Tuesday, October 29, 2024
Sunday, October 27, 2024
"The preeminent issue is abortion..."
A homily for the 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, 2024
Our opening
prayer at Mass this morning just a few minutes ago was “Lord, make us love what you command”
Why do we pray that? Because all of God's commands to us are for our own good right now, right here...but we are always being tempted by Satan, so we need to ALWAYS be praying that we grow deeper in love with God asks of us.
On February 3, 1994 now SAINT Mother
Teresa of Calcutta was the keynote speaker at the National Prayer Breakfast
with President Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary in attendance.
She said, in her remarks “The
greatest destroyer of peace today is abortion, because it is a war against the
child, a direct killing of the innocent child by the mother herself. And if we
accept that a mother can kill even her own child, how can we tell other people
not to kill one another? the greatest
destroyer of love and peace is abortion…We cannot solve all the problems in the
world, but let us never tell people to practice contraception and abortion.”
Already in the Old Testament God tells
the Israelites wandering in the desert that God is going to allow the Israelite
people to conquer the current inhabitants because the current inhabitants were sacrifice
their new-born children to a demon God by throwing their children into a fire
and watching them burn to death.
In the Old Testament, God also says “Before
I formed you in the womb, I knew you!”
Some here at this Mass may have had an
abortion or helped someone obtain an abortion…God wants to forgive you if you
have not already confessed it…God loves you!!!
The Archdiocese of Indianapolis and the
Catholic Church in the United States is the number one advocate in the country
helping women who have had an abortion heal from it, offering the Sacrament of
Confession and retreats for women who have had an abortion.
The Catholic Church and the crisis
pregnancy centers around the country are also the number one organization in
the country helping mothers of unplanned pregnancies take care of their
children, offering classes, diapers, formula, cribs, clothing, financial
assistance…whatever moms need we help them…and guess what would happen if you
went to an abortion facility and tried to get any of that assistance?
Some in the Catholic Church have put
forward “The seamless garment of life theory” that all issues of life are the
same, but the Catholic Church has NEVER taught that all issues of life
are the same weight.
The US Bishops at their annual meeting in Baltimore have
overwhelmingly voted every year, including the document they put out for
Catholic voting this year, that the threat of abortion should be
every Catholic’s number one priority in the voting booth.
As St. Teresa of Calcutta reminded the United States
30 years ago, the GREATEST destroyer of peace is abortion.
On the issue of abortion, God commands
us to love every human life. As we
prayed at the beginning of Mass “Lord, make us love what you command!”
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Monday, August 19, 2024
Thursday, August 8, 2024
Wednesday, July 31, 2024
Friday, July 26, 2024
Tuesday, July 9, 2024
National Eucharistic Procession Elizabeth Ann Seton Route Enters into Indiana
The National Eucharistic Procession that started on Pentecost Sunday at the Atlantic Ocean in Connecticut entered the Archdiocese of Indianapolis in mine and Fr. Meyer's parish boundaries. Here is a beautiful 2 minute video that captured one leg of our 6 miles today
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Are we saved by Faith Alone?
Saved
by Faith Alone?
Most of the 30,000 different sects of protestantism in the
US teach "Salvation comes to each person by Faith alone", which is
just flat wrong.
Saint
Paul says in Romans 3:28 "For we consider that a person is justified by
faith apart from works of the law" so Martin Luther took that, and then in
his own translation added "ALONE" so that it reads "For we
consider that a person is justified by faith ALONE apart from
works of the law" in Martin Luther's "Bible"
And
St. Paul also writes to the Galatians in Galatians 2:16 "a person is not
justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ, even we have
believed in Christ Jesus that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by
works of the law, because by works of the law no one will be justified."
So
Martin Luther took these two lines from St. Paul, and accuse Catholics of
believing that we believe that we are justified by our works.
But
St. Paul is not saying that our works do not matter, St. Paul is saying
"works OF THE LAW" as in, "The Jewish Law"
When
St. Paul talks about "works of the law" there are 3 different types
of laws in the Old Testament:
1)
Laws that established cultural customs for the Jewish people (circumcision,
what foods to eat and not eat, etc.)
2)
Laws governing Jewish Temple worship
3) and
there are lots of Moral Laws in the Old Testament, which do not change over
time.
St.
