Saturday, December 13, 2025
Friday, December 12, 2025
"BIG" GIFTS CAN COME FROM "LITTLE" PEOPLE
GIVEN AT THE LITTLE SISTERS OF THE POOR 11-1-24-2025
The closest thing today to the Temple in Jerusalem of Jesus’ day - at least in my experience - is a downtown cathedral. Just as the Temple in Jerusalem attracted a host of characters at the time of Jesus, most downtown cathedrals today attract a cross-section of humanity: millionaires and street people, tourists and residents, the non-religious, the marginally religious and religious fanatics. Like bees to honey, an important religious landmark, be it the Temple or a Cathedral, attracts a human circus.
For 14 years, from 1983-1997, I had the privilege of being the pastor of the Cathedral of the Assumption in Louisville. From confessions that would curl your hair, to mental cases that would work your nerves, it was, by far, the most interesting pastoral assignment I have ever had, bar none! On my first day, I had to deal with a homeless man who had the urge to take off all his clothes to scare old ladies. I had to pull a drunk out of the bishop’s throne. I had to wrestle a stalker to the floor who pulled a knife on me over a homily. I mistakenly called the cops on the archbishop. I have had a man drop dead during a wedding, babies pee on me during baptisms and altar servers vomit on me during Mass. I had to drag a screaming woman from the altar steps to the back door through a wide-eyed congregation, too frozen to move. I was panhandled and manhandled.
In my 14 years, I probably met at our Cathedral most of the types that Jesus met in the Jerusalem Temple, including the poor “widow woman” of today’s gospel. This woman taught me a very important lesson about priesthood.
I was running late for the noon mass. I was going to the back of the Cathedral for something when I was confronted by a “bag lady” coming at me, with both arms waving to get my attention. I was used to it, so used to it, that I thought I “had seen it all” when it came to “street people.” As soon as I spotted her, I just assumed that she wanted money. I had been down that road so many, many times. Before I could get my well-rehearsed “come back later” or “go see our social worker” speech out, she asked excitedly, “Father, where is the poor box? I want to make a donation!” At that she opened her dirty hand and there she clutched her gift of a few nickels and pennies for the “poor box.” I had stereotyped and judged her by her appearance. Her generous “widow’s mite” judged me!
This modern-day version of the “widow and her mite” taught this priest several lessons. (1) You never know what is going on inside the people, merely through external observation, so always “take off your shoes” and approach them as you would “holy ground.” There is nothing as dangerous as a judgmental, “know it all” priest, be he a young priest or an old priest. (2) As Jesus taught the Pharisees, some of the people may have the appearance of saints, but inside are like whitewashed tombs, while some of those who appear to you to be terrible sinners may just turn out to be living saints. “Do not judge, lest you be judged.” (3) Generosity has very little to do with the size of the gift. Many big givers give once in a while from their surplus, but the ones who really keep parishes going are the many consistent little gifts from people who have to sacrifice to give.
The woman today has an important
lesson to teach us and that is: generosity is always rewarded, and often
extravagantly! As Anne Frank, the young Jewish girl from Holland who was forced
to live for two years in a secret attic by the Nazis, being caught and ending
up dying in a prison camp, wrote during World War II, “No one has ever become
poor by giving.” Generosity is what many women have taught me over my lifetime!
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
A REMINDER: LET'S NOT FORGET THAT THESE KIDS NEED A SCHOOL
IF YOU ARE ABLE TO HELP, LET'S DO THIS
IT'S GOOD TO DO, ON SO MANY LEVELS
HELP BISHOP FILBERT MHASI FINISH HIS NEW SCHOOL
A CREATIVE APPROACH ADDRESSING THREE MAJOR PROBLEMS
Sunday, December 7, 2025
"PROPHETS" ARE PEOPLE WHO ALWAYS RUB OUR NOSES IN TRUTH
For me, John the Baptist has
to be one of the hardest persons in the whole Bible to warm up to! To be honest
with you, I’ve never really liked him! In fact, during this warm and fuzzy
Christmas season, he can be a real thorn in the side or a pain in the rear end! He
was a true “wild man,” the kind of man you would grab the kids and pull them
close if you ran into him on the streets. The smell of him alone would probably
gag a horse! His home was a cave in the wilderness where very few people
would want to go there, much less live there! For clothes, he wore a disgusting
old camel hide and for food he ate the locusts he found flying around and the
wild honey that he discovered hidden in the cracks of rocks or in the hollows
of scrub brush. Men who wear fur, eat bugs and scream a lot get on my nerves pretty
quickly! On second thought, he had a beard so I guess he was not all that bad! Afterall, I had a beard most of my adult life!
John preached a fire and
brimstone message of repentance in preparation for someone he calls “mightier
than I.” Like all charismatic preachers with a fresh message, people went
out in droves to check him out and some to receive his baptism. They craved the
fresh start and new life that he talked about.
When the religious
establishment folks went out to investigate, in their minds, this “nutcase” who
was drawing people away from them, they found a hairy, bellowing preacher who
did not mince words. He tore into them and called them “a nest of poisonous
snakes,” warning them not to even try to hide behind their religious malpractice.
In his way, he told them to “put up or shut up.” He challenged them to quit
talking a good line and to deliver on their claims, because a powerful
“someone” would be coming who would separate the “wheat” from the “chaff.” The
“wheat” would be gathered into God’s barn and the “chaff” would be burned in an
unquenchable fire.
