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.
Sunday, May 3, 2026
FAITH IN GOD IS THE ANTIDOTE FOR A TROUBLED HEART
I would describe myself,
in my early years, as an “anxious” person. To be “anxious” is to be “uneasy and
apprehensive about something uncertain” or to be “worried.” It’s all
about that awful thing that might happen next. This was
especially true when I left Meade County, at age 14, and entered St. Thomas
Seminary High School here in Louisville. I experienced being “a lost ball in
tall weeds” as I entered my first-round of “culture shock!”
Those who have lived with
spouse abuse or lived with a raging alcoholic or drug addicted person also know
what I mean. Living in anxiety is a lot like living with a ticking time-bomb
strapped to your leg – only day and night every day. It is living in dread,
living on “pins and needles,” “waiting for the other shoe to drop,” waiting to
“hit bottom” after falling. It is no way to live and only those who have been
there understand what I am talking about.
As a small child, anxiety
was a simple passing experience – the terror of hiding under covers,
wide-awake, after my older sister, Brenda, had told convincing ghost stories or
during the height of a crashing, booming rainstorm.
As a fifteen-year-old from “the
country” in a high school seminary in “the city,” my anxiety
was about the fear of failure, the fear of not being good enough, the fear of
rejection, the fear of being laughed at for being a “hillbilly,” the fear of
being bullied because I was “skinny” and the fear of not having enough money to
live on during the school year.
As a young priest, anxiety
was about being threatened by the Ku Klux Klan, being scorned in public by some
Protestant ministers for being a Catholic and for being a liberal Catholic by
fundamentalist Catholics, being stalked by a knife wielding schizophrenic for
welcoming fallen-away marginal Catholics back to church, watching years of work
and dreams crack and almost fall to the ground in front of me during the
Cathedral renovation, sleeping with one eye open for years after having my home
burglarized three times, being ashamed of being a priest and of maybe being
falsely accused during wave after wave of bad news during the sexual abuse
scandal and waiting for the results of a biopsy that might have been
cancer.
As an older priest,
anxiety had to do with three major disappointments when one great assignment
ended and my plans for what I expected to do next burned and crash on the
launch pad. It was only then that I found out that the Plan B that God had in
store actually turned out better than the Plan A that I wanted to happen. It
was then that I realized that all my anxiety had been one big waste of
time.
At 82, this may be the
most anxiety free time of my life. Today, I know “peace,” the opposite of
“anxiety.” I have a safe place to live. I have enough saved to live
comfortably and a little saved for the future. I have a few successes behind me
and I have a variety of wonderful small jobs to wake up to every day. I feel
accepted by myself and, as far as I know, I am loved by most of those who know me.
Most of all, I discovered
the cure for “anxiety.” I am more at peace now. than I have ever been, because
I have discovered the “good news” that Jesus came to bring. I have come to
understand and know that I am loved by God, without condition, and in the end
that everything is going to turn out OK, even if I may still have to face the
challenges of old age, bad health and, God forbid, a painful
death. Yes, I have to admit that heading into 83, I have that
feeling I used to get when I was walking across thin ice wondering when it
would crack and I would suddenly find myself in a real crisis. However, because
of the peace that God gives those who believe in his “good news,” I am
confident that he will help me handle the rest of the way whatever comes my way
because his way is always the better way!
"Peace!" These
words of Jesus were not only addressed to the terrified disciples, huddled
together and cringing in fear, in that upper room after his crucifixion, as
well as Paul addressed to the anxious Philippians, these words are addressed to
all of us Catholics today; whether you are a student worried about grades,
finances or the fall-out of a bad choice made in the heat of passion; whether
you are living in abusive relationship or an unsafe environment or with
constant discrimination for being different; whether you are unemployed and in
debt up to your ears or barely handling a chronic health problem; whether you
are a single parent trying to make it on your own; whether you are religiously
scrupulous and live in constant fear of a punishing God and can’t let go of it
or whether you are facing a major health crisis, Jesus addresses his words to
you today. ‘Peace be with you! Calm down! It’s going to be OK! When all is
said and done, things are going to turn out just fine. I am with you! Trust me
with Plan B!'
Anxiety is worry about
what might happen. Peace is the awareness that
everything will be OK no matter what happens. Trust
in God is the only way to peace. Peace is God’s gift to us and it is based on
the “good news” that we are loved and that great things await us – because God
said so!
Let me end with one of my favorite prayers by Saint Francis de Sales.
I cannot read this story without being
reminded that “changes in the church” have always been a part of our history,
even in the very early church. I cannot read this story without also thinking
about the necessity of pulling in more people to do ministry as the church has expanded.
Also, I cannot think about how church
leaders have always needed help in carrying out their ministry without thinking
of the story of Aaron and Hur holding up the hands of Moses in battle in the
Book of Exodus (17:12). "As long as Moses kept his hands raised
up, Israel had the better of the fight. Aaron and Hur supported
his hands, one on one side and one on the other, so that his hands remained
steady till sunset."
