2022 Annual Catholic Appeal

2022 Annual Catholic Appeal

During the weekend of February 26, we will have the opportunity to come alongside those who are suffering through the Annual Catholic Appeal. Each of our gifts, no matter the amount, makes a difference in someone’s life.

25% comes back to our parish for our own outreach to those in need. Prayerfully consider what you can give this year.

Please designate St. Catherine of Siena Parish, Vallejo - 425.

On Happiness

Both in his words and in his life Jesus contradicted the common wisdom about what constitutes human happiness. True happiness does not come from wealth or power or pleasure. Happiness comes from seeking the kingdom of God above all human quests. Jesus’ beatitudes are a discourse on the nature of true happiness.

Everybody wants to be happy. Nobody is satisfied to just exist. Something in each one of us longs for something more - a better quality of life; we long for something deeper, higher. This longing is an important part of what it means to be fully human. The problem is in our understanding of where and how do we find true happiness.

In our society, we have access to all kinds of fun, entertainment, excitement, thrills and pleasures this modern age can afford. Businesses have come up with ingenious television commercials telling us that happiness is found in the goods and services they sell. Brilliant advertising tells us that happiness is located in Las Vegas or Cache Creek or Graton or Hawaii or in Disneyland.

The lifestyles of those we call celebrities suggest that happiness is found in excessive wealth and unrestrained permissiveness…lifestyles in which anything goes… people doing whatever they want to do… regardless…

Our economy is fueled and depends upon people wanting more and therefore buying more, spending more…. Consumerism, materialism… trying to find happiness, satisfaction out there.

But, reality check - sooner or later, people realize that what all these voices offer is just temporary pleasure - thrills…just fleeting emotions; not true lasting happiness…too superficial to reach our deepest longings…

I am not saying it is wrong to have fun and have nice material things or pleasant experiences. Life cannot be all work….Simple pleasures of life are important… But we need to get our priorities straight…and focus on what really matters in life… what life is really all about.

Jesus said: "But seek first God’s kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you. (Mt 6:33) …

  • Meaning – If our heart belongs to God – our friendships, our relationships, our business and entertainment interests, everything in our life falls into right order around God, the center of our life… God is the Supreme Good… The Summum Bonum.

  • In Christian philosophy – The Supreme Good is believed to be not just the best thing one could ever have but also that good which contains in itself or brings along with it all other good and desirable things, that which completely satisfies the otherwise insatiable desires of the human heart and God is the Supreme Good.

People think that happiness is situational… meaning… that they can expect to find happiness if only certain external circumstances would change….They think they will be happy when certain situation or event happens…. when summer comes, or after the wedding, or when they get the new job, or new house or new car or when they retire… or when their children are out of the house.

You know what - if we think this way, happiness becomes like a mirage on the highway – continually vanishing as we approach.

In the beatitudes, Jesus is speaking the truth about happiness… which can be found within us – not out there… not depending on circumstances.

One famous spiritual author wrote (William Barclay): “A change in fortune, a collapse in health, the failure of a plan, the disappointment of an ambition, even a change in the weather, can take away the fickle joy the world can give. But the Christian has the serene and untouchable joy which comes from walking for ever in the company and in the presence of Jesus Christ.”

Sometimes we cannot help what happens to us… sometimes things happen beyond our control but we can, however, determine and can control what our response will be… even with this pandemic, we can control how we react to circumstances.

St. Paul wrote his letter to the Philippians and he wrote this while he was in prison and he even thanked them for their concern. He said: “I am not complaining, for I have learned to be content in whatever situation I find myself.” (4:11) Rather than being at the mercy of his circumstances, St. Paul has learned to transcend them… to rise above them.

St. Paul shared his secret: “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” Christ is the key.

What is the difference between the people whom Jesus calls “Blessed” and those to whom he says, “Woe to you?” Those who are blessed have put their trust in God instead of in the world. Those to whom he says, “Woe to you” – are those who found their joy in the material world.

From our first reading from the book of the prophet Jeremiah – so beautiful:

“Blessed is the one who trusts in the LORD,
whose hope is the LORD.
He is like a tree planted beside the waters
that stretches out its roots to the stream:
it fears not the heat when it comes;

its leaves stay green;
in the year of drought it shows no distress,

but still bears fruit.”
Wow! What an awesome imagery of the life in God…life in Christ…

You see - we cannot be truly happy without our personal intimate relationship with God – meaning - Fullness of life… true happiness… is the result of redemptive relationship with God and loving relationship with other people… and Jesus Christ is the key. Jesus is fully God and fully human and so through Jesus we can experience both oneness with God and unity with one another… becoming One Body of Christ… children of God, our Father.

Those who are truly happy are those who found happiness not in the tables in the world’s finest restaurants but in the Lord’s Eucharistic table… Holy Communion with God and with one another – through Christ, with Christ and in Christ. True happiness is within the person whose heart has been transformed by the living Christ. That is why St. Paul said: “It is no longer I who live; it is Christ who lives in me.”

Jesus pointed the way to happiness in giving us the two greatest commandments: “Love God with your whole being, and love your neighbor as yourself.” Meaning - Happiness comes to those who forget themselves – Happiness comes to those who have sacrificed all thoughts of happiness for the sake of a higher purpose. We are called to a higher standard of living and loving.

We cannot and should not pursue happiness for its own sake…It has been said: “Make happiness your pursuit, and it leads you on a wild-goose chase.”

Happiness is actually what we discover as a result of pursuing something higher or more noble… which is doing the will of God and loving other people. In basis simple term: If you want to be happy; then make other people happy. Happiness is not the goal of life. Happiness is actually God’s gift to those who have found the true goal of life… which is Oneness with God.

So, the question is: Are you happy? If not, why not?

Personally, when asked, why are you happy, Deacon? I reply "Because God loves me!" That's it! That is the basis of our dignity and worth and hope and joy. God loves us. Nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus.

When faced with life’s struggles, I just try to remember how God has been so miraculously good to me and my family, beyond what we could have ever imagined.

You see - until we truly really believe that God loves us, we cannot truly love ourselves and therefore, we cannot truly love others "as we love ourselves"

So, always remember this – you can forget everything I said earlier… remember this till the day you die: regardless of the circumstances or situations you might find yourselves in, ALWAYS REMEMBER: GOD LOVES YOU! GOD LOVES YOU! GOD LOVES YOU!

St. Augustine said: “You created us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you…”

God bless…


On Love

Our second reading from St. Paul’s letter to the Corinthians - the great reflection on love …is one of the most beautiful passages in all of Sacred Scripture. We often hear it on weddings.

Actually, the reason why St. Paul wrote this was because the community was celebrating the Eucharist – incorrectly.

You see, the early Christians gathered together on Sundays – like we do - in obedience to the Lord's command: "Do this in memory of me." So, they shared a meal just as Jesus shared a meal with his disciples at the Last Supper. During those gatherings, the needs of the community were taken cared of…. Foods were shared in common. They brought enough so that the poor members of the community had enough also
The Eucharist was being celebrated as part of a full meal but things started to break down. Factions and cliques – or exclusive groups - were forming even as the Corinthians gathered to celebrate the Lord's Supper. The rich were bringing good food and drink only for themselves and their friends… while the poor were being neglected and were left to take care of themselves. Come to think of it - this does not seem too different today in some form or another… with all due respect.

So, St. Paul corrected the Corinthians by going right to the heart of what the Eucharist is all about… that…at the Lord's Supper, everyone shared the One Bread of Christ, making the participants one body, one community of love…and he pointed out that the division into factions - with the rich neglecting the poor, even treating them with disrespect or ignoring them as in conflict with the communal nature of the Church…. As Christ called His Church to be.

So, St. Paul talked about Christian community – as we heard from last two Sundays’ second readings also – St. Paul pointed out that the various gifts of the members of the community – wisdom, understanding, prophesy, speaking and interpreting tongues, and so forth – they all flow from the same Holy Spirit.

…One gift is not more important than the other, one member of the community is not more important than another. Together – all - with their gifts - compose the unified or One Body of Christ. Do you see how it also applies to us today?As we heard in today’s second reading, St. Paul emphasized that the gifts of the Holy spirit are useless, meaningless, without love…

Even if you speak in angelic tongues, even if you comprehend all mysteries; even if you give your body to be burned, even if you give a lot to the poor, but if you do not have love, you gain nothing.

St. Paul was basically telling the church how to be church…Eloquent sermons are not enough…. Exercising even radical faith is not enough… even feeding the poor, taking care of the homeless, is not enough…. For the church to be truly church, the Body of Christ, it must express the unconditional love of God, as individuals and as a community.

St. Teresa, the Mother Teresa of Calcutta said it so beautifully:

It is not how much we do, but how much love we put in the doing.

It is not how much we give, but how much love we put in the giving.

“Faith, hope and love… and the greatest of these is love.

Sadly, with all due respect, we all have experiences of people who claimed to have great faith or to have knowledge of faith and Scriptures but who lacked love. We all have met people who were so stern, so harsh in their dealings with others…. so rigid in what they thought is proper Christianity, that – instead of people experiencing God’s love through them - they actually drive their children and spouse and friends away from their lives – even turning people away from the Church… people were turned off.

Without love, we, as individuals and as Church, are nothing.

St. Paul wrote: “If there are prophecies, they will be brought to nothing; if tongues, they will cease; if knowledge, it will be brought to nothing.”

- Meaning – when we die - all our gifts become nothing – only love remains or survives… So, our focus should not be so much on the gifts of the Holy Spirit… they were given to us for us to grow in our faith – in our relationship – in our Oneness with God…. And our ultimate focus must be on living the Love of God – learning to love God not because of what He gives us but loving God and each other because we ourselves have become Love… not a matter of doing or giving but it is a matter of the heart, a matter of Being… being Love as God is Love.

We were created in the image and likeness of God who is Love and so our very nature is to Love… Not so much to be loved…but to love… and Be Love in existence.

God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, God became one of us - human, so that – through Christ - we can become as He is – divine love… we share in the divine life of God.

We heard in the reading: “At present we see indistinctly, as in a mirror (meaning -just getting a glimpse of God), but then, face to face – when we get to heaven, we see God face to face - At present I know partially; then I shall know fully, as I am fully known.”

That is why - with that awareness and Christian maturity – to which we are all called to - St. Paul said: “When I was a child, I used to talk like a child, think like a child, reason like a child. But when I became a man, I had to put aside childish things.” In other words – calling us “to grow up”…. To grow not just in age but in wisdom… in communion with God…. to go beyond being “minimal” Catholic Christians…. just whatever it takes just to get by.

As Christians, we are called to higher standard of loving.

That’s why St. Paul clarified what love is as we heard in today’s second reading.

It is actually a statement of what is essential for authentic Christianity.

Let me paraphrase: Love is a patient man, a patient woman. Love is a kind man, a kind woman. Love is a person who is not boastful, or rude, or self serving… Love is one who is not quick tempered, or vengeful. Love is a truthful person, a man or woman of integrity. A loving man, a loving woman endures anything and keeps right on loving. No matter what happens, his or her love remains strong.

I suggest, at the end of the day, before going to sleep, as part of your examination of conscience, ask yourself: Was I patient, kind today? Was I boastful, rude or self-serving today? Was I quick tempered or vengeful today? etc. Use the first letter of St. Paul to the Corinthians Ch. 13… to examine your conscience even before going to Confession.

