| Turning Water into Wine (January 2010)
By celebrating the marriage at Cana with friends and relatives, Jesus reveals to us that the wondrous miracle of love is a participation in his incarnation, full of grace and truth.
A Listening Heart (September 2009)
I want to coin a phrase: There are none as blind as those who will not
listen, meaning we cannot understand reasonably what we do not experience
truthfully.
True Bread of Life
(August 2009)
When I dedicated my life to Jesus, I began to get fat. I know that sounds
counterintuitive. Research tells us that, on average, people of faith
are healthier than the norm. Still, I gained weight.
In Giving Recieve
(July 2009)
As I reflected on a Sunday reading (Ez.2:2-5), I felt it applied to me
in the humblest of ways. It was as though it read, “A spirit entered
into me and set me on my feet…I am sending you to bring hope and
joy to people who are filled with sadness and despair.”
No to Violence (April
2009)
Shootings on the streets of Vancouver or bombings in Gaza or the death
of Canadians troops in Afghanistan: we are constantly reminded of how
pervasive violence is.
Go to the Breaches
(March 2009)
Whether we enter the season of Advent or the season of Lent, I always
like to compare the two. I find it interesting how we make huge distinctions
and tend to forget the similarities.
Transcending
Loss (November 2008)
Death is a life-altering experience, both for the person who dies and
those dealing with loss. Each case is unique; yet some things don’t
change.
Authentic Love
(September 2008)
Among the most admirable traits of humanist decency is the inclination
to treat others at least as well as we ourselves would like to be treated
in similar circumstances. So pervasive is this idea that world religions
share this common ground.
Lift up the
Poor (September 2007)
Sooner or later, progress on the spiritual journey of faith, hope and
love leads us to the path of compassion. Along the way, we come to see
with the eyes of Jesus those set aside by what the world calls “progress.”
Among these are the poor and the marginalized.
Persistence in
Prayer (August 2007)
Most discussions about prayer eventually come around to the subject of
efficacy. In other words, what exactly does prayer accomplish, and why?
The Charter of Christianity
(July 2007)
The purpose of Jesus’ mission was to show us the heart of God. In
a way, that’s our job too. That’s the job of a missionary
disciple, which we are all called to be.
Understanding Love
(June 2007)
For the sake of those of us who need to be reminded of the most basic
truths of our faith, Psalm 8 reminds us of some very key principles.
Peace Built on Love
(May 2007)
Fundamentally, the only strategy that leads to true peace involves faith,
hope and love, and an equal measure of justice, compassion and respect
for the dignity of each individual.
The Wilderness Within
(January-February 2007)
Jesus leads the way in everything: in baptism, in self-giving love and
in rising to new life. But we forget sometimes that he leads us into the
wilderness in order to show us how to come out of it stronger, with a
better sense of our mission and purpose.
Receive to Give
(December 2006)
We often say that “it is in giving that we receive.” There
are countless ways to experience the wisdom of this expression. But the
reverse is also true. The period of Advent is also one in which we must
accept that, “It is in receiving that we give.”
The Church and AIDS (August 2006)
A true theology of love also reminds us that if we are One Body, as Saint
Paul told the Corinthians, our joy is one joy and our suffering is shared
by all. When the least of God’s children suffer, we all suffer,
whether we know it or not. Things are connected more than we realize.
The Gospel of Meaning
(July 2006)
One thing that is often said about young people today – as well
some not so young – is that they are obsessively driven to find
ways of escaping the dreariness of their lives. What lies behind this
is a crisis in meaning. Faith gives meaning and meaning gives hope.
Fear and Faith (June
2006)
Fear is possibly the single greatest obstacle to living authentically.
The antidote is the confidence that God, who calls us to a particular
mission, will grant us what is necessary to accomplish it.
A Holy Priesthood
(May 2006)
Once a year, the Catholic Church implores its members to carefully consider
the present situation of vocations and to pray to the Almighty that he
might send workers into his fields. The implication: either that too few
people are called or too few heed the call, or both.
