Sunday, February 15, 2026

THE RIGHT TO CHOOSE AND THE DUTY TO CHOOSE WISELY

 


If you choose you can keep the commandments. Before man are life and death, good and evil, whichever he chooses shall be given him.

Sirach 15:15-20

There are two great “temptation” stories in the Bible – the temptation of Adam in the garden and the temptation of Jesus in the desert. In the first temptation story, man loses and Satan wins. In the second temptation, Jesus wins and Satan loses. All other temptations in history have to do with these two stories of temptation.

What exactly is a “temptation?” It is a personal inner struggle with a choice that has at its base a desire to do something, especially something wrong or unwise. It is such a part of our everyday living that every time we say the Our Father, we pray that we will not be led into temptation.

I am reminded of today’s reading from the Book of Sirach in the Old Testament. “Before you are life and death, good and evil, whichever you choose shall be given you.” That is worth repeating! "Before us is life and death, good and evil, whichever we choose will be given to us!"

A lot is made these days of our "right to choose," but little is said about our responsibility to choose wisely, not to mention our responsibility to accept the consequences of our choices. Some people are like kids who go through life eating the filling out of the Oreos and then throwing the cookies away. They want freedom without the responsibility that goes with it! They want to choose, but they are not necessarily willing to accept the responsibility that goes with their choices.

 

We may have the right to eat French Fries and Chicken Nuggets three times a day, but we also have the responsibility to eat healthily.  If we only exercise our right to eat whatever we want, without accepting our responsibility to eat well, we will sooner or later have to accept the consequences of our choices. College students may have a right to skip class, but they also have a responsibility to go to class. If they only exercise their right to skip, they must be willing to accept the consequences of maybe flunking out of school.  If we only exercise our right to accept a credit card, without accepting our responsibility for paying for what we charge, we will sooner or later have to accept the painful consequences of our choices - ruining our credit for years to come!  Our culture is now filling up with people who keep trying to beat this basic truth!    

 

Young friends here today, I have something to say to you. One of the benefits of being a young adult is finally being able to enjoy the freedom to make your own choices.  One of the upsides of the freedom to choose is the ability to build your own life the way you want it through a series of personal choices. One of the downsides of the freedom to choose is the freedom to ruin your own life through a series of poorly-thought-out choices. The freedom to choose, combined with the ability to choose wisely, is the ideal. Yet there are many who cannot handle their freedom well and end up losing it. Choosing what feels good at the moment, without the personal discipline to choose what would actually be good over the long haul, is a recipe for disaster.  Hearing about people ruining their lives has actually become a favorite American entertainment. Many think it is funny to watch stupid people on trash TV tell the world how they have ruined their lives and the lives of those who have been associated with them.    

 

Every day people like Judge Judy and Maury Povich make big bucks featuring people who have ruined their lives and the lives of those around them because of the poor choices they have made. They have the "freedom to choose" but choose poorly. They have the "freedom to choose" but they don't have the ability to discern what is of value.  Illegitimate children, ruined marriages, sexually transmitted diseases, financial ruin, family disintegration, squandered opportunities for a good education and loss of reputation are only a few of the consequences of making choices without the ability to choose wisely.

 

To be able to "discern what is of value," we must develop self-mastery. By “self-mastery,” I mean we have to be able to name and then "stand up to" our addictions, our cowardice and our laziness in order to create the life we want to have! We must be able to "handle" ourselves and our cravings - for a higher purpose and for our long-term good. We must be able to continually clarify what we really want out of life, constantly focusing our energies to reach for what we want and consistently dealing in truth rather than self-deception.

 

People with self-mastery approach their lives like artists approaching the task of producing a work of art. People with self-mastery know how to discern what is of value and use what they have discerned to live on purpose!  The spiritual disciplines of both East and West speak often of the practice self-mastery.  I published a book eight years ago on this very subject. It is an autobiography mapping the choices I have made since age six and how those choices made me what I am today – for good or for bad! It is called BETWEEN COURAGE AND COWARDICE: Choosing to Do Hard Things for Your Own Good.

 

One of the sad things about our culture, in which freedom of choice is so highly honored, is the growing tendency to deflect responsibility for our choices after we make them.  If our culture is to survive, the freedom to choose must be combined with personal responsibility. To demand the freedom to make our own choices and then throw the blame on others when those choices backfire is the height of cowardice and irresponsibility - and yet it is so popular in our culture. Freedom without responsibility is wreaking havoc all around us.

