Deacon Brian: Fiat

4th Sunday of Advent

On this 4th Sunday of Advent, Deacon Brian gives an incredible homily on Mary’s fiat to God (“may it be done to me according to your word”) which lays the groundwork of the vision for our parishes in the coming year.  In it he uses the analogy of a NASCAR race to portray God’s first call and primary challenge for all the lay faithful to be drivers for Christ in the great Christian race of missionary discipleship, with the clergy being your pit crew and the fans being the whole world!

As we, lay parishioners and ministers alike, discern in this coming year how to transform our parishes of St. Joseph and St. Ann into communities that welcome the Lord’s call to “go and make disciples of all nations,” we ask for your prayers and support, that together we all might echo back to God Mary’s fiat: “may it be done to me according to your word,” and that we might draw many more to echo those word along with us!

Our Lady of Guadalupe

3rd Sunday of Advent

People started following and listening to Jesus in large part because of the signs that accompanied his message – the miracles he was performing. December 12th was the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe.  In 1531 Mary appeared to an Aztec peasant named Juan Diego asking that a Church be built on the spot.  Accompanying these apparitions were three miracles – the miracle of the roses, the miracle of the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe appearing on Juan Diego’s cloak/tilma (which can still be seen today in Mexico and which defies all modern explanation), and the miracle of over 9 million people converting to Christianity in a matter of years and following Christ because of this apparition and image.  In our Gospel today John the Baptist is preparing the way for our Lord.  Mary has prepared the way for our Lord Jesus in so many ways, both through her life on this earth and her continued apparitions to God’s children. Inspired by the miracles that God has done, let’s ask God to continue to work miracles in our lives and in this world, that we may follow Him with more conviction and that others may be opened to hearing the message of Jesus Christ!

Daily

1st Sunday of Advent

We humans change one step at a time – it’s just the way we’re wired.  And once we’ve made a change that tends to become the new normal and we stick to it,  for better or for worse.  This Advent season God wants to work in your life in new and powerful ways!  But for that change to occur, there is a requirement: DAILY prayer and reflection.  To give Jesus the space He needs in our lives and minds and hearts to work out His grace within us requires the daily practice of openness to God in prayer and reflection.  One day a week is okay, 2 days is all right, 3 is getting better…but if we’re wondering why we’ve plateaued and not much seems to be changing or growing in our spiritual life, it’s because God needs our daily permission to work His good grace in us, one step at a time!

Kingdom Citizens

Feast of Christ the King

We’ve been so concerned recently with who’s going to be our president, have we stopped to ask ourselves how concerned we’ve been with Who’s going to be our King?  This weekend, as we near the end of our liturgical year, we celebrate the Feast of Christ the King as we we look ahead to the end of time – when Jesus Christ will come in glory to rule all of creation forever.  If politics can get us passionate and worked up about a man who will run our country for a handful of years and then go into the history books, then our faith and relationship with Jesus Christ should inspire us to incredible passion for sharing Who is going to be our King for all eternity!  As citizens of God’s kingdom, we’re not called only to live personally as disciples of Jesus Christ, but we’re also expected to reach out call others to join this incredible kingdom.  How do we do that?  Start listening to find out!

Why Purgatory?

32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time

This last week we celebrated both All Saints Day and All Souls Day.  On All Saints we rejoice and thank God for those whose souls are fully united to God in heaven; on All Souls day we pray for those people who have died and whose bodies are decomposing yet whose souls live on into eternity.  Why do we pray for them? What need would they have that we can help with?  Why not just celebrate All Saints Day and forget about All Souls Day?  When the word “purgatory” gets brought up in conversation I’m usually met with incredulity, people thinking of it as an outdated or unnecessary idea – if God is love why would there be a purgatory?  But maybe the way we’re thinking about it is all wrong; maybe there’s something incredibly relevant and timely about purgatory, both for us and for all souls, whether living in the body or out of it.

