Friday, December 30, 2016
Holy Family
Thursday, December 29, 2016
At the Crèche
At Christmas we celebrate the huge step God takes towards us
to bridge our estrangement from him, to teach us what we dearly need to know
again and again: namely, how deeply and personally he loves us. He
continues to do this by making himself disarmingly approachable, meeting us
exactly where we are, in our human ordinariness and need.
On Christmas in 1971, Blessed
Paul VI said: “God could have come wrapped in glory, splendor, light and power,
to instill fear, to make us rub our eyes in amazement. But instead he came as
the smallest, the frailest and the weakest of beings. Why? So that no one would
be ashamed to approach him, so that no one would be afraid, so that all would
be close to him and draw near him, so that there would be no distance between
us and him. God made the effort to plunge, to dive deep within us, so that each of us can speak intimately with him, trust
him, draw near him and realize that he thinks of us and loves us . . . He loves
you! Think about what this means! If you understand this, you will have
understood the whole of Christianity.”
As we pause by the crèche,
let us realize anew that God chose to be born a tiny child primarily because he
wanted to be loved. At Christmas, we are called to say “yes” with our
faith, not to the Master of the universe, and not even to the most noble of
ideas, but precisely to this God who is himself humble Love to and for us.
He comes to us in our own
“Bethlehems”—that is the unfathomable beauty of Christmas. He always
takes the initiative in our lives, and where we are loveless, he puts love, and
draws out love, our love, so that we might love him through the very love he has for us. The grace of Christmas brings love to
birth in our hearts once again and teaches us what we dearly need to know at
any moment: that we are loved, and changed by love.
Photograph of the crèche in the Abbey church by Brother Jonah. Meditation by Father Dominic.
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Loved
It takes work to get back to the peace of knowing yourself completely loved. And perhaps we never fully get there while we’re here. But the desire is set deep inside us, that incompleteness, the ache for the surprise of love to find us. Perhaps some of us follow certain old scripts handed on to us by our own histories, stories filled with fear and failure. The script often reads- don’t trust, don’t hope. Jesus, God’s tender Word comes to us and offers us a new script, new words to rewrite our story and reimagine the old hopelessness as possibility and opportunity for grace; even allowing ourselves to believe that we are rejoiced over.
Jesus invites us back to this place where we can learn to receive life and love as underserved and unexpected blessings. We may sense the near impossibility of opening our hearts to make a space for love and hope, a place inside us where God’s rejoicing can sprout and blossom from the hard, unpromising stump of our tired old fear and loneliness. And so we each morning we go up to the altar again to receive his precious Body and Blood, the promise of his rejoicing over us.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Shimmering Divinity
The flesh that Jesus assumed is our flesh- human, weak, vulnerable, needy, suffering. Christmas celebrates Christ’s birth into all of these things, not his removal of them or from them. The incarnate God really is Emmanuel, God-with-us. Our world and our lives remain wounded; painfully so. But the reality of the Incarnation assures us that God really is present. The late Jesuit theologian Avery Dulles put it this way: “The Incarnation does not provide us with a ladder by which to escape the ambiguities of life and scale the heights of heaven. Rather, it enables us to burrow deep into the heart of planet earth and find it shimmering with divinity.” This shimmering divinity is offered to us each day in the Eucharist, at the altar manger, under the unassuming signs of bread and wine. Come, let us adore. Come, let us consume.
Madonna and Child by Sandro Botticelli. Excerpts from Dom Damian's Homily for Christmas Mid-night Mass.
Madonna and Child by Sandro Botticelli. Excerpts from Dom Damian's Homily for Christmas Mid-night Mass.
Monday, December 26, 2016
Christmas
Shepherds are the first ones to hear the
good news of great joy that a Savior has been born. Shepherding was a despised
occupation in the first century. Shepherds were scorned as shiftless,
dishonest people, who grazed their flocks on other people’s lands. Yet these
outcasts are the ones who not only first hear the proclamation of a Savior but
are the first to respond to it. For them it was more than just a birth
announcement. It was an invitation, an invitation which they accepted. “When
the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one
another, “Let us go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has taken place, which the
Lord has made known to us." So they went with haste…” These unlikely outcasts
really knew how to hear and respond to God’s approach. You cannot miss the
echoes of Jesus own words later in his life, “Truly I tell you, the tax
collectors and prostitutes are entering the kingdom of God before you.”