 

When enough of us have the ability to discern what is of value and when enough of us have the self-mastery to choose what is of value, our marriages will improve, our families will improve, our neighborhoods will improve, the economy will improve, our churches will improve, nations will improve and the world will improve. These problems can only be fixed one person at a time. In reality, no one can save us from us, but us!  As I like to say, “There is no rescue party out looking for us!”          

 

Discipline is about choosing “delayed gratification” or “good things coming to those who wait” or “the ability to resist the temptation of an immediate reward in favor of a larger prize in the future.” Numerous studies have shown that the ability to delay gratification is one of the biggest indicators of success through life – be it your ability to manage your resources, choose the right spouse, maintain your weight, becoming skilled at a sport or launching a career. Those who can resist temptation in pursuit of long-term goals are blessed with an enormous advantage over the rest of the herd. In other words, too much comfort is a bad thing – long term. Yes, lack of self-mastery has a direct impact on the quality of multiple areas of people’s lives. Those who cannot establish mastery over their appetites and impulses will no doubt see many aspects of their lives quickly unravel. The ability to subordinate a lower impulse to a higher value is the essence of a satisfying life. Leonardo da Vinci was right when he said, “One can have no smaller or greater mastery than mastery of oneself.”

 

The ability to discern what is of value and self-mastery in the face of severe temptation is at the heart of Jesus’ desert experience. To do his Father’s will, not his own, Jesus had to be able to see the difference between what “looked good” and what was “actually good.” Once he was able to discern what the will of his Father was, he needed to have the self-mastery to follow it, no matter how tempting it was to do otherwise!

 



Saturday, February 14, 2026

Thursday, February 12, 2026

LET'S FINISH GIVING SOME TANZANIAN KIDS A BRIGHT FUTURE

 Now That We Have Most of the New Half-Finished School Building and Complex Itself Funded and a Few School Supplies Secured

LET'S FILL THESE NEW CLASSROOMS WITH DESKS AND SEATS

This is an example of the type of "student desk and seat units" we would like to have built for the five classrooms. Each unit seats two students. Costs presented in US dollars. 

One unit for two students = $200.00
Each classroom needs 23 units for 46 students = $4,600.00

THERE IS A TOTAL OF FIVE CLASSROOMS IN THE WHOLE SCHOOL

If you are interested in helping purchase one or more units, a whole classroom of units or units for the whole school, you can write a check to Father John Judie Ministries, Inc and send the check to Father Knott for deposit in that account (Father Knott's address is listed below).  Put "For Bishop Mhasi's School Desks"  in the blank memo line at the bottom left side of the check. 

Rev. Ronald Knott
1271 Parkway Gardens
#106
Louisville, KY 40217

LOOKING GOOD
The New Cardinal Polycarp Pengo Primary School (backside) As of Last Week. Building Re-Started Back in January of 2026 After Our Flow of Generous Gifts. The Workers Are Making Great Progress Each Week. 
Front Entrance (other side) as of 2-11-2026
A Worker Digging the Pit For the Outdoor School Latrine. It Will Be Lined With Concrete Blocks and the Latrine Building Itself Will Go Overtop of The Pit. 
While the other construction continues, they drilled a well and hit water to fill their 10,000 liter school water tank.
Bishop Mhasi told me on 2-11-2026 that he had bought some cows so that the kids of the school will have milk and meat to serve at the school. 
In the Name of All of His Waiting School Kids, Bishop Filbert Mhasi Says "Thank You!"

To all who have helped bring this school project back to life, I too say "thank you!" To those who have been thinking about helping a little, but never got around to it, it's not too late. We will still accept gifts either small or large. I invite you to be part of making a difference in the world. In a world where we all sometimes feel "powerless to change anything," it is not an exaggeration to say that this school will change these families and their communities for the better for generations to come!

This school may be on the other side of the world, but let me remind you that as Catholics we all belong to a "one, holy, catholic and apostolic" Church. We are all one faith-family spread around the world and we are all called to be missionaries. They have made great sacrifices to someday have a school, so let us assist them in finishing it so that this school can open soon. We are almost there!

If you want to be part of this effort, write your tax deductible checks, small or large, to Father John Judie Ministries and send them to me at my address listed above for deposit in his account. 
Your gift would make a great St. Valentine's Day present to some kids who really need this new school! 