We, the Church, the Body of Christ – share in the mission of Christ, to bring good news of God’s love, and freedom to those who need them.

Let us not be like the people of Nazareth, Jesus’ home town, as we heard in today’s Gospel reading …who refused to hear Jesus’ message…

We are all called to believe that God fulfills his promises through us….we are the Body of Christ – today, now - if only we allow God to work through us.

We were all also anointed at our own baptism and so now, I invite you to claim as our own profession of faith this passage from the book of the prophet Isaiah which Jesus proclaimed as we heard last Sunday - just in case you did not hear it or remember it and about which Jesus said as we began our Gospel reading today: “Today, this Scripture passage is fulfilled in your hearing,”


Please repeat after me:

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,

because he has anointed me

to preach good news to the poor.

He has sent me

to proclaim liberty to the captives

and recovery of sight to the blind,

and to let the oppressed go free…”

Amen… meaning – So be it. Meaning - this Scripture passage is being fulfilled also in you and in me today and all the days of our lives.

God bless…

God's love and Christian Marriage

Today is the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time. As Father has explained before, any Sunday in Ordinary Time is no less important than the liturgical seasons of Advent, Christmas, Lent and Easter. The word “Ordinary” as used here comes from the word “ordinal” or “numbered” – simply - to mark our Sundays… to organize the readings.

Actually, on Sundays in Ordinary Time – we focus on the mystery of Christ in its fullness – we focus more on the various aspects of our faith, our mission in the world as sharing in the mission of Christ…. Who calls us to live out, to express in our daily lives the messages of the various solemnities of the Christmas and Easter seasons.

So, the question is: Is the message of Christmas clear to us. How is our faith in the resurrection of Christ expressed in our lives; in our attitudes?

Christmas reminds us of how life ought to be all year round. .. life filled with sense of self-giving, joy, peace and hope… regardless of this pandemic or circumstances we might find ourselves in… because Jesus – Emmanuel is always with us – Christ has conquered sin and death….and so we become ourselves the manifestation of the Love of God in the flesh…. for others… the message of the Epiphany.

Epiphany continues beyond the Christmas season.… God continually reveals Himself and His love for us – sometimes in extraordinary ways and sometimes in the ordinary things of our every day lives.

Today’s first reading from Isaiah and the Gospel reading speak about marriage.

The first reading from Isaiah prophesies that God’s love is experienced like the love experienced in marriage, the love of a bridegroom for his bride…

It is difficult for human beings to understand the love God has for us. God loves us, even when we ignore him; even when we do not show the love that we should have for him. So, for the prophet Isaiah, the best way to explain this was to use as an analogy the love that exist in a happy marriage.

That’s why we hear so often the imagery that the Church is the bride of Christ – who self-sacrificingly gave Himself totally for His bride.

When we see a married couple live out their commitment faithfully; when we see that self-sacrificing love of giving self completely to the other, we get a glimpse in that marriage relationship the love God has for us - so complete, so real, so self-sacrificing… which makes their marriage a sacrament in the true sense of the word… a sign, a symbol of God’s love.

… which means - The Lord reveals himself also in the typical, ordinary events of a loving, Christian marriage.

Before I continue, I need to mention that this is not ignoring the witness to the love of God by those who are not married… This is not saying that if you are not married, your life cannot be as godly….

Whatever status in life we are in… whatever vocation we have…. whether it be as a spouse, whether it be as a priest, whether it be as a religious, whether it be as single… whatever it is….our vocation has been given to us to draw us closer to our God…and in turn to be witnesses to the love of God…in our status in life. This is the universal call to holiness….

Today I just would like to focus on Christian marriage in the light of our readings today…and because the concept of marriage, particularly Christian sacramental marriage as a covenant relationship, is in crisis and is in constant attack in our society today. Marriage is being re-defined.

In fact, in my experience, more than half of the parents, often times two out of three of the parents presenting their babies for baptism here at St. Catherine’s are not married in the church.

I baptized one kid yesterday and the first thing I asked the parents was: Are you married and they answered no… How about civilly? The answer was no.

Meaning – many young couples now are either just living together or were married civilly.Somehow, our society presents marriage as a contract as we can see in the movies and many television shows, and in the lives of many celebrities and also within our own families and circle of friends.

Using business language - basically a contract is an agreement of two parties in which both parties receive certain goods or benefit. When those goods are no longer being received, the parties have the right to terminate the agreement. That’s the mentality we see in today’s society towards marriage also. It’s an agreement that can be broken. It’s about what I get, when I don’t get what I want anymore, we can break the agreement.
Similarly, in many cases, when the husband or wife is no longer having their needs met, they end the marriage… as simple as that.

That is why…many people today live together first to see if they will be happy, to see first if their needs will be met and then, when they feel all is well, then they decide to get married.

There was an article in New York times, researchers who expected the widespread practice of ''trial marriage'' to usher in an era of increased marital stability have been surprised by new studies showing that those who lived together before marriage separate and divorce in greater numbers than couples who go directly to the altar.

You might not agree with this, but at least consider this:
If a person enters into a relationship, such as in a “trial marriage”, to see if he or she will be happy, then he or she is more concerned with getting than giving. In those cases, even if the couple eventually decides to get “officially” married, for some it is still impossible to move from that selfish motivation to the Christian motivation which is to give – of one’s self completely.

Marriage is 100/100, not 50/50.

People ask: “But, how is a guy or girl to know that this person is right for him or her if we do not try it first?” What is important and necessary is faith….
Meaning – if you are single and are planning to get married, what is necessary is having Christ in your life, having personal relationship with Jesus, to guide you in your discernment regarding marriage: whether to marry or not, whom to marry, when to get married, where to get married.

When you surrender your life to Christ, he will guide you to do the right thing… to give you the grace to love in a selfless way rather than in a selfish way.
If and when you get married, with Christ in your life, at the center of your relationship, you can love your spouse more than you can humanly possibly love your spouse because it is now the love of Christ that loves your spouse…. And because of the presence of Christ’s love, your house becomes a Christian home; your water becomes wine.

These may all sound too idealistic…. not realistic… but as Christians – we need to continue to have the ideal of a Christian marriage…

The giving of self completely, the sacrificial love of marriage can seem to be impossible. Of course, on our own - it is impossible. But with God - it is not, nothing is impossible with God.

The miracle at Cana of six jugs of water turned into wine (about 20-30 gallons each) is a great image of the generosity of God and His grace…way beyond what we need, way beyond what we can ever imagine or expect. We just have to tap into it. We just have to believe and to trust.

We have the Eucharist, the Body and Blood of Christ, the grace Our Lord offers to us today and everyday for us to be renewed in our commitment… whatever vocation we might be in - to be renewed in offering of our lives to God and to each other – in our families, in our parish, and in our world.

God bless…

Time to Examine Our Lives

We may have been thinking about how blessed those magi were. They were among the first to see the Christ child, and they had the honor of bringing him gifts. Yes - they were blessed, but – you know what? You and I are much more richly blessed than they were because we know Christ in an even deeper way than they ever did. We were baptized into Christ Jesus; we are one with him. His Spirit poured unto us at our baptism.

Most of us – I wish I could say all of us – most of us will receive his Body – Christ Himself - in Holy Communion. The magi never did. They never had the opportunity to receive Jesus in their bodies as we do - literally – physically receive Jesus – body, soul and divinity in Holy Communion. You see – that is how much more blessed we are!

Today is the feast of the Epiphany – not Feast of Three Kings – but Feast of Epiphany - which means manifestation. To manifest means to make something or someone easily perceived by the senses especially by the sight and understood by the mind – to make obvious.

The Feast of the Epiphany is NOT about the Three Kings or Magi or Wise Men bringing gifts - it is about God revealing Himself - in the person of Jesus Christ - not only to the Jews but also to the Gentile world – represented by the Magi - which is us – because - God is the God of all creation. God wants everyone to be saved.

Our gathering hymn is so beautiful – “All are welcome; all are welcome in this place.”

The beauty of the Catholic Church - is that – that of being catholic, universal. The Church cannot be the Mystical Body of Christ; cannot be God’s living sacrament of His love unless the Church is open to all… welcoming to all.

Our problem is often with people who claim to have “found the Lord” – or who claim to have experienced the presence and love and the power of the Lord in their lives and yet are uncharitable, impatient and intolerant of others.

You see - if we are intolerant, unkind, impatient, not generous towards others, then others will be denied seeing or experiencing God’s presence in us.

God reveals himself to us - so - we can reveal Christ to others, to be Epiphanies (so to speak) of the Lord for others, to be living sacraments of God’s love; to proclaim the Good News of God’s love by our very lives – the very purpose of our existence, of our life.

We must reveal Jesus to people who do not know him. We must reveal Jesus to people who need to know him better, like our families, friends, and neighbors. I’m sure that all of us can think of people who are the face of Christ to us. We, in turn, must be the face of Christ to others…and reveal his presence to others.

Each of us are called to let the light of Christ shine through us and brighten our own corner of our troubled world… because so many people live in darkness… with no hope, no peace, no joy; many are not experiencing love…wandering from one pointless, frustrating experience to another.

People seek for “light”, happiness, hope but do not know where to find it. It is up to us to show the presence of the Lord to others.

The magi worshipped Jesus and gave him their most valuable gifts. And so, the question is: What would be our most valuable gift that we could give to the newborn Jesus? There is no greater gift we could give than the gift of ourselves… and the question is - What is this life or selves we are offering to God?

A new year is a good time to examine our lives – our selves… It is a good time to look and ask ourselves: Where have we been, where are we in our lives – what have been the focus of our lives? Where are we going – what are we planning to do with our lives?

Are we better persons today than we were a year ago? Better yet: Are we better Christians than we were a year ago?

Do we see a need to change the course and direction of our lives? – Just as the three magi after finding Christ, after worshipping Him and presenting Him with gifts – as the gospel says - “They went back to their own country by another way…” Meaning – to truly encounter Christ is to be transformed.

In looking at our lives – where we have been –we need to remember - No matter what we have done, no matter how bad we may seem to have been, no matter what the world has done to us, there is always the grace of God. There is always forgiveness available. There is always the possibility of beginning again. In Christ, we are a new creation.

Yes - We are sinners; and we cannot save ourselves and so, we stand in need of grace. We need a savior.

Christmas celebrates the Incarnation. Incarnation means God becoming one of us in the flesh. Therefore, Incarnation means the coming of help from beyond ourselves… because we cannot save ourselves. We are helpless and we are lost in the journey of life without Christ.

The good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ is that God accepts us as we are, even in our failures and sin. God’s love is greater than our sin. God offers forgiveness and new life. Our salvation lies in accepting God’s forgiveness… in cooperating with the grace of God.

With Christ – everything is new…He is the Good News of God’s infinite love and mercy. That is why He is the Good News… “new”.

Christmas is a summons – a call - to each one of us to allow the love and compassion of Jesus to become flesh in our lives – so to speak… That is why we hear: “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.”

To follow Christ is a decision we have to make every day – and intentions or making New Year’s Resolutions are not enough. If our goal in life is to be like Christ – to be in communion with God – to be epiphanies of God’s love to others - but – if we go back to the same daily habits of selfishness, self-centeredness, intolerance, dishonesty and compromising our Christian values – we will never be another Christ.