We remember that it all
began with an angelic announcement to a young virgin, who then had to explain
to her betrothed that she was pregnant. (Imagine what that was like for Mary.) It
took another angelic visitation for Joseph to recover from the shock and
dismay. After that you would think that things would have gone a bit more smoothly.
But no. This couple has to make a long journey late in the pregnancy. They are really refugees, and the time for her to deliver
arrives. They are forced to find a make-shift maternity room in the squalor of
a place that is no more than an animal shelter.
A couple of weeks ago I saw a photo in the newspaper. It was of a
dining room table around which sat three young children and two adults.
Their hands were folded saying grace. A lighted Christmas tree was in the
corner which cast its glow over the scene. The story that went along with this
photo said that these were grandparents who had adopted their grandchildren.
The kids’ parents were both addicted to drugs and were unable to care for them. The story went on to say that there are thousands of kids in similar
situations. I experienced a moment of
surprise, bordering on shock. The scene in the picture was not at all what I
thought it was.
When I went back to look at the photo, which I did
several times, what I began to see was a Bethlehem manger scene. And now I know, more deeply than ever before,
that what we are celebrating is true. It is true for me, for you, for
parents, for grandparents, for children, for everyone. It is “good news of great joy…for all the people.” No one is excluded.
Photograph of the sanctuary of the Abbey church at Christmas by Brother Brian. Excerpts from Dom Damian's Homily for Christmas Mid-night Mass.
Every manger of darkness
is filled with the Light of Life;
is filled with the Light of Life;
Every manger of confusion and self-doubt
is filled with the Wonderful Counselor;
is filled with the Wonderful Counselor;
Every manger of weakness and impossibility
is filled with the Mighty God;
is filled with the Mighty God;
Every manger of chaos and conflict holds the Prince of Peace;
Every manger of guilt and regret is filled with the Merciful One;
Every manger of fear and lostness is filled with the Good Shepherd;
Every manger of hunger and poverty and thirst and desire
holds the Bread of Life;
Because of the manger of Bethlehem,
the manger of our humanity now cradles God.
from Michael Marsh
holds the Bread of Life;
Because of the manger of Bethlehem,
the manger of our humanity now cradles God.
from Michael Marsh
Photograph of the sanctuary of the Abbey church at Christmas by Brother Brian. Excerpts from Dom Damian's Homily for Christmas Mid-night Mass.
Saturday, December 24, 2016
Christmas Eve
Later in his ministry, Jesus will remind a follower that he, “the Son of Man has nowhere to rest his head.” But for now the Infant Jesus rests in the arms of Mary and Joseph, hidden with them in an ordinary life of pleasures, small joys, sorrows and aches and pains like ours. And still he asks each of us if he can rest his head against our heart.
Friday, December 23, 2016
O Emmanuel
This evening in the final O Antiphon we chant to Christ Jesus:
O Emmanuel, king and lawgiver, desire of the nations,
Savior of all people:
Come and set us free, Lord our God.
O Emmanuel, king and lawgiver, desire of the nations,
Savior of all people:
Come and set us free, Lord our God.
Emmanuel is God with us, in all that we go through, in our joys and sorrows.
As monks it is our duty and privilege to become attuned to the Lord's continual advent. For if it is true, as we believe, that one day
the Lord will return once and for all to gather us all together and bring us
home to the Father in the end time, we also know that his coming toward us is a
relentless, already-happening reality. And we are meant to be experts-- experts at waiting,
attentiveness; experts at emptiness, the emptiness that is constantly clearing a space for him. In Christ Jesus, our Emmanuel, God has
made a giant leap towards us. Jesus our Lord is always drawing near. And attentiveness to his presence is the secret we were
made for.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Thursday, December 22, 2016
O King!
O King of the Gentiles and the Desired of all, you are the cornerstone that binds two into one. Come, and save man whom you fashioned out of clay.