Nor can I read the story of Aaron
and Hur holding up the two arms of Moses without thinking about one of the best
descriptions of deacons and priests and their relationship to the bishop that I
have ever read. Deacons and priests serve as the two arms of the bishop as he
carries out his ministry. It is in Walter Cardinal Kasper's book Leadership
in the Church: How Traditional Roles Can Serve the Christian Community Today.
One of the great things to come out of
Vatican Council II was the restoration of the deaconate. Now various motives
were behind this restoration, including a vision of relieving the pressure of a
future priest-shortage. The council rejected this idea because the deaconate is
an autonomous grade of the sacrament of orders, not a substitute in places
where priests were lacking nor one particular form of lay ministry. The council
fathers saw the deaconate as vitally necessary to the life of the church and,
with the presbyterate, one ordained ministry, of which the episcopacy is the
fullness, going back past medieval developments to early church ordination
liturgies and patristic theology. The deaconate and the presbyterate have
different tasks and denote two different structures, but must collaborate with
one another because they both participate in the bishop's ministry and both are
immediately subordinate to the bishop.
The Council saw the deaconate and the
presbyterate as graded participation in the bishop’s ministry. The deaconate is
not a subordination to the presbyterate. The presbyter and the
deacon are subordinate to the bishop directly – his two arms so to speak. The
deacon is not an "almost priest,” nor one who fills in the gap where no
priests are available, nor should it be seen as transitional stage on the path
to priesthood.
The main role of the deacon, as the
bishop’s representative, is to lead, inspire and motivate the whole church to
service in collaboration with priests. Deacons do not do service for the
church, but make sure the church is doing service. This necessary leadership
role does not dispense the laity, the bishop or the priest from their own
service tasks. Deacons are charged with promoting service in
the whole church, to inspire, motivate and train others for service, not to do
it all personally for the church.
At liturgy, it is the deacon’s
responsibility to bring the needs of the community, especially the poor, to the
table. It is the deacon who trains and guides volunteers, as well as, lay
ministers. The deacon is the contact person to governmental services. No matter
what he is doing, the deacon’s role is to make sure the church is serving, not
to be an “almost priest” nor, as I have experienced on occasion, a “dress-up
deacon” who likes to wear robes and pectoral crosses bigger than the bishop
himself and just perform liturgical functions, but could care less about the messy ministry of service.
Neither priest nor deacon carries out
his own ministry. Both help the bishop carry out his ministry. The gradations
in the participation in the bishop's ministry thus denote two separate arms,
which have different tasks but must collaborate with one another in unity.
In a real sense, both deacons and priests
"make the bishop present" in the communities entrusted to them. Both deacons and priests make a “promise of obedience.” That promise does not mean, “Yes, boss,
I’ll do it if you force me to do it!” It simply means that we promise not to be
overly attached to our own preferences and points of view so that the unified
ministry of the bishop is made visible and is realized in the diocese.
I have no idea where the church will
be going in the future as it adapts to the changes of the world in which it
finds itself, but I do know that it will need to change or it will find itself
in an impossible situation of trying to lead from behind.
I have a feeling, only a personal feeling
mind you, that the married deaconate, as well as our recent ordination of former
married Protestant clergy, is preparing us for an expansion into more married priests,
while celibacy will remain an option. Even at that, I certainly do not believe
that married priests will automatically be a solution to our priest shortage. Protestant
clergy, and Jews as well for that matter, have both married and women clergy
and are also facing a severe shortage of clergy.
There is one change that I see would be helpful and that is the expansion of deacons being able to celebrate the
Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick in hospitals and nursing homes. They are
the ones who visit the sick more often than priests in today’s church, but a
priest needs to be called to celebrate that Sacrament instead of a Deacon.
At 82, I will not be here to see
either of those changes happen, but I do realize that I have seen more changes
happen in my lifetime that I ever imagined growing up in the pre-Vatican II
Church or back when I knew very little about the history of our Church. All I do know is that we have always changed,
that we are changing as I speak and we will continue to change till the end of
time as Jesus promised! I also know that some will like the changes, some won’t
like the changes, but we will change anyway, like it or not!
Saturday, May 2, 2026
Thursday, April 30, 2026
MOTHER GOOSE'S BABIES ARRIVED - AN UPDATE FROM APRIL 16
Six of the seven eggs hatched the night of the April 27th storm! The mother, father and six goslings are doing great and were up eating the morning of my birthday on April 28th. Here they are - all enjoying some stale bread I served them for breakfast.
At first I panicked when I opened the blinds and saw the empty nest with one unhatched egg. I thought mother goose was scared away from her nest by the storm and downfall of rain and some animal had snacked on the other eggs.
I looked out a couple of times to see if the mother had returned to the nest only to see her and her new family looking up at me with a hungry look in their eyes! I was relieved and I could not believe that her six goslings were up eating just a day after they were born during a storm!
Even though nature is fun to watch, the last thing we needed on our condo pond was another six geese relieving themselves on the grass. Last fall, I counted at least twenty-two of them at one time! Thank God that the condo association mows the grass for us!