Thursday, May 14, 2026
A BEAUTIUL PRAYER FOR GROWING OLD GRACEFULLY
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
TO GIVE THANKS FOR WHAT YOU HAVE OR JUST TO ASK FOR MORE?
WHY DO YOU GO TO SUNDAY MASS?
I often hear people say, “I don’t go to church because I don’t get anything out of it!” Like the people in the gospel today who pursued Jesus because they wanted more free bread, they go to church so that God will give them more, not to give God thanks for what they have already received!
At the beginning of each week, we gather on Sunday to
celebrate the “Eucharist.” That word is Greek for “giving thanks.” Many people
do not understand that the first purpose of celebrating the Eucharist is to
give thanks for what one has already received before asking for more! Meister Eckhart, the 12-13th century
theologian, philosopher and mystic said it best. “If the only prayer you
ever say in your entire life is thank you, it will be enough.”
"If the only prayer you ever say
in your entire life is thank you, it will be enough." This simple yet
profound quote by Meister Eckhart carries a deep message about gratitude and
its significance in our lives. In its straightforward interpretation, the quote
emphasizes the transformative power of expressing gratitude. Gratitude is a vital aspect of our well-being
that often goes unnoticed or taken for granted. It allows us to acknowledge and
appreciate the blessings and positive experiences in our lives. Expressing
gratitude not only enhances our overall happiness and satisfaction but also
cultivates a sense of contentment and fulfillment within us. It is a reminder
to recognize the goodness that surrounds us, no matter how small or seemingly
insignificant. It reminds us, like the gospel today teaches us, that there
greater and higher spiritual realities than our daily physical needs.
Beyond the surface level understanding
of Eckhart's quote lies an unexpected spiritual concept – the
interconnectedness of gratitude and selflessness. Gratitude, in its purest
form, requires us to step outside of ourselves and recognize the contributions
and kindness of others. It shifts our focus from our own desires and needs,
creating space for appreciation and genuine gratitude for the world around
us. At its core, gratitude is a radical act of humility and recognition of
interdependence. When we express gratitude, we acknowledge that we are not
alone in our journey and that we rely on the support and benevolence of others.
It encourages a shift from an individualistic mindset to a more collective
perspective, fostering empathy and compassion in our interactions with others.
In contrast, the modern world often
promotes an attitude of entitlement and self-centeredness, which can hinder our
ability to cultivate gratitude. Society bombards us with messages telling us
that we need more to be happy, leading to an insatiable desire for material
possessions and success. This mindset creates a void that can never truly be
filled, as it focuses on what we lack rather than what we have. Choosing to
embrace gratitude as a way of life challenges this narrative. It invites us to
pause and appreciate the blessings we may have taken for granted. It invites us
to find joy in the small moments, to be present in the here and now, and to
develop a sense of awe and wonder for the world around us.
Sunday, May 10, 2026
ARE YOU HOPEFUL? CAN YOU EXPLAIN WHY TO PEOPLE WHO ASK?
Be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for
a reason for your hope, but do it with gentleness and
reverence.
I Peter 3:15-18
I can remember exactly
what she said! “Why in the hell are you wasting your time in that stupid
church? I finally wised up and got out of that silliness a long time
ago! I can’t believe that anyone as intelligent as you appear to be is still
a Catholic, much less a priest!” I can remember her words almost word for
word. I stood there in freeze-frame as if I had been shot at close range
waiting for the pain to register. I was both shocked and embarrassed!
This situation is not made
up. It actually happened to me many years ago at a reception after my
ordination. The young woman was in her thirties. She was a college
graduate and very aware of all that was going on around her. When she saw
that I did not turn and run, she proceeded to go through her, obviously
well-rehearsed, litany of all that was wrong with churches in general and mine
in particular. She went w-a-a-a-a-y back! She covered the Spanish
Inquisition, the Crusades, Galileo, infallibility of the Pope, sexual
repression of the masses, grade school child abuse, the slavery of women, dull
Masses, trivial sermons, money grubbing TV preachers and Vatican
finances. I think I even got blamed for Tammy Faye’s make-up and
hairdo! I stood there squeezing the life out of my ginger ale, cringing
as if being whipped as she went down her list! My face was beet
red! My knees started to buckle. I wanted to melt into the floor.