As you can imagine, these
words certainly did not endear him to the religious establishment, but he did
not stop there. He took on the political establishment as well. He got in King
Herod’s face and told him that he was committing incest and that marrying his
brother’s wife was not right. That kind of confrontation was tantamount to
smacking a lion across the face. Embarrassed in front of his guests, Herod had
John’s head cut off and served up on a platter for speaking so bluntly!
John was a “prophet” and
this is what “prophets” do. Prophets are not so much people who predict the
future as people who get up in your face and make you look at present truths
you are trying not to see. Today, we would call them “whistle blowers,”
people who drag the truth out into the light of day whether it is convenient or
not! Like prophets of old, whistle blowers are often considered “nut cases” at
first. Like prophets of old, whistle blowers often get themselves killed,
either actually or figuratively, because most establishments do not like to
have their boats rocked or their embarrassing truths to come out into the open.
Instead of heeding the truth, people usually turn on the truth-teller. If you
have ever been involved in such an action, you know just how dangerous telling
the truth can be. If you were not physically hurt, you may have been labeled or
blackballed for years and maybe even for life.
We still kill prophets in a
host of creative ways. We shun friends who will not go along with us when we invite
them to agree with us when do wrong. We rage against "wokeness" when
what it exposes is too painful to admit. We ridicule the teaching of the Church, and those who
teach what the Church teaches, when they won’t bless the wrongs we want to do.
We call evil good and good evil so that we can live with inconvenient truths,
even when we know in our guts that what we are doing is
wrong.
All of us have a built-in “prophet” as well. That built-in “prophet” is called our “conscience.” Our conscience is constantly confronting us with truths that we would just as soon not look at. When our consciences keep accusing us of violating our principles, we have ways of “silencing” them temporarily or even “killing” them for good. We regularly silence our consciences with alcohol and drugs, so that we can do what we know is wrong. If we do it regularly and consistently over the long haul, we can even kill our consciences, until one day we are capable of doing or believing horrendous things that no longer even shock us! As someone said, “When there is no faith, there is no conscience. When there is no conscience, there is no morality. When there is no morality, there is no humanity.”
When we stop listening
to our prophets, inside and out, we sooner or later end up in a dark place with
no escape. On the other hand, Jesus said this: “If you remain in my word,
you will truly be my disciples, and you will know the truth and the truth will
set you free!” (John 8:31-32) External prophets and our internal consciences
shake us awake and make us face the truth because “people who tell us what we want
to hear are not necessarily our friends and people who tell us what we don’t
want to hear are not necessarily our enemies.”
Yes, the truth will set us free, but as President James A.
Garfield said, “The truth will set you free, but first it will make you
miserable.” The truth of the matter is this. To relieve our misery when are faced with
unpleasant and unwanted truths, we tend to kill our prophets and numb our
consciences!
These days, when truth is at
stake, we desperately need communal prophets and personal consciences to
rub our noses in the truth no matter how painful it is to look at! Today, we
have way too many people willing to tell us what we want to hear, rather than
what we need to hear! Truth still matters!
Saturday, December 6, 2025
Thursday, December 4, 2025
"THE SQUEAKY WHEEL GETS THE GREASE"
GIVEN AT THE LITTLE SISTERS F THE POOR 11-17-202
The people walking in front rebuked the blind man, telling him to be quiet, but he kept calling out all the more.
It is important to notice the words of Jesus here! These same words are often used in the miracle stories of the gospels. Jesus does not say, “Go I have healed you!” Rather he says to Bartimeus, “Go your faith has saved you!” In fact, there are failed healing stories in the gospel where Jesus could not work any miracles because of a person’s lack of faith. It takes two for a miracle healing – the power of God and the faith of the one who asks for healing.
The one necessary ingredient, then, in all healing miracles is the strong belief that healing is possible. This strong faith triggers an abnormal acceleration of natural healing processes. This is true of all the healing shrines in all religions – it is the firm faith of the believer that unleashes God’s healing power.
Bartimeus can teach us something. Psalm 119 says, “God hates half-heartedness!” Very often we are ambivalent about what we say we want. Often, we hang onto our infirmities and losses because they give us convenient excuses for not getting on in life and doing the hard things involved in making it work. We say we want things to be different, but in reality, we are not so sure! Often, we actually do not want things to change all that much.
I am sure Bartimeus thought twice about whether he really wanted to see because he knew that when he was able to see he had to quit feeling sorry for himself, he had to give up depending on alms as a beggar and had to get a job for the first time in his life!
Miracles are possible in our lives, but miracles are different from magic! Magic is about sitting around wishing somebody else would make things happen to make us all better. Magic is waiting for a fairy godmother to come and wave her magic wand over us so we don’t have to do anything. For a miracle to happen, like Bartimeus, we have to get up, throw away the security blankets that we have wrapped ourselves in and be clear about what we want and be willing to go get it! We have to override the naysayer in our own heads and the naysayers who line to roads of our life. Wishing and magic waits for others to fix us. Really wanting something make us take action. God is willing to help those who are willing to help themselves. Yes, we need to help the helpless, but we also need to encourage those who can help themselves to help themselves!
Friends!
We can begin to work miracles in own lives by really wanting something
different and really believing that what we want is possible, like Bartimeus.
As Dale Carnegie once wrote, “Believe that you will succeed…believe it firmly
and you will do what is necessary to bring it to success.” Jesus put it this
way to Bartimeus, “Your faith has saved you!”