Tuesday, September 26, 2017

My Favorite Mystery

Last month I wrote about beer…among other things.  This month I gave up beer.  I’d like to say it was part of a spiritual fast, and my withholding was tied in with prayer and meditation, but in all honesty, it was strictly dietary.  As I look back over the past few weeks, I realize that I wasted opportunities.  My diet involved days of fasting.  Although I remembered to bathe and comb my hair (see Matthew 6:16-18), I should have joined my minor physical discomfort to prayer, and given it a higher purpose.  I wonder what other opportunities are wasted.

I think the rosary may be one of the most misunderstood prayers in our faith, and perhaps one of the most incorrectly executed prayers by those who regularly recite it.  I think many opportunities to grow closer to Jesus are wasted during the reciting of countless decades of the rosary.  I am confident in saying this because for many years I know I was guilty of religiously “saying” the rosary, but not “praying” it.

What is the rosary?  Is it simply a way to log prayer minutes?  Is it nothing more than rote verse?  If it is, then we’re doing it wrong.  Rather, the rosary is a time to meditate on our faith, on God, and on the life of Jesus Himself.  Meditating on each mystery of the rosary should be our focus throughout the prayer.  If we are not dwelling on the mysteries as we pray, then truly we are simply reciting repetitive words.

My favorite mystery is the 2nd Joyful Mystery: The Visitation.  Seemingly, there isn’t much to this mystery.  It could be a simple story to fill the space between Gabriel’s visit, and the Nativity.  Sure Elizabeth was pregnant with John, and he’ll come back into play in 30 years or so, but there could be an argument made that Jesus and John don’t even seem to know each other personally when they are reunited in the Jordan River.  If we just take the words ‘Mary visits her cousin Elizabeth’ at face value, then we’re done.  We really don’t have much else to meditate on as we recited the next ten Hail Mary’s.

The mysteries, however, are an invitation for us to remember, to read, to study, to recall, and to ponder every aspect of Jesus’ life.  On the one hand, how cool is Mary?  In the first chapter of Luke, we hear that upon finding out she was pregnant with Jesus; Mary decided to hike up to the hill country in Judah to visit Elizabeth.  Three months later, and three months further along in her pregnancy, she would hike back.  I don’t know if that gives much revelation into the life of Jesus, but as someone who loves the outdoors, I think our mother Mary is pretty awesome for getting out and walking around the mountains.

Admittedly that first insight about Mary hiking is something I just like to consider privately, and doesn’t have a greater theological basis.  Everyone walked everywhere in those days, but it still makes me smile when I ponder that mystery while taking a hike up the hills at Castlewood State Park.  If you want material that is a little deeper, however, we only need to read on in Luke.  We find that the unborn John the Baptist leaped in the womb of Elizabeth, upon hearing Mary’s greeting, and upon being overjoyed at the visit from the unborn Jesus she was carrying.  (Paraphrase from Luke 1:40-41)  If this passage isn’t a glaring proclamation of the dignity of human life from the point of conception, and a 2,000 year old declaration that the pre-born are aware of stimuli in their environment, then I don’t know what is.  In just a few short words, I’ve always found it to be perhaps the most pro-life passage in the bible.

Mary had just finished learning of her pregnancy from Gabriel when she went to visit Elizabeth.  Even at that microscopic stage of development, the gospel clearly tells us that Jesus is recognized as much more than cells.  He is our Lord.  And who recognizes Him first?  The unborn John the Baptist at approximately 6 month’s gestation; somewhere between 2nd and 3rd trimester.  Maybe I’m reading a little too much into this passage, but at a minimum, I think it is an irrefutable claim to the value of pre-born life, written to us two millennia ago.

As we move on, we see beautiful words spoken by both Elizabeth and Mary during this visit.  Those words would go on to form the Hail Mary and Magnificat prayers.  This brings us around full circle.  The rosary is a recitation of scripture, and we see the basis of the Hail Mary right here in Luke.  Its main focus is not the repetitive praise of Mary, but rather the reciting of the Gospels, the learning of the life of Jesus, the pondering of His teachings, and even insight as to where teachings of the catechism have their basis.