King may be a title we need to
remind us of the place we want Jesus to have in our lives, in our hearts. But it is simply not
a title Jesus chooses for himself. He has come to serve, not to be served. And so he tells us: "Whatever
you did to one of these least brothers of mine, you did to me." He, the highest, speaking
from his throne of glory, thus declares himself to have wholly passed over, in
his actual existence on earth, into “the least”, and these, the lowest, he also
claims as his own brothers and sisters. Christ’s
eternal origin in his heavenly Father, dynamically mediated through the
Incarnation, creates a new brotherhood among all human beings. This is not a natural brotherhood, existing
by the mere fact that we are all human beings.
This is a supernatural kinship that comes into being at a specific
moment in time, as a new creation, when the eternal Son assumes the fullness of
our humanity into his divine person in the womb of blessed Mary.
Meditation by Father Simeon.
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
O Dawn
O Rising Dawn, Radiance of the Light eternal and Sun of Justice: come and enlighten those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death.
Faith is light. In John’s
Gospel, Christ says of himself: “I have come as a light into the world, that
whoever believes in me may not remain in darkness.” John 12:46
“We
therefore are not the origin of this light but it is the great gift of Jesus as
light of the world. As Jesus exclaims to Peter after his confession, ‘Blessed
are you, Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you,
but my heavenly Father.’ ”
The consequence of this supernatural gift is that “Those who believe, see; they
see with a light that illumines their entire journey, for it comes the risen
Christ, the morning star that never sets.” And with the light of faith we gain
fresh vision, new eyes to see. This vision is never simply the assimilation of
an idea, for faith “is born from an encounter with the living God.” And
the “living God calls us and reveals his love, a love which precedes us and
upon which we can lean for security and for building our lives.”
This love calls us to go out of ourselves, it summons us to a new life. When we
respond, love transforms us. Through love “we gain fresh vision, new eyes to
see; we realize that it contains a great promise of fulfillment, and that a
vision of the future opens before us. Faith, received from God as a
supernatural gift, becomes a light for our way, guiding our journey through
time.” Faith “sees to the extent that it journeys, to the extent that it
chooses to enter in to the horizons opened up by God’s word.”
Reflections on Lumen
Fidei, the encyclical letter of Pope Francis, by Father Timothy.
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
O Key!
This evening we call out to Jesus as "Key of David." Keys open doors. Jesus is the key to our freedom from all that would frighten, cripple or close us in on ourselves. He offers us the small, fragile hand of God beckoning us not to be afraid. Whatever our fears, our sins, Jesus notices and offers us accompaniment and a way out. He assures us that we are more than all that. He has come to save us from all that would paralyze and hurt us.
Now in Him we have the power to forgive, not because “It’s alright. It’s nothing.” No, the opposite is true- very much has happened. We’ve been hurt, ignored, whatever, but we can absorb the hurt and forgive because we trust in Christ Jesus who is at our side, even within us, assuring us that pain and fear and suffering are powerless to define who we truly are. We belong to him. He is our Key.
opening the gates of God’s eternal Kingdom:
come and free the prisoners of darkness!
Monday, December 19, 2016
Root of Jesse
O
Root of Jesse, standing as a sign among the peoples;
before
you kings are speechless,
to
you the nations will make their prayer:
Come
and deliver us, and delay no longer!
We chant this evening’s
antiphon, acclaiming Jesus as “Root of Jesse.” And we recall that he is the
Origin and Source of all our good, all our hope, all our longing. This antiphon
is a kind of gloss on the words of the prophet Isaiah:
On
that day,
The
root of Jesse,
set
up as a signal for the peoples—
Him
the nations will seek out;
his
dwelling shall be glorious.
On
that day,
The
Lord shall again take it in hand
to
reclaim the remnant of his people
…He
shall raise a signal to the nations
and
gather the outcasts of Israel...
Jesus is truly the One who
gathers and joins together in hope all peoples, scattered by hopelessness, hate
and fear. As we name his “Root of Jesse,” we pray especially for all refugees.
Sunday, December 18, 2016
O Adonai
O Adonai, and leader of the House of Israel, who appeared to Moses in the fire of the burning bush and gave him the law on Sinai: Come and redeem us with an outstretched arm.
