National Day of Mourning. Mark 2:1-12
On this Sunday before Lent, Bishop Peter Ingham addresses the whole Diocese in his Lenten Pastoral Letter entitled "Our Real Crisis." My homily this week is based on Bishop Peter's letter, with a little more material on the Gospel, the beautiful story of the paralysed man being brought to Jesus by his friends, to receive the greatest of every person fulfilled - the forgiveness of sins. The recording concludes with a true story from Ireland.
Music is Sretenye - O My Soul, rise!
Recorded at St Michael's, 9.30am Mass (8"10")
Watch the full Pastoral letter here.
Play MP3
22 February 2009
15 February 2009
Exclusion and Embrace
6th Sunday (B) - Leviticus 13; Mark 1:40-45
It did not take long during the week before we began to hear victims of the terrible bushfires that ravaged Victoria last weekend ask why did this happen? Who is to blame? Was it the fault of the arsonists who lit the fires, or the greenies who didn’t allow controlled-burns, or the government for not have early warning systems in place. Today we see that a class-action has begun against the power company that maintains the power-lines, because it may have been a spark from a fallen pole that started the fires. We are always looking for someone to blame. This is perhaps more the case with our generation, but it has probably always been the case. If only those people weren't here, everything would be ok (you know - the people with that colour skin; those who voted that way in the election; people who made their money that way; people who have that sexual orientation.)
In centuries past, the way to achieve holiness / salvation was through ritual purity. You had to stay removed from anyone that was not living and following the requirements of the covenant like you were. So you simply must avoid anyone who is ‘unclean.’ Keep yourself separate from those who are ‘sinners’ & hang-out with people who are like-minded and obsessed about the same kind of issues, etc. Stay away from the wrong kind of people – notorious sinners; people who are diseased, etc.
In the gospels, we meet Jesus who again and again goes against this wisdom (this ‘framing narrative’) and associates with those who are ‘unclean’ and even touches them. He shows us the extent to which God will go to reach us, to include us in the kingdom. He pulls down barriers and walls that prevent the saving power of God from reaching those who are the most vulnerable in our society. And he invites us to do the same.
Play MP3
[Note this version does not mention the movie 'Gran Torino' - so it is spoiler free!]
It did not take long during the week before we began to hear victims of the terrible bushfires that ravaged Victoria last weekend ask why did this happen? Who is to blame? Was it the fault of the arsonists who lit the fires, or the greenies who didn’t allow controlled-burns, or the government for not have early warning systems in place. Today we see that a class-action has begun against the power company that maintains the power-lines, because it may have been a spark from a fallen pole that started the fires. We are always looking for someone to blame. This is perhaps more the case with our generation, but it has probably always been the case. If only those people weren't here, everything would be ok (you know - the people with that colour skin; those who voted that way in the election; people who made their money that way; people who have that sexual orientation.)
In centuries past, the way to achieve holiness / salvation was through ritual purity. You had to stay removed from anyone that was not living and following the requirements of the covenant like you were. So you simply must avoid anyone who is ‘unclean.’ Keep yourself separate from those who are ‘sinners’ & hang-out with people who are like-minded and obsessed about the same kind of issues, etc. Stay away from the wrong kind of people – notorious sinners; people who are diseased, etc.
In the gospels, we meet Jesus who again and again goes against this wisdom (this ‘framing narrative’) and associates with those who are ‘unclean’ and even touches them. He shows us the extent to which God will go to reach us, to include us in the kingdom. He pulls down barriers and walls that prevent the saving power of God from reaching those who are the most vulnerable in our society. And he invites us to do the same.
Play MP3
[Note this version does not mention the movie 'Gran Torino' - so it is spoiler free!]
14 February 2009
Exclusion and Healing
6th Sunday (B) - Leviticus 13; Mark 1:40-45
During the week we have heard many stories from the bushfire-ravaged centres of Victoria – many incredibly harrowing and horrific of great loss of life and possessions; some magnificent and miraculous of escape and rescue. Among these stories we have also been presented with others as victims have struggled to come to terms with their loss and begun to look for someone to blame. It was the fault of the arsonists who lit the fires, or the greenies who didn’t allow controlled-burns, or the government for not have early warning systems in place.
In the Ancient Near East one story was seen as essential for survival – ‘exclusion’. The way to achieve holiness / salvation was through ritual purity. You had to stay removed from anyone that was not living and following the requirements of the covenant like you were. So you simply must avoid anyone who is ‘unclean.’ Keep yourself separate from those who are ‘sinners’ & hang-out with people who are like-minded and obsessed about the same kind of issues, etc. Stay away from the wrong kind of people – notorious sinners; people who are diseased, etc.
In the gospels, we meet Jesus who again and again goes against this wisdom (this ‘framing narrative’) and associates with those who are ‘unclean’ and even touches them. He shows us the extent to which God will go to reach us, to include us in the kingdom.