So that’s an overly abbreviated account of why I like the 2nd Joyful Mystery.  Pray the rosary today and think about your favorite mystery as you learn more about Jesus. 


by: Matt Buehrig

Monday, September 18, 2017

The Truth is Black & White

I’ve been putting off an iPad problem. Finally admitting defeat, I head to the West County mall Apple Store. The next available Genius Bar appointment is in a hour, so I put my name in and went with my 14 year old daughter to the food court. As we get our Philly cheesesteaks and sit down, Hanna notices about fifty police officers coming through the food court entrance into the mall.

“They are probably getting lunch before they head downtown” I quickly state as I see Hanna start to get worried. Then they came. Hundreds of angry protestors chanting and yelling through the food court. Several are wearing ski masks and jumping around, antagonizing the shop owners, while others simply march with signs.

“Why are they doing this?” Hanna asked. I had explained the day before about the verdict, so she knew the situation, but her question was why are they here, now, in the mall. I told her that when people see something in their world that they don’t feel is right, there is something inside us that gets upset. That anger you have in the face of injustice is God given, and we need to act on that to help make this world a better place.

Hanna had come with Lisa and I to protest outside of Planned Parenthood before. I reminded her of what that was like. That we felt that there was something wrong going on, and our way of standing up against it, was to stand with signs and pray outside of the facility. The conversation then went to “What about when things get violent, or set on fire?” I tell her that our faith helps guide us here, and hurting others, stealing or vandalizing, even if it is in the name of what you feel is a greater good, is wrong.

So I think I’ve helped take this stressful situation and turned it into a great lesson for my kid. Then she drops the bomb on me in the car as we are leaving the parking lot, “Dad, how do you know if you’re right or not?” Well, ummm, you see Hanna…..

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

A Tribute to Author and Prophet



                        

Have you ever lost a good friend you’ve never met?  In tribute, I share a brief bio of Johann, Christoph Arnold, a prophetic author of compassion, hope, and forgiveness.  I felt the loss of this influential author in my life during Easter of this year.  In addition, I framed his bio with pearls of wisdom from a few of his books.  Hopefully, his thoughts bring you moments of pause and grace.

Seeking Peace
“We often think of peace as the absence of war; that if the powerful countries would reduce their arsenals, we could have peace.  But if we look deeply into the weapons, we see our own minds – our prejudices, fears, and ignorance.  Even if we transported all the bombs to the moon, the roots of war and the reasons for bombs would still be here, in our hearts and minds, and sooner or later we would make new bombs. … working for peace must mean more than getting rid of weapons.  It must start with uprooting war from ourselves and from the hearts of all men and women.”  

“Shalom means the end of war and conflict, but it also means friendship, contentment, security, and health; prosperity, abundance, tranquility, harmony with nature, and even salvation. … It applies to relationships among people and nations, and between God and man.                         Seeking Peace

Endangered
“… new children are born into our torn and twisted world every day, and each one brings the renewed message that God has not lost faith in mankind.”

“You yourself are the child you must learn to know, rear, and above all enlighten.  To demand that others should provide you with answers is like asking a strange woman to give birth to your baby.  There are insights that can be born only of your own pain, and they are the most precious.  Seek in your child the undiscovered part of yourself.”

“Don’t worry that your children never listen to you.  Worry that they are always watching you.”

“As long as Christ lives only in your bibles … and not in your hearts …”

“Why is it that in bringing up our children, we so quickly see the obstacles and problems, and so easily miss the joys?  Raising the children we bring into the world ought to be a privilege and a joy.”

“Constant pressure of any kind will eventually cause a child to snap.”

“The idea of the child as teacher, though not an uncommon one, always deserves rediscovery.  It is the logical consequence of a reverent approach to children.”

“It is because we have forgotten that the tie that binds one generation to the next means far more than the sharing of blood.   As humanity’s oldest and strongest bond, the love between a parent and a child is a gift for the future – an inheritance for prosperity.”