This evening in our Vespers antiphon we address Jesus, using the Hebrew title for Lord "Adonai." Indeed Jesus is for us Lord of lords, Master and Ruler of all creation, present in the burning bush on Sinai, and still with us now in all our ordinariness. We recall the words of the poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning:
Earth’s crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God:
But only he who sees takes off his shoes.
This evening in our Vespers antiphon we address Jesus, using the Hebrew title for Lord "Adonai." Indeed Jesus is for us Lord of lords, Master and Ruler of all creation, present in the burning bush on Sinai, and still with us now in all our ordinariness. We recall the words of the poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning:
Earth’s crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God:
But only he who sees takes off his shoes.
Let us notice and honor the Lord in the ordinary events of our day.
Abbey colored glass photographed by Brother Daniel.
Saturday, December 17, 2016
O Wisdom
As we begin this
evening our novena in preparation for Christmas, we name Jesus first of all "Wisdom."
And we recall Paul's words to the Corinthians, "Let no one deceive himself. If any one among you considers himself wise in this
age, let him become a fool so as to become wise. For the wisdom of this world is foolishness in the eyes of God." So it is that the promised Messiah, God Most High, will come to us hidden, small, clothed in the flesh of our precarious humanness. This is the wisdom of God, God's way of doing things.
O Wisdom, you came forth from the mouth of the Most High and, reaching from beginning to end, you ordered all things mightily and sweetly. Come, and teach us the way of prudence.
O Wisdom, you came forth from the mouth of the Most High and, reaching from beginning to end, you ordered all things mightily and sweetly. Come, and teach us the way of prudence.
Image from an ancient Cistercian manuscript.
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Do Come
As monks we are meant to live in incessant desire for God, to become all longing and hunger for him. The season of Advent, its prayers and readings speak to us of a mutuality of desire. For indeed if we long to see the face of God, so God's desire to come to us outstrips our own desire and takes flesh in Christ Jesus our Lord. In Jesus God's face has been revealed. This revelation stokes our desire for more intense experience of his presence and divine embrace. During Advent we celebrate the emptiness that makes us totally available for all that God wants to give us in Christ. We are joyful in our neediness and longing, for God longs to fill us with God's own Self in Christ more than we dare imagine. Amen. Come Lord Jesus and do not delay!
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
John of the Cross
If we were to go to Saint John of the Cross with a problem or complaint, perhaps he would remind us that of course "the road is narrow" and those who wish "to
travel it more easily must cast off all things" and use the cross as their "cane," and be ready to suffer all things willingly for the love of
God.
Because sometimes we may have preferred other crutches or cushions to the cross of Christ, we beg the Lord's mercy.
Monday, December 12, 2016
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Mary's conception, free of original sin, was
unique among all created persons. But it is our re-conception in Christ, our rebirth in Christ, our re-creation in
Christ and our vocation to be holy and blameless, without blemish, immaculate
before the face of God in love. This is something we all share with Mary. It
seems an impossible vocation. Mary, our
model, teaches us how to follow it and prays for us as we do.
There is a famous quote: “Pray as if everything depended
on God and work as if everything depended on you.” But if we were to ask the Virgin Mother Mary
about it, she would perhaps say: “Pray and work knowing that it all depends on God.
Everything depends on God.” She would be
in agreement with St. Paul in his saying, “What do you have that you did not
receive? If then you received it, why do you boast as if it were not a
gift?” The notion that each of us is
called to be “holy and immaculate before the face of God in love” only seems
impossible when God is left out of the process. Mary learns from the angel that nothing will be impossible for God: she, a virgin, but she will have a son who is the Son
of God.
In the Magnificat, Mary never once uses the
pronoun “I”. Her prayer is not a prayer
of praise about herself, but about what God has done for her, for Israel, and for
all generations of the lowly who know that nothing is impossible for God. Mary prays in praise of him who is her savior, a
God who looks not on egocentric accomplishments but rather on our lowliness
and poverty and hunger for Him, a God who ever remembers to have mercy upon us
to make us blessed and holy and immaculate as we live and pray before his face.
Reflection by Father Luke.
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Gaudete Sunday
The Church does not invite us to rejoice as some kind of liturgical diversion from the pain and conflict all around us. Just the opposite; we are invited to rejoice only because, as the prophet Isaiah tells us this morning, God is very near despite all indications to the contrary:
Be strong, fear not!