After the initial shock, I
realized one day – after several days of worrying about it – that her
tongue-lashing was actually good for me! I was forced to admit that I
hadn’t taken the time to think in depth about why I still believe! I
realized that I really hadn’t thought much about the “hope that is within
me!” I realized that I had not taken the time to really answer that
question: “Why in the hell am I still in this
less-than-perfect old church?”
It was not the only time
I have been seriously challenged for being a Catholic. When I worked in
the home missions of our diocese, down along the Tennessee border, I was often
challenged as the first Catholic priest to live in Wayne County! I was
attacked by name by a preacher on the radio. The whole ministerial
association was asked to leave the church we were meeting in after I showed
up. The host said he could “no longer in conscience” be part of the group
“now that it had a Catholic in it!" He then asked all of us to leave his
church! I had a Sunday morning radio program, but while I was away on
vacation, a group of ministers went to the radio station and had me thrown of
the air! I was once verbally attacked at the Post Office. I was
snubbed a couple of times in grocery stores, ignored in restaurants and
tolerated at meetings simply because I was "one of those Catholics."
Those experiences have
helped me answer that question - “the reason for my hope." Besides
that, some of my friends have been neither church members nor believers. All of
them have asked tough questions. It seems that I have been surrounded by
people asking for an answer. It’s about time, I thought, that I answered
today’s question!
Be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for
a reason for your hope, but do it with gentleness and
reverence.
Those words from our first
reading today, the First Letter of Peter, are unbelievably appropriate even
today. When they were first written, Christians were a despised
minority. They stood out like sore thumbs in a pagan culture.
Neighbors, friends and even family members had serious questions to ask.
Often those questions were asked in hate and anger.
It took guts to be
different then, just as it does today. The writer of the First Letter of
Peter writes to encourage believers to stand their ground in the face of
ridicule, rejection, persecution, and possible death! “If you are questioned,
give a decent answer,” he says “but give it gently and respectfully.”
“Even if you are defamed, libeled, abused or ignored, do not answer with
hate. If you have to suffer, at least you can say you suffered for being
good.”
That young woman’s words
are as fresh today as they were then. The young woman at the party may
have picked the wrong place, chose the wrong time and asked her question in
bitterness, but her questions are valid. “Why do I stay
in a church with so many problems? Why do I believe when
so many people my age do not? Why am I a Catholic,
instead of a member of some less complicated denomination? Why am I
a priest when so many have left and so few are coming in? When I saw the
second reading today, I said to myself, “OK, today is your opportunity!
Tell the people why you believe, why you
stay, and why you are hopeful!”
Let share with you, then,
my five “reasons for the hope that is within me.”
REASON #1
GOD IS MADLY IN LOVE WITH THE HUMAN RACE
The only reason God broke
into human history in the person of Jesus is that we were not getting the
message – the message that God is madly in love with us. Because we were
not getting the message, God came in person! I cannot believe how many so-called
“religious” people still wonder whether God loves them or not, people who worry
about going to hell over trivialities, people who even cringe in fear at the
name of God. I cannot believe how so many so-called “religious” people
wring their hands in anxiety about how the world is going to end – as if the
outcome is still up for grabs! When Jesus announced the Kingdom, he said
that it would start growing quietly and almost imperceptibly, but it would keep
growing until all evil was crowded out. Jesus said that the battle
between good and evil would meanwhile continue, yes! Jesus said that evil
would win many more battles, yes, but it would not win the war! Jesus
promised that the outcome had already been decided
So, my friends, as we face
our set-backs, disappointments and losses, we must keep this good news in the
back of our minds and remember it when we are discouraged. I did not make
this promise! Jesus did! Because of that, I already know how things
will finally turn out! The victory over evil has already been decided!
REASON #2:
IF GOD HAD WANTED A PERFECT CHURCH, HE WOULDN’T HAVE
PARTNERED WITH THE LIKES OF US!
The church is a gathering
of people – real flesh-and-blood human beings, not angels! Therefore, it
is a mixture of the stupid and the wise, the silly and the serious, the gutless
and the heroic, the vicious and the loving, the sinner and the saint.
There is no “them” and “us.” There is a mixture of good and evil in each
one of us. It’s just a matter of degrees. So, how can we get so
upset about the splinters in our brothers’ and sisters’ eyes, when there is a
plank in our own? It has been that way from the very beginning.
Jesus knew that when he got involved with human beings, he was bound to get in
trouble. He did it anyway. He did it on purpose. He did it
with forethought and deliberation. He chose the weak, the idiot, the
prostitute, the reject and the sinner on which to build his church. He
has been choosing the same types ever since. Remember the words of Jesus,
“Healthy people do not need the doctor, sick people do!”