“… whatever a child needs in the way of guidance, security, and love, he/she needs now.  Many things can wait.  Children cannot.  Today their bones are being formed, their blood is being made, their senses are being developed.  To them we cannot say ‘tomorrow.’  Their name is ‘today.’”                                                                                                                            Endangered
Born in England in 1940, one of nine children to parents who fled Nazi oppression in Germany, Johann Christoph Arnold spent his childhood in flight.  The Brits considered the fleeing Germans enemy aliens.  Under pressure, the Arnold family crossed the U-boat infested Atlantic to settle in Paraguay living as farmers and craftsmen.  In 1955, his family moved to upstate New York to the Bruderhof, an intentional Christian community where members pool all income, talents, and energy to care for one another and to reach out to others.  
Johann made his commitment to the Bruderhof.  He completed a degree in business, becoming a salesman for the community’s toy manufacturer.  While traveling on business to Atlanta, he watched breaking news of young Jimmie Lee Jackson’s death in Selma, Alabama.  Jackson had been shot at a peaceful voting rights march.  Overwhelmingly drawn (called?) to the civil rights movement, Johann immediately drove 200 miles to Selma to the funeral.  Johann wrote, “The viewing was open-casket, and although the mortician had done his best to cover the injuries, the wounds on Jimmie’s head could not be hidden.    We never heard one note of anger (among three thousand attending) or revenge in the service.  Instead, a spirit of courage emanated from the men and women of the congregation, especially as they rose to sing the old slave song, “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ’Round.””
            At the cemetery, Martin Luther King spoke of forgiveness and love.  “He pleaded with his people to pray for police, to forgive the murderer, and to forgive those who were persecuting them.  If there was ever cause for hatred or vengeance, it was here.  But none was to be felt, not even from Jimmie’s parents.”
            This event transformed Johann Arnold, inspiring, shaping his life’s mission.  “The cause worth dying for was the kingdom of God coming to earth.  Baptism by water and Spirit had sealed his commitment to this kingdom.  Love to all, peace, and forgiveness were weapons of power, tools for the courageous believer, not the soft or faint-hearted.”  He proclaimed the gospels in several books, one of his more powerful, “Why Forgive?”
            Johann Christoph Arnold, a prolific writer, pastor, elder in the Bruderhof, relentless fighter for peace and reconciliation through forgiveness, a disciple to live the gospel and love his neighbor, and a prophet died three days after Easter 2017.  I found his writing to-the-point, profound and insightful.  He lived in the graces of the Spirit often among very challenging people.  Blind to social status, he respected people who held differences of opinion.  Many described him as “disarming with warmth and trust.” “We might not have agreed, but we could respect each other and acknowledge our shared goodwill and humanity.”
            Johann had his haters.  “I didn’t relish them, but I could thank them for giving me reassurance in light of Jesus’ words: ‘Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you!” Luke 6:26. 
        Under his pastoral care, the Bruderhof grew from four communities in two countries to 24 communities on four continents.  Johann attended peacemaking conferences in Israel, Iraq, South Africa, Mexico, and Rwanda.  Inspired during his meeting with Mother Teresa, he guided the Bruderhof humanitarian aid to Haiti, Thailand, Central and South America, and the Middle East.       
His friendship with New York’s Cardinal O’Connor opened doors with his Catholic brothers and sisters.  Occasionally, Cardinal Dolan and Elder Arnold shared company while enjoying good German sausage and beer.  His convictions on the vitality of the family led to meetings with Popes John Paul II, Benedict, and most recently Francis.  He worked with Chuck Colson on prison ministry and Sister Helen Prejean on death penalty abolition. 
   Arnold teamed with Detective Steven McDonald to form “Breaking the Cycle” taking the message of forgiveness to schools.  Shot and paralyzed while investigating a crime in Central Park, Detective McDonald publicly forgave the fifteen-year-old who shot him.  McDonald has continued to reach out to his shooter in prison ministry. 
McDonald spoke of Arnold; “He cherished opportunities to learn about people’s needs, joys, and sorrows, and always marveled at how similar people are underneath.  He recognized the image of God in everyone.  He was never ashamed to speak of the love of Jesus.”
Value those who give you guidance, strength in faith to carry on, to grow.  Who affirms you in forgiveness, family, faith, and peace?  














Escape Routes
“The joys of heaven are often overshadowed by clouds or hidden in the most unexpected places.  Yet they are always there, ready to be discovered by the seeker who has eyes for them.  And once he finds them, even the weariest soul will see that the agonies of searching were not without meaning.”

