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Showing posts from August, 2019

Homily 21st Sunday--Faith challenge

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There are people who when they learn something new, they are all in. They learn skiing, then they are buying the latest equipment, taking lessons, pushing themselves to ski black diamonds, double black diamonds, and more...travelling Or fishing, they get the best rods and fly lines, travel to New Zealand or other parts of the world…. Cooking, get all the best cookbooks, the best pots and pans, redo the kitchen and produce very tasty dinners. Their zeal takes off. Setbacks become opportunities to grow. Those setbacks, those moments when life is turned upside down, they do happen. We look at what seems to be the craziness of our country these days. The apparent craziness of our world and our church. People fighting over what looks to be silly things, and yet, our world groans with bigger issues: people are starving and being killed; the rainforest in Brazil burns away; our young persons hurt themselves. We have families who are mourning the loss of parents and children. Way

19th Sunday Homily--Working for a better world!

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The story of the Irish immigration is filled with sorrow and faith. A people, held in poverty and servitude by the English and subjected to a form of de-population especially during the potato famine. Hoping for a better life for themselves and their future generations, many fled to come to the USA. Here they faced anti-Catholic bigotry and prejudice, NINA… Yet the impact of our Church and society remains to this day. The Italians can repeat a similar story...does anyone know what “WOP” means? My own great grandparents, fleeing the then Austro-Hungarian Empire in which their own language was forbidden, their rights revoked, came to this country They too hoped for a better life; and encountered anti-Catholic bigotry, the KKK. They persevered, they hoped for a better world and worked hard to provide for it. So many people dream of a better world. So many people hope for security for them and their children. It is ingrained within us as human persons. It is ingrained because we long f

18th Sunday Homily-What matters to us?

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In a brilliant podcast/interview on “OnBeing” with Abraham Verghese and Denise Pope both out of Stanford, the meaning of success was reflected upon and its impact on people. Ms. Pope works with young adults at Stanford and observed that this generation of students are overly stressed out, materialistic and poorly educated. Basically, “success” had become measured by these young adults through good grades and jobs with a big paychecks. Bad grades or when the dream job was not achieved, were considered failures, and importantly, the students did not know who to deal with it. Therefore the pressure they placed on themselves to be seen as successful was tremendous. Ask a priest “How successful was your confirmation/RCIA/or parish in general?” I bet the answer will be how many kids went through the program, how many were initiated at the Easter Vigil, the collection amount on Sundays. Denise Pope also talked about the students who were better adjusted. They were the ones who gene