Jesus’ accustomed way of teaching was in parables. He would tell a story and let the hearers enter into the story in order to unpack its meaning. The use of images is the most effective way of dealing with matters too deep for words. “Show, don’t tell” is the mantra of good writing technique. Not… Read More »
SEPTEMBER162016
Jesus used to travel from town to town bringing good news. St. Luke points out: “Accompanying him were the Twelve and some women.” The Evangelist wants us to notice that from the beginning women had served in leadership in the Jesus movement. We need this reminder since leadership in the Catholic Church for the past… Read More »
SEPTEMBER152016
St. Paul composes a mini-creed to remind the people of Corinth that their faith is based on the concrete human experiences of real human beings. The feast of the Sorrows of Mary serve as a reminder that human experiences can be sad and painful. The tradition was that there were “seven dolors” of Mary but,… Read More »
SEPTEMBER142016
“Christ Jesus, though he was in the form of God, did not regard equality with God something to be grasped. Rather, he emptied himself.” Grasping was, of course, the original sin. Adam grasped that apple. Jesus reverses the effect of sin by not grasping. We know had ugly greed can be — grasping after this,… Read More »
SEPTEMBER132016
We hear the term “body of Christ” so often (every time we receive Holy Communion) that the richness of the term can be obscured. For St. Paul “body” was the best image of the Church on three levels. First, a body to be a body must be one, must be whole, must be a unity… Read More »
SEPTEMBER122016
St. Paul says: “I received from the Lord what I also handed on to you.” The process of receiving the faith from those who have gone before and then handing it on is known as tradition. As Tevye the milkman says in Fiddler on the Roof “Because of our traditions each of us knows who… Read More »
SEPTEMBER112016
September 11. That date will always be associated in the minds of Americans with evil. While the enormity of that sin is obvious for all to see, the power of sin is also at work in our lives in a less dramatic fashion. That is why the call to repentance is such an important part… Read More »
SEPTEMBER102016
“You are what you eat,” my mother used to tell me. She was trying to get me to put down the potato chip and pick up an apple. St. Paul has something similar in mind when he says, “The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a participation in the Blood of Christ?… Read More »
SEPTEMBER92016
The Olympics were not the only games held by the Greek states in ancient times. In non-Olympic years athletes would gather at Corinth (which is on an Isthmus) for what were know as the Isthmian games. Since St. Paul was a tent maker he had lots of business during the games. The apostle took the… Read More »
SEPTEMBER82016
Social scientists ask: is it nature or nurture? Is how one turns out due to one’s genes or the way one was raised? The feast of the Birth of Mary suggests that both nature and nurture shape us. The scriptures describe Mary as part of a long history in Israel. Genealogies are listed to show… Read More »
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