Epiphanies
in Our Lives (November-December 2005)
Epiphanies remind us that we’re born to be in meaningful relationship
with others and with Christ in others. Seeing that is an epiphany. Our
growth in caring about others can be a cause or an outcome of such experiences
of the essential nature of divinity, and it moves through particular stages,
beginning with indifference, and then becoming pity, then compassion and
later solidarity.
Sacred
and Secular Worlds (October 2005)
“Tell us, then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to the
emperor, or not?” While the law to which this question referred
is the law of God, it raises a number of problems viewed in both a sacred
and a secular perspective.
Standing
for Something (September 2005)
Righteousness is about right relationship with God but also with
ourselves. It’s about saying what we do and doing what we say. It’s
about integrity, which is necessary for living authentically. It makes
us effective when we are right and able to correct our actions when we
are wrong.
An Understanding Mind (July-August
2005)
According to Scripture, God appeared to Solomon in a dream and offered
to grant any wish that he might have. Solomon's response is both surprising
and instructive.
God's "Love Triangle"(May
2005)
When we read of Jesus telling Nicodemus, God so loved the world that he
gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish
but may have eternal life, do we appreciate the implications of that statement?
Called
to Live the Gospel (April 2005)
To be called, as we all are, means that we are significant in the eyes
of the good shepherd. It also means that we are called to occupy a particular
place in the flock. The abundant life that he gives us is a role that
we are to occupy in the big picture of the life of the flock.
The
Passion of the Poor (March 2005)
Recalling the Lord’s Passion gives us a moment in which to meditate
upon the reality of Christ’s great sacrifice, which was made painfully
vivid to us in last year’s movie The Passion of the Christ.
But perhaps more importantly, this sacred moment allows us to reflect,
in the midst of our otherwise busy lives, upon some unfinished business.
The
Sureness of Hope (February 2005)
Hope is the link between faith and love. Faith gives us a reason to hope,
and hope gives us the will to love. Hope is the spice of faith and the
energy of love.
Where
Does the Light Lead? (January 2005)
To those around him, Jesus said, “Follow me.” He says this
still to those who would be his disciples. But where are we being led?
Where did Jesus go when he spoke these words?
Called
to be Saints (December 2004)
The word "saints" appears dozens of times in Scripture, including
numerous references in the Book of Psalms. There are a great many in the
Pauline letters and notable ones in the Book of Revelation. It is almost
always plural. What is implied is a communion, not only with God, but
also with the people of God.
Is
this my King? (November 2004)
What challenges us as Christians is that despite the fact that God offers
heaven and earth, that he offers the abundance of life, and that he offers
freedom, we are so reticent to give what he asks.
Reflection
on Divine Mercy (October 2004)
When we make bad choices in life, the option of returning to the right
road is always open to us. Indeed, God is always eager to lead the way.
And, he is even more eager to do so if we are afflicted by the bad choices
of others.
Reflection
on Humility II (September 2004)
Humility, we are told, is the root and guardian of all virtues. If this
is so, then its importance in living according to Gospel values can scarcely
be exaggerated.
Reflection
on Humility I (August 2004)
There is a banquet scene found only in Luke’s gospel (Chapter 14)
that cleverly teaches Pharisees (and us) the very essence of humility,
and the generosity that humility enables.
Teach Us How to Pray (July 2004)
Each of us has moments of doubt about prayer. We wonder what it is; how
it works and what fruit it bears. We do well in those times to recall
the disciple in Luke's Gospel who, speaking as well for many of us, asks
Jesus how to pray.
Who
Do You Say You Are? (June 2004)
Joy is one of the most complex and difficult-to-define human emotions.
Its quality is particularly elusive when we speak of spiritual joy.
Believe
and Repent, and Believe (March 2003)
There was a time in my life when I doubted the divinity of Jesus.
At that time, while accepting the existence of a historical Jesus, I tended
to attribute his wisdom chiefly to the realm of human psychology.
What
Eyes Have Seen (February 2003)
Major feasts of the liturgical year, their scope reaching well beyond
the day on which they are celebrated, in a sense, overlap one another
to create an integrated whole.