Paul, in Romans and Galatians is referring to the Jewish cultural laws,
which no longer apply to Christians when he says "apart from works of the
law"
Anyone
who doubts the importance of our works can look to several places:
1)
James 2: 15-17 "What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith
but does not have works? Can that faith save him? If a brother or sister
has nothing to wear and has no food for the day, and one of you says to
them, “Go in peace, keep warm, and eat well,” but you do not give them the
necessities of the body, what good is it? So also faith of
itself, if it does not have works, is dead"
2)
And, as Catholics, we could also point to Matthew 25 where the things
Jesus requires for entrance into Heaven are all WORKS:
"I was naked and you clothed me, in prison and you visited me, hunger and
you gave me food…"
3)
There also at least 7 other places in the same Letter to the
Romans where St. Paul says our salvation IS based on works that we perform:
2:6
“God will repay everyone according to his works"
2:7 “eternal life to those who seek glory, honor, and immortality through
perseverance in good works”
2:10 “There will be glory, honor, and peace for everyone who does good”
2:13
“For it is not those who hear the law who are just in the sight of God;
rather, those who observe the law will be justified”
2:16 “God will judge people’s hidden works through Christ
Jesus.”
10:9 “if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe
in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.”
10:10 “one confesses with the mouth and so is saved.”
These are all "works".
Saturday, June 8, 2024
A Brief Reflection on the first ending to the Gospel of John
"Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of His disciples that are not written in this book. But these are written that you may come to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that through this belief you may have life in his name." John 20:30-31
This is the first ending of John's Gospel. Chapter 21 goes on to recount the conversation between Jesus and Peter "do you love Me more than these..."
But I just want to reflect briefly on the end of chapter 20.
John implies that his Gospel is all that is needed to establish the Divinity of Jesus Christ, and that through belief in Jesus, we have life in Jesus' name...and recently that just struck me for the first time.
Thursday, June 6, 2024
15 Years a Priest
Today, June 6th, is my 15th anniversary of my ordination to the priesthood for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. Thank you for all of the prayers!
Monday, May 20, 2024
A Pentecost Examination of Conscience
A Pentecost Examination of Conscience
2024
Today, we
celebrate one of the great Solemnities in our Catholic Church. It is the Solemnity of Pentecost. Pentecost was originally a harvest feast for
the Jewish People, but of course it became the day where the Holy Spirit was
first poured out on humanity. And what
happens??? The Holy Spirit immediately turns cowards into men and women of
great courage who run out of their locked room and immediately start preaching
the Good News of Jesus without any fear whatsoever.
I have said
many times that on the day of my Confirmation, I had absolutely no idea what I
was getting even though my catechists and parents likely told me 1,000 times. It was not until I was teaching a
Confirmation class in a local parish while still a seminarian that I learned
what I had received at my Confirmation.
And learning the gifts that I had received through my Confirmation, it
instantly changed me into a rather cowardly seminarian into a bold seminarian.
The gifts of
the Holy Spirit, though, need to be opened, and if we don’t know that we have
received gifts, then we can’t open them.
Confirmation
is Latin for “to strengthen” and the Holy Spirit, on all of us who have been
confirmed, bestows lots of gifts, and St. Paul says that the Holy Spirit a
unique set of gifts and amounts of those gifts to each person. So first of all, do you know that you have
received the Holy Spirit at your confirmation, and that the Holy Spirit has
given you the strength to preach the Good News of Jesus Christ without
fear? Do you also understand that the Holy
Spirit has given you a unique proportion of all these gifts that the Holy
Spirit has not given to any other person besides you?
And finally,
regardless of the unique way that the gifts of the Holy Spirit have been poured
out upon you, Saint Paul says there are 12 fruits of the Holy Spirit. You can find them in the Catechism and I like
to use these 12 fruits as a regular examination of conscience.
Charity – do
you seek to lay down YOUR life for other’s holy needs and holy desires?
Joy – do you
radiate Joy to other people?
Peace – we live
in a world that is always trying to upset our peace, but when you meet a peaceful
person you know it. When people meet
you, do they recognize that you are at peace?
Patience – are
you a person of patience?
Goodness –
when you meet a person who is full of goodness, you know it instantly as
well. Do people who meet you say that
they have just met a good person?
Generosity –
are we generous with our time? Are we
generous with our talent and treasure?
Gentleness –
Jesus promised adversity to anyone who would follow him in the world. Do we let adversity destroy our Gentleness?
Faithfulness
– are we faithful to God no matter what happens to us?
Modesty – do
we dress properly?
Self-control
– do we submit our various passions to our reasoning and logic or are we ruled
by our passions and desires?
And the twelfth
is chastity - do we seek to live out our
human sexuality according to our state in life?
Monday, May 13, 2024
On Catholics Worshipping Statues and Worshipping Mary
May Crowning 2024 “On Catholics Worshipping
Statues”
Most non-Catholic
houses of worship do not contain any statues of saints nor images of any
saints. Why is this? It is based on a misreading of Exodus
20:4. Exodus 20:4 says “You shall not make
any GRAVEN images” and lest anyone doubt that God meant “NO STATUES NOR IMAGES”
in Exodus 25 God COMMANDS Moses to make 2 statues of angels for the Tabernacle.