Here is your God,
he comes with vindication;
with divine recompense
he comes to save you.
Then will the eyes of the blind be opened,
the ears of the deaf be cleared;
then will the lame leap like a stag,
then the tongue of the mute will sing.he lame leap like a stag,
then the tongue of the mute will sing.
Here is your God,
he comes with vindication;
with divine recompense
he comes to save you.
Then will the eyes of the blind be opened,
the ears of the deaf be cleared;
then will the lame leap like a stag,
then the tongue of the mute will sing.he lame leap like a stag,
then the tongue of the mute will sing.
We dare to rejoice because hope, mercy and compassion are with us and always coming closer in Christ Jesus our Lord, the God of all consolation. Hope is beside us. Not false hope (there’s never ever been anything false about hope) for now in Christ, Hope is a Person who is searching for us. Love and mercy are relentlessly coming to us as an undeserved and surprising gift. Isaiah reminds us that “a pattern of reversal” is unfolding in our midst.” And we are being invited to collaborate in the divine subterfuge. For God is taking disaster, pain and contradiction as his opportunity for grace, and he begs our cooperation.
Photograph of Abbey window by Brother Daniel.
Friday, December 9, 2016
Saint Juan Diego
Listen, Juan, my dearest and youngest son….know for sure, my
dearest… that I am the perfect and ever Virgin Holy Mary, Mother of the God of
truth through Whom everything lives, the Lord of all things near us, the Lord
of heaven and earth. I want very much to have a little house built here for me,
in which I will show Him, I will exalt Him and make Him manifest. I will give
Him to the people in all my personal love, in my compassion, in my help, in my
protection: because I am truly your merciful Mother, yours and all the people
who live united in this land and of all the other people of different
ancestries, my lovers, who love me, those who seek me, those who trust in me.
Here I will hear their weeping, their complaints and heal all their sorrows,
hardships and sufferings…
Like the Son she carries in her virgin womb, Mary very much wants
to console us. She is transparent to the mercy that he is for us. Mary and her Son hear our weeping and our sorrow. God and his
mother are very near.
Thursday, December 8, 2016
Immaculate
As we celebrate Our Lady today, we recall these words of our own Saint Bernard of Clairvaux:
In dangers, in doubts, in difficulties, think of Mary, call upon Mary.
Let not her name depart from your lips, never suffer it to leave your heart.
And that you may obtain the assistance of her prayer, neglect not to walk in
her footsteps. With her for guide, you shall never go astray; while invoking
her, you shall never lose heart; so long as she is in your mind, you are safe
from deception; while she holds your hand, you cannot fall; under her
protection you have nothing to fear; if she walks before you, you shall not
grow weary; if she shows you favor, you shall reach the goal.
Drawing by Leonardo da Vinci.
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Nicholas and Oscar
Today the Church celebrates Saint Nicholas remembered through the ages for his generosity to the poor. We recall these words of the martyred archbishop Blessed Oscar Romero, which we imagine the holy bishop Saint Nicholas would have appreciated.
No one can celebrate a genuine Christmas without being truly poor. The self-sufficient, the proud, those who, because they have everything, look down on others, those who have no need even of God — for them there will be no Christmas. Only the poor, the hungry, those who need someone to come on their behalf, will have that someone. That someone is God, Emmanuel, God-with-us. Without poverty of spirit there can be no abundance of God.
Photograph of the Abbey after our first snowfall by James O'Kane.
Monday, December 5, 2016
Fulfilled in Him
The heart of Jesus brims over
with the most tender and efficacious compassion. He speaks
and healing occurs. God’s love in Christ breaks through; God’s Word as in the
beginning is fruitful and full of power. For the love of God enfleshed in
Christ Jesus has no patience with evil and sickness. Jesus is opposed to all that oppresses and
burdens us; his power is expressed in humble, loving, compassionate mercy. Jesus gives this once paralyzed man back to his friends, to his family, to his community. And so the words of the prophet Isaiah are fulfilled in Jesus:
Strengthen the hands that are feeble,
make firm the knees that are weak,
Say to those whose hearts are frightened:
Be strong, fear not!
