Friday, June 29, 2012

Happy Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul!

Hello all,


Today (June 29th) is the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul.  
[a solemnity is one step more festive than a "feast"... it can get confusing]


I wanted to share this with you for a few reasons:


First, I like to eat and since today is even more special than a feast day then we ought to feast (eat) even more to celebrate today.


So enjoy some of your favorite food and/or beverages.  But do so in such a way that you remember who Peter and Paul were and what they have done in service of Jesus and the Gospel.


Secondly, my name is Peter (I think you know this) and I celebrate today as my personal "names day."  This is a custom that we have in the Franciscans that we have two special days.  The first is our Birthday and the second is the feast of the saint that you are named after.  Today is that day for me.  Today is my "names day."


Yesterday evening I went out for a sundae so I think that'll count for my feasting to celebrate today but I might enjoy with a frosty beverage this evening.


The third reason that I wanted to share today with you is that it is important to remember Peter and Paul.


There is no way that our Christian faith would be what it is without  the work and sacrifice of these two men.  Neither of them were perfect... far from it.  One denied and rejected Jesus and the other was going about trying to murder Christians.


God does not choose saints to do His will he picks sinners.


Both Peter and Paul died for their faith in Rome and it is because of that that the Christian Church has always regarded Rome as a very special place.  The bishop of Rome is also regarded as the one who takes the place and ministry of Peter in the Church... we call him the "Pope" today.


So today remember Peter and Paul.  Thank God that they were sent to share their Christian faith with the whole world and you might even read a bit of what they wrote.  


Here's a hint: it's in the Bible... blow the dust off and see what you can find.  


One of my favorite passages that St. Peter wrote (or is given credit for writing) 1 Peter 3:15b


Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Not a homily: my reflections on the Nativity of St. John the Baptist

Hello all,


I did not preach today but I really enjoyed the scripture readings that we had at mass today.  For your information there were two sets of readings.  The first set was for the vigil mass on Saturday evening and the other set was for the masses during the day today on Sunday.


Here we mixed and matched the readings and I enjoyed hearing them because I have a deep love for the reading first reading from the vigil mass (Jeremiah 1:4-10)  This is the calling of the prophet Jeremiah.  I also really enjoyed the Gospel reading from the masses during the day (Luke 1:57-66, 80)


Both of these readings touch me in a very personal way. 


The celebration of the Nativity of John the Baptist is essentially about who John the Baptist was as the person who God had chosen to prepare the world for the coming of Jesus' public ministry.


As I heard the readings and proclaimed the Gospel I connected with these readings personally.  I heard echos of my own vocational call.


So I thought that I would share with you a [brief] version of my vocational call.


As an aside: I'm not the only one who has a vocational call.  We are all called (that includes you) to help prepare the world to get to know Jesus.  We are all called like the prophet Jeremiah and John the Baptist to speak the truth and help the world draw close to God.  We are all called to discern God's will for our lives and follow it.  For me that is the key to real happiness and joy.


Here's my story:


When I was younger I suffered (and still do) from a very serious heart defect that I had from birth.  I've had open-heart surgery five times in my life.  I was 18 months, 14, 16, 17, and 21 years old when I "went under the knife."  During these surgeries I've come very close to death and even had (what some might call) a near death experience when I was 14.


Fr. Merrick
During the early part of my illness I spoke with my parish priest (Fr. Merrick Bednar) who himself had had a heart problem and a heart transplant.  He challenged me to unite my sufferings to those of Christ and to see in my pain a precious opportunity to grow spiritually.  He helped me go deeper in faith and trust in God's will for my life.  And so, since life was simple to me back then, I just did it.  I believed and trusted.  I never lost sleep over my illness and I was not afraid of death.


I don't say this to make you think that I'm special or holy (I'm not) but God was able to teach me something through the suffering, pain, and fear.  I learned that my life is not my own.  My life is a gift to me and I have a choice as to what I want to do with it.  


I do personally feel that what many were saying about John the Baptist in the Gospel from today "The hand of the Lord was with him" is in some way applicable to me.  I also am convinced that it is applicable to you too.  