You also see this tension demonstrated brilliantly in the Clint Eastwood movie ‘Gran Torino’ which shows a society in collapse, with multiple groups in tension and conflict. Strangely the character that Clint plays reminds us of the way that Christ was. (Note – contains spoilers about the movie.)
Play MP3
Ref: Watch Fr Robert Barron's YouTube video on the movie Gran Torino (more spoilers!)
During the week we have heard many stories from the bushfire-ravaged centres of Victoria – many incredibly harrowing and horrific of great loss of life and possessions; some magnificent and miraculous of escape and rescue. Among these stories we have also been presented with others as victims have struggled to come to terms with their loss and begun to look for someone to blame. It was the fault of the arsonists who lit the fires, or the greenies who didn’t allow controlled-burns, or the government for not have early warning systems in place.
In the Ancient Near East one story was seen as essential for survival – ‘exclusion’. The way to achieve holiness / salvation was through ritual purity. You had to stay removed from anyone that was not living and following the requirements of the covenant like you were. So you simply must avoid anyone who is ‘unclean.’ Keep yourself separate from those who are ‘sinners’ & hang-out with people who are like-minded and obsessed about the same kind of issues, etc. Stay away from the wrong kind of people – notorious sinners; people who are diseased, etc.
In the gospels, we meet Jesus who again and again goes against this wisdom (this ‘framing narrative’) and associates with those who are ‘unclean’ and even touches them. He shows us the extent to which God will go to reach us, to include us in the kingdom.
You also see this tension demonstrated brilliantly in the Clint Eastwood movie ‘Gran Torino’ which shows a society in collapse, with multiple groups in tension and conflict. Strangely the character that Clint plays reminds us of the way that Christ was. (Note – contains spoilers about the movie.)
Play MP3
Ref: Watch Fr Robert Barron's YouTube video on the movie Gran Torino (more spoilers!)
08 February 2009
Immediately (5th Sunday)
090208 - 5th Sunday Year B - Mark 1:29-39.
During this liturgical year, we read from the Gospel of Mark. Each Gospel has its own style and personality. In John there are long discourses from Jesus with rich theological insights; Luke, written to a Gentile audience, has beautiful parables like the prodigal son and the good Samaritan; while Matthew, written to a Jewish audience, presents Jesus as the new Moses, with new teaching enfleshed by stories of what Jesus did. In Mark, the shortest and probably the earliest Gospel, we meet a Jesus who is always on the move. The Gospels were written in Greek, and Mark uses the word 'euthus' or 'eutheus' which means 'immediately' or 'straight away' more often than all the other Gospels combined - 42 times (18 in Matt; 6 each in Luke and John). This gives this Gospel a great sense of breathless urgency. In the first chapter alone, we see the word used 11 times! This gives us an insight into the nature of Jesus' ministry. We also see that Jesus needs to escape after this hectic day of ministry to find time alone with God. And finally that when the disciples come looking for him, since 'everyone is looking for you,' he doesn't stay and minister, but he goes 'elsewhere' to continue to proclaim the kingdom of God there. We need to learn that at times we need to say 'no' to certain things (even if they seem good) in order to say 'yes' to the 'one thing necessary.'
Recorded at St Michael's, 9.30am (8'40")
Play MP3
During this liturgical year, we read from the Gospel of Mark. Each Gospel has its own style and personality. In John there are long discourses from Jesus with rich theological insights; Luke, written to a Gentile audience, has beautiful parables like the prodigal son and the good Samaritan; while Matthew, written to a Jewish audience, presents Jesus as the new Moses, with new teaching enfleshed by stories of what Jesus did. In Mark, the shortest and probably the earliest Gospel, we meet a Jesus who is always on the move. The Gospels were written in Greek, and Mark uses the word 'euthus' or 'eutheus' which means 'immediately' or 'straight away' more often than all the other Gospels combined - 42 times (18 in Matt; 6 each in Luke and John). This gives this Gospel a great sense of breathless urgency. In the first chapter alone, we see the word used 11 times! This gives us an insight into the nature of Jesus' ministry. We also see that Jesus needs to escape after this hectic day of ministry to find time alone with God. And finally that when the disciples come looking for him, since 'everyone is looking for you,' he doesn't stay and minister, but he goes 'elsewhere' to continue to proclaim the kingdom of God there. We need to learn that at times we need to say 'no' to certain things (even if they seem good) in order to say 'yes' to the 'one thing necessary.'
Recorded at St Michael's, 9.30am (8'40")
Play MP3
01 February 2009
Teaching with authority
The words and teaching of Jesus were always closely united. This was clearly the intention of God from the beginning - this was the way that he wanted for his people. God wants us to know the truth, and he wants us to be changed by our encounter with him. This is only possible when we experience teaching that has power - power that can cut through our own barriers and doubts. Power that can cut to the heart and reveal those areas of our lives that are in need of the healing and truth that only the Lord can give us. When we take time to listen to the Lord, we find this truth and we find this authority for our lives...