Personal
Epiphanies (January 2003)
This story is about a friend’s sister. It took place several years
ago when she, her husband and two young children moved to a new city.
Her husband travelled frequently. She often felt overwhelmed by her new
surroundings, the distance from friends and family and the demands of
her role as mother to her two children, the youngest of whom was just
a baby.
A
Journey to Perfect Joy (December 2002)
Mary and Joseph journeyed. The shepherds journeyed. The wise men journeyed.
We too journey. We are pilgrims…persons who journey to a sacred
place …to a place deep within ourselves …a place where we
might see in our soul the likeness of God …a place of encounter
with Christ …a place of free and full union with our brothers and
sisters …a place of perfect joy.
Foolish
Bridesmaids (November 2002)
Among the expressions that have stuck in my
mind since childhood is the Boy Scout motto: Be Prepared. While its secular
meaning has been evident to me since my days in short pants, I have more
recently come to see it as also having religious significance.
Robes
of Gratitude (October 2002)
In accomplishing a task, we are generally challenged
not only to choose the right course of action, but also to conduct ourselves
in a suitable manner …to do the right thing right.
Compassion
in Forgiveness (Septemer 2002)
The longer we plumb the depths of God's love for
us, the more mysterious becomes our discovery. We find layers of meaning
we tend to describe in human terms: kindness, mercy, anger, compassion,
and fear of the Lord.
Encountering
Strangers (August 2002)
Encounters define us. Relationships with the people
we encounter on either a planned or random basis reveal who we are, or
who we think we are, and what we are to become. After all, ours are a
relational species and our identity flows from this reality.
My
Burden is Light (July 2002)
If you received an invitation that read: "You are cordially invited
to take up your cross and follow me. Signed: Jesus", would you shout
out: "Yes!"? Would you change your summer vacation plans to
accept this invitation?
Mercy,
not sacrifice (June 2002)
Among the many accountabilities we appear to have
as a mandate from heaven is one that we seldom recall, regarding mercy.
The
Breath of Life (May 2002)
The classic way of verifying if someone is alive
is to "see if they're still breathing". In many ways, life and
breath are synonymous.
Troubled
Hearts (Aptril 2002)
Perhaps what is most bewildering about our
Christian faith is the promise of peace. How can we still be gripped by
so much violence some two thousand years after the birth of the Prince
of Peace?
Lazarus
in us (March 2002)
The story of Jesus raising Lazarus after four days in the tomb poses several
intriguing challenges to the inquiring mind.
Bright,
Salty People (February 2002)
Jesus said to his disciples: You are the salt of the earth…You
are the light of the world. What does he mean by these analogies?
Peace
as One Body (January 2002)
I have in my breviary a beautifully crafted card that I received years
go from a dear Franciscan sister, which contains a wooden cross thinly
sliced from an olive tree in the Garden of Gethsemane and tiny pressed
flowers from the Holy Land. On it are the lovingly hand-written words
“Afin que tous soient un!” (That all may be one).
Holy
Family Time (December 2001)
At Christmas, we celebrated that wonderful day
on which Mary and Joseph delivered Jesus to us, so that we might call
him our brother. There is perhaps no more vivid sense of this than the
one we get from recalling the first reconstruction of the Nativity scene,
something we take for granted in our Christmas celebrations.
Christmas
Time (November 2001)
As I reflected on the season of Advent the other
day, I began to wonder if the reason the people of Bethlehem had turned
their backs on Mary and Joseph was not so much because they lacked the
space, but rather because they lacked the time.
Humble
Pie (2) (October 2001)
To figure out how long it will take to accomplish
a given task, it sometimes helps to work backwards from the time when
the output will be needed. The same is true of a journey. Such planning
also helps to understand what intermediary steps are required.
Humble
Pie (September 2001)
I once sat in a job interview facing someone who
asked me how I would deal with a hypothetical confrontation at work. As
part of my answer, I made a vague reference to the fact that I would approach
the situation "with a certain sense of humility".