And on
whether it is right to seek anyone to intercede for us, it is important to remember
that we all ask each other to pray for things all the time…"Dave, please pray
for this issue in my life right now”
And if I
asked my Mom to pray for me, no one would scream “Why don’t you just pray to
Jesus?” And if my Mom died and I went to
her grave and whispered some prayer intentions asking her to intercede for me
with Jesus, no one would say “Why don’t you just pray to Jesus?” And if I had a statue of my Mom made at her
grave and brought flowers to her grave, no one would ask “Why are you worshipping
that statue and bringing flowers to it?”
That is exactly what we are doing today in crowning this statue of our Blessed Mother and bringing flowers to place in front of her statue.
Furthermore, one of the 10 Commandments command each of us to honor our mother and father. There are many different verses in the New Testament that say that we are adopted brothers and sisters of Jesus Christ through our baptism. (one example: Romans 8:15 "You received a spirit of adoption, through which we cry, “Abba, Father!”). So to not honor Mary is to not honor our Mother, which is a direct violation of one of the commandments. So any person who is baptized in Jesus Christ and yet does not HONOR Mary commits a grave sin.
Please know that what we are doing this morning in crowning this statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary is both right and just!
Holy Mary, Mother of
God, please pray for us!
Monday, April 29, 2024
Homily for the 5th Sunday of Easter 2024
“The Father Prunes Those Who Bear Fruit
So They can Bear MORE Fruit”
Homily for the 5th Sunday
of Easter, 2024
The first
Fall Saturday when I was a seminarian at St. Meinrad, I popped a bowl of
popcorn and had prepared to watch several college football games in the TV lounge. I expected lots of other seminarians to do
the same. Only one other guy showed up,
and so, after about an hour, I got up and found something better to do with my
time.
Jesus says
in our Gospel that God the Father will prune all those who are ALREADY bearing
fruit so that we can bear MORE fruit.
And I have found this to be so true in my life.
Of course
Jesus also mentions mortal sin in today’s Gospel as being basically one of us
looking down, and seeing that we are connected to Christ the vine, and saying
to ourselves “I know that this sin that I am about to commit will sever me
from Christ, but I am going to do it anyway.” The only way to remedy that deadly sin is to
go to the Sacrament of Reconciliation.
But back to
college football. Watching college
football is not inherently sinful. But,
over time, God showed me that it is not the BEST use of my time. And the same goes for TV, my smartphone,
social media, etc. God the Father, in me
cooperating with His desire to prune or cut those parts of my life away, has
allowed me to bear more fruit.
And the
Devil is always going to be telling each of us “Here comes God the Father
with his big scary pruning scissors, He is going to cut you and it is really
going to hurt” but again, we need to know that the Devil is a liar.
We need to
trust that God the father, in seeing that we are bearing fruit, wants us to
give Him permission to trim some things from our life so that we can bear MORE
fruit.
Monday, April 22, 2024
4th Sunday of Easter, 2024
Below is a video series that All Saints Catholic Church, one of my 4 parishes, called "Rise Up". It also is a summary of my homily yesterday for the 4th Sunday of Easter.
Monday, April 15, 2024
You Can't Eat a Eucharistic Miracle
First Communion 2024
Dear young people, I have some bad news for you, but then I
want to explain how it is good news.
Your first Eucharist that you will receive in just a few
minutes will likely taste just like the 2 practice hosts that you received at
practice a few days ago. And a lot of
Catholics and non-Catholics ask why the bread, when consecrated, does not turn
into visible flesh and blood.
The good news is that the bread and wine, when a priest prays
the words of consecration over them, still has the appearance of bread and wine
so that we can still eat Him.
In the history of the Catholic Church there have been about
200 times where, at Mass, when the priest prayed over the bread and wine, the
host did turn into human flesh and blood.
The problem is that then no one was able to consume Jesus. The Flesh and Blood of Jesus were all put
behind glass and preserved in some way.
So again, it is actually great news that Jesus comes to us
under the APPEARANCE of bread so that we can still consume Him.
And He changes us, over time, into Himself. That is why your parents and relatives who
are here this morning need to keep bringing you back on Sundays and Holy Days…Jesus
works on us slowly…the transformation into Jesus is a life-long process…
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Cowardice and St. Stanislaus
“Cowardice” a Homily for the Memorial
of St. Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr
I was
blessed to give a witness talk and have the Mass yesterday at a local senior
retreat. I then enjoyed lunch with the seniors
and the retreat chaperones. While in
line, someone took the Lord’s name in vain.
I am not sure if it was a chaperone or a student, but I know other
people heard it, and that other people knew I heard it, and other people saw
that I didn’t do anything to correct it.
Today the
Church remembers St. Stanislaus, who was a bishop in Poland martyred by a King
that St. Stanislaus stood up to. The
reading in the Breviary today for St. Stanislaus is from Saint Cyprian, and his
letter ends in this way “The soldier of Christ, trained by Christ’s commands
and instructions, does not begin to panic at the thought of battle, but is
ready for the crown of victory.”