We are called to be other Christ in the world. Like Mary, we are called to give birth to Christ in our lives, so to speak.

So, as we put away our Christmas lights and decorations, PLEASE! let us NOT ALSO put away in a box and storage the Spirit of Christmas. Christmas actually reminds us of how life ought to be all year round. .. life filled with sense of self-giving, joy, peace and hope… regardless of this pandemic or circumstances we might find ourselves in.

So - Let us pray that in receiving the Eucharist - Sunday after Sunday, and for some - day after day - that we might be transformed even little by little, into Christ… that we become what we receive… the Body of Christ.

At every Mass - the priest would say: “Lift up your hearts.” And we respond: “We lift them up to the Lord.” Let us pray that we all really mean it – consecrating our lives to God - not only in words but to be expressed in our daily lives… that we lift up our hearts to God everyday - and do His will everyday.

At the end of the Mass – when the priest or deacon says: “Go in peace – Glorifying the Lord by your life.” – let us pray that we really mean from our hearts – our response – “Thanks be to God!” and really be living Sacraments of God’s love… that when others see us, may they not see us - but Christ shining through us.

God bless… Holy Grace-filled Christ-centered New Year to all!

The Presence of God

As we heard in the Gospel, St. Luke mentioned the big names of historical first century Palestinian rulers to emphasize that the birth of Jesus, the Incarnation actually happened at a concrete time and place in history. Meaning -it is not just an abstract idea.

“All flesh – meaning - all people - shall see the salvation of God.”

What does salvation mean? When a person says, “I have been saved by the grace of God through Christ”, - it is theologically correct – but – for many – it may still sound abstract or mystical…

– so - what does salvation mean for each one of us in our daily life?

The Scriptures made salvation clear and concrete in the life of Christ.

Meaning - Jesus did not just preach or talk about it. He made salvation visible with His life…

He made God - a redeeming, saving, loving God - visible… so that all people could see him and know what God is like… Jesus is the Word of God, the Wisdom of God, the Love of God made visible… and the “Word became flesh”…

The doctrine of salvation becomes more understandable when it becomes visible in someone’s life. When you see love in action, you may not really be able to explain it, but you know what it is.

For example - at school - a teacher who cares for her students. She gives extra time to a student who is having difficulty. She comes early or she stays late. There is no extra pay. She is not even recognized for what she does. She does not have to do it… but, she is serious about her work and she cares about her students. You may not be able to explain that, but you recognize dedication when you see it. We can say the same thing about our parish ministers and volunteers.

Salvation has to do with people’s character and quality of life. And the greatest need of the church today is for that kind of preaching. People who are real and honest and loving and kind –they make salvation visible, and a visible salvation is the easiest kind to understand.

Not everyone can preach beautiful sermons or deliver lectures, but anyone can make salvation visible… How? with our own lives… just as Jesus did.

Jesus said: “As I have loved you, so you also should love one another. This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another." (John 13:34-35)

In the Acts of the Apostles, “When the people saw the courage of the disciples, they were amazed and recognized them as companions of Jesus - that they had been with Jesus.” (Acts 4:13)

St. Paul wrote to the Galatians: “The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, and self-control.”

What is salvation? – it means all these things – having Jesus Christ in your life and therefore having those traits or virtues in your character.

When people look at you, when they deal or interact with you – do they see in you - love, and courage, and patience, and kindness, and self-control? Do they see humility, joy? Do they see someone who is at peace, who is patient, kind, gentle?

Salvation is not something mystical or magical, but something real and moral.

A life changed by the grace of God is a great image of salvation that people can see and which – people can understand and cannot deny.

To illustrate with a story - A new convert to Christianity was asked by his atheist peers about certain details on the life of Christ. He was not able to answer several of their questions about the life of Jesus and they started to mock him.

The convert just said: “I am just a simple man. I may not know all about the details on the life of Christ, about his miracles, but this much I know. I was an alcoholic, an addict and my life was a mess. I lost my job. I was in poor health. My wife and kids did not even want to be in the same room as I was… but when I surrendered my life to Christ, with Christ in my life, I found new meaning and purpose in my life.

I now have a new job and I have started to work things out again with my family… all by the grace of God through Christ. That’s miracle enough for me.”

So – my brothers and sisters in Christ - what difference did Christ make and continue to make in your life? How is salvation made visible in your life?

One person in whose life - Christ is real - is worth a thousand arguments.

When people look at you and see the joy and peace and serenity that radiates from you, regardless of what you are going through, they would like to be like you. They would like to be your friends.

And when that happens - then – you can in turn help them by showing them the way… like what John the Baptist did: “Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths..,” - so others will also encounter God personally.

The experience of God is like the experience of love. You can tell people about love - but they will not understand what you are talking about until they themselves experience it… experiential knowledge.

That is why God became one of us to show us God’s unconditional love and how to love and what life is all about. Jesus is the perfect manifestation of God’s love for humanity.

Christ has already come in Jesus of Nazareth – His first coming. Christ will come again at the end of the world which we refer to as His second coming.

And during this in-between time – between the first and the second coming – The coming of Christ is also happening now – in the here and now - Jesus is knocking on the door of our minds and hearts so that He may enter and make us increase and abound in love for one another and for all… to become more a people of love.

We listen for that knock on the door of our hearts and the question is – Do we allow – are we willing to allow Christ into our lives to become our Lord.

That is what Advent is all about. We are always Advent people just as we are always Easter People. – we are always waiting in joyful hope for the coming of the Lord Jesus in our lives, whenever, however that might be.

The word Advent is a translation of the Greek word Parousia which means “presence” or, more accurately, “arrival” – meaning – the beginning of a presence, the presence of God.

God’s presence has already begun and we the faithful are the ones through whom God wishes to be present in the world. Through our faith, hope and love, God wants His light to shine in the world… through us.

We are waiting for Jesus to be fully present in our lives so that hopefully – eventually – by the grace of God - we can say what St. Paul said: “It is no longer I who live but it is Christ who lives in me.”

Meaning - God’s love, grace and mercy – are more evident in everything we do.

That should be the focus of our prayer, meditations, fasting and examination of conscience during Advent. It is not Christmas yet; it is still Advent – otherwise, Christmas will be meaningless.

Like Mary, we are all called to give birth to Christ, so to speak, in our lives.

We celebrate the coming of Christ who made God visible for all to see. Now – we are faced with the same challenge of making Christ so real that people can see Christ through us… in the here and now - so that through us, “All people – all flesh – every person - shall see the salvation of our God.”

AMEN. God bless…

Being Good Stewards of God’s Creation

Homily on “Being Good Stewards of God’s Creation” based on the Gospel of

Mark 12:38-44

We were all created in the image and likeness of God (Gen. 1:26) and so – the question is - Do our lives reflect God’s love, grace, mercy and generosity?

When people hear the word stewardship – the first thing that comes to mind is - Oh! the parish is asking again for donations particularly money. Stewardship does relate to money, of course… but Stewardship relates to everything. Stewardship is recognizing our responsibility to God for everything we have including our lives.

When God finished creating all things, God gave humanity - the responsibility for what God had created. God made humans in charge of all His creation… that is Stewardship… Stewardship is the proper use of all that God has given us…

Knowledge, for example. People know much more now than previous generations because of technology giving us information instantly but the question is: What have we done with the knowledge that we have?

To those of us, who by the grace of God were able to migrate here in America – land of great opportunities. The question is: What have we made of the opportunities we were given?

Stewardship also relates to talents, to emotional strengths, to spheres of influence, to everything…including spiritual gifts.

…Even our faith… is also a gift from God.

If we are doing well in life, in terms of wealth or health, knowledge, physical attributes, or even in terms of deeper spirituality – being more “religious” or faithful than others – Caution: before we look down on others – before we feel so proud of ourselves– compared to others - we have to keep in mind what Jesus said: “To whom much is given, much is required.” (Luke 12:48)… “Much more has been given to you, much more is expected of you…”

This is quite a challenging and maybe troubling news or challegne to many of us who have received so much more of almost everything… As a saying goes - trouble the comfortable… so that they comfort the troubled. (Dietrich Bonhoeffer)

God does not bless us with abundance so that we can grow still more prosperous, but God expects us to share the abundance we have received with those in need. Let us pray that we live in love and generosity – as God has been so generous to us.

We find the best in ourselves when we dare to give boldly and generously.

Yes – admittedly, basic inequalities exist among people: inequality in circumstances, inequality in opportunities, inequality in abilities. So – it is not fair to compare people including ourselves with other people.

Yes - Life is not fair at times but God is good all the time.

We might not find fairness and justice in this world during our life but have this as a basis for your hope: God has all eternity to make all things fair and just for everyone… so, do not lose hope… if you are struggling.

Again - All of us will be judged in terms of what we have done with what we have been given… It is a matter of what we do with what we have… be it much or be it little….

Yes – many of us live in difficult times of financial crises because of the pandemic, but our first reading serves as a great reminder for us. God sent the prophet Elijah to a widow living in the midst of a severe drought and so the widow had only a small amount of food left.

Yet, when Elijah asked for something to eat, she gave him what he asked for, believing that God will provide for her and her son. .. trusting in the providence and generosity of God…and so as we heard in the reading: “her jar of flour did not go empty, nor the jug of oil run dry…”
Here’s a story as another way to understand or to look at stewardship – as an illustration:

There is this great mountain in an ancient kingdom. The king issued a challenge to all his subjects who lived on the sides of the mountain. On a certain day they are to climb the mountain to the top. There will be a reward for the winner.

Obviously - there is a basic inequity here. Some live very near the top of the mountain, while others live near the bottom. Those living near the bottom don’t have a chance of getting to the top before everyone else.

But you see - the king did not say that the reward was for the person who reached the top, or for the person who reached the top first.

At the end of the day of the climb, the king will give the reward to the person who climbed the farthest from wherever that climber started.

As we get closer to the end of the Liturgical Year – in two weeks – we will celebrate Christ the King – we will be reminded more and more about the end times…when we will have to give account of what we have done with our lives, with what we have been blessed with.

Our readings do not specifically talk about it but they are pointing to how we are going to be judged. "Beware of the scribes, who like to go around in long robes and accept greetings in the marketplaces, seats of honor in synagogues, and places of honor at banquets…(yet), they devour the houses of widows and, as a pretext recite lengthy prayers. They will receive a very severe condemnation."

On the other hand - Jesus blessed the poor widow who gave only two copper coins because Jesus knew how much it actually was. It was all she had… compared to those who gave much more but they gave out of their surplus… it is just their extra.

The value of a gift is not necessarily based on its quantity. Those who give more does not mean that they are more generous or that they love God more… because it is a matter of the heart… which God looks at. There are people – with all due respect - who give generously but with selfish motives, with their own agenda or with strings attached.

When you show kindness and if you expect something in return, that is not kindness, that is business…

People see our actions. God sees our intentions.

At the heart of Jesus’ criticism of the scribes and Pharisees is their hypocrisy.

Here’s the message for us - We should be careful not to appear good only on the outside. What matters is what we really are… not about recognitions, not having places of honor… not about receiving honor.