Here is your God,
he comes with vindication;
With divine recompense
he comes to save you.
Then will the eyes of the blind be opened,
the ears of the deaf be cleared;
Then will the lame leap like a stag,
then the tongue of the mute will sing.
Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci. Meditation on today's Mass readings by one of the monks.
Strengthen the hands that are feeble,
make firm the knees that are weak,
Say to those whose hearts are frightened:
Be strong, fear not!
Here is your God,
he comes with vindication;
With divine recompense
he comes to save you.
Then will the eyes of the blind be opened,
the ears of the deaf be cleared;
Then will the lame leap like a stag,
then the tongue of the mute will sing.
Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci. Meditation on today's Mass readings by one of the monks.
Sunday, December 4, 2016
Upside-Downness
and the leopard shall lie down with the kid;
the calf and the young lion shall browse together,
with a little child to guide them.
The cow and the bear shall be neighbors,
together their young shall rest;
the lion shall eat hay like the ox.
The baby shall play by the cobra’s den,
and the child lay his hand on the adder’s lair.
In this morning's First Reading the prophet Isaiah speaks of the wondrous upside-downness that will characterize the presence of the Messiah, the presence of the kingdom, the presence of Christ Jesus in our world.
Ultimately our work as monks, indeed as Christians, is all about attentiveness to the Lord's invitation to reconcile the opposites in our lives and in our world. We are invited to move away from a world of us vs them, good guys vs bad guys, holiness vs everything else. This does not mean relativizing moral distinctions, but seeking ways to bring healing and peace and forgiveness to situations that seem irreconcilable. We speak the truth in love while continuing in prayer, confident that with God nothing is impossible, for God is reconciling all things in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Ultimately our work as monks, indeed as Christians, is all about attentiveness to the Lord's invitation to reconcile the opposites in our lives and in our world. We are invited to move away from a world of us vs them, good guys vs bad guys, holiness vs everything else. This does not mean relativizing moral distinctions, but seeking ways to bring healing and peace and forgiveness to situations that seem irreconcilable. We speak the truth in love while continuing in prayer, confident that with God nothing is impossible, for God is reconciling all things in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Saturday, December 3, 2016
Drawing Near
No longer will
your Teacher hide himself,
but with your own eyes you shall see your Teacher.
but with your own eyes you shall see your Teacher.
One whom we long
for, even though we may not always realize the depth of our desire for him, he
himself longs to draw near to us. And so he will lower the heavens and come
down, hiding in Mary’s womb. There in the bridal chamber that is her flesh, he
will assume our flesh.
At the sight of
the crowds, his heart was moved with pity for them
because they were troubled and abandoned.
because they were troubled and abandoned.
God Most High has noticed our need for him, and God’s heart enfleshed in the pitying heart of
Christ Jesus comes very near, revealing God’s intimate understanding of all
that troubles us. We no longer need to be afraid.
Woodcut by Eric Gill. Meditation on today’s Mass readings by one of the monks.
Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Childlike
“I give you praise, Father, Lord of heaven and earth,
for although you have hidden these things
from the wise and the learned you have revealed them to the childlike. Luke 10
Jesus' words in this morning's Gospel remind us of his words in the Sermon on the Mount: “Blessed are the poor in spirit.” These are the "childlike" who know their need for God and look to God for everything. These were the ones who followed Jesus around, and hung on his every word. They have experienced that life isn’t fair. They have nothing; and they are nothing; but Jesus gives them hope. He calls them blessed, not because he’s trying to put them down, but because they are not self-sufficient, but desperately know their need for God.
Jesus turns to them, to us, and says, “Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will refresh you.” There is room in his mercy-filled heart for everyone, no one is excluded. But there’s a catch, we need to be aware of the truly good news of our insufficiency, our incompleteness, our sinfulness, our poverty, which make us available to receive all that Jesus has to offer us- which is everything, his entire self. In the end God does not want our virtue, he wants our weakness, our need which make us totally available to the mercy he wants to be for us.