As I was
reading that this morning, I was convicted that St. Stanislaus stood up to a
king, and I didn’t correct a person out of fear. I resolved, this morning in the confessional,
to go back to the retreat and apologize to anyone who heard this person take
the Lord’s name in vain and also saw me not do anything to correct him.
I love the
Catholic Church for so many reasons, and one of the reasons I love the Catholic Church is that the Church
sees EVERY action of ours to have eternal repercussions, NOTHING is
insignificant…and so I sinned in not correcting the person, and I sinned by the
scandal I caused…and so I am going to confess that sin but also make
reparations for my sins and go and apologize, and hopefully, in doing that, the
next time something like this happens, and I will have the courage to correct a
person out of love. Amen.
"Christ's Glorified Body Still Has Wounds???" Divine Mercy 2024
Divine Mercy 2024 “Christ’s Glorified
Body Still Has His Wounds???”
Leading up
to Divine Mercy Sunday in 2020, I was in my room at the Mayo Clinic having had
several brain surgeries. I was doing
Mass every day from my hospital room, but had plenty of time to research my
homilies. I was thinking then about
Christ’s Resurrected and Glorified Body still having wounds from His
Crucifixion. The Catholic Church teaches
that everyone, at the final judgment, will have their soul and body reunited,
and that the bodies of those entering Heaven will be perfect…so I was thinking “Why
does Jesus’s Glorified Body still has wounds”?
And it turns
out that St. Thomas Aquinas, 800 years ago, asked the same question and has a
really beautiful answer… St. Thomas said, essentially, that Christ’s resurrected
Body still has his wounds because they were earned out of love, and so seeing
his wounds in Heaven will cause us all the more to be thankful for his
sacrifice for us.
And that
made sense to me, and I preached from my hospital room 4 years ago that I hope
all the victims of priestly sexual assault will still see my wounds, and that
we will be able to rejoice together.
Everyone
here today has wounds and scars…some scars come from surgeries or injuries or
cancer, and many of us also have hidden scars of depression, anxiety, or the mental
and emotional scars of watching a person that we love suffer.
Again, the
beautiful teaching of the Catholic Church is that EVERY SINGLE DROP of our
suffering can be offered up for other people.
If you haven’t done that yet, I invite you to do that now…there’s no
magic formula… you can just say some version of “Jesus I offer my suffering up
for _______” or “I offering my suffering up for wherever you see the graces are
most needed” and hopefully, when you get to Heaven, those who you have suffered
for will be able to see your scars and rejoice together with you!
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Does Jesus Hate Women? Homily for Tuesday in the Octave of Easter, 2024
“Stop Holding on to Me” Tuesday in
the Octave of Easter 2024
Jesus makes
a strange demand of Mary Magdalene in today’s Gospel “stop holding on to me” Does he not women to touch him? St. Thomas Aquinas quotes St. Augustine on this
Passage: St. Augustine says this: “Didn’t Jesus tell Thomas to touch His
side? Who can be so absurd as to suppose
that disciples should touch Him before He ascended to His Father, but not that
women should touch Him before He ascended?
We read of women touching Him before He ascended, including Mary
Magdalene herself in Matthew’s Gospel (Matthew 28:9 “And behold, Jesus met them
[Mary Magdalene and the other Mary] on their way and greeted them. They
approached, embraced his feet.”)
Rather, St.
Augustine points out that Jesus commands Mary Magdalene not to touch yet in
this Gospel because Mary Magdalene was still weeping at the tomb, and so believed in Him
only as a man. Also, St. John Chrysostom
says that Jesus also told Mary Magdalene not to touch Him “so as to allow
her to feel awe in talking with Him, as Jesus also no longer keeps company with
His disciples”
Monday, April 1, 2024
Easter 2024
Easter 2024
Christmas is
a time that most of us can, as human persons, identify with…most notably the joy
of the birth of a child. We all know mothers
who have given birth to children, and those are causes for great celebration.
But Easter
and the events leading up to Easter are very foreign to us on a natural level…we
need to remember that all that was necessary for Jesus to save us from Hell was
for Jesus to die and resurrect. And because
Jesus created space and time, Jesus could have set up the Old Testament
prophecies any way He wanted to, so we are faced with this confusing reality
that Jesus CHOSE to be TORTURED to death and then resurrect. as St. Peter reminds us in our first reading
today “To Jesus all the prophets bear witness”.
It is clear to us, as we look back through the Old Testament with
hindsight, we do see how nearly every line of the Old Testament points not just
to Jesus’ death, but to his immense suffering that He would undergo.