It is a matter of what we are inside… God looks at the inner motives of the heart. God wants us to be as generous as He is – in the true sense of the word…. Not only in terms of time, talent and treasure but God wants us to be generous also in terms of patience with others, forgiveness, sympathy, mercy.

Remember: The happiest people are not those who have everything but those who give everything they have.

Fr. Jerry Orbos beautifully said: As we grow older, our main goal in life must not be happiness, but Godliness; not reputation, but character; not wealth, but virtue; not fame, but faith; not the approval of men, but the approval of God, the Creator, the Source of all that is good.

God knows exactly who and what we really are. As we continue with our Eucharistic celebration – let us ask for God’s grace to be good stewards, to help us live honestly before God, to live honestly and truthfully with ourselves and with other people.

God bless…

Greatness Is Having A Heart To Serve

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI said: “The world offers you comfort; but you were not made for comfort. You were made for greatness.

In the Gospel, Jesus was not really concerned about his disciples’ desire for greatness. He actually prepared them for greatness; but, what Jesus was concerned about was their wrong or erroneous ideas about what it means to be great.

And so, Jesus contrasted between greatness in the eyes of the world and being great in the kingdom of God. In this world, the greatest people appear to be those who are being served, those who rule over others. In the kingdom of God, however, the greatest are those who serve others.

Let us start with our family… The important question is this: Are you in your family to serve or are you in your family to be served? … Your answer to that question is critical as to what happens with your family…

But, we also need to realize that there is a substantial difference between how people usually understand or define what a servant is and how Jesus used the word “servant”…. Meaning … just because one serves another person or just because one is a servant does not mean one is already great in the eyes of God.

Similarly, just because one is poor here on earth, it does not mean he automatically will go to heaven or just because one is rich, it does not necessarily mean that he will have a hard time going to heaven… because it is all a matter of attitude and intentions…. a matter of what we do with what we have – be it much or be it little given our status in life.

In terms of being a servant, the difference is in the servant’s motivation and attitude… because admittedly there are those who serve but for the most part, they have had little choice about their roles in life… Given the choice, they would rather not serve…It is just unfortunate for them as they feel…they just found themselves to be in such a situation/position – serving others - because of circumstances… but it was not their choice.

Meaning - It is not enough to do the right thing but it is important to do the right thing for the right reason. Let us ask always ourselves: why do we do what we do?

What does Jesus mean then “to serve” and at the same time also being great in the kingdom of God? It means to put the needs of others ahead of our own. True love means willing the good of the other. It means to freely willingly choose to be servants, and to make the choice gladly, knowing it is the way to fullness of life and joy….

To truly serve means to serve, not out of sense of guilt – not out of sense of desire for reward but true service means serving others out of love…. For the love of God - rooted in our personal relationship with God, rooted in love.

Jesus himself is the greatest example who came “not to be served but to serve ”…being obedient to the Father…willingly and humbly giving himself up to death – even death on the cross.

What Jesus showed us is not a new way of serving, not a new way of doing things, but a new way of BEING. It is being in communion, being one with the Father.

Christ himself did nothing of himself. He said, “Amen, amen, I say to you, a son cannot do anything on his own, but only what he sees his father doing; for what the Father does, his son will do also”(Jn 5:19) - meaning - the entire ministry of Jesus depends upon his remaining in and belonging to the Father…. And Jesus is inviting/pointing us into this same personal intimate relationship with the Father, the Source of Life… the Source of all that is good.

Just as Jesus remains in the Father in His missionary work, Jesus told his disciples and is telling us: “Whoever remains in me…. Will bear much fruit, because without me you can do nothing.”

You see, even if what we do can be seen as good Godly Christian service, but if it is not according to God’s will for us and others but according only to our own personal selfish agenda, we can do more harm than good to ourselves and to others.

Always remember: People see our action; God sees our intention… what is in our hearts.

If we are not in communion with God and therefore if we fail to live in His grace and if we just trust and rely on our own efforts, if we rely just on our own understanding of reality… Christian life can become extremely frustrating and difficult… if we do not have the Spirit of Christ in us…

…and therefore, if we do not have Christ in us, we will find NO joy, no strength in serving and therefore we will find ourselves burning out easily… which could lead us to resenting our being servant and in our ministry, we will find ourselves and people will notice our being “grouchy” and consequently affecting how we serve others and therefore we could even turn people off or away from Church, and even God.

But if we are in communion with God, then we will know what to do, to whom to do it, when to do it, how to do it, effectively and even effortlessly – joyfully, gladly. There is no such thing as a sad saint.

People say: “I serve the poor because I see Christ in them…” You know what? Actually, if we are One with Christ, He will take us to the poor….and we will serve them as Christ serves them… Christ ministering to Christ… what an awesome reality. It is now the love of Christ that loves them through us.

St. Therese of Lisieux said: “I know that when I am charitable, it is Jesus alone who is acting through me and the more closely I unite myself to Him, the more I will be able to love all.

In the Gospel, Jesus asked His disciples and He is asking us – Can we drink His cup. Jesus suffered, was crucified, died out of love for us.

In our Eucharistic celebration, as we eat the bread of life – Are we willing to accept the consequence of eating the Bread of Life? …. When we say Amen to the Body of Christ - Are we willing to be also the Bread of Life for others?…Are we willing to say amen to whatever God calls us to… as disciples?

Yes, the closer we follow Jesus, he will take us to where we would rather not go; He will takes us to serve even those people we do not even like and whom we would rather not serve.

These are the paradoxes of Christian life. If you want to be full, you must empty yourself. If you want to live, you must die to yourself. If you want to be free, you must be a slave to Christ…

And…Obedience to Christ results NOT into submission but it results into likeness, being other Christs in the world….

Jesus said: “Know the truth and the truth will set you free.

St. Pope John Paul II said: “True freedom is not freedom to do whatever you want to do – but true freedom is to do what you ought to do.” … to be what you are meant to be…free to Love… because God is love.

The greatest joy in the world, true happiness, lasting happiness, fullness of life is reserved for those who are like Christ, who have the heart to serve

So, my brothers and sisters in Christ, if you want to live a great life, if at the end you want to be remembered as a great man or great woman, be a servant which is our highest calling and the very meaning of our lives.

Saint John of the Cross said: “In the twilight of life, meaning – at the end of our earthly life, God will NOT judge us based on our earthly possessions and human successes or achievements, but God will judge us on how well we have loved.'

God bless…

True Greatness

Greatness.jpg

There were these two guys who saw each other at a gathering. The first one said: “O Henry, you have changed! You were tall but now you seem short. You were light skinned and now you are dark. You were kind of skinny, I remember but now you have gained weight. You changed the color of your hair.” The second guy said: “I am not Henry. I am John”. The first guy said: “You even changed your name.”

- That is what we call a mind-set… prejudiced, pre-conceived idea – because no matter what the first guy saw and heard, he was still convinced of what he thinks.We are all like that at times – our minds are so set – in other words, “closed-minded” - that no matter what others tell us – no matter what we see or hear – we do not see or hear anything else except what we want to see or hear and this can lead to dangerous misperceptions of reality – therefore of others… often times resulting to conflict. We react to what we think not to what is reality.

Even in our relationship with God, this prideful attitude manifests itself in trying to force God into our own pre-conceived ideas of how God should operate and that God must adjust Himself to our way of being and acting and thinking… but the Scripture says, the truth is: God’s ways are not our ways.

Our concept or our beliefs about God, what God is, who we are before God; our concept of what life is all about - affect or influence how we see ourselves and others and therefore they affect or influence how we treat others.

Our beliefs affect how we interpret everything. Our beliefs affect our attitude which affects our behavior which develops into character and which shapes our life and therefore affects our destiny.

Accuracy of perception leads to accuracy of response.

That is why it is important for our eyes, our minds, our hearts to be open to the truth. As Jesus – who Himself is the Truth – said: “Know the truth and the truth will set you free.” …. Free from illusions… from prejudice…from blindness… from deafness…free from slavery to sin… Therefore - Free to be the person God meant us to be…. Free to live the life God intends us to live…free to enjoy God’s grace……Therefore, free to love… our true nature… according to God’s will and purpose.

Wisdom is seeing reality, our situations, as God sees them. Wisdom is seeing ourselves and others as God as sees us and as God sees others. That is why we need to pray for wisdom everyday.

The goal of our lives is conversion of our hearts and minds and to be in communion with God… to be one with God…to have the Spirit of Christ in us… to have the mind of Christ … to be in touch with reality, to be in touch with the Truth.

The apostles, even after three years of listening to Jesus’ teaching about service, humility, and true love – when they saw big crowds following Jesus and when they saw his miracles… his growing reputation, they concluded that following Jesus will ensure for them a similarly successful and mostly pleasant life. They concluded and therefore expected that Jesus would raise an army, free them from Roman rule, build a kingdom like King David… so, they started talking among themselves as to who among them is the greatest or the most important. They were already positioning themselves.

That was why when Jesus told them about his death and rising from the dead – it is beyond their concept - they could not understand it – they were so busy entertaining their own ideas…As we heard last week – Peter rebuked Jesus for talking about being killed and so Jesus, in turn, rebuked Peter saying: “Get behind me, Satan. You are thinking not as God does, but as human beings do.”

Jesus has been teaching them about the necessity of suffering and service and all they can think about is power and prestige. So, Jesus corrected them by teaching them the basic principle of discipleship. “If anyone wishes to be first, he shall be the last of all, and the servant of all” (Mk 9:35)… which blew the minds of disciples… This is in complete contradiction with the ways of the world.

Jesus wants his disciples to be great but his definition of greatness is different from worldly definition….

So, Jesus took a child and He placed the child in their midst. Jesus showed his disciples how they should see themselves. Be like a child—not seeking power nor prestige, - not lording it over anyone…

Jesus said: “I have come not to be served but to serve…. Students are not greater than their master…” - which means - His disciples, which means - US – we need to realize that we are all also called to serve… the key to true happiness and fullness of life - which is the way - we could have the best place in the kingdom of heaven.

You know what the Pope calls himself – “The servant of the servants of God.”

Life of service is not just for priests, deacons and religious – it is for all of us. That is why at the end of the Mass… we are sent …in peace … to glorify the Lord by our very lives by loving and serving the Lord in others. We are called not just to be good people – we are supposed to be good for people.

Jesus told his disciples and is telling us that greatness is found in service…especially of the poor – We are called to take care of people like a child – The child represents those who are helpless – poor, alone, neglected - young and old… those who seem insignificant to the world… those who can do little or nothing for us, those who cannot pay us back in return for our good deeds for them

So, are you ready to receive Jesus in the ones who need your help?

Greatness is in emptying ourselves – dying to our ego, our pride – and letting God work through us… being instrument of God - so others can also truly live and experience God’s love through us….We are all called to do this continually.

Every day, every moment of the day you and I are called to consider others over ourselves. Every day we have to resist the temptation to self-centeredness, self-absorption, selfishness. We are to resist the temptation to put ourselves before others.

Every day we are called to be the Presence of Jesus, to be other Christs in the world for others… to be the instruments of God’s love, grace and mercy so God can communicate His goodness… through us.;

Again – the goal of our lives is to be in union with God… beginning now – eternal life is at hand – it begins now - in this life… As we pray “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”

(Twenty-fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time – Cycle B - September 19, 2021)

Are You Listening?

