Salted with fire. Jesus uses some interesting words in the Gospel for tomorrow. The image of salt puts us in mind of food. It reminds us that salt is necessary for life. It's also a natural anti-bacterial, a preservative. It brings out the flavors of the food while at the same time killing germs that might make it spoil. Fire also is something we use to cook, but much more. It does indeed purify, but it can also kill. It warms but can also burn. It's dangerous but intrinsic to the survival of man. Without fire we would still be living only in the tropical reasons eating only fruits from the trees. Fire improves life but anything it touches changes.
Both of these images remind us of something that changes us, cleanses us. Both can hurt but both are beneficial as well. Anyone who has ever gotten salt in a wound knows that it stings! Yet, it also helps to kill the germs. Spiritually both of these images indicate a cleansing, albeit maybe a painful one. A cleansing that every single person will go through, not just the good and not just the bad, but every one of us. The thing is, we have heard this image before throughout the history of Christian theology. "God's love is an all consuming fire." "We are the salt of the earth." The image of the burning bush comes to mind. It did not consume the bush, but it transformed it. The ground on which it stood was then holy ground. So in God's case the fire doesn't consume everything... but it does change everything it touches.
St. Paul tells us the parable of man whose house was burnt to the ground, and he declares he was saved as by fire. The only thing that made it through were the gold, precious gems, and precious stones. All of the wood, hay, and stubble was destroyed in the process. I think that's the image that Mark wants us to envision in today's reading. Those things which are from heaven, those things born of charity (love), are what will remain after the house burns down. Those things which are not of heaven; selfishness, ego, hatred, anger, addiction, disordered attachments; these things would be consumed by the fire.
I have heard God's love described as an all consuming fire that is fueled by sin. Just like a log that you throw on the fire, the more sin, the more the flames burn. In light of our belief as Catholics that explains Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory like this: Those who refuse to let go of their sin cling to it in the life after this. They have no desire to let go of it and the more they are washed by the love of God, the more it burns, the more it hurts. So they run for eternity trying to get away from the love of God, hating him more and more... instead of just letting the sin go. Those who die with some attachment to sin but are on their way to heaven must be pure before entering. So they bear the burning... while trying to let go of the sin. Until the sin is burnt out, until there is no more fuel... they simply must endure it as they grow closer and closer to God's love. The greatest ache they experience is knowing they are on the way to see God.. but their own sins, the things they did not let go of in this world, that is what is keeping them from going directly to him. That is purgatory. Not a new place, not another chance.. but a process by which you are cleansed by God's burning love. Then those who are pure, those who have no attachment to sin, have no need for purification.. those we call Saints.. because they are right there in Heaven with God.
James in the first reading gives us a laundry list of sins. He condemns those with wealth who do not help those in need. Those who cheat the poor. He declares all the ills that we today know as Social Justice. This is the fuel. These are the things which make God's love flare and burn. It's only when we allow him to purify us, to cleanse us. To let the Holy Spirit transform our hearts and our minds until we no longer hold on to those sins.. and the sorrow, the remorse, the bitter conscience... is replaced with love, joy, faith, and hope. That's what the Sacraments are all about. Letting God's love wash over us. It may not always be pleasant, but it's cleansing. It may not be something we want to go through, but it's necessary.
Jesus uses some hyperbole to talk about the need to cut off those things which cause you to sin. The Church Fathers have long seen these parts of the body as symbols for intimate friends. Jesus is calling us to examine our friendships... that it's better for us to walk into Heaven without that person at our side.. than for us to follow them down a path that leads to both of our destruction. He declares that it is better to have a millstone tied around our necks than cause a child of God to sin... that goes for us.. and for them. I think that's the challenge today. To ask ourselves, in what ways am I being held back? What fuels am I holding on to? What do I need to let go that God's love might flood over me and purify me? Are there any poisonous, caustic relationships that I am in that I need to take a break from? Remember salt enhances flavor, it brings out the nuances of what is already there. It's time for us to remove those things which are unpleasant to the taste, and replace them with that which will last forever.
His servant and yours,
Brian
"He must increase, I must decrease."
So I am in ORDINARY TIME. Waiting, quietly anticipating my Easter which is the fullness of our faith. - Father Ev Hemann
Showing posts with label burning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label burning. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Thursday, February 18, 2016
So ya thought ya might like to go to the show
In today's news feed I found it
interesting to see headlines that declared Donald Trump and the Pope
at war with one another. One article making it seem as if the Pope
had declared Trump a heretic and excommunicated him, another in which
Trump declared the Pope despicable for questioning his Christian
faith. All of them had one in thing in common, they weren't showing
the whole truth. Clips out of context and misquotes abounded. What
the Pope said rather, was that building walls instead of bridges was
not the action of a Christian. What the Pope said was radical. What he said was counter cultural. What he said is Catholic
teaching.