What are we
to take from this? I think one thing we
can say definitively is that Jesus came not only to save us but to show us how
to live, and In the Gospels, over and over again, Jesus says some variation of “if
you want to live, pick up your cross of suffering and follow Me”
Jesus
Christ, in CHOOSING to be tortured to death, has made holy our suffering
too, and that is the great news of Easter…by Jesus’ Resurrection, He has definitely shown that His triumph over death was through suffering, and so our suffering as well
has a sanctifying effect in our life now, in the lives of other people if we
offer our sufferings up for them, and, thirdly, our suffering in imitation of
Christ also helps us draw closer to Heaven.
Jesus Christ
SUFFERED death, but was resurrected today.
Amen. Alleluia!!!
Saturday, March 30, 2024
Good Friday 2024
Good Friday 2024
There are 5 precepts in the Catholic Church. What is a precept? The Catechism says that:
“The obligatory character of these laws are the necessary minimum
in the spirit of prayer and moral effort, in the growth in love of God and
neighbor:
The
first precept ("You shall attend Mass on Sundays and holy days of
obligation unless you are sick or caring for someone who is sick
The
second precept is that you shall confess your sins at least once a year. This required confession at least once a year
ensures proper preparation for the Eucharist.
95% of Catholics surveyed reported NOT following either the first
precept or not following the 2nd or not following either one.
St. Paul in his 2nd Letter to the Thessalonians says
there will be a great falling away from the Catholic Church during or near the
time of the anti-Christ. 95% of American
Catholics have admitted themselves that they don’t take Jesus and the
Church seriously.
And Jesus asks a haunting question in Luke’s Gospel…when the Son
of Man comes, will he find Faith on Earth…
One of the most beautiful descriptions of our standard approach to
Jesus was written by Fr. Thomas Merton.
Fr. Merton writes this:
"I suppose it is usual for elder brothers, when they are still
children, to feel themselves demeaned by the company of a brother four or five
years younger, whom they regard as a baby and whom they tend to patronise and
look down upon. So when Russ and I and Bill made huts in the woods out of
boards and tar-paper which we collected around the foundations of the many
cheap houses which the speculators were now putting up, as fast as they could,
all over Douglaston, we severely prohibited John Paul and Russ’s little brother
Tommy and their friends from coming anywhere near us. And if they did try to
come and get into our hut, or even to look at it, we would chase them away with
stones.
When I think now of that part of my childhood, the picture I get
of my brother John Paul is this: standing in a field, about a hundred yards
away from the clump of sumachs where we have built our hut, is this little
perplexed five-year-old kid in short pants and a kind of a leather jacket,
standing quite still, with his arms hanging down at his sides, and gazing in
our direction, afraid to come any nearer on account of the stones, as insulted
as he is saddened, and his eyes full of indignation and sorrow. And yet he does
not go away. We shout at him to get out of there, to beat it, and go home, and
wing a couple of more rocks in that direction, and he does not go away. We tell
him to play in some other place. He does not move.
And there he stands, not sobbing, not crying, but angry and
unhappy and offended and tremendously sad. And yet he is fascinated by what we
are doing, nailing shingles all over our new hut. And his tremendous desire
to be with us and to do what we are doing will not permit him to go away. The
law written in his nature says that he must be with his elder brother, and do
what he is doing: and he cannot understand why this law of love is being so
wildly and unjustly violated in his case.
Many times it was like that. And in a sense, this terrible
situation is the pattern and prototype of all sin: the deliberate and formal
will to reject disinterested love for us for the purely arbitrary reason that
we simply do not want it. We work to separate ourselves from that
love. We reject it entirely and absolutely, and will not acknowledge it.”
We all need to stop throwing stones at Jesus to keep Jesus away
from us. We need to let Jesus, who is
perfect love, flood our hearts.
Jesus is not a dictator nor is he an egomaniac who demands that we
worship Him on Sundays and confess our sins once a year…Jesus made us and knows
what is best for us…let us recommit to allowing perfect love to once again
flood our being. Amen.
Monday, March 25, 2024
Homily for Palm Sunday 2024
“Perfect Love Casts Out All Fear!”
Most of the people in our Gospel today act out of fear. Every Apostle flees when soldiers come to
arrest Jesus. Peter, after promising to
never abandon Jesus, several hours later denies even knowing Jesus three times
out of fear.
Pontius Pilate knows Jesus is innocent, but out of fear of
the Jews and fear of losing his power, condemns Jesus to death anyway.
Many of us are tempted to be fearful. Certainly the Devil has a lot of ammunition
to make us fearful in 2024…wars, rumors of wars, plagues, elections…
But Jesus says, over and over again “DO NOT BE AFRAID!” The phrase “do not be afraid” is the most frequent
phrase in the Bible.
If you heard Fr. Vince Lampert’s talk, he confirms that the
Devil wants us afraid, wants us to think God is NOT in control and that God is
NOT in charge. But the Devil is a liar.
