Thursday, June 18, 2026
FIVE MARKS OF A GROWN-UP FOR THOSE WHO ARE NOT THERE YET
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
THE BEATITUDES EXPLAINED
Unlike the Ten Commandments, which
stress the things that one who loves God should not do,
today’s gospel offers us a list of things that a person who loves God does do.
It is important to remember here that Jesus is not saying “do
these things and God will love you,” but rather “if you love God, these are the
things you will do!” We do not do these things to earn God’s
love, rather if we love God, we will do these things. So, what
then does a serious lover of God look like?
(1) He or she is first of all “poor
in spirit.” What Jesus is talking about here is not merely economic
poverty. Even the dirt poor can be greedy in their hearts. What it means,
really, is the deep-down knowledge that when it comes right down to it, we own
nothing and everything can be taken away from us in an instant. Every material
possession, every blessing we have ever had, is a gift from God that was given
to us, not to hoard, but to share. The more we have been given, the greater the
responsibility we have to share.” “Poverty of spirit” is a basic knowledge that
we are all poor, when it comes right down to it. As they say,
“There are no pockets in shrouds!”
(2) A serious lover of God is able
to mourn. One who loves God seriously knows that we are interconnected human
beings and therefore never loses his or her ability to feel the suffering of
others. A cold-hearted, self-centered, disinterested person is not a friend of
God. A friend of God shares the compassion of Christ who was moved deeply by
the horrible suffering of simple human beings and is never far from “the gift
of tears,” as the saints called it.
(3) A serious lover of God is meek.
A “meek” person is not a person who lets people walk over him or her. A “meek”
person lives with the knowledge that he is never “a god,” but nonetheless
always a “child of God.” In other words, he neither inflates his own worth on
one hand, nor does he allow others to deflate his value on the other
hand. Being meek means to know who we are in God’s eyes- nothing
more, but nothing less!
(4) A serious lover of God hungers
and thirsts for righteousness. A serious lover of God does not dabble in
religion, placing religion somewhere outside the realm of his daily living and
daily choices. Rather, he or she is a serious spiritual seeker,
always trying to align his everyday life with Christian
principles. He or she strives always to close the gap between being
a Christian in name and being a Christian in fact, while being totally free of
religious fanaticism and doing spiritual violence to others in the name of
orthodoxy.
(5) A serious lover of God is
merciful. Being merciful means letting God be the judge of other people. It
means giving people the benefit of the doubt, giving them a break, wishing them
well on their path, knowing that with God, it isn’t over till it’s over, and
with God there is always another chance. Yes, it also means living the maxim,
“There but for the grace of God, go I!” Thomas Merton said, "The whole
idea of compassion is based on a keen awareness of the interdependence of all
livings things, which are part of one another, and all involved in one
another."
(6) A serious lover of God is clean
of heart. A serious lover of God doesn’t just do good things, he or she does
them for the right reason and with the purest of motives. I tried to
remind the seminarians at Saint Meinrad that it is a good thing to want to be a
priest, but one must go into it for good reasons – to serve people, not for
what priesthood can do for them. It is a good thing to give to the poor, but
one can give to the poor, not because they love the poor, but
because they will get their name in the paper or will have a building named
after them. A serious lover of God always does good things, but he also does
them for the right reason.
(7) A serious lover of God is a
peacemaker. War is getting more and more irrelevant. We need to become as good
at peacemaking as we have been at building sophisticated weapons. There will
always be misunderstanding between people. One who truly loves God has the
ability and the credibility to prevent disagreements from becoming a reason for
violence. We need not think globally only. Families, marriages, neighborhoods,
siblings and churches desperately need these peacemakers. When enough of us
really love God, we will have enough peacemakers to move us closer to universal
peace. If you love God, you love his people! If you love his people,
you will do what you can to bring them together.
(8) A serious lover of God will be
persecuted, insulted and lied about. The brighter the light the fiercer the
attack! Evil does not like goodness. Evil cannot tolerate the presence of
goodness and so it attacks. One who seriously loves God is more than willing to
take persecution, insults and lies, knowing that personal integrity is more
important than comfort or approval.
So, the bottom line is this – you
will know that you are on the path to sainthood if these "beatitudes"
describe you! If these eight characteristics don't describe you, make a u-turn
while you can, because you're headed in the wrong direction!
Sunday, June 14, 2026
A MOTLEY CREW FOR SURE
Jesus was right! The church is like a huge dragnet that scoops up a little of everything from the depths of the sea. Jesus was right! The church is like a field of weeds and wheat growing together. Jesus was right! The church is like a wedding banquet attended by the good and bad alike! Today’s "Pharisees," like the self-righteous Pharisees of old, are scandalized by this reality, the reality that the church is, and always has been, a hodge-podge of sinners and saints! These self-righteous types try to distance themselves from today's “undesirables,” imagining themselves as "better than" while despising so-called "degenerates," "sinners," and various people on the margins.
In another gospel text, we are presented with the scene of Jesus joining tax collectors, sinners and his disciples at a dinner at Matthew's house. Jesus obviously attended such dinners quit often because the Scriptures tell us that Jesus earned the nicknames of “glutton” and “drunkard” within the religious establishment. Coming upon this dinner scene at Matthew's house, with "tax collectors and sinners sitting down with Jesus and his disciples to eat," the Pharisees objected vehemently, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?” Overhearing their criticism, Jesus responds without apology, saying this to them: “Those who are well do not need a doctor! Sick people do! I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners!”
