Liturgy
This link will keep 'parishioners-at-large' in touch with current creative liturgy sources and resources that respect a variety of 'traditions' within the Church.
COMMONWEAL Magazine
A 'lay' Catholic weekly publication with an accent on an intelligent analysis and commentary on curent issues, trends and concerns of interest to Catholics.
National Catholic Reporter
A national Catholic lay newspaper covering events not usually covered or presented with a clerical bias in the local diocesan press or but of concern and interest to Catholics.
Survivos' Network for those Abused by Priests or Religious
A National Network of self-help support groups for people abused by clergy or religious.
Bishop Accountability
Vital information about the disclosure of sexual abuse and related issues affecting Catholics in the pew and the manner in which Bishops continue to exempt themselves from accountability
Voice of the Faithful
A 'movement' of lay Catholics 'inspired' by the abuse scandal calling for greater accountability of bishops to 'Catholics in the Pew.'
+ 23rd Week in Ordinary Time – Labor Day
“All work and no play make Jack a dull boy.”
Readings: II Thess 3:6-12, 16 Psalm 90:2, 3-5, 12-14 Matthew 5:31-34Lord, give success to the work of our hands. [Ps 90:17]
I believe I first heard that quote about all work and no play in the 3rd grade at Bayley Grammar School. Sr. Paulita, SC was the teacher. She had a stock of quotes from ancient sages and current commentators. Of course anything we memorize in elementary school will remain with us for life!
As with every axiom, there is both an element of truth as well as an exaggeration of truth. This is the reason we often refer to axioms as ‘truisms.’
On this Labor Day, 2010, many folks will not be taking a weekend at the shore because the kids are already back in school. Others can’t take a holiday because they need to work. Others will not be celebrating Labor Day this year because they have no work today or tomorrow.
The optimum for any able-bodied person is to be in a situation in which work is play. These are the blessed few among us for whom ‘work’ is only an extension of their play. This doesn’t mean they are playing at work. It means rather that they are able to use their most creative talents and abilities for a greater good, not just for their own personal enjoyment.
Whatever one’s employment, Catholic social doctrine has always stood strongly for the ‘right to work’ and for the ‘right to a just wage.’
The jobless rate in the private sector continues rise but alas, all too slowly while the politicking and debate over bailouts continues. The large crowds at malls do not tell the whole story. People are looking but not everyone is buying. Gainful employment for everyone has become the great equalizer. It means that those who have will need to give more and those who have not will have less to give until the economy stabilizes.
‘Lord, direct all our actions by your holy inspiration and carry them on by your gracious assistance so that every prayer and work of our may begin in you and through you be happily completed. Amen.’
Daily Scripture Archive»“The Road Less Traveled”
People who enter a recovery program such as AA also enter a covenant of trust with a sponsor, with other members of the AA community, with their families and even with their employer. They also acknowledge their trust in a higher power.
Concomitant to this covenant is the honest ‘confession’ that their lives have become unmanageable—the acknowledgment that life is not working for them or for their families and friends. The first step toward recovery is to own up to their dependency on alcohol or drugs.
In one way or another, the substance abuser having taken an inventory of his or her life, discovers that indeed, there are no free lunches and there are no short cuts to happiness and successful living. More than likely the addict has turned to alcohol or drugs to dull or deaden the pain of living.
Notwithstanding the promise of life in the bottle and despite the threats of family and friends, sooner or later the addict hears a voice in the heart that is louder than all the others. That moment is just the beginning of recovery and a new response to life just “one day at a time.” It is the long awaited ‘aha moment’ in which many become aware of a higher movement into which they were invited by a higher power and life-giving force we call God.
Several years ago, ‘USA Today’ featured a story under the caption: “What Makes People Happy?” The author of the story, Marilyn Elias, asked that question in a series of interviews with psychologists, sociologists and other people dealing with human behavior.
Her conclusion was that the happiest people are not necessarily those who have everything. Rather they are people who are involved with family and friends. What she describes as “the toxicity of materialism” is absent from happy people. They seem to be less concerned about keeping up with their neighbors and more interested in the pursuit of personal growth, intimacy and the nurturing of relationships. Their personal goals are clear. They are self motivated and not concerned by the need to impress others with their prowess or status and they have forgiving hearts.
The readings for this fifth Sunday in Lent are an invitation to conversion, recovery and covenantal love.
They are an invitation to drop the things that prevent us from being truly happy from the inside out and an invitation to adopt a way of life that is not only consistent with the movement of God’s spirit but also guaranteed to bring true happiness. In other words, they are calling us to be our ‘best selves’ with the assurance that God does indeed want the best for us — whatever it takes.
Our ‘recovery’ begins with discovery and the sincere acknowledgement that we haven’t got it right yet. It continues with an attentive heart tuned into the voice of God who speaks the loudest in the human heart.
Jeremiah’s words were spoken to a people whose world was virtually falling apart. The Israelites had lost their independence, their homeland and their very identity as God’s people. They had chosen a path that would lead to their alienation and exile under the domination of a foreign despot.
Although they had only themselves to blame, Jeremiah assures them that God would not hold it against them and in fact would renew them from the inside out. I will speak to their hearts. “I will place my law within them and write it on their hearts. I will be their God and they shall be my people…. All, from least to greatest, shall know me, says the Lord, for I will forgive their wrongdoing and remember their sin no more!”
The author of the letter to the Hebrews places on the lips of Jesus, a heartfelt prayer for the people whose alienation and sin he took upon himself. He set for them and for us an example of what it means to be faithful in the face of hardship, even death.
He was “obedient” to the inner stirrings of his heart. In other words, he “listened” to God’s voice calling him to unselfish love whatever the cost. He did it without counting the cost and became the source of healing love for all who “listened” to his words.
In his inimitable fashion, John the evangelist connects Jesus’ death on the cross with his glorification—strange connection indeed. John, remember, is a theologian and a mystic. Through signs and wonders, his gospel is a portrait of Jesus as suffering servant of God. Jesus’ faithfulness was rewarded by being the “firstborn to rise from the dead.” In this he was glorified.
When tempted to take another road, he confessed: “I am troubled now. Yet what should I say? ‘Father, save me from this hour?’ But it was for this purpose that I came to this hour. Father, glorify your name.” God responds: “I have glorified it and will glorify it again.”
In other words, Jesus could not back away from a total embrace of life in a supreme act of love no matter how costly.
“Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
and sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
and looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair.
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I__
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
As we continue our Lenten journey drawing nearer to Jerusalem, our paths Jesus’ — and —ours will converge one again on Calvary in the mystery that is at the heart of our faith — the contradiction of the cross.
We all admire Jesus but there is a difference between admiration and true discipleship. In the words of Scripture scholar and commentator, Pat Sanchez, “We must choose whether we shall live our lives as mere admirers of Jesus, living a safe and sterile semblance of Christianity that is politically correct and acceptable to the world, or whether we shall follow him along the less traveled road.”
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I —
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
[Robert Frost]
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