One of the few people who does not act out of fear in the
events surrounding Jesus’ Crucifixion is Jesus’ best friend the Apostle
John. St. John the Apostle stands by the foot of the Cross unafraid and unwavering. And the Apostle John has written
several letters that are in the New Testament.
In one of those letters St. John writes “Perfect Love casts out ALL fear” (1 John 4:18)
At this and every Mass, Jesus, who is Perfect Love, shows up
when the priest prays the Words of Consecration. At the end of this Mass you will have the
opportunity to spend a few minutes in silent adoration in the Real Presence of
Perfect Love. Whatever you might be
afraid of in your life today…turn those fears over to Jesus who is Perfect
Love, and ask Jesus to cast out all your fears.
You will be amazed at what will happen!
Friday, February 23, 2024
The Scandal of Rupnik
When I was still on Twitter, when the logo for the year of mercy was released in 2015, I commented that it was hideous.
I stand by that assessment...the oversized eyes, the melding of one of their eyes...it is creepy and hideous.
And then all the allegations have come out against the artist Fr. Rupnik...that he allegedly convinced religious sisters to have sex with him so that he could create his art.
Some, defending the idea that Rupnik's "art" should remain in Catholic Churches all over the world say some form of "Well, Carvaggio was a drunk and may have murdered someone; are you going to take down all of his work as well?"
But here is a big distinction: Carvaggio never murdered someone to help make his art.
Rupnik allegedly sexually enticed religious sisters and then allegedly absolved them of that same sin in the confessional, which incurs a latae sentiae excommunication on Rupnik if he in fact did that.
Caravaggio never did anything that incurred a latae sententiae excommunication to make his art.
And Caravaggio's paintings are masterpieces, and Rupnik's art is hideous and creepy.
1st Sunday of Lent, 2024, The Angelus
The Angelus
A recent survey found that 90% of Americans believe in angels, which is a greater percentage than believe in God, which does not make much sense to me, but hardly anything makes sense to me in the United States in 2024.
Almost every CHAPTER in the Bible mentions angels. Including our Gospel today, which says the angels ministered to Jesus in the desert.
At every Mass, we believe that in a special and unique way ALL the Angels and saints are present here, eventhough we cannot see them...and no other Christian denomination believes that about their worship service.
At Mass, when the priest finishes the preface he says some version of "now with all the angels and saints, let us together acclaim...Holy Holy Holy..."
That is the exact phrase that both Ezekiel in the Old Testament and the Book of Revelation say that the angels and saints are singing unceasingly and without end...we are literally singing WITH the angels.
As I always say, the Catholic Church has a buffet of options for prayers and devotions, and not every prayer will be helpful for every Catholic, but one prayer that Fr. Meyer and I both pray is the "Angelus". We start every morning in the rectory chapel with the Angelus at 6am. The Pope every Sunday prays the angelus at noon and then gives a short reflection to those gathered in St. Peter's Square.
A parishioner donated cards with the prayers of the Angelus on it, and so I will ask the ushers to come forward at this time and pass out the cards to anyone who is interested, and/or looking for something to do during Lent.
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
Ash Wednesday 2024
2 Things for Ash Wednesday
1) Give up something that you never want to go back to. 10 years ago, I gave up TV for Lent and on Easter I started watching TV again. The next year, I gave up TV for Lent, and after Lent I was hardly watching it, but by the time Lent rolled around again, I was back watching an hour a day. I gave up TV for a third lent...and now, for the last 4 years or so, I don't even miss TV.
2) Pick at least one partner who will hold you accountable. I have always had a gym membership, and I have noticed that the gym crowd swells on January 2nd from all of the people who make New Year's resolutions, but a week later it is always back to the regulars. But I have also noticed another thing...the aerobics classes and exercise classes that meet every week...they keep coming after January 7th and come all year...why...because there is a community and there is accountability..."where's Jan...oh she is on vacation in Florida...she'll be back next week" Maybe you are a part of a Bible study or a small group...let them know what you are doing and meet weekly to pray and talk about how you are doing with your Lenten resolutions.