REASON #3
I TRUST THE TEACHERS OF OUR CHURCH MORE THAN GRADUATES OF SOME TALK-SHOW SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY OR SOME KNOW-IT-ALL ON FACEBOOK
I am happy the church is
not controlled by what is trendy and what most people think. It both
speaks to the modern world and listens to it! For that, it can both stand up to
the world and take some heat from the world! Even when I disagree with
its conclusions sometimes, I am proud of the struggle it is making to renew
itself and deal with a gamut of complicated problems that face the world
today. That renewal is messy, uneven and confusing, but at least it is
not putting its head in the sand! We are not just some new denomination. we
are a universal, world-side, ancient church wrapping around the globe! Because we are a world-wide church, change
takes time and patience if we want to stay unified! No, our church does not
have answers for everything! Yes, it is a mess sometimes! However, I choose to
stay like St. Peter, who asked Jesus when a bunch of his followers walked away,
“To whom else shall we go?”
REASON #4
WE ARE NOT IN THIS ALONE AND BY OURSELVES
Before Jesus left this
earth, he said this to us, his church: “Do not be afraid. I will not leave you
orphaned! I will give you the Holy Spirit as your Helper, to be with you
always! He remains with you and will be within you!”
We, you and I, received that Spirit when we became members of the church.
We still have that Helper always. With that assurance, there is no reason
to lose hope! We are invited to help the Kingdom come, but we are not
responsible alone for making it come! God is! So let us concentrate on
doing our very best, forgiving each other when we don’t and quit worrying as if
it were our responsibility to control the world! With the power of God
within us, there is no reason to lose hope. There is, on the
contrary, every reason to have hope!
REASON #5
OUR ONLY OBSTACLES ARE LACK OF FAITH, LACK OF GUTS,
AND LACK OF IMAGINATION.
The world has many
problems and I believe the only thing that stands in the way of solving them is
our fear and our failure to believe the “Good News,” that “blessed assurance”
that everything ultimately is going to be okay. If we really believe that
God is on our side, that God is madly in love with us and that God has seen to
it that the end will be wildly festive, then the only thing that stands in the
way of dealing with the world as it is, is lack of nerve and a shortage of guts
to stay in the struggle. If we really believe the basic “good news,” we
will hang in there no matter what. If we don’t believe what Jesus
promised, there are a million good reasons to quit and any of them will do!
Much ranting and raving
about the church is done by people who still equate the church solely with its
leaders. When we do that, every problem is the responsibility of somebody “up
there” to fix! We are the church and we will go on no matter how weak and
rigid our leaders might be! The validity of the message has never depended
on the goodness of our leaders! We are individually called to fidelity no
matter how many other so-called believers jump ship!
These are a few of the
reasons I have hope. In the end, the church is a lot like my old
grandma. She had a wart on her nose. She was a little rigid and
cranky. She was not perfect, but I loved her. I didn’t love
her in spite of her short-comings, I loved her because she
had problems. You know, my grandma, my church, and me have one thing in
common. We’re not perfect, but we are certainly "good enough"
for God!
Saturday, May 9, 2026
Thursday, May 7, 2026
SHOULD I STAY OR SHOULD I LEAVE?
Many of his disciples no longer
accompanied him, so Jesus asked, "Do you want to leave too?" Simon
Peter answered him, saying, "Master, to whom would we
go?"
John 6:60-69
Many people tell
me that I'm nuts for being a Catholic priest. I hadn't been ordained but a day
when the first person came out of nowhere to challenge me on this. I have told
this story before, but it immediately came to mind when I read this gospel. It happened
at one of the receptions, following my first Mass.
I was standing
there in my new black suit and Roman collar - a little proud of myself - when
all of a sudden, a stranger approached me and stuck a pin in my balloon.
"I can’t imagine anyone as intelligent as you seem to be would still be a
Catholic, must less become a priest! I got out of all that craziness a long
time ago!"
I stood there,
shocked, like I had been shot at close range as she went down her
well-rehearsed list of things wrong with the Church. When she finished, she disappeared into the
crowd, never to be heard from again - at least that is what I thought.
