There will be a virgin and a
conquering of the serpent. In Isaiah
further prophecies are made. Throughout Scripture,
a blurry picture becomes clearer and clearer until one night it snaps into
sharp focus on a young, faith filled woman, by the announcement of an angel. From obscurity she is plucked, though in God’s
eye she was never out of the center of His plan. From her our God is given flesh and entrusted
to her care until He could go about the business of saving us from our self
destructive ways.
(This is not in this paragraph but my own thought.) You, Christian, are not much different. Scratch just below the surface there is
greatness. It is not in your wealth,
your ability to command, your ancestry, or your prospects (or lack thereof!) All that will pass and be forgotten. But like in a C. S. Lewis novel, you have already
been named a king or queen with great dignity, inheritance, and rule, and it
will only come to light for the faithful who remain true to their nature and
enter into the kingdom of our heavenly Father.
While it is pretty cool that Pope Francis was named Time
Magazine’s “Person of the Year,” he is not the first pope to be named so. Blessed John Paul II was also given the
moniker of “Person of the Year.” There
was one more pope thusly honored but technically speaking he was named Time’s “Man
of the Year.” (Times and Time have
changed.) That would have been Blessed John XXIII. I bring this up just in case
people forget we have had a string of popular popes. But this is not to diminish the uniqueness
that is Pope Francis.
Second is the “Social Gospel.” He eschews what he calls the “Throw Away
Culture” of the world. This does not
mean that he wants us to recycle more. This
is referring to a tendency to see certain people as “less than” and not afford
them the dignity that all human beings should have. From conception to death, all humans should
have the right to life and dignity. Life
is the most basic of rights and that upon which all rights rest. And there will never be true peace on earth
until all are afforded this most basic of rights.
I will admit that I watch “Dexter.” For those unfamiliar with this show: it is
the story of a mass murderer trying to live a normal life – except for those
pesky murders.
Dexter supposedly is unable to have feelings; particularly
complicated feelings such as love. He
works hard then trying to figure what to do to express love to those close to
him and make them feel love. It is a radical decision for the other with
little consolation to himself. Inside
his head he is saying, “This is all fake.
If they only knew I don’t know a thing about love.” From a spiritual standpoint he is in the
deepest throws of love. If he acted
lovingly toward those for whom he had great feelings of love, big whoop. As Scriptures says, “even the pagans do the
same.” But he overcomes his deficit to
love mightily. His is probably the
purest love in the show.
That is the part of the show that peaks my interested. The producers go through great lengths to
make Dexter a lovable character. And he
had a code by which he lives; he will only kill those who kill and have escaped
responsibility for their murders and who will most likely kill again. So if you would become friends with Dexter,
you most likely would never experience the dark side of him that “needs” to
kill. You would only know this great
guy.
FINDING TRUTH WHEREVER IT MAY BE FOUND: "(The room) smelled of the past, of a time before computers, before information was 'Googled' or 'blogged.' Before laptops and BlackBerries and all of the other tools that mistook information for knowledge." from Louise Penny's, "Bury Your Dead"
From the "In Box": "When someone tells you the Catholic Church’s stance on abortion, homosexuality or euthanasia is wrong, when someone makes fun of your religion, when someone mocks a religious practice you hold dear, how do you respond? How should you respond? Can you really challenge someone’s deeply held beliefs or will you just make them mad? These questions are at the heart of an intelligent and engaging new documentary by Father Robert Barron entitled, 'Catholicism: The New Evangelization.' (Not to be confused with Father’s popular 10-part epic, 'Catholicism.')
What was she thinking?
What was she feeling? What was
she facing? To some extent, these are
easier questions to ask about Mary than they are about her Son. Mary is, after all, a human person. Jesus is a Divine Person and therefore it is
often very dangerous to say, “At this point, Jesus was feeling (fill in the
blank).” How do we know? True, He was fully human, but He was also
fully Divine and to think we could know the inner workings of His mind might be
presumptuous. (This is my opinion, not
part of this document.)
“Community is lost in virtual communion” was the title of an
editorial that appeared in the Beacon Journal last week written by Alex Beam of
the Boston Globe. It concerns a
Methodist minister in North Carolina who wants to start a “virtual campus” of religious
services via computer which would include Holy Communion, one of two
sacraments, the other being baptism, that the Methodists recognize. Adherents would be able to have a house
Church of sorts, gathering together on line to pray under the leadership of a
pastor.
But what if you are starting point is a division? (Remember, I am taking this from a Catholic
position, my Protestant brothers and sisters will take a very different
view.) For example, the minister cited
above makes the argument that Methodism’s cofounder, John Wesley, was a radical
religious innovator in the 18th century. Part of that innovation was to break from
established Church and begin something new (or old, if one believes they were
returning to something original in Christ’s mission.) A new Church was formed with its own belief
system and hierarchy. What gave them the
authority to do so? Well, one argument
is that the Bible did. The Holy Spirit did. The teachings of Jesus did. 
Here again Mr. Fann plays the game of denouncing a behavior
for those he’s against, and then shows how perfectly logical it is for him to
do it. None of the people against the
HHS mandate are forcing anybody to do anything.
Nobody is protesting that such items should be taken out of the store; nobody
is protesting clinics because they are handing out free birth control, but Mr.
Fann places the desire of one person to have birth control paid for by a person
who finds it morally repugnant over and above the religious freedom of the provider. One can still have the freedom to act
according to his conscience (and have it paid for), the other may not.
The only person making demands on anybody’s behavior (and
tapping their resources) is Mr. Fann and backers of this portion of the HHS mandate. (This reminds me of 2 Maccabees chapter 7).
Secondly, I recommend that you do not take a job writing an
ethics column. There is a huge
difference between indirect and direct culpability. It is one thing for me to give twenty dollars
to a teenager who then goes out and buys smokes, it is another thing to make
available smokes for the teenager “because he is going to smoke anyway.”