Sunday, November 27, 2016
Advent Mercy
In
this morning's Gospel we hear about Jesus coming to judge the living and the
dead. But we need to know that his judgment will not be a judgment of
vindictiveness, but a judgment of truth. Jesus is the truth. He knows us
through and through: all the choices we have made for good or for bad; all the
circumstances that influenced our decisions; all our efforts or lack of them to
turn to his mercy. We already anticipate his judgment in the Sacrament of
Confession when in his presence truth speaks to Truth. But when his truth meets
our truth, judgment reveals mercy. Mercy is a close ally of truth, and when
they come together, they give birth to hope. And hope does not disappoint us –
it is the light of the Lord.
Isaiah
has that wonderful saying, “They shall beat their swords into plowshares and
their spears into pruning hooks….” Our monastic life of vigils, fasting,
silence, and especially the common life is designed to beat our swords – that
is, our passions – into plowshares so that peace may be sown among us. Our goal
is perfect charity, a charity that reaches out to those who might be left behind.
The Gospel speaks of two men in the field and two women grinding at the mill.
Let us not refuse to join those in the field or those grinding away at life’s
daily tasks. May our charity become like bands of love, reaching out to make
sure no one is left behind. This is what the Lord wants of us.
Our salvation is
nearer now than when we first believed. The Lord is near, especially in the
Holy Eucharist. As we begin a new liturgical year, let us set out, following
the Spirit’s lead, and walk in the light of the Lord – believing and hoping and
loving – reflecting the light of Christ so that his salvation may reach to the
ends of the earth.
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Thanksgiving
As he was entering a village, ten persons with leprosy met him.
They stood at a distance from him and raised their voices, saying,
“Jesus, Master! Have pity on us!”
And when he saw them, he said,
“Go show yourselves to the priests.”
As they were going they were cleansed.
And one of them, realizing he had been healed,
returned, glorifying God in a loud voice;
and he fell at the feet of Jesus and thanked him.
He was a Samaritan.
Jesus said in reply,
“Ten were cleansed, were they not?
Where are the other nine?" Luke 17
Nine lepers celebrate new skin, one leper celebrates the Creator and Restorer of new skin. If gospel statistics are any indication, then ninety percent of us live life at skin level. Jesus offers us so much more. He desires more for us, than we often desire for ourselves. His final question in today's gospel: “Ten were cleansed, were they not? Where are the other nine?" is not a rebuke. It is an invitation. An invitation which Jesus extends to us today. Let us not hesitate to open our hearts in gratitude, begging his healing, peace and forgiveness.
Photo by Brother Brian. Meditation taken from Abbot Damian's words at this morning's Thanksgiving Day Mass.
They stood at a distance from him and raised their voices, saying,
“Jesus, Master! Have pity on us!”
And when he saw them, he said,
“Go show yourselves to the priests.”
As they were going they were cleansed.
And one of them, realizing he had been healed,
returned, glorifying God in a loud voice;
and he fell at the feet of Jesus and thanked him.
He was a Samaritan.
Jesus said in reply,
“Ten were cleansed, were they not?
Where are the other nine?" Luke 17
Nine lepers celebrate new skin, one leper celebrates the Creator and Restorer of new skin. If gospel statistics are any indication, then ninety percent of us live life at skin level. Jesus offers us so much more. He desires more for us, than we often desire for ourselves. His final question in today's gospel: “Ten were cleansed, were they not? Where are the other nine?" is not a rebuke. It is an invitation. An invitation which Jesus extends to us today. Let us not hesitate to open our hearts in gratitude, begging his healing, peace and forgiveness.
Photo by Brother Brian. Meditation taken from Abbot Damian's words at this morning's Thanksgiving Day Mass.
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
The End
By means of the cycle of the liturgical year, the Church in her wisdom sets
before our eyes very vividly the reality of the unavoidable end of our lives
and of the history of the world, and the expectation of good things to come: The day is coming, says the prophet Malachy to us, blazing like an oven, when all the arrogant
and all evildoers will be stubble… But for you who fear my name, the sun of
justice will arise with healing in its wings. We do well to contemplate this
reality of the day of reckoning with our minds and hearts, through the
words and teachings of the Lord Jesus himself.
The great challenge is to decide what
will be our attitude in the face of this impending reality of the End of Time,
when we believe that the Lord Jesus himself will come in glory, to judge and save.