The
Hands of Christ (May 2001)
Take a long, close look at your hands. You are
looking at the hands of Christ.
A
Bittersweet Time (April 2001)
Good Friday is bittersweet. It is bitter
because it reminds us of our sorrows - pain and suffering; rejection and
loss.
Follow
the Leader (March 2001)
Some of us remember playing "follow the leader"
as a childhood game. The more mischievous among us may even recall the
"devilish" thrill of leading others through awkward places,
such as water puddles or woods thick with undergrowth.
Blessed
are those who trust in the lord (February 2001)
Everyone is keen to find happiness, but few are prepared to look in
the right places.
The
Heart of unity (January 2001)
When I was in my teens, in 1960s Eastern Ontario, I knew a few families
in which the mother would head out to church on Sunday morning in one
direction and the father in another. Generally the children would accompany
the Catholic parent.
The
Joy of Peace (December 2000)
The last time I meditated on the traditional Prayer of St. Francis, I
understood it from a fresh perspective. Instead of Peace being one of
its goals - along with joy, love, pardon, faith, hope and light - I began
to see how Peace is the crowing gift that marks the achievement of all
the rest. Or at least, that Peace blooms insofar as other virtues are
seeded and nurtured.
The
Once and Future King (November 2000)
Throughout most of the history of civilisation,
authoritarian rulers, often called kings, have governed humanity. Such
kings have had a rudimentary covenant with their subjects in that, in
exchange for some semblance of security, they granted themselves the right
to lord it over the inhabitants of their kingdom.
The
Challenge of Wealth (October 2000)
You can’t read, listen to or reflect on the teachings of Jesus very
long without coming up against the thorny question of whether or not money
is indeed the root of all evil. In fact, you can’t go very far down
the mystical road without making sense out of the apparent inconsistency
between the generosity of God and the insistence of Jesus “to sell
what you own”.
The
Challenge of Tradition (September 2000)
Jesus said that we must judge a tree, if we are
to judge at all, by the fruit that it bears. Also, Jesus roundly condemned
the tree that bore no fruit at all. It may be said that tradition is like
a tree. It may be magnificent to behold. And aside from its visual appeal,
it may provide comfort and a sense of security. It may even offer the
illusion of protection from predatory elements. Yet ultimately, it must
bear fruit. Eventually, it withers and dies and its vitality must shift
to its progeny.
The
Feast of Understanding (June 2000)
It may surprise some readers to see me refer to Pentecost as the Feast
of Understanding. There is great joy in celebrating the many gifts of
the Holy Spirit, but what I think most corresponds to the change that
came over the apostles during the event we commemorate on this occasion
is their meaningful appropriation of the great truths that they had freely
accepted in faith.
The
Shepherd In Us All (May 2000)
There is no doubt that the quintessential pastor is Jesus. In John’s
gospel, we read how he defines himself as a shepherd and attributes to
himself all the best qualities of a good shepherd.
Zeal
Consumes Me (April 2000)
The gospel of John is often regarded as the most spiritually profound
of the four official accounts of the life of Jesus and opens, after the
prologue, with what is sometimes called the “book of signs”.
This section moves through seven episodes or stories that point out deep
theological truths.
The Spirit of Renewal
(March 2000)
Some biblical references have over time entered
into such common usage that they have almost lost their spiritual significance.
Such is the case for expressions such as “salt of the earth”
and adages such as “new wineskins for new wine”.
Be
Free From Anxieties (February 2000)
In his first letter to the Corinthians, Paul tells
the faithful I want you to be free from anxieties. This could be interpreted
to be both a gift and a command. It is certainly a gift in that it is
the key to what is perhaps Jesus’ most significant legacy, namely
the freedom to achieve our full potential. But it is also a command in
that Paul is intimating that we must take deliberate action in order to
access that potential.
Surprised
By Joy (January 2000)
Have you ever tried to imagine yourself as one of the characters in the
Nativity scene? I have, and I’ve imagined myself to be everything
from Joseph through a shepherd to a donkey, with which I am told I share
more than a few characteristics.
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