Positive Motion

26th Sunday in Ordinary Time

How do we evaluate a day, a week, a month, a season in our life?  Is it by how little we’ve done wrong or sinned?  In the Gospel today Jesus comes down hard on sin: “If your hand causes you to sin, cut it off!  If your eye causes you to sin, pluck it out!”  While we may become complacent with our sins, Jesus never does.  And yet, if our goal is never to sin, that neither makes us holy nor prepares us for heaven! The Christian life isn’t about not sinning; heaven isn’t about not sinning.  Turning away from sin is only the first step of the Christian life.  Then we walk the path of the Gospel in a real and living relationship with Jesus!  So how do we evaluate a day, a week, a month, a season in our life?  A Christian would evaluate it based on how generously he or she lived, how many opportunities to help others were taken advantage of, how much more a man or woman of the Gospel they became during that time.

Generosity – Diocesan Annual Appeal

Last weekend, in place of the homily, our parishes viewed the annual diocesan Catholic Services Appeal video.  The Catholic Services Appeal supports the operational costs of our diocese, over 30 faith building programs (especially for our youth), and the education and formation of our seminarians.  Totus Tuus and Extreme Faith Camp are just two of the youth programs made possible through the diocese, both of which I have been a part of and both of which I see producing so much fruit in our youth as they encounter Jesus Christ in new and deeper ways.  God has given each of us so many blessings and gifts — please be generous with what God has given you!  (And if you don’t belong to the Diocese of Superior, please be generous in supporting those programs in your area that contribute to the building up and spreading of our amazing Catholic faith!)

Spiritual Speech Impediments

23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time

In our Gospel today a deaf man with a speech impediment is brought to Jesus.  Jesus takes him away from the crowd, touches his ears and tongue, prays, and cures both his deafness and speech impediment.  In our society it seems that many of us Catholics, like the man in our Gospel, have experienced what it feels like to be tongue-tied: we don’t always how to respond to people who are hostile to the Church (especially in light of the recent scandals) or how to answer difficult questions about what we believe clearly and concisely, and we’re not always comfortable telling other people what Jesus Christ has done in our lives.  Like He did the man in our Gospel today, Jesus wants to take us aside and cure our tongue-tied-ness…but like the man in the Gospel, the healing doesn’t begin with the tongue.