From the time that I was 16 I also felt a call to be a friar and a priest and I can remember reading over and over the passage from the beginning of Jeremiah where God called him. 


Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,before you were born I dedicated you,a prophet to the nations I appointed you. 
"Ah, Lord GOD!" I said, "I know not how to speak; I am too young." 
But the LORD answered me, Say not, "I am too young." To whomever I send you, you shall go; whatever I command you, you shall speak.  Have no fear before them, because I am with you to deliver you, says the LORD. 
Then the LORD extended his hand and touched my mouth, saying,
See, I place my words in your mouth!


When I was younger (and even now) I was a talker.  I was like my father and I would not stop talking.  I loved to talk and because I came from smart parents and I learned to speak well.


It is a joy to preach because I feel that God has given me the ability to talk and I love sharing something personal at the pulpit.


There was really one more aspect to my vocational call:


One day in college my roommate's friend (a beautiful young woman) came up to me and said that she wanted to pray with someone about some things in her life.  I was, at first, uncomfortable with this because I had no idea why she had asked me.


To make a long story short, we did pray together... many times over the next 2 1/2 years.  She was suffering from the most heart wrenching pain that I could ever imagine a young woman experiencing and she desperately needed to encounter God.  For some reason she picked me to pray with.


Over those years of praying with her every few months I saw God work a miracle in her life.  He did it through me.  It was not a fast or flashy miracle but it was amazing to see.  I didn't perform any miracle... I was along for the ride and I just tried to get out of God's way.


In-hind-sight I decided that if I could live my life in such a way as to simply make myself available to God and others so that He could use me to do his work then that is what I wanted to do.


I knew that my life was a gift and I wanted to give it back to God who had given it to me.

Friday, June 22, 2012

I love physics!

My father was a chemist... I love physics.  They say the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.  I suppose that is true in regards to my appreciation of science.


In regards to physics I follow a channel on YouTube called Minute Physics.  I enjoy their brief videos describing all things physics.


Well a few months ago the creator of the channel posted this video


I really enjoy the observations that are made in each and every video.  However in the above video there is an incredible insight that is being presented.


One of the last lines of the video is "Thank you stable orbits, for without you, life as we know it, and cheese, would be impossible."


There is something profound here.  Our universe is put together a very certain way.  If it were different at all it would not work.  The video about orbits, gravity, and our three dimensional world shows this well, I think. 


If the slightest detail of the cosmos were changed then life would not exist.  The more that we learn about our world through science the more that we can marvel at the exact and necessary details of how it all works together to make our universe "just right."


A very common example is that ice is one of the only solids that is less dense than its liquid form of water.  If water was like every other liquid then its solid form would sink in the liquid form.  If this were different, and ice sank, then life could not have developed the way that it has on earth.


It reminds me of the line from the first chapter of the Bible that we hear over and over... "God saw that it was good" and "God looked at everything that he had made and found it very good."

I'm not saying that the above video is trying to prove God's existence and I'm not saying that the book of Genesis is a scientific and historical account of creation (it isn't).

What I am saying is that I really enjoy the fact that the more that I learn about science the more that I marvel at the beauty of the universe.  My faith tells me that God made the world and science helps me understand more fully how good of a job God did when He created.



Thank you, science, for helping me to enjoy God's work.
Thank you, God, for creating, you did a wonderful job!

Friday, June 1, 2012

The 8th Grade went to Boston!

Hello all,


One of the best parts of my "job" is that I get to spend time with the students in our school.  On Wednesday the 8th grade went to Boston for their end of the year class trip... and I got to go with them.


We started the day with a tour of Fenway Park.  Then we went to the Prudential observatory overlooking the city's skyline.  This was followed by Mass in the chapel in the mall of the Prudential building, then lunch at the Hard Rock restaurant.  Finally we had a bit of time to wander around Quincy Market and then we took a boat ride on the Boston Harbor on a speedboat named "Codzilla."


Overall it was a wonderful day!