Revealing Your Full Potential

30th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Michelangelo, one of the greatest artists of all time, loved sculpting most of all.  He could look at a block of marble, see the potential, a vision for what that block of marble was hiding, and then carve away everything that was not that potential.  When we stand in front of the mirror, each one of us is looking at a block of marble called, “The rest of your life.”  Do we have a vision for what we want that block of marble to look like at the end of our life?  Can we see and appreciate its full potential? Because God has a vision for each one of us, He sees so much potential, He tells us in the Gospel today that within each of us is a heart that can love God with everything we’ve got and love our neighbor as ourself.  What do you want to look like at the end of your life: a roughly carved block of untapped potential tromping around heaven, or a true masterpiece of God’s creation?  It’s already inside of you!  How will you let God keep carving you this week?

Put on Christ

28th Sunday in Ordinary Time

The parable which Jesus gives about a king inviting guests to the wedding reception of his son is ultimately a parable about eternal life and heaven (which our 1st reading from Isaiah speaks of as “God’s holy mountain”).  The king in the parable is God, his son is Jesus, and the wedding banquet is eternal salvation.  Some have ignored the invitation (God’s original Chosen People, the Israelites), so the king has sent out his servants (the Apostles) to invite anyone and everyone, the bad and the good alike (the Church), to this wedding reception.  One man, however, is thrown out for not wearing his wedding garment.  While it may seem harsh, the wedding garment symbolizes the garment we were given at baptism when we were asked to put on Christ.  We may say “yes” to God’s original invitation, but Jesus makes it clear that one “yes” is not enough.  After that, we also have to say “yes” to putting on Christ each and every day, to wearing the wedding garment we’ve been given.  And as we learn at the end of the parable, busy-ness, laziness, forgetfulness, whatever made that man not wear his garment, is not a good enough excuse when the final day comes.  What are you wearing today?

Listening to our Father

26th Sunday in Ordinary Time

In this Sunday’s Gospel we have a story of change: one son says “no” to his dad’s request but then changes his mind and does it; the other says “yes” to his dad’s request but then changes his mind and doesn’t do it.  We all have the possibility to change, for better or for worse, every single day.  Every day is an opportunity to follow God’s voice again…or to choose to let that voice fade into the background.  A disciple is one who follows the voice of God each and every day; one who has an obedient and faithful heart – not just in word, but especially in action; not just on Sunday, but on Monday through Friday as well.  Which son are you now?  Which son will you decide to be tomorrow?  Change is always possible!

Forgiveness…& Politics?!

24th Sunday in Ordinary Time

This weekend our readings center on forgiveness, especially on how we will NOT be forgiven unless we first forgive others.  While Jesus in the Gospel responds to a question by Peter saying he must forgive seventy-seven times (which seems very magnanimous), Jesus also goes on to give a parable in which a man is punished and condemned because that man does not forgive others and treat them with mercy (which seems quite harsh to our ears).  Jesus ends the parable by saying our Heavenly Father will do the same to us if we don’t forgive others.  The Scriptures make it clear that in order for us to be forgiven, we must forgive others…ALL others.  So what does that have to do with politics?!  Listen to find out, and no matter where you stand on whatever issue, be prepared to feel the Lord challenging you to more!

Our Authority

21st Sunday in Ordinary Time

Authority is a theme in our readings today – in both our first reading and Gospel “keys” are spoken of, symbolic of a position of authority. This time of Coronavirus has led to a lot of discussion about who has authority: who’s in charge of what, to what extent can a governor proclaim a state of emergency, what rulings and content are under the authority of state Supreme Courts , what authority does the CDC have, how much authority does a governor have to mandate action, who has the authority to enforce those mandates?  For as much as we like to talk about all these things and weigh in with our opinion, the truth is that we individually have almost no authority in changing overall societal response to Covid.  I think that we as humans (me included) really enjoy talking about how others should use their authority and what decisions they should be making, but we really don’t enjoy confronting how we are neglecting to use OUR God-given authority!  So what exactly is the authority that God has given to each of us?  Listen to find out!