The readings for tomorrow's daily Mass
remind us of this simple truth. God wants to forgive us. He wants
to bring us to the fullness of humanity, to become the person that we
are created to be. Thomas Merton said “For me to be a saint means
to be myself. Therefore the problem of sanctity and salvation is in
fact the problem of finding out who I am and of discovering my true
self.” That doesn't mean that how I am currently acting is saintly. Rather it means when I truly live out the fullness of what God
created me to be... when I am the authentic Brian he intended me to be,
that's when I find Sainthood.. that's when we have arrived. I
remember when I was in school as a kid the ladies in the cafeteria
had a sign hanging up with this little boy kind of frowning as if he
was trying to figure something out. It said "I know I'm
somebody, cause God don't make no junk." How true.
A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian. This is not the gospel. - Pope Francis
What do writings about anger and hatred
have to do with Trump and the Pope? The Catholic Church teaches :
Our attitude to our neighbor will disclose acceptance or refusal of grace and divine love. (CCC 678) |
The more filled we are with love, the
more we treat our brother with love, dignity and respect. The more
like God we are, the more we want to share that love. Many
conservatives often want to quantify this love by saying that of
course Jesus did not mean to put ourselves at risk. Yet, when people
came to capture him in the middle of the night he did not even defend
himself, but even had Peter put his sword away. Then he healed his
'enemy.' Now, we have a right to self defense. Of that the Church
has been clear of over the years. Not only a right but even a grave
duty. (CCC 2265). Jesus though called us to a radical notion, a self
giving that goes beyond our own box.
The problem truly has become our
segregationist attitude. We in our search for greed, security, and
pleasure; have divided the world up into countries, states, and
political entities. It's a system that helps bring order, sure.
It's also a system that turns our fellow man into the 'other'. Then
we decide who is 'us' enough to be included as our neighbor, and who
isn't. When we say 'lets take care of those at home first,' we are
essentially saying 'those born in our country deserve more freedom,
more love, more charity than those who were born elsewhere. How is
that we get to decide that? What did they do to deserve that? Why
is being born somewhere a deciding factor in how much we care for
someone? Isn't that pretty much what the caste system attempts to
do? Those born into the right family are treated with respect and
dignity, those in the wrong are the unclean, the outsider, the ones
who will always be downtrodden.
Building bridges, not walls. That is
what Christ came to do. Christ came to tear down the wall of
hostility and make the two into the one, the gentiles and the Jews
into one family (Ephesians 2:14). He didn't come to die only for
those in America, only those in the Church, or even only those who
are free from sin. No he came to die for all men, that all might
come to be one. When we pray the our Father we are praying for 'us.'
Finally, if we pray the Our Father sincerely, we leave individualism behind, because the love that we receive frees us from it. The "our" at the beginning of the Lord's Prayer, like the "us" of the last four petitions, excludes no one. If we are to say it truthfully, our divisions and oppositions have to be overcome. (CCC 2792) |
Doesn't that just hit home? It's time for us as Christians to truly ask ourselves, are we living the Gospel? Are we holding anything against our brother? Are we serving God's Kingdom or our own? The only crime many of these refugees have committed is being born in a country that is not our own. A crime that they did not choose to commit. In the case of Mexico alone, we see people being murdered in a drug war, raped and pillaged. Then we demean and degrade them by keeping them at bay. We use terms like illegal to make them seem unwanted, undesired, criminal. We put up a mental wall that makes us feel safer, and then cheer when someone wants to put up a physical one to keep out those undesirables. What will we do on judgment day when Christ says to us, “What you did to the least of these, you did to me”? None of us got to choose where we were born. It's time to stop punishing people for that.
What will we do on judgment day when Christ says to us, “What you did to the least of these, you did to me”?The first reading from Ezekiel is wake up call. It remind us that for those who choose to do good, to live the fullness of what God created them to be, heaven awaits. For those who reject it, those who decide to do evil and ignore the potential for freedom of excellence that God has offered them, awaits the fires of Gahanna.