A man walked into a bar and he noticed a guy sitting at the bar with a banana in his ear.

The man thought to himself: “Should I tell him? No. It is none of my business…

But - he could not help it… so, he approached the guy

“Sir, you have a banana in your ear”. The guy said: “What?” The man repeated: “You have a banana in your ear.”

The guy said: “Young man, you have to speak louder, I have a banana in my ear.” (I will connect that to my homily later.)

When Jesus healed the deaf man, the man’s speech impediment was also cured. The inability to hear and the inability to speak frequently go together. There is a spiritual parallel here. Until we have heard the truth, we cannot live by the truth; therefore, we cannot speak and proclaim the truth…

We are all called to be great witnesses to the truth – to the love of God… to the goodness of God - in spite of what is happening in the world… in spite of the darkness and sufferings we experience or see.

Pope Francis said: "In these dark months of the pandemic, let us listen to the Lord as he invites us to begin anew and never lose hope." "It is always possible to begin anew, because there is a new life that God can awaken in us in spite of all our failures."

Listening is one of the most psychologically courageous things we ever do in our own normal personal relationships… simply because listening – real listening – involves seriously entertaining the ideas of the other person. That entails the risk of having to change our minds in response to what we hear.

That is true in our own personal relationship with God. If we truly listen to God, it leads us to repentance; it leads us to conversion of mind and heart – metanoia.

We all want to hear good news. The word Gospel means Good News. So, if the Good News of our salvation through Jesus Christ is really good news, if that is the truth, why are not people hearing it? Why are they not listening? What is it that makes people deaf to the goodness and mercy of God – therefore – people are being mute and not being able to speak of God’s love, grace and mercy …. not only with words but by their very lives?

The past several Sundays, we reflected on Jesus as the Bread of Life and that in our Eucharistic celebration, we become what we partake – we become the Body of Christ – The question is: Did we listen to what God was telling us?

Are we now being bread of life for others… Are we also the source or instruments of hope, courage and strength for others… especially in these hard times…

Do people see the transforming impact of going to Mass and receiving the Eucharist in your life? …that they want to have what you have.

We live in a very secular and even atheistic society. Kids are growing up with very limited exposure to the Scripture and the teachings of the Church… and what makes it worse - the parents do not send their kids to religious education…and on top of that - the parents do not talk to their kids about their faith at home…

So kids grow up and grow old – as the parents do – with all due respect - without good understanding of their faith…. I am not talking about just understanding religion – but understanding what it means to have faith – to have a personal relationship with God and His presence in our lives

Just a Side Note: Here at St. Catherine’s, we have a great religious education program we are proud of. Please take advantage of them and encourage your kids, particularly those going to public schools, to attend religious education. Registrations are still being accepted for the coming program year. (End of my side note)

Some people are deaf to the good news – the Word of God - because they are not in the habit of reading, reflecting and meditating on the Scriptures. As St. Jerome said: “Ignorance of the Scripture is ignorance of Christ.”

On the other hand, there are people who also are deaf to the good news because they think they got it all figured out. We hear people say: ‘O, I have been to so many Bible Studies; I have read the Bible so many times…front to back…I have been to Catholic schools and Catholic universities; have been to so many retreats, etc. - and so, they think they already got it all figured out about God and everything about the mystery of our faith.

They are like the scribes and Pharisees who were deaf to the voice of God and were blind to the true presence of God – standing right in front of them, right before their eyes, in their midst. They failed to recognize Jesus because of their prejudiced pre-conceived idea of what the messiah should be like and how God works.

Some of us are deaf to the good news because they refuse to hear…. with fingers in their ears… so to speak…like the guy with a banana in his ear.

This is the most difficult of deafness of all to cure. It is NOT the inability to hear; it is NOT the lack of opportunity to hear; it is the refusal to hear.

Some people have selective hearing – they hear only what they want to hear – in other words – we call them - Cafeteria Catholics – those who pick and choose and obey only certain teachings of Christ and His Church – whatever suits or fits their lifestyle and preferences.
Some people refuse to hear the challenge of the Gospel because they think they might have to change, and change for them is unbearably painful and they do not want to give up their bad habits or attachments

They are afraid that if they get any closer to Christ and live by His teachings – it will take the fun out of life… they will miss out on the “good” things in life. They cannot be any farther from the truth. What they fail to realize is that Life in Christ – having an intimate personal relationship with Christ – always listening to the promptings of the Holy Spirit - actually leads to true joy, lasting peace and happiness and fullness of life… regardless of the circumstances surrounding one’s life.

Let me end with this story: There was a young girl, wearing ragged clothes, barefooted. Her companions were making fun of her. “You’re a Christian, aren’t you?” They taunted her. “If God loves you, why doesn’t God take better care of you? Why doesn’t God tell someone to give you a pair of new shoes, nicer clothes, better place to stay, enough food, so you do not go hungry?” The girl seemed puzzled for a moment. Then, with tears in her eyes, she replied, “I think God does tell people. But they are not listening.

My brothers and sisters in Christ – God continues to speak to us in so many ways. Are we listening?

The deaf man in today’s Gospel represents all of us, all believers. Apart from the grace of God, we are all deaf, to God’s word.

May the Lord break open our deafness so that we can truly be attentive to those whom the Lord has placed in our lives

Using the words prayed over us at our own baptism:

May the Lord Jesus who made the deaf hear and the mute speak, grant that we may receive His word with our ears and profess the faith with our lips, to the glory and praise of God, our Father. Amen.

Ephphatha! Be opened!

Jesus As The Bread of Life and In The Eucharist

The day after the miracle of feeding the 5,000, the people kept following Jesus and Jesus in essence told the people that they were following Him not because they were excited about what Jesus had been teaching them. They were following Jesus because of the miracles and that He fed everyone.

And so - we need to ask ourselves – Why do we seek the Lord? Why do we follow Jesus? Why do we come to Mass? Why are we here?

Do we love God – for Who God is – or do we love God because of His blessings… or because we are afraid not to receive His blessings if we do not love Him or serve Him? What are our intentions?

Jesus was aware of people’s physical needs – so, he demonstrated his concern for them -- he cured the sick… and he fed them… but His purpose was something deeper and more than food for the body… Jesus wanted to do more than give people bread to eat. He wanted to give them a new relationship, a new life, salvation, eternal life…. He wanted to give them a better understanding of what life is all about.

So, Jesus began to talk about spiritual needs – he offered himself as the bread of life - to raise their aspirations beyond worldly needs but the people had little or no interest in that kind of talk…

That is why if you read the rest of chapter 6 of John’s Gospel, the people found his teachings too much for them to accept – So, as the Scripture says…they “returned to their former way of life and no longer accompanied him.” …because his teachings are just not what they expected….Not in their agenda…so to speak.

That is still happening today…

Many people, it seems, come to Christ and His Church in search of something that Jesus really never promised to provide... and so - not being satisfied – not having their expectations met – not hearing what they want to hear – or hearing what they do not want to hear - they “murmur like the Jews in disbelief” - they drop out of church… and they turn their attention and time to something else.

So – what are you looking for in life? What are your expectations as followers of Christ?

Let me share a few thoughts:

First of all - in following Jesus – admittedly, we expect something that would make life a little easier… at least.

Somehow, somewhere, we have gotten the idea that faith in God – following Jesus - is supposed to solve our problems, free us from our daily struggles, and virtually eliminate suffering. We seem to forget that it did not work that way even for Jesus. Jesus never expected His Father to shelter him from the harsh realities of life. Faith for Jesus was never like a shield. For Jesus, his faith – his relationship with His Father was, instead, a source of strength that enabled him to face up to life with all of its cruelty. Life is hard. Life is unfair.

Meaning – similarly – for us - that means that we should think of our relationship with God, of following Christ, not so much in terms of blessings, comfort or convenience but should be in terms of courage and strength, and trust – which is what God wants from us – to trust Him. Jesus’ purpose is not to make life easy enough for us to handle, but His purpose is to make us strong enough to handle whatever life may bring.

And that - with Christ in our lives - we can confidently go through life’s journey with hope – even with peace and serenity and joy – regardless of the circumstances we might find ourselves in; the life of Christ in our lives nourishing us, his presence giving us the ability to look beyond the present with our eyes focused on our ultimate goal, which is eternal joy with the Lord in heaven… not focused on passing perishable things of this world.

Hopefully, this past year and a half of pandemic reminded us that everything – and everyone, including our loved ones - will pass. Even this pandemic will pass. Even beautiful things and great experiences regardless of how intense the sensual pleasures might be… they, too will pass.

Jesus said: Do not work for food that perishes but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.

Jesus as our Bread of Life means nourishment for our soul, joy in our sorrow, strength in our weakness. It means community, family, friendship with Jesus. Jesus as the Bread of life means Jesus in the Eucharist, in the Scriptures, in the church, in life itself. Jesus Christ means all of these things…Christ is all in all… for those who believe…

Jesus is the Bread of Life that satisfies the deepest longing of the human heart… Jesus is the Summum Bonum – the Supreme Good.

Let me focus on Jesus in the Eucharist – Jesus being present - body, blood, soul and divinity in the Eucharist under the appearance of bread and wine. When we come to Mass and receive the Eucharist, we experience a foretaste of heaven.

We come to Church, we receive Communion, not because it is the rule of the Church but because our journey through life is difficult, to say the least… and so we receive communion because we need food for this journey of life. The Lord gives us this food. He is our food. He is the Bread of Life.

Christ gave his disciples, and He still gives us, His body to eat… the “bread of life,” the food we need to eat often to keep us going… till we get to heaven.

We need Christ in the Eucharist to become the Christ-like people we are called to be. When we receive the self-giving love of Christ in the Eucharist - being strengthened by the real bread of life, then - it becomes possible for us to “truly love God and others” … because it is now the love of Christ that loves God and others - meaning – ourselves becoming what we eat … the Body of Christ… for others.

In receiving Holy Communion, it is very important to realize and understand and to remember that the Body of Christ does not nourish us spiritually by simply receiving it – by just going through the motions – because it is a Catholic thing to do. What is necessary - is - we must believe… we must have the proper disposition – we must have the right attitude - when we receive the Eucharist… We must have the awareness, the faith in whom we receive, Christ himself… that we truly enter into communion with Christ…

…And that we also enter into communion with one another – that is why we greet one another with the sign of peace before communion - because - to truly believe and receive Christ and be nourished by him – by his life – by his Spirit - means that we must commit to live our lives every day unselfishly like Christ.

We must also be bread of life for others… We must also be the source of hope, courage and strength for others… especially in these hard times.

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI wrote: I quote: “Ultimately, the Church draws her life from the Eucharist, from this real, self-giving presence of the Lord. Without this ever-new encounter with Christ, she would necessarily wither…

You cannot touch the Body of the Lord again and again, without being affected by him and challenged by him, being changed and led by him.

… Christ genuinely shared himself out, gave himself with the torn-up bread, so that his life might be ours: that is the incredible event that occurs ever anew. Herein lies the great significance of the Eucharist and it is quite real.” (Unquote) …

… Meaning – Christ is wholly completely truly really present, Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity in the Eucharist.