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

A WRINKLED PHOTO AND A FADED MEMORY WITHOUT MANY DETAILS

 MY PEN PAL FROM MY HIGH SCHOOL YEARS 1958-1962

 
Me, at St. Thomas High School Seminary, about that time. 

When I was in High School Seminary (1958-1962), I had a South Korean "Pen Pal." I don't remember his name for sure, but something like Dong Reyel Tang keeps coming to mind. We wrote back and forth and exchanged gifts. I forgot what I sent him, but I remember him sending me some nice green woven baskets with lids. In a box of old "keepsakes" I came across his tiny picture that he sent me and I have kept it all these years. He is obviously wearing some kind of uniform. I think it just might be his seminary uniform since I know both of us were in the minor seminary about the same time.  

I have no idea what happened to him, but I do have many questions. Is he still alive? Did he ever become a priest? Did he leave the seminary to become something else? Did he marry and have children? Is he still in South Korea or did he emigrate to another country? If he is still alive, we would both be about 81-82 years old. 

I would love to make contact with him, or any of his family, after all these years, but it sounds almost impossible since I cannot recall any other details about him including why or how I lost his old address. 

However, with the internet, who knows? Maybe this post will be like one of those old "message in a bottle" events from the past when someone puts a paper message in a bottle and throws it into the sea only to have it be picked up by somebody on some beach on the other side of the world and be returned to you! I do believe in "miracles." I believe Philo T. Farnsworth, inventor of TV, nailed it when he said "Impossible things just take a little longer!"

Sunday, February 8, 2026

LET YOUR GOOD DEEDS BE SEEN SO THAT GOD WILL BE PRAISED!

 

You are the light of the world. Let your light shine in such
a way that people may see your good works and give God the glory.
Matthew 5:14,16

My fellow Catholic Christians, do you realize who you are? Did you hear those words from today's gospel reminding us of who we are? “You are the light of the world! Let your light shine! Let your good works be seen so God can be glorified!” The Scriptures tell us in other places that “from your mother’s womb, God gave you your name!” “You are God’s servant through whom God’s glory shines!” “From your mother’s womb God formed you for that task, the task of letting God’s glory shine through you!” “You are made glorious in his sight!” “He made you a light to the nations so that his salvation may reach to the ends of the earth!” Jesus tells us in the gospel reading today that “You are the salt of the earth! You are the light of the world! You are a city built on a hill! Your light must shine before others! Your good deeds must be out there to be noticed!” Yes, we are “the light of the world!” However, we are like the moon and God is like the sun. The moon has no light of its own, the moon merely reflects the light of the sun. Just so, when people see our light and observe our good deeds, we must make sure that God, the true source of our light, indeed all light, gets the glory!

My fellow Catholic Christians may we want to be who we are! May we want to be who we are! I am here to remind you who we are and what our mission is in this life! We were sent to shine! We were sent to shine so that God will look good in the eyes of the world and receive its praise! We should never put ourselves down! We should never underestimate our worth! We should never belittle ourselves nor play small! We should never let others put us down! We were sent to shine! To keep our lamps burning, we have to keep putting oil in them! Therefore, we need to take care of ourselves – take care of ourselves enough to do hard things for our own good so that our light will shine as brightly as possible! We should always resist the temptation to give into the biggest human temptation and that is to settle for too little! Our families, indeed the world, need us to be who we are and all that we can be!

I came across a Bruce Barton quote recently that has been rolling around inside my head for some time now. Others credit Benjamin Franklin. It is not a new idea, but a life script that I adopted a long time ago. It goes like this! “When we are through changing, we are through.” Us old people, when we were young people, might remember Bob Dylan singing another version of this same idea. “He not busy being born is busy dying.” In other words, if you are not growing, you are not standing still, you are dying! If you are “sent to shine,” you absolutely need to keep putting oil into your lamp! You must keep stoking your own fire!

Winston Churchill said, “Nothing gets better by leaving it alone.” In fact, when we “leave things alone” the natural process of entropy sets in – we start coming unglued, we start declining, we begin to rot! Entropy is that spontaneous and unremitting tendency in the universe toward disorder unless there is an opposing force working against it. People, like homes, when they are left alone fall into decay. Even fruits and vegetables, unless something is done to “preserve” them, begin to rot! When we “leave ourselves alone,” we commit what I call “personal and spiritual suicide.” Personal and spiritual suicide is the result of constantly saying “no” to opportunities to grow and change.”