Jesus’ “eschatological discourse” in today's Gospel according to Luke takes place in the temple in Jerusalem, where many people are enthralled with admiration, looking at the impressive solidity of the temple and the very costly stones and offerings that embellish it. It seemed to the Jews that the temple would last forever, because it was the grandest building they had ever seen, and also because it had been granted to them by God himself. And yet Jesus says that all that magnificence will come tumbling down one day. For the Jews this was a great tragedy that announced the end of the world. Jesus takes the occasion to describe a number of historical and natural catastrophes, like earthquakes and wars, that point to the world’s end. But then comes the most important part of the sermon, when Jesus warns his disciples sternly, saying: See that you not be deceived, for many will come in my name, saying, “I am he,” and “The time has come.” Do not follow them!
This warning of the Lord is crucial for us, because it means that the end of the world will not occur mechanically, enforced by some law of destiny allegedly inscribed in the stars and proclaimed by all kinds of charlatans and impostors. No! The end of the world will occur only with the coming of the one and only Jesus, Lord of history and creation, and the moment of this coming depends entirely on the freedom of God’s gracious will, which always seeks our good, and not on any impersonal process of history or nature. As Malachy prophesies, those who fear God’s name have nothing terrible to fear as they await the end of the world. The coming of the Lord Jesus, the one who loves us and has shed his blood for us, can never be a reason of fear for the Christian.
Jesus’ “eschatological discourse” in today's Gospel according to Luke takes place in the temple in Jerusalem, where many people are enthralled with admiration, looking at the impressive solidity of the temple and the very costly stones and offerings that embellish it. It seemed to the Jews that the temple would last forever, because it was the grandest building they had ever seen, and also because it had been granted to them by God himself. And yet Jesus says that all that magnificence will come tumbling down one day. For the Jews this was a great tragedy that announced the end of the world. Jesus takes the occasion to describe a number of historical and natural catastrophes, like earthquakes and wars, that point to the world’s end. But then comes the most important part of the sermon, when Jesus warns his disciples sternly, saying: See that you not be deceived, for many will come in my name, saying, “I am he,” and “The time has come.” Do not follow them!
This warning of the Lord is crucial for us, because it means that the end of the world will not occur mechanically, enforced by some law of destiny allegedly inscribed in the stars and proclaimed by all kinds of charlatans and impostors. No! The end of the world will occur only with the coming of the one and only Jesus, Lord of history and creation, and the moment of this coming depends entirely on the freedom of God’s gracious will, which always seeks our good, and not on any impersonal process of history or nature. As Malachy prophesies, those who fear God’s name have nothing terrible to fear as they await the end of the world. The coming of the Lord Jesus, the one who loves us and has shed his blood for us, can never be a reason of fear for the Christian.
Photograph by Brother Brian. Excerpts from a homily by Father Simeon.
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Christ as King
Someone very gentle and loving is trying to lead us forward in hope; Someone who leads by falling down, being spat upon, shoved and tortured. Not to teach us how to be doormats; that is not what His kingdom is about. It is about refusing to fight evil with evil, about absorbing hurt because of hope and trust in One who is at our side, even within us. It is all about witnessing to the reality that pain and fear and suffering are powerless to define who we truly are. They are simply not our destiny. We belong to Christ Jesus our Master, our King.
Includes some insights from James Alison. Photograph by Brother Daniel of Renaissance glass fragment in an Abbey window.
Thursday, November 17, 2016
Happy
Brother Jude has served the brethren as community cook for more than twenty years. And his kitchen is a place of warmth and hospitality, where the brethren can always find a warm cookie and a kind word. Jude loves to quote Saint Elizabeth of Hungry, who once said, "We must make people happy."
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
At the Door
Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, then I will enter his house and dine with him, and he with me. Rev 3
As Christ
Jesus draws near, we recall his words to the woman at the well. “If only you knew the
gift of God and who is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink, ‘you would have asked
him instead and he would have given you living water.” If only we knew. If only we understood
Jesus’ desire to refresh us. For even as he invites us to come to him with our
thirst, it is he who is thirsting for us to thirst for him. His thirst is his unending
desire for us. Christ Jesus is at the door waiting to
heal and console and mercy us. Let us open to him, realizing our real need for the living water that he is.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Photograph by Brother Brian.