Saturday, February 10, 2024
Tuesday, January 30, 2024
The Best Catholic Novels
There are a lot of great Catholic novels out there. Here are my top recommendations:
"Lord of the Rings" and the "Hobbit" by J.R.R. Tolkien
“Toward the Gleam” by T.M. Doran…a must for any Tolkien Fan! https://ignatius.com/toward-the-gleam-toglh/
“Atticus” by Ron Hansen…written by a Catholic Deacon, one of
the best novels I have ever read https://www.amazon.com/Atticus-Novel-Ron-Hansen/dp/0060927860
A Trilogy by Brian Gail
"Fatherless" https://cedarhouse.co/fatherless/
"Motherless" https://cedarhouse.co/motherless/
"Childless" https://cedarhouse.co/childless/
The following are all written by Michael O’Brien:
"Father Elijah" https://ignatius.com/father-elijah-fep/
"A Father’s Tale" https://ignatius.com/the-fathers-tale-ftp/
A Trilogy by Michael O’Brien
"Strangers and Sojourners" https://ignatius.com/strangers-and-sojourners-sasp/
"Eclipse of the Sun" https://ignatius.com/eclipse-of-the-sun-esunp/
"Plague Journal" https://ignatius.com/plague-journal-pjp/
"A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens https://ignatius.com/a-tale-of-two-cities-7ttcp/
"Kristen Lavransdatter" by Sigrid Undset https://ignatius.com/kristin-lavransdatter-klp/
"The Death of a Pope" by Piers Paul Read https://ignatius.com/the-death-of-a-pope-doph/
These final two were authored by Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson:
"Come Rack, Come Rope" https://tanbooks.com/products/books/come-rack-come-rope-ebook/?h_campaign_id=436318446&bng_id=1363396189114446&h_ad_id=85212676805031
"Lord of the World" https://tanbooks.com/products/books/lord-of-the-world/
Monday, January 29, 2024
Deaconesses?
Currently in Canon Law, Canon 1370 says this:
"3. Both a person who attempts to confer a sacred order on a woman, and the woman who attempts to receive the sacred order, incur a latae sententiae excommunication reserved to the Apostolic See"
What that means is that no priest can absolve any person who attempts to ordain a woman to the diaconate, nor can any priest absolve the woman who is "ordained". Instead, the priest who hears this in the confessional has to write to Rome in order to get permission to absolve the "ordainer" and/or the woman "ordained".
There has been some talk over the last 50 years about ordaining women as deacons. My question is this:
Can something that is currently a crime in the Catholic Church that a priest cannot grant absolution for suddenly be reversed and become Catholic teaching?
Sunday, January 28, 2024
4th Sunday of Ordinary Time 2023 "If today you hear His voice, harden not your hearts!"
“If today you hear His voice, harden
not your hearts!”
The first
time I ever saw Eucharistic Adoration when I was a seminarian at St. Meinrad,
and I instantly fell in love with it…and I can look back over time and see how
the holy hours have made me an infinitely better person…I still have a long way
to go but they have me infinitely better.
As Father
Patrick Hyde talked about when he came to Dearborn County in November… just as nuclear
radiation in a negative way reorients every atom of our being without us
feeling the effects at first, being in the Presence of Jesus exposed in a
monstrance reorients every fiber of our body and soul and over time changes us
more and more for the better.
The average American
spends two thirds of their waking hours staring at glass screens whether it is
smart phones, tablets, laptops or television sets…and I just want to say that
the only glass screen that will bring us any lasting peace is staring at the
glass screen of a monstrance with Jesus’ Real Presence right behind it.
Starting on
Ash Wednesday, there will be a new perpetual adoration chapel at St. Mary’s in
Aurora…and we also be making an appeal to every parishioner next weekend to
fill out a card to sign up for at least one hour each week at the adoration
chapel.
I was
listening to Catholic Radio on the way to Mass this morning here at St. Mary’s
and a gentleman was recounting how he was baptized a Catholic at a young age,
and fell away from the Catholic Faith…made millions of dollars…but was also
addicted to alcohol…and when he hit rock bottom he went to the Catholic Church
which was locked. He said he walked
around the corner, and there was what he would later learn is a perpetual
adoration chapel. He said he slept in
the room, and when he woke up, he felt such a calm sense of peace, and that
time in the adoration chapel put him back on the right course.
Next weekend
after all the Masses, we will be asking you to sign up for an hour. I love the psalm from today for many reasons,
and it is “If today you hear His voice, harden not your hearts..” so Fr. Meyer
and I just ask that you spend this coming week asking Jesus to show you what He
wants from you in regard to an hour of adoration.
Saturday, January 20, 2024
Saturday, January 6, 2024
Homily for Epiphany 2023
Homily for the Epiphany, 2023
“And having been warned in a dream
not to return to Herod, they departed for their country by another way.”
In this
action of the Magi, returning to their country by another way, many Church
Fathers and Saints have seen this as a metaphor for what happens when EACH of
us encounters Christ…we take a new path after encountering Christ. And we all encounter Jesus Christ every time we come to Mass!
We live in a
culture that is saturated with gossip and slander…there are gossip tv shows,
gossip magazines, gossip websites, gossip newspapers and even entire cable
channels devoted 24 hours a day to celebrity gossip and slander.
All the
social media platforms reward you for gossiping and slandering other people.
I used to
gossip all the time…I would gossip and slander other people from sun up to sun
down. But I bought an audio version of
the New Testament about 5 years ago, and listening to it over and over again, I
was struck particularly by how so many sins committed with our speech, if left
unconfessed, the New Testament authors say those sins will keep us out of
Heaven.