As one who bought into this idea of “self-formation” a long time ago, I have concluded that there are two secret ingredients to becoming all that we can be as ‘the light of the world.” (1) The first ingredient in really loving oneself is a passionate commitment to personal excellence – to loving who we really are – loving ourselves enough to care about becoming our best selves. Really loving oneself does not mean papering oneself. Rather, it means doing hard things for one’s own good. One of the most critical needs here is the need for a capacity for critical and constructive self-awareness. We must be able to know and understand what makes us tick. We must own my own personal histories and heal them if necessary. In short, we must be dedicated to becoming our best as quality human persons first. Let me put that another way. You cannot take a loser and ordain him and expect to have an effective priest! If he is not a quality human being to begin with, all you will end up with is a loser priest who can’t relate to people or inspire them to hunger for holiness. You cannot take two losers and put them through a wedding and expect to end up with a happy marriage and effective parents! If they are not quality human beings to begin with, all you will end up with is a miserable marriage and disastrous parents!

(2) After a passionate commitment to who one is, being the best version of ourselves, the second ingredient in really loving oneself is a passionate commitment to vocational excellence – a passionate commitment to what we do! In other words, if you are parents, commit yourself to being the very best parent you can be! If you are married, commit yourself to being the best husband or wife you can be! If you are a priest, commit yourself to be the best priest you can possibly be! Whatever you are, be good at it! If you strive to be the best at what you do, you will get better at it. If you choose the “good enough to get by” path, you will become known for your mediocrity. As the leadership guru, Tom Peters, put it “The idea of mediocrity scares the hell out of me!” Without a passionate commitment to vocational excellence, you will no doubt end up being a mediocre priest, a mediocre marriage partner, a mediocre parent or a mediocre professional! The world is already overcrowded with mediocrity – people with no passion for personal or vocational excellence! My mother used to call them “people who merely go through the motions,” “people whose hearts are not in it.” God says to us in Revelations 3:15-16, “Would that you were either cold or hot. So, because you are lukewarm, neither hot nor cold, I will vomit you out of my mouth.” May God spare you from such mediocrity! May you become the very best version of yourself! May you become who you are! You are the light of the world! Let your light shine! Yes, let it shine! Let it shine!

Brothers and sisters! One of my biggest fears as a priest is not natural death, but spiritual and emotional death, being here and being not here at the same time – “dead on my feet,” if you will! My biggest fear is gradually turning into a priest whose heart is no longer in it! Chaucer’s Parson described such a priest as “a man annoyed at his own life.”

The word used by fourth century monks for this state was acedia. Acedia is not a disease, it’s a temptation – the temptation to disconnect, the temptation to stop caring, the temptation to stop making an effort. It is a temptation that can grow and harden into a persistent attitude of apathy and cynicism which is deadly to any kind of personal or spiritual growth. I find it fascinating that acedia, in its root, means negligence - a negligence that leads to a state of listlessness, a lack of attention to daily tasks and an overall dissatisfaction with life, of not caring or not being concerned with one’s self-care or position or condition in the world. In other words, unlike clinical depression, it can be resisted. The sooner it is confronted the more success one has in turning it around. As the leadership guru, Tom Peters, put it: "Unless you walk into the unknown, the odds of making a profound difference in your life are pretty low." 

We all know priests and married couples who woke up one day and found themselves in precisely that spot – with feelings of being stuck, with few options and little hope. Maybe we are, or have been, one of them! If we were to be honest with ourselves we would have to admit that we didn’t get there overnight. It happened because of extended neglect. We didn’t take the time to nourish our individual selves. Many marriages and religious vocations do not die of "natural causes." Too often, they simply die of "starvation!" Too many of us do not take the time to nurture our vocations. We just “let things go!”

Whether we are priests, marriage partners, parents, professionals, widows or widowers, we are all called to resist the temptation toward acedia, the neglect of our personal and spiritual growth. We are the light of the world and there is responsibility that goes with reflecting that light! As Mother Theresa put it. “To keep a lamp burning, we have to keep putting oil in it.” Again, Bob Dylan put it this way. “If we are not busy being born, we are busy dying.”