St. Thomas Aquinas said so beautifully: When we approach the Eucharist, four of our senses fail us because the bread looks, smells, tastes and feels like bread. We can only trust one of our senses – and believe what we hear: the Word of Jesus which the priest repeats at every Mass: This is My Body. This is My Blood.

Amen.

Bread of Life

Homily on “The Bread of Life” based on the Gospel of John 6:1-15:

During this current liturgical year – Cycle B – for our Sunday Gospel readings, we read from the Gospel of Mark but beginning today until August 22 nd with the exception of Sunday, August 15th, the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, the gospel readings will be from the gospel of John chapter 6 – to guide the Church to reflect more intently on the mystery of the Eucharist, the Bread of Life.

The Bishops of the United States have proposed a Eucharistic Revival for the

Catholic community in the United States. Preparations are being made to begin the revival in 2022-23, culminating with a Eucharistic Congress in 2024-25.

Of the seven sacraments - the Eucharist occupies a unique place as the "Sacrament of sacraments": "all the other sacraments are ordered to it as to their end." …meaning – the other sacraments prepare us to receive the Eucharist.

Vatican II tells us "The Holy Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian spirituality." (, no. 11; cf. , no. 1324)… meaning - the Eucharist as our starting point to go out into the world of daily life and it takes us back home to the Eucharist after our journey in the world… so, Source and Summit - that is why it is called the Bread of Life.

Therefore, Bishop Soto wrote to the priests and deacons, the pastoral leaders in our Diocese and I quote:

“We are now inviting the faithful to renew a love for the Eucharist and rekindle a desire to unite ourselves with the Body and Blood of the Lord Jesus.

The Sundays dedicated to the reflection on the sixth chapter of John provide a good opportunity to teach about the mystery of the Eucharist and encourage more devotion to this Most Blessed Sacrament.

Research has shown that many Catholics do not appreciate the mystery of the

Eucharist. They do not grasp being present to the Lord’s Last Supper and kneeling at the foot of the Lord’s cross on Calvary as we offer the Mass.

They do not recognize the real body and blood of the crucified Christ under the appearance of bread and wine.

Many members of our community may still be hesitant, or some may even be

indifferent to returning to the Sunday Sacrifice of the Mass.

The Eucharist also offers us the path to a greater communion of mind and heart in this fractious time (fractious meaning troublesome or unruly time) for society and the Church.” - Unquote

The bishop suggested a theme for each Sunday and the theme for this Sunday is: The Eucharist as the Sacrament of Charity… meaning – as we heard in the Gospel - Jesus feeds the hungry crowd with an abundance. Jesus’ generous charity to us must in turn lead us to concrete acts of charity also towards others.

So – let me start with this - In the Gospel: “When the people saw the sign He had done (he healed the sick, raised the dead, cured the leper, made the deaf hear and the blind see), they said, “This is truly the Prophet, the one Who is to come into the world…”

During these past year and a half with the pandemic and all the other crises, we might have expressed this to God ourselves in frustration – we can imagine people needing or “demanding” God to give more visible signs of His reality and loving presence so we will have deeper and stronger faith…and continue to hope in spite of the darkness brought by the pandemic … which has taken over our lives… We found ourselves afraid and lost.

We lived with a lot of pain and unresolved tensions… that is why very often now we see or hear about people being so impatient and violent and being uncivilized. We experience the pain of sickness, various kinds of personal and professional failure, humiliation, heart breaking losses of loved ones, every kind of disappointments.

Someone has said that an atheist is actually someone who cannot be patient enough with God. There is a lot of truth in that. Patience with God is perhaps our greatest struggle in our faith.

Throughout the Israelites’ forty years in the wilderness, God gave them bread from heaven—without fail. Every morning, they woke to a fine covering of manna on the ground, just enough food for the day. Then, just to be safe, God gave them a double portion on the day before the Sabbath so that they would not have to work on the day of rest. Imagine how moving this must have been for the Israelites. They could trust that God would take care of them—and that he would do it in such a dramatic way!

But over time, the Israelites started complaining… they began to grow tired of the manna (Numbers 11:6). It was the same food, day in, day out, and they lost sight of how wondrous a gift it was. They lost sight too of what their lives would look like if God had not been so gracious to them.

Similarly - How easy it can be for us, as well, to lose sight of the gift that Jesus gives us in the Eucharist – the Bread of Life. After all, we believe that at every Mass, no matter what else happens, ordinary bread and wine are TRAN-SUBSTANTIATED into Jesus’ sacred Body and Blood. Day in, day out, year after year, the same miracle happens on countless altars throughout the world.

On one level, it’s understandable that receiving the Eucharist can become routine for us. We might even begin to lose sight of how special it is. Don’t let that happen! Don’t ever lose faith in what Jesus can do for you through the Eucharist! Before God gave them the manna, the Israelites faced the very real threat of starving to death in the harsh wilderness of Sinai. Similarly, if we didn’t have Jesus’ Body and Blood to nourish and empower us, we too would be lost in the desert of this world. We too would have little hope of reaching the promised land of heaven.

So treasure this gift of the Eucharist. At every Mass, be sure you call to mind what it is – WHO it is - that you are receiving. Let the truths behind the Bread of Life bring you to the altar with a new openness to God’s power and grace.

According to Cardinal Herni de Lubac, Jesuit theologian, after the words of consecration, the most sacred word of the Mass is: “Go” at the end of the mass… reminding us that after having been called out of the world and into the Mass, into the company of angels and saints, having feasted on the Body and Blood of Christ, having been changed and transfigured, we are sent to return to the world on a mission. We must GO to let the life of Christ within us – out - in order to renew the face of the earth… through us.

The celebration of the Eucharist should increase our love for one another and remind us of our responsibilities toward one another. We have a responsibility to share the Good News of Christ not only by our words but also by how we live our lives.

Instead of demanding for signs from God – let us realize that we are called to be the Signs – living Sacraments – of God’s loving presence – to be instruments of His love, grace and mercy for others.

Like Christ, like the Body of Christ – our lives must also be blessed, broken and shared…

Like the blood of Christ, our lives must be poured out in loving service of God and our neighbor.

Every night before we go to sleep, as part of our examination of conscience, we should reflect and ask ourselves: “Was I a taker or was I a giver today?

God bless…

17 th Sunday in Ordinary Time – July 25, 2021

Gospel Reading: John 6:1-15

Are We Religious, But Not Faithful?

amazed at lack of faith.jpg

In spite of Jesus’ great proclamation of the kingdom of God and the miracles Jesus performed as we heard in the Gospel readings these past weeks like the calming of the sea, the healing the woman hemorrhaging for 12 years, raising the daughter of Jairus from the dead, driving out demons from those possessed, still - Jesus experienced rejection because of discrimination or prejudice because He was the carpenter and they know his family so well as we heard in the Gospel today. In short, he was just too ordinary.

The rejection Jesus experienced reminds us that Jesus shared our humanity in ordinary ways. … but He remained faithful and continued to trust in His Father…

What He cared most about - is to be pleasing to God… being faithful to His Father in heaven and doing the Father’s will.

As God called Ezekiel and Paul as we heard in our first and second readings, Jesus called his disciples, and us –His Church – not so much to succeed as the world defines success, but to be faithful and to trust in God.

St. Paul in our second reading was told when he asked to be healed: “My grace is sufficient or enough for you for my power is made perfect or more obvious in your weakness than in your strength.”

Whether strong or weak these days, remember the counsel of St. Theresa of Calcutta: “You will never know - Jesus is all you need - until the day - when Jesus is all you have.”

… And during the past year and a half many people realized that – hopefully. Reflecting on our experiences during the past year and a half during the pandemic: The question is – Did we learn anything at all from our experiences and are we now much better persons, are we now much better Christians – as individuals and as a community - as we were before the pandemic?

Do we now have a better perspective on who we are - what really matters in life… what life is all about …. particularly in terms of our relationship with God and with one another?

Our Gospel story actually calls us to self-examination – as individuals and as a community… to see if we are faithful to the mission Jesus has given to us - His Church. The purpose of the Church, our mission is to carry on the ministry of Jesus, to continue his work in the world.

Looking at St. Catherine of Siena faith community, is Jesus also going to be amazed at our lack of faith as we heard in the Gospel?

Yes, we are religious… but are we faithful? – in terms of downreach, outreach and upreach. Let me explain those three terms.

First – in terms of down-reach. … The word down in down reach does not mean we look down on the poor because we are the ones who help them. But - down reach in the sense of – being like Jesus who came down from heaven, so to speak. He humbled himself to share in our humanity so we can share in His divinity.

Jesus’ mission is to reveal God’s love to all people, to the greatest and to the least. No one was too lowly to be loved.

John the Baptist, from prison, sent two of his disciples to ask Jesus, “Are you really the Messiah, or should do we start looking for someone else?” Jesus said, “Go and report to John what you have seen and heard: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have good news preached to them.”

This was Jesus’ work. Jesus said that someday we will have to answer for whether or not we have fed the hungry; did we clothe the naked, have we visited the sick, and did we reach down to the needy. “Inasmuch as you have done it to one of the least of these, you have done it to me.” Jesus was not just interested in “saving souls.”

He was also interested in redeeming lives, making people whole here on earth. This is the work he left to his church... to us.

So, how is our down reach?

Second, how about in terms of out-reach. So what is out-reach?

Jesus said, “You are the salt of the earth.” He said, “You are the light of the world.” Like Jesus, our mission is to gather and unite the People of God. The church of Jesus Christ is a family. We are a family here. It is not only that we are called to recognize each other as brothers and sisters, it is also that we are called to invite other people into this family… to reach out to others.

The “good news” of the gospel is that there is a place at God’s table for everyone… saints and sinners alike - all are invited to enter – to join the family. The church is to open its arms as widely as Christ himself does, and to be as inclusive as the love of Christ.

So – how has been our outreach?

Thirdly – how about in terms of up-reach…as in “we look up to heaven” - the worship of God.

Father Glenn mentioned at the start of the mass that the greatest way America can celebrate the Fourth of July is in thanksgiving and worship of God. In God we trust.

Although – I mentioned down reach and outreach first – actually our first mission is not down-reach, not out-reach. Our first priority is the worship of God.

Why? Because until we have met God in worship, we have nothing to bear witness to. Until we have experienced the Word of God in worship, we have nothing to say. Until we have received sacramental nourishment in worship especially in the sacrament of the Eucharist, we have no power to love or to serve.

That is why – as we re-open please invite your families, relatives and friends to come back – come home to the church to join us in the worship of God.

Jesus gave an important warning to His disciples – to us. He cautioned that if we ever attempted to live our Christian life apart from an intimate relationship with Him, even if we might exert great effort for the kingdom of God, we would discover that we would not produce any significant results. Jesus said that it is not our activity that produces fruit, it is our relationship with Him that matters.

We are always reminded – particularly the clergies - that if we are struggling in our ministries – we need to re-examine our prayer life… and it goes for all of us. If you are struggling in life, re-examine your prayer life.

Let us ask ourselves, do we have a relationship with Christ or relationship only with our religion. Do we personally know Christ or do we know only about our religious practices and what we are supposed to believe?

Is coming to mass still just an obligation for you – a Catholic thing to do – or is it rooted in your own personal relationship with God – to give thanks and praise and worship to` God.

There might be other ways to measure the faithfulness of a church to her mission in addition to down-reach, out-reach, and up-reach.