“We’re always in danger of ending up possessed by our possessions. When this happens, it is a sign that we have lost our dignity as human beings and become mere tools for creating wealth. Inevitably, we’ll treat other people as tools too. Strangers to our own humanity, we’ll find ourselves adrift just when we thought the good life was within our grasp.”
“Reading these words, we might think that her story has a happy ending – and in a sense, it does. But she knows that her struggle is not over. Like every one of us, she must daily renew her decision to fight her demons and work toward wholeness, both within herself and in relation to others. A disease of the spirit won’t simply go away and stay away. But we can choose to turn the battle against it into a positive one – even into a source of strength.”
“Materialistic attitudes have cheapened human life so badly that many people would rather spend a dollar on punishment than a dime on prevention.”
“Perhaps the legacy of his tragic end is this – the lesson that though admitting and embracing our failures is painful, the inability to face them can be lethal. Do we put our faith in money and the material signs of having made it, or do we find our fulfillment in close relationships and a strong purpose for living?”
 “Though the son of God, he had the frame of a human male and he neither despised the human body nor shied from the physical or the sensuous. We need only recall that he provided a wedding party with wine and allowed a woman to dry his feet with her hair.”
“The fires through which we must go will leave us either scarred or refined.”
“That is why it is often said that at the hour of death, nothing else matters but our relationship to God. In fact, that relationship can be measured by very concrete things: the love we have given others, or failed to give; our dependence on God, or our attempts to steer clear of him; love, or the lack of it; humility, or pride – these are the things that will either comfort or torment us as we prepare to die”.
“I believe that since God set us into a material world, we ought to live in it fully – in the here and now. Even if our present life is meant to be a preparation for a better life to come, there is no point in frittering away our days worrying about the future, or our chances for eternal blessedness. Jesus taught us, “Love your neighbor as yourself,” and that simple command holds more than a life’s work.”
“When I held my grandson for the first time, I couldn’t find words to express everything I was feeling.”
“For isn’t every person–family member, stranger, enemy, or friend–a bearer of God’s image stamped with the sign of eternity and carrying a divine spark? Isn’t each one a messenger for whom we ought to set a place, one we should welcome and honor and love? To view our fellow human beings in this way is not only a lofty idea; it is the only way out of confinement and alienation.”                                                                                                                      Escape Routes
Why Forgive?
“Will we choose to love or not? Everything else pales beside this crucial question.”  
“Forgiveness is neither earned nor even deserved, but a gift.  It is also a mystery.”

“An offender can be punished, but to punish and not to restore, that is the greatest of all offenses ….  If a man takes unto himself God’s right to punish, then he must also take upon himself God’s promise to restore.”

“Bitterness is more than a negative outlook on life. It is a power – and a destructive and self-destructive one at that. Like a cancerous cell, a dangerous mold, or a spore, it thrives in the dark recesses of the heart and feeds on every new thought of spite or hatred that comes our way. And like an ulcer aggravated by worry or a heart condition made worse by stress, it can be physically as well as emotionally debilitating. In fact, if not addressed and taken care of, bitterness can lead to death.”

“Asking one’s partner for forgiveness is always difficult, because it requires humility, vulnerability, and the acknowledgement of weakness and failure.”

“Most of us will probably never be faced with forgiving a murderer or rapist. But all of us are faced daily with the need to forgive a partner, child, friend or colleague – perhaps dozens of times in a single day. Perhaps the hardest thing about practicing forgiveness in daily life is that it requires us to confront the reality of our feelings toward those we know best. It is difficult enough to forgive a stranger we might never see again, but it is much harder to forgive a person we love and trust. Our family, our friends, the people we feel closest to at work – they not only know our strengths, but also our weaknesses, our frailties, and our quirks.”

“Later I read more and a line from the Lord’s Prayer – this line that says ‘forgive us as we forgive’ – jumped out at me.  The meaning seemed clear: “You won’t be forgiven until you forgive.”  I remember arguing to myself, “I can’t do that, I could never do that,” and God seemed to answer right back, “Well you can’t.  But through me you can.””

“Forgiving is a deeply personal matter. Ultimately, each of us must find healing within, on our own terms, and in our own time. On another level, however, forgiving is much more. Even if its power connects people one by one, the resulting ‘ripple effect’ can be felt on a much broader scale. In fact, forgiveness can be a powerful social force, transforming whole groups of people.”


“What does forgiving really mean? Clearly it has little to do with human fairness, which demands an eye for an eye, or with excusing, which means brushing something aside. Life is never fair, and it is full of things that can never be excused. When we forgive someone for a mistake or a deliberate hurt, we still recognize it as such, but instead of lashing out or biting back, we attempt to see beyond it, so as to restore our relationship with the person responsible for it. Our forgiveness may not take away our pain – it may not even be acknowledged or accepted – yet the act of offering it will keep us from being sucked into the downward spiral of resentment.”     Why Forgive?