I am currently on NET training on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, so no Sunday homily was recorded this week.
I am currently on NET training on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, so no Sunday homily was recorded this week.
25 January 2009
Conversion of St Paul
During the year of St Paul, we celebrate today the great feast of the conversion of Saul, scrupulous Pharisee, student of the synagogue of Tarsus in Cilicia and of Rabbi Gamaliel in Jerusalem. All that he knew, all that he had studied with such great fervour had only served to convince him that Jesus was not the Messiah, and it was right for him to die at the hands of the Romans. Now as he prayed and meditated while on his way from Jerusalem to Damascus, as he desired to be faithful to all the commandments of the law, even if this meant persecuting followers of the way to death - something completely unbelievable and impossible to predict happens to him. He meets this same Jesus of Nazareth, this same Lord - and his whole world is turned up-side-down. We, in our turn, are invited to experience this same life and to encounter the Lord Jesus on our journey through life as well, so that we can follow in the footsteps of Paul and experience this gift as well.
Based on Acts 22:3-16 / Recorded at St Michael's (12'10")
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Based on Acts 22:3-16 / Recorded at St Michael's (12'10")
Play MP3
18 January 2009
Samuel & discipleship
The call to discipleship is strongly expressed in these readings - Andrew inviting his brother Simon to meet the Lord. Having spent the week at Summer School of Evangelisation in Bathurst, many young people want to know how to discern the will of the Lord. In the first reading from 1 Samuel 3, we see in Samuel five principles that can guide us:
1. Stay awake and attentive
2. The Lord's call is personal: 'Samuel, Samuel'
3. Learn the language of the Lord (by reading scripture and the teachings of the church)
4. Use the wise counsel of an older brother/sister/mentor (Eli)
5. Sometimes the word of the Lord will not be very comfortable and will involve suffering (1 Sam 3:11-18)
Recorded at St Michael's, 9.30am (8'38")
Play MP3
1. Stay awake and attentive
2. The Lord's call is personal: 'Samuel, Samuel'
3. Learn the language of the Lord (by reading scripture and the teachings of the church)
4. Use the wise counsel of an older brother/sister/mentor (Eli)
5. Sometimes the word of the Lord will not be very comfortable and will involve suffering (1 Sam 3:11-18)
Recorded at St Michael's, 9.30am (8'38")
Play MP3
11 January 2009
Baptism of the Lord
In the ministry of John the Baptist, the son of the priest Zechariah, we see the ritual washing (the mikvah) take on a new significance, as a sign of God's new work of creation. Now the presence of God will not be confined to the temple - the curtain in the temple that separated the Holy of Holies is torn apart - a foretaste of the great event of Jesus death and resurrection. Recorded at Sacred Heart, Bomaderry. (12'50")
Play MP3
Play MP3
09 January 2009
The Good Life
Fr Richard John Neuhaus, the publisher and editor of the iconic journal 'First Things' died last night in New York from cancer.
This is a reflection that he wrote on death back in 2000:
We are born to die. Not that death is the purpose of our being born, but we are born toward death, and in each of our lives the work of dying is already underway. The work of dying well is, in largest part, the work of living well. Most of us are at ease in discussing what makes for a good life, but we typically become tongue-tied and nervous when the discussion turns to a good death. As children of a culture radically, even religiously, devoted to youth and health, many find it incomprehensible, indeed offensive, that the word “good” should in any way be associated with death. Death, it is thought, is an unmitigated evil, the very antithesis of all that is good.
Read more here
We also heard at the end of last year of the passing of Cardinal Avery Dulles. This is a reflection that he wrote:
This is a reflection that he wrote on death back in 2000:
We are born to die. Not that death is the purpose of our being born, but we are born toward death, and in each of our lives the work of dying is already underway. The work of dying well is, in largest part, the work of living well. Most of us are at ease in discussing what makes for a good life, but we typically become tongue-tied and nervous when the discussion turns to a good death. As children of a culture radically, even religiously, devoted to youth and health, many find it incomprehensible, indeed offensive, that the word “good” should in any way be associated with death. Death, it is thought, is an unmitigated evil, the very antithesis of all that is good.
Read more here
We also heard at the end of last year of the passing of Cardinal Avery Dulles. This is a reflection that he wrote:
The behavior of living organisms cannot be explained without taking into account their striving for life and growth. Plants, by reaching out for sunlight and nourishment, betray an intrinsic aspiration to live and grow. This internal finality makes them capable of success and failure in ways that stones and minerals are not. Because of the ontological gap that separates the living from the nonliving, the emergence of life cannot be accounted for on the basis of purely mechanical principles. In tune with this school of thought, the English mathematical physicist John Polkinghorne holds that Darwinism is incapable of explaining why multicellular plants and animals arise when single-cellular organisms seem to cope with the environment quite successfully. There must be in the universe a thrust toward higher and more-complex forms.
...Materialistic Darwinism is incapable of explaining why the universe gives rise to subjectivity, feeling, and striving.
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