Pope Francis said: The Catholic Church must be reformed to create a more missionary and merciful church.”

Again - Our calling is not so much to succeed, certainly not by the world’s standards. Our calling is to be faithful, and the Lord who calls us goes with us every step of the way.

The Lord accepts us just as we are.

Jesus said: “Teach them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age. (Matthew 28:20).

God bless… and God bless America.

Does God Care?

Someone texted me: “Happy Father’s Day” with a reminder that the rest of the year is “Mother’s Day”.

The Gospel reading pretty much captures our experience during the pandemic and I would guess – at least at some point particularly during the earlier months of the pandemic– many people asked: Why does it seem God is sleeping? Doesn’t God care that we are perishing?

Last year – March 27, 2020 - as the world grapples with the spread of the coronavirus, Pope Francis - in front of a rainy St. Peter’s Basilica, before an empty square - delivered a homily of hope - based on the same Gospel reading we have today - comparing the pandemic to a storm that can be overcome only by coming together in faith.

The Pope said: “Just as it happened with the disciples, we too are faced with a “darkness… Thick darkness has gathered over our squares, our streets and our cities; it has taken over our lives… We find ourselves afraid and lost.”

The Pope said that it is “a time of choosing” … as we are asked to stay at home and put social life on hold, people have a chance to “choose what matters and what passes away, a time to separate what is necessary from what is not,”

Today – the big question is: Are we better persons today; are we better Christians today than we were before the pandemic. Because - What a wasted experience if we did not learn anything at all or if we did not change for the better including in terms of our perspective on what really matters in life…. Especially in terms of our relationship with God and our relationship with one another.

Does God care? Do not be embarrassed by that question. In our Gospel reading, even the first followers of Christ had the same doubt… in the midst of the storm, in desperation, they shook Jesus awake and said: “Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?”

The most serious questions about God - come not from theory – or intellectual pursuit or discussions - but from tragedy… We can all relate especially thinking about how we felt during the early days of pandemic. When we are caught in a storm from which there seems to be no escape, then the question becomes real and relevant: Does God care? Does He even exist?

Do not avoid that question and do not be ashamed of it. Those disciples would never have become the men that we so greatly admire without that experience when they doubted but had the honesty to say so. That kind of struggle has always been a vital part of great living and of great faith.

Look at it this way: When a person raises that question – Does God care? – he is at least facing the realistic facts.

Just think of the pandemic, the violence, the natural disasters, wars, etc. that happened during this past year.

We live in such a tragic world, and that if we are going to believe in God at all, we must hold that faith in the midst of tragedy. Does God care? That question is not disrespectful to God.

I do not think there is such a kind of easygoing faith in God that never wonders, that never struggles, that never doubts.

We must recognize that faith has always risen to its height in times of adversity.

The unexpected storm, that almost sunk their ship, played a vital role in the lives of those early disciples. Without it, they would not have been driven to doubt. They would not have wondered if the Lord cared. They would not have learned that the Lord actually, really cares.

The reading ends with another kind of question, not a question of doubt, but a question of awe and wonder. The disciples were saying to one another, “Who then is this whom even wind and sea obey?”

Today – we can relate in a way … as the world re-opens – this is the first weekend we have no more social distancing in the Church, people gathering again, travelling again, businesses opening again… “Who then is this – whom even Covid19 obey?”

But of course, COVID 19 still exists with all the new variants. Hatred and wars, violence, evil still exist.

Jesus said: “In this world, you will have troubles; but take heart, I have overcome the world”

We commonly think that people are most inclined to believe in God when life is beautiful and easy. But that is not supported by the experiences of the great believers. Look at our Lord himself. He saw His heavenly Father in the flowers of the field and the birds of the air. But that was not the place where his faith reached its height. That happened at Calvary where doubt was strong and faith was hard. It was at Calvary, on the cross that He wondered why God had forsaken him. But it was also there that He calmly spoke His final sentence, “Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.”

As long as you and I live in this world, we will – at times - continue to find ourselves in darkness of the soul and we ask God: Where are you? Do you care? Do you hear me? We will probably never get finished with that question. But the very experiences that cause us to ask that question - will be the same place where we find our answer. It is a strange paradox, but faith reaches its height in the midst of adversity.

But - of course, we do not pray for adversity in our lives to deepen or strengthen our faith. The fact is – sooner of later – life will bring it to us - it is the reality.

Perhaps you are currently passing through some rough waters, fearful that conditions will get worse, and not knowing how you will manage if they do. Maybe you are even now at the end of your wits and your strength, and wondering if anybody cares that you are drowning, so to speak.

Our Gospel message today is a great continuation of last Sunday’s Gospel message - on trusting God – God is working although we do not know how.

God is more concerned with calming the storms inside of us - in our hearts – in our minds - where the demons really exist - than with changing things in the world around us….not so much in our external circumstances as in our interior worlds, in our hearts and minds.

Our first reaction to a crisis is to want God to change our external circumstances, but God seems to focus more on calming our inner seas. How we experience the world about us is largely determined by the condition of our souls.

Usually the change that matters is not the rearranging of the world outside of ourselves, but the transforming of our hearts.

… The calming of our inner seas, so to speak - comes primarily through our faith in the trustworthy nature of God’s love. When we know that nothing can separate us from God’s gracious, unconditional love - this is the most durable security there is. “Nothing can separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus, our Lord.” (Romans 8:38-39)

The experience we have of our earthly fathers really affects how we relate to our heavenly father.

Children see their parents, in general, their fathers, specifically, as what God is supposed to be like. Children can more easily relate to a loving heavenly Father if they experience the love – the unconditional love of an earthly father.

First of all, we want to commend all fathers who sacrifice so much for their family – for their children – for loving them so well with the love of Christ…..those who have sacrificed their desires, so that their children could go to school or to college – there are those who even work at least 2 jobs just to give their family the very best of everything, so that their kids can be the very best they can be.

As we continue with our celebration – let us pray also

- For those who have been alienated or hurt by their fathers

- For those who have never known their fathers

- For all kids who lost their fathers through divorce or death.

Let us pray – especially - for all fathers today that they may be more faithful to their duties in the family. Let us pray to God to give fathers the moral strength and the grace they need to become good role models whom their children can always look up to …. Just as we look up to Our Father in Heaven.

Happy Fathers’ Day! But remember, the rest of the year is Mothers’ Day.

(12 th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Cycle B)

The Eternal God Lives In Us

One of the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit is wisdom. Wisdom is seeing reality, ourselves, seeing others, seeing our current circumstances or situations as God sees them.

Our perception or how we see things is not always the correct perception of “true” reality… and it is important to have accurate perception because accuracy of perception leads to accuracy of response.

Let me share with you these two stories you might be familiar with and which I have shared before also but it is worth sharing again to illustrate the point - and for those who have not heard them just in case.

A man walking through the forest saw a fox that had lost its front legs for some reason and the man wondered how the fox managed to survive. Then he saw a tiger come in with game in its mouth. The tiger ate its fill and left the rest of the meat for the fox.

The next day God fed the fox by means of the same tiger. So, the man began to wonder at God's greatness and said to himself, "I too shall just rest in the
corner with full trust in the Lord and He will provide me with all I need."

He did this for many days but nothing happened, and he was dying, almost at death's door – so speak - dying - when he heard a voice say, "O you, who are in the path of error, open your eyes to the truth! Follow the example of the tiger and stop imitating the disabled fox.”

How we see ourselves – how we see reality - what we believe or think what life is all about - makes a whole world of difference… and so it is important to see reality as God sees them… the true reality… the Truth…

That is why we need to constantly discern God’s will for our lives… what we are called to be - and do… by listening to the Holy Spirit within us – by living a life of prayer, by our obedience to Jesus teachings, and faithfulness to the sacraments of the Church.

Today is Pentecost Sunday, Feast of the Holy Spirit – Who guides us to all truth, Who reminds us of who we are - Beloved Sons and Daughters of God, brothers and sisters of Christ, therefore, co-heirs to the Kingdom of God… We are the Body of Christ; we are His Church; we are the temples of the Holy Spirit. That is what and who we are.

Here's the other story:

There was this eagle’s egg that somehow ended up in a chicken farm. The chickens knew that they must protect and care for the eagle’s egg, so an old hen volunteered to nurture and raise the large egg.

One day, the egg hatched and a beautiful eagle was born. Sadly, however, the eagle was raised to be a chicken. Soon, the eagle believed he was nothing more than a chicken. The eagle loved his home and family, but his spirit cried out for more. While playing on the farm one day, the eagle looked to the skies above and noticed a group of mighty eagles soaring in the skies. "Oh," the eagle cried, "I wish I could soar like those birds."

The chickens roared with laughter, "You cannot soar with those birds. You are a chicken and chickens do not soar." That is what the eagle learned to believe. The eagle, after time, stopped dreaming and continued to live the rest of his life like a chicken.

The moral of the story: You become - what you believe you are… you become what you think you are.

Again, perception is not always reality because at times we are so blinded by our own pre-conceived prejudiced erroneous ideas or concepts. Wisdom is also to realize that to learn is also to unlearn our erroneous ideas and false concepts.

A fish asked her mother: “Mom, where is this ocean everyone is talking about? The mom said: “You silly child, you are in it!?

So - Where is God - everyone is searching for? We are IN God… like the fish in the water. God is not out there. God is even closer to us than the air we breathe.

Pentecost is not the commemoration of a historical event. Pentecost is the affirmation of the living reality of God in our lives… the presence of God’s Spirit within us.

A little girl was asked: “Is God big or small?” She replied: “God is so big that the entire universe cannot contain Him… but He is so small that He lives in my heart…” See - The little girl got it! … the Truth.

We have heard and have been taught and have spoken many times about this subject of the same Holy Spirit that filled St. Peter and the other apostles on first Pentecost Sunday is the same Holy Spirit poured unto us at our baptism… heard so often - that we no longer feel the impact of its meaning. But - think for a moment - what an awesome thing it is to say, “The eternal God lives in me.”

So - Please say with me: “The eternal God lives in me.” (Repeat) It think it will do us good to keep repeating this phrase to ourselves… and to continue to reflect on this reality… It will be great to remind ourselves of this everyday….

… May be – say the phrase at the beginning of each day… Because this is a life-changing realization, life-changing awareness - if we truly accept it and truly believe it…. “The eternal God lives in me.”

It is an incredible thought, but it is the unmistakable message of Pentecost.

Gifts come with a mission. The Spirit of Jesus has been given to us not just for ourselves but for a world that longs for love, that longs for meaning in life.

There are people out there – starting with our own family members - longing for an experience of God, longing for the Spirit of Jesus, the Holy Spirit. They are seeking people who know God… who know not just about Jesus... but who know Jesus - and who walk in His way.

They are looking for people who not only know about justice and compassion but they are looking for people who are just and compassionate.

We have the Spirit of Christ within us.

The great work that began on Pentecost Sunday continues through us.

Today and every day is Pentecost…just as every day is Advent – we live constantly in joyful hope for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ; just as every day is Christmas Day – and the Word of God becoming flesh – in us every day; just as everyday day is Lent – because we need to have this ongoing conversion of hearts - dying to old self and constantly renewing our covenant with God….