If the church is like a dragnet that scoops up a little of everything from the depths of the sea, then Jesus must have scraped the bottom of the pond to come up with this motley crew that we have come to call “apostles” and "saints." As St. Paul said of Jesus, "He chooses the weak and makes them strong!" A few years ago, I came across a funny memo addressed to Jesus about the apostles he was about to choose. It is sent from a fictional consulting firm in Jerusalem! It may be funny, but it makes a profound point that I have used a couple of ties before in other parishes. Let me read a section to you.
Jesus, Son of JosephWoodcrafter Carpenter Shop
Nazareth 25922
Dear
Jesus:
Thank
you for submitting the resumes of the twelve men you have picked for management
positions in your new organization. All of them have now taken our battery of
tests; we have not only run the results though our computer, but we have also
arranged personal interviews for each of them with our psychologist and
vocational aptitude consultant.
It
is the staff's opinion that most of your nominees are lacking in background,
education and vocational aptitude for the type of enterprise you are
undertaking.
Simon Peter is emotionally unstable and given to fits of temper. Andrew has absolutely no qualities of leadership. The two brothers, James and John, place personal interest above company loyalty. Thomas demonstrates a questioning attitude that would tend to undermine morale. We feel that it is our duty to tell you that Matthew has been blacklisted by the Greater Jerusalem Better Business Bureau. James, son of Alpheus, and Thaddeus definitely have radical leanings, and they both registered a high score on the manic-depressive scale.
One
of the candidates, however, shows great
potential. He is a man of ability and resourcefulness, meets people well, has a
keen business mind, and has contacts in high places. He is highly motivated,
ambitious and responsible. We recommend Judas Iscariot as your controller and
right-hand man.
We
wish you every success in your new adventure.
Sincerely yours,
Jerusalem Management
Consultants
“God’s
ways are not our ways.” How many times have we heard that remark? Well, it is
absolutely true and the Scriptures are full of examples where God seems to
relish in picking losers, crooks, idiots and incompetents to do his most
important work. In the Old Testament, we read about the call of Abraham and Sara. They were
99 and 90 respectfully when they were called to begin the most important family
in history! A little old, don’t you think? When he needed a mother for Jesus,
who did he pick but an engaged teenager from nowhere! A little risky, don’t you think? Are we
surprised that Jesus would pick such a shaky foundation on which to build his
church: a liar, a couple of mama’s babies, two Middle Eastern terrorists, an
agnostic and a tax collector? The only reason I can figure out for these kinds
of decisions is to let us know loudly and clearly that it is God’s work, not our
effort or expertise, that counts! It’s not about our goodness. It’s about God’s
goodness!
Most of my life I have struggled with feelings of not being good enough, no doubt results of some serious emotional abuse when I was a child. “You will never amount to anything!” “You can’t do anything right!” “You’re a hopeless case!” My feelings of not being good enough are not as severe as they used to be, by a long shot, but traces of them are still there and those old feelings can be triggered almost without warning. Many of you know what I am talking about. They are irrational feelings, for the most part, but they are still there. One incident in particular triggered them “big time!” Pope Benedict told a group of newly ordained priests in Rome a few years ago that they must be “perfect.” Since I have never felt like I could adequately measure up to the expectations that people place on priests, those words really rattled me. It has taken me years to quit beating myself up for not being perfect and be consoled that my best was good enough for God. I don’t want to go back there! I won’t go back!
It
is the gospel message that has helped me understand God's love more than any psychologist! The word
“gospel” means “good news.” The “good news” is this: our best may not be good
enough for this world, but it is good enough for God! God loves us without
condition! As our second reading today puts it, “God proves his love for us, in that
while we were still sinners Christ died for us!” God’s love is freely given
without any need on our part to earn it. God loves us flaws and all! One Scripture says this: “People see externals. God sees into the
heart.” Another Scripture says this: “God chooses the weak and made them strong in bearing witness to him.”
Jesus filled these weak, flawed and sinful bunch of men with the fire of his
love and gradually made saints of them! In his ministry Jesus specialized, not
in ritual temple service, but in helping society's rejected and marginalized people feel worthy in God's eyes: the poor, women, children, the diseased, the ostracized and the
marginalized - people who did not feel good enough!
My friends, in the end, it is not about what you do for God, it is about what God has done for you! No matter what happens, remember this: you are valued and loved in God eyes, no matter what you’ve done or failed to do! As scripture says in our second reading today: “He died for us while we were sinners.” Notice that it does not say: “He died for us because we shaped up!” God loves us, not because we deserve it, but in spite of the fact that we do not deserve it!
If
Jesus can choose Peter, Andrew, James, John, Phillip, Bartholomew, James,
Thaddeus, Thomas, Matthew and Simon and use them for his work, he can choose
people like you and me, flaws and all, to carry on that work! God did not love
us because we are lovable. We are loveable because God loves us. God’s love is purely a gift. So, before we go
around judging others’ worthiness before God, let us own our own sins and
failings. If God can have compassion on us, after knowing all our sins and
failures, then we surely can have compassion on each other. As we say in the Mass, right before
communion, “Lord, I am not worthy to receive you, but only say the word and I
shall be healed!”
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Thursday, June 11, 2026
BUILDING PROJECTS: A "KNOTT THING" GOING WAY BACK
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
WHERE ST. PAUL PREACHED AND MARY LIVED WITH ST. JOHN
The The main street St. Paul walked on from the port into the city of Ephesus.