Saint Paul
says in First Corinthians chapter 6 That slanderers will not inherit the
Kingdom of God.
Saint Paul
tells the Galatians that “The acts of the flesh are obvious: discord, fits of
rage, dissensions…I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this
will not inherit the kingdom of God.”
The Book of
Proverbs talks over and over again about how those who spread gossip are
destined for calamity
Jesus says
what goes into the mouth does not defile a person, but what comes out of the
mouth is what defiles them.
Even
spreading something we KNOW to be true about another person is a sin if it
paints that person in a bad light…that sin is the sin of detraction. Of course we need to tell the proper
authorities if we see something happen that is a crime, but detraction is along
the lines of “You won’t believe what I saw Lysander do this morning…”
I have two
things to be particularly in rooting out the sins of gossip and slander from my
life:
1 Monthly
confession
2 Now, any
time I am tempted to gossip or slander someone, I stop and pray a Hail Mary for
that person in my head
The
Catechism says “everyone enjoys a natural right to the honor of his name and
reputation and to respect.”
In Ephesians
4 St. Paul says that we should “say only the good things that people need to
hear, things that will really help them”
I used to
come to my parents, and spend the first of couple of minutes “venting” to them
about all the “problems” but I also realized about 5 years ago that “venting”
1 Is not “saying
only the good things that people need to hear, things that will really help
them”
2 Does not
do any good for my family and friends, and wastes their time
Let us
resolve to totally change our course, like the Magi to take a new road home,
because our speech can often get us in trouble, and sins of gossip and slander
and detraction, if left unconfessed, will keep us out of Heaven.
Let us
instead commit to the new road home of saying only the good things that people
need to hear
Thursday, January 4, 2024
A Homily from then-Cardinal Ratzinger 40 years before his death
This is an excerpt from a homily Cardinal Ratzinger gave about 40 years before he died on December 31st, 2022:
"This year is ending. This means, as always, that we spend a few minutes in reflection. We draw up balance-sheets and make an effort to anticipate what the future may bring. For a moment we become conscious of the strange thing called "time," which otherwise we simply use without thinking about it. We feel both the melancholy and the consolation of our own transiency. Much that caused us distress, much that weighed us down and seemed to make progress impossible, has now passed and become quite unimportant. As we look back, difficult days are transfigured in memory, and the now almost forgotten distress leaves us more peaceful and confident, more composed in the face of present treats, for these too will pass. The consolation of transiency: Nothing lasts, no matter how important it claims to be. But this compromise, also has its discouraging and saddening aspect. nothing lasts, and therefore along with the old year not only difficulties but mush that is beautiful has passed away, and the more we move beyond the midpoint of our lives, the more poignantly we feel this change of what was once future and then present into something past. We cannot say to any moment: "Stay a while! you are so lovely!" Anything that is within time comes and then passes away."
Wednesday, January 3, 2024
The final battle will be over marriage and the family
“The final battle will be over Marriage
and the Family”
One of the 3
children who were graced with visions at Fatima in 1917 was Lucia dos Santos. Our Blessed Mother asked the 3 children in
1917 to let everyone know that there would be a great miracle, and when that
day and time arrived, the Sun darted all over the sky for several minutes, and was
witnessed by over 70,000 people, some were atheist and non-Catholic newspaper reporters
and photographers who witnessed the Sun moving all over the sky. Lucy has since died, and Pope Francis several
years ago made her a venerable, putting her on the path to Sainthood.
Lucy said,
before she died, “The final battle between the Lord and the kingdom of Satan
will be about Marriage and the Family. Don't be afraid because whoever works
for the sanctity of Marriage and the Family will always be fought against and
opposed in every way, because this is the decisive issue.”
We have seen
marriage and the family in the United States under assault for at least the
last 100 years, and more recently marriage and the family have been under
attack even from WITHIN some corners of the Catholic Church.
And so I
just want to say tonight that those who are in a marriage recognized by the
Catholic Church, and who are open to life…THANK YOU!
As a priest,
just know that I am SO inspired by all of you that are living out your marriage
as the calendars prepares to turn to 2024…I know it is not easy but marriages
and families that are pursuing holiness INSPIRE me and every other priest.
We have some
great readings this weekend about marriage…about wives being submissive to
their husbands and about husbands loving their wives as Christ loves the Church…I
think it is important to recognize that Jesus says in another Gospel passage, “The
rulers of the gentiles LORD it over them, but among you it shall not be so. Whoever among you wishes to be great will
become the SERVANT of all…” True authority
comes not from exerting power over another, but from serving everyone.”
Again, thank
you to all the families in this parish trying to make it work…may the Holy
Family intercede for all of us today and every day!