The affirmations of Sacred Scripture and the teachings of the Church on the subject of hell are a call to the responsibility incumbent upon man to make use of his freedom in view of his eternal destiny. They are at the same time an urgent call to conversion: "Enter by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is easy, that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard, that leads to life, and those who find it are few." (CCC 1036) |
Today we are faced with a choice. Jesus is asking us for water, he is asking us for food, he is a stranger asking for shelter. How will we respond to him? We have a right, even a duty to keep those we are responsible for safe. We also have a duty to reach out to fellow man and lift him up to that fullness that he too is created for. That fullness which was revealed completely and perfectly in the person of Jesus Christ. That's what Christianity is all about. That's what Lent is about. Forgiveness. Prayer. Fasting. Alms-giving. We are deeply entrenched in the desert of our own ego. God is offering us a chance to move outside of our own small mindedness and reach out to the rest of the world and say, “Christ is the way the truth and the life.” More poignantly than ever echoes the words of that beautiful hymn, “They will know we are Christians by our love.”
His servant and yours,
Brian
“He must increase, I must decrease.”
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Be Holy, As I AM Holy
Today's readings bring to mind something I have been meditating on a lot lately. The concept of Holiness. We all have so many varied definitions of Holiness, from being set apart, to being like God, to even the notion that being Holy means being free from sin. Recently though someone brought to my attention something that today's first reading says clearly:
Then he said, “Do not come near; put off your shoes from your feet, for the place on which you are standing is holy ground.” Exodus 3:5
The ground itself can be Holy. Holy then doesn't mean free from sin... because the ground cannot sin. It's just a part of creation and God said that all of creation was good, so what makes this ground different than another ground? Why is the ground over there not Holy, but this ground is? The presence of God. That's an interesting thing to think about. Our Sanctuary is Holy at the church because God is present in the tabernacle. Our churches are Holy. Our Priests can rightly be called Holy, because they have God in them. It's not about them not having sin. It's not about them being perfect. It's about them being ordained, having the Spirit of God in them.
Then a thought struck my mind. We as Catholics believe that we are to look for Jesus in every face we meet. "Whatever you do for the least of these, you do for me." Every person is made in the image of God.. regardless of their sin, regardless of their realization of it.. they have an inherit dignity. Doesn't that in a way make all of creation Holy? If Jesus is walking around everywhere.. shouldn't we be treating all of our life as if we were in a Holy place?
We often act different in 'church' than we do in public, and much more so in private. Yet if we think about the fact that God is omnipresent... he is everywhere... not just in the burning bush, but also in the dirty bedroom. Not just in the tabernacle, but in the congregation. Not just in the Priest, but in the laity.... Then shouldn't we be authentic everywhere? And that person we are in church.. should be the person we are everywhere.. because we should strive to become the man we think we should be there.
So what about you? Do you take your shoes off in the presence of God? If we think of shoes as 'flesh', as the sinful nature we have... do you attempt to remove your shoes period? Because this ground your standing on.. that's Holy ground.
Then he said, “Do not come near; put off your shoes from your feet, for the place on which you are standing is holy ground.” Exodus 3:5
The ground itself can be Holy. Holy then doesn't mean free from sin... because the ground cannot sin. It's just a part of creation and God said that all of creation was good, so what makes this ground different than another ground? Why is the ground over there not Holy, but this ground is? The presence of God. That's an interesting thing to think about. Our Sanctuary is Holy at the church because God is present in the tabernacle. Our churches are Holy. Our Priests can rightly be called Holy, because they have God in them. It's not about them not having sin. It's not about them being perfect. It's about them being ordained, having the Spirit of God in them.
Then a thought struck my mind. We as Catholics believe that we are to look for Jesus in every face we meet. "Whatever you do for the least of these, you do for me." Every person is made in the image of God.. regardless of their sin, regardless of their realization of it.. they have an inherit dignity. Doesn't that in a way make all of creation Holy? If Jesus is walking around everywhere.. shouldn't we be treating all of our life as if we were in a Holy place?
We often act different in 'church' than we do in public, and much more so in private. Yet if we think about the fact that God is omnipresent... he is everywhere... not just in the burning bush, but also in the dirty bedroom. Not just in the tabernacle, but in the congregation. Not just in the Priest, but in the laity.... Then shouldn't we be authentic everywhere? And that person we are in church.. should be the person we are everywhere.. because we should strive to become the man we think we should be there.
So what about you? Do you take your shoes off in the presence of God? If we think of shoes as 'flesh', as the sinful nature we have... do you attempt to remove your shoes period? Because this ground your standing on.. that's Holy ground.
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