Like me, St. Peter
must have been challenged many times about his decision to stay that day, when
so many others walked away because of Jesus teaching on the "bread of
life" because he writes many years later, in the first of his two letters,
"Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a
reason for your hope, but do it with gentleness and reverence." (I Peter
3:15,16) When I am challenged, I try to follow his advice.
That first
happened when I was 26. I am now 82. At
82, I agree wholeheartedly with Peter. "To whom would I go?" I have
been offered a lot of so-called alternatives,
I recognized more problems in our Church than most of them, but I can say this
much in all honesty. I haven't seen anything yet that I would trade all this
for!
I served as a
chaplain at Bellarmine for 14 years. One of the most important questions facing
those youth going in their young adulthood was "Why do you stay in the
Church?" Why do you choose to remain Catholic, when so many others your
age were walking away? I am sure many of them had been challenged seriously,
maybe even in an angry way.
Well, I used to
remind them, every once in a while, that I was not "assigned" there
by the bishop. I didn't have to be there. I had plenty of other jobs - too many
jobs, in fact. But I wanted to be there and I choose to do that because I wanted
to help to give them, and those who questioned them, reasons to stay in the
Church so that they did not "walk away,” or worse, just "drift
away."
I volunteered to do
Sunday Masses to help give them reasons "to stay in the Church." I
volunteered because I wanted to help them move from an inherited faith, to a
personal faith. There are many people today who claim they want to be
"spiritual, but not religious." Archbishop Dolan of New York
described them this way, "They want to believe without belonging. They
want to be sheep without a shepherd. They want to be part of a family, but they
want to be an only child." The fact
of the matter is that Jesus founded a church on Peter, one of those who did not
walk away, and Jesus promised that "the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it" and that he would "be with it always, until the end of
time." The truth of the matter is,
we are not individually children of God, we are God's family with many siblings
and as a family we are called to be our brother’s and sister’s keepers.
By the way, the
woman who challenged me fifty-six years ago contacted me a couple of years
back to apologize and to tell me that she had returned to the Church and was
absolutely loving it for the first
time in her life. As that great "theologian," Yogi Berra put it,
"It ain't over till it's over."
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
ARE YOU BORN AGAIN? ALL AT ONCE OR GRADUALLY OVER TIME?
Are you saved? Have you been
“born again?’ Have you accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior? If you really
want to make a Catholic squirm and sweat and doubt their religious upbringing,
just corner one and rattle off that set of questions!
When I worked in the Bible
Belt, down in the southern part of the state, Catholics, including myself, were
often bombarded with those questions. More than one Catholic was left confused
and bewildered. Their counterparts could date the precise hour they were
“saved,” while Catholics stood there puzzled and confused.
Today’s gospel gives us a
perfect opportunity to talk about these questions. To be “born again,” does one
have to have dramatic, certain and dated experience or can one grow
toward God in an extended process, sometimes without a clear beginning and end?
Many of our
fundamentalist brothers and sisters look to the Apostle Paul as their hero and
ideal. His conversion experience was dramatic and decisive. It was a
shattering, clearly memorable confrontation with the person of Christ on the
road to Damascus when he was on his way to hunt down Christians and kill them.
After this dramatic u-turn in his life, he fanatically embraced and defended
what he had recently persecuted and attacked. His conversion experience was so
dramatic that the story is retold three times in the Acts of the Apostles and
referred to three more times in various New Testament Letters.
Paul’s emphasis on
personal-individual faith, his emphasis on a dateable dramatic decision and
evangelistic zeal have become the prototype and model of Christian conversion,
especially for fundamentalist Christian groups.
Roman Catholic Christians, while
respecting Paul’s experience, look to the Apostle Peter as their hero and
model. Peter’s experience was very different. In one gospel passage,
Peter does in fact make his profession of faith, but like many of us, it is the
climax of a long and gradual insight into who Jesus was.
Even though some would like
to suggest that everybody has to have a definite conversion experience that
can be dated, the New Testament does not suggest a single stereotype for an
authentic Christian conversion experience. Nicodemus, for example, who
triggered the discussion with Jesus about what it means to be “born again” is
an ambiguous illustration of conversion. We do not know whether Jesus persuaded
Nicodemus or not. All we know is that he turned up to help out at the
burial of Jesus.
Roman Catholics have often
dismissed as silly emotionalism the dramatic and decisive conversions of
fundamentalists, while fundamentalists have often dismissed the long and
gradual conversions of Catholic believers. The fact is, the church has always
welcomed both kinds of conversion experiences.