Just as every day is Easter – Resurrected Christ living in us… We are Easter people… Alleluia is our song and we live in peace and joy regardless of the circumstances we find ourselves in – sharing in God’s divine life.

Today and every day is Pentecost. The Holy Spirit is NO less present today with us – within us – as He was with the Apostles on that first Pentecost.

Remember that the Holy Spirit is IN US. He will reveal his wisdom to you and me little bit at a time, allowing us to grow into holiness at just the right pace.

And so – we pray: “Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your people and enkindle in us the fire of your love. Send forth your Spirit and we shall be created and you shall renew the face of the earth, THROUGH US!!

AMEN.

God's Love And A Mother's Love

Today’s Gospel reading is a continuation of last Sunday’s Gospel.

Jesus said: "Whoever remains in Me, and I in him will bear much fruit ... by this - is My Father glorified, that you bear much fruit and become My disciples" (Jn. 15:5,8).

In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus gives us the formula for bearing much fruit –

“This is my commandment: love one another as I love you.
No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” (Jn. 15:12-13).

It comes down to this: Obedience to God’s great commandment of love.

The word “love” has become one of the most frequently used and misused of words and people attach quite different meanings on the word love.

As we heard in the readings today, for St. John - true love is found not in the way humans usually love but in the way God loves.

To truly love is to give ourselves to what we love, to give ourselves to the people we love. Loving means more than being kind, more than being nice, more than being compassionate. Loving means giving one’s self. On the cross Christ - gave himself to the world - - utterly, completely… He emptied Himself.

That is why Jesus commanded: Love one another as I love you – “As the Father loves me, so I also love you” – and this commandment is much greater than – love others as you love yourself…

People often love because they want to receive something back, even as simple as simply feeling good in the other’s company. Often, before people love they ask themselves, “What is in it for me?”

I will be nice to you if you will be nice to me… I will be kind to you so that you will be kind and nice to me…I like you because you like me… because you say nice things about me and you do things for me… See, how selfish those sound!

The love of God is unconditional – has no boundaries – no limits – God’s love is constant and trustworthy.

Love is not just a commandment of God, love is not only what God does - Love is God Himself… God is love…. Where love is, God is.

We were created in the image and likeness of God who is love and so our very nature is to love… and that sums up the meaning and purpose of our life … to love.

There is one Tagalog song that captures this profound realization and it goes: “Kung hindi ako nagmamahal, sino ako?” – translated: “If I do not love, who am I?” “If I do not love, what am I?”

True love is more than a fleeting emotion towards other people. Jesus did not say, “love each other if you feel like it.” Love is a matter of the will. Love is not a feeling. To love is a choice. To love is a daily choice.

St. Theresa of Calcutta was often asked why she spent so much time and energy helping people who were going to die anyway, and most of them not even Christian. Her answer was that she had no choice. She was a Christian, committed to serving Jesus, because Jesus identified with the poorest of the poor.

Parents respond to their baby’s cries in the middle of the night… Not because they feel like it. They have no choice if they really love their child… and that choice takes sacrifice.

A teenager listens to a friend’s story of family difficulties because his friend needs an ear that understands. The teenager would much rather be listening to music, or playing video games, but has no choice but to be present for the suffering friend. Christianity demands it.

A retiree spends a few hours each day with an elderly neighbor. He’d rather be fishing or golfing, but he has no choice but to visit Christ’s presence in the homebound.

Our parish volunteers and ministers: They would rather be safe and comfortable at home with their families but the love of Christ calls them to serve and they chose to respond.

And on and on. Millions of little routine daily sacrifices - that make the greatest life there ever was - a reality in our world.

Love is sacrificial. When we look at the cross, we realize the life that we have been chosen to lead. We have been chosen to make Jesus’ life a reality. Jesus wants to live His life in us.

Jesus said in the Gospel: “It was not you who chose me, but I who chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit…” It is a gift to be chosen by Jesus and be His friends.

We have been chosen for a mission. We can choose every day to respond to the gift of His friendship by trying to follow His footsteps.

You may not have heard the story of Princess Alice, the second daughter of Queen Victoria of England (1837-1901). The princess married and had a child, a baby boy. When the child was four he came down with a terrible disease at the time called black diphtheria. It was highly contagious. There was no cure and no hope. The doctors and nurses told the princess that she had to stay away from her son. Her own health was frail.

One day as she stood at the door of her little boy’s room, she heard him whispering to a nurse, “Why doesn’t my Mommy hold me and kiss me anymore?” That was more than Princess Alice could bear. She then did what any loving mother would do. She ran to her son’s bed, hugged him and kissed him. She had no choice. She had to show her love. He needed her. Within weeks she came down with the sickness. Both mother and child were buried together.

There is an old Jewish proverb that goes, “God could not be everywhere, and therefore he made mothers.” Mothers are the embodiment of God’s love.

A mother’s love is unconditional. Our mothers love us whether we are beautiful or ugly, smart or dull, able-bodied or handicapped; whether a success or a failure in society, whether we are grateful or ungrateful.

All these qualities of a mother’s love are for us a foretaste of God’s tender and untiring love for us. And this is what we are celebrating today.

We are celebrating mothers because through their hands God cares for us when we are in need; through their mouths God speaks to us words of consolation when we are heartbroken; through our mother’s heart God pours out to us his unconditional love that never gives up on us.

Today we acknowledge and appreciate them and we say, “God bless you mothers.”

Of course, we cannot and should not forget spiritual mothers and the fact that there are women who cannot be mothers – because of one reason or another… but they are so motherly in their own way.

Happy Mothers’ Day!

Divine Mercy and Trusting in Jesus

Deacon Bobby's Homily on April 11, 2021

Babe Ruth, the famous professional baseball player, drifted away from his faith during his career. One night he was very ill in a New York hospital, and a friend suggested that he make his peace with God. As a result, Babe Ruth asked to see a priest. After celebrating the sacrament of Reconciliation, Babe Ruth wrote:

“As I lay in bed that evening, I thought to myself - what a comfortable feeling to be free from fear and worries. I could simply turn them over to God.”

Wow! What an expression of Trust in God’s Love and Mercy.

The greatest message of Jesus in all of the Gospels is Mercy.

In the Gospel of John (3: 17) -"For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.” God does not desire the destruction of sinners but their conversion.

The message of God’s Divine Mercy and forgiveness - that flows from God’s abundant love - is the very source of our hope… the hope that does not disappoint.

As written in her Diary - Jesus said to St. Faustina: “Mankind will not have peace until it turns with trust to My mercy" (Diary, 300).

If you were to take all of the sins ever committed on earth, they would not amount to a grain of sand in comparison to the ocean of the Divine Mercy of God.

The Sacrament of Reconciliation or Penance or Confession – is one of the greatest gift of God to His Church - through which we experience God’s mercy - through Christ – with Christ – in Christ…

But sad to say - unfortunately – people do not take advantage of such a great blessing – such a great gift. A gift is no good unless you unwrap and open it and use it.

Pope Francis said: “The greatest sin today is that people have lost the sense of sin.

As an example, using the biblical episode in which King David falls in love with Bathsheba and sends her husband, general Uriah, to fight in the front line and thus to certain death. It is in fact a murder.

King David, faced with a great sin, but he does not see it as a sin. He doesn't even think of asking for forgiveness. Instead, all he thinks about is: 'How can I resolve this?'

It can happen to all of us. I think we can all relate to this. We are all tempted and we fall into sin. It's part of life's normal struggle. But the problem - the most serious problem is not so much temptation and us falling into sin against God’s commandments, but the problem is our behavior and attitude towards sin.

With all due respect - we have become masters in justifying ourselves. We always find an alibi that explains our shortcomings. People think everything can now be explained away… or rationalized… People just want to have some psychotherapy - or it is always the other person’s fault… everyone is doing it. And so - people do not think in terms of sin anymore, they no longer feel sorry and repentant and therefore, in their mind, there is no need to change and that is why people do not go to confession anymore.

The truth is: Salvation will not come from our cunning, from our cleverness, from our intelligence. Salvation comes from God's grace and how we train every day of our Christian life cooperating with God’s grace.

In the midst of trials, violence and hatred in the world, in the midst of struggles in life, God wants the world He created and loved to know Him in a relationship of intimate trust.

The message of the Divine Mercy is simple. It is that God loves us — all of us. And, he wants us to recognize that His mercy is greater than our sins. “Nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus”, so that we will call upon Him with trust, receive His mercy, and let it flow through us to others. Thus, all will come to share His joy.

The message of Divine Mercy is one we can call to mind simply by remembering ABC:

A - Ask for His Mercy. God wants us to approach Him in prayer constantly, repenting of our sins and asking Him to pour out His mercy upon us and upon the whole world.

Jesus told St. Faustina: What offends Jesus more than the sins people commit is people’s lack of trust in His mercy. Jesus told St. Faustina: “If you think you are a greater sinner than the others, the more you have a greater claim, greater right to My Mercy.”

Jesus said: “Let them come to me. Everyone who comes to seek my mercy, I will not disappoint them.” “I will grant them the remission of all their sins, even if they be as scarlet; even if they be more than the grains of sand on the seashore and the stars in the heavens.”

A - Ask for God’s mercy.

B - Be merciful. God wants us to receive His mercy and let it flow through us to others. He wants us to extend love and forgiveness to others just as He does to us. Our being forgiven of our sins depends on our being merciful ourselves also towards others. As in the Lord’s Prayer: “Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.”

The first step in being merciful with others is to reflect on and be aware of our own sinfulness and the countless times we have been forgiven instead of judging those who have sinned against us.

Think of the “baddest” person; think of the worst people you can think of. Have you ever thought that you are also capable of doing those bad things people did, and do, maybe even worse? – if you are given the opportunity or if you were put in the same situation. So, do not be too proud now.

A – Ask for God’s mercy.

B – Be merciful

C - Completely trust in Jesus. God wants us to know that the graces of His mercy are dependent upon our trust. The more we trust in Jesus, the more we will receive.

"Jesus, I trust in You!" This prayer clearly expresses the attitude with which we, too would like to abandon ourselves trustfully in the hands of our only Savior – Jesus Christ.

When we go to confession – if you still remember – with all due respect - we tell the priest – in essence – we tell Christ… - who is using the body of the priest – we start with: “Bless me Father for I have sinned.” Doesn’t it sound odd or strange? It seems there is some audacity or boldness or even arrogance in those words: “Bless me Father for I have sinned…” It seems more natural or more correct to say: “Give me punishment…” or “Spare me… for I have sinned.” But – to say “Bless me, for I have sinned? “

There is a profound truth there. Blessing is not deserving. Blessing is not payment for good deeds. Blessing is not earned. Quite the opposite, blessing is the gift one receives by pure grace and mercy. Grace is getting what we do not deserve. Mercy is not getting the punishment we deserve.

And - When one receives a blessing - it says more about the goodness of the one who blesses or the one who gives the blessing than the goodness of the one being blessed.

St Paul in his letter to the Romans (5:8) – “God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

Let me close with the Divine Mercy message from Pope Francis:

“God is waiting for us. Let us find the courage to return to His house, allowing ourselves to be loved by him, to dwell in his loving wounds, and to encounter his mercy in the sacraments. We will feel his wonderful tenderness, we will feel his embrace, and we too will become more capable of mercy, patience, forgiveness and love.”

God Bless