Sunday, August 25, 2019

Belles Beginning Mass Homily
August 24, 2019  Saint Mary's College
First Year Students Mass

Welcome to Saint Mary’s College!  How many of you arrived by horse and chariots? In carts? Upon mules and dromedaries?  How many of you know what a dromedary is?   You represent 31 states and 3 nations, from the east and the west and the north and the south, and you are here for your next great experiment with truth—for continuing your education.  

 At Saint Mary’s, you will exercise the discipline that is education to become fully alive or, in the words of  Saint John Newman, to flourish--to grow not into the conventional person the limited world would have you be but into who you REALLY are at the very core of your being.  You are here to flourish!

You enter through the narrow gate, where you will encounter the core of your being:  your God.  None of us can know our true selves until we come to know and love the core of our being -without a relationship with the living presence we call God.  God!  What a word!  What an over used, misunderstood and mysterious word. We have certain perceptions of that word, many of which are still immature, undisciplined, poorly educated, and incomplete and can impede our spiritual and intellectual growth. We cannot cleave to those images of God but need to examine and evaluate all of them if we are to grow into who truly are.  We might keep some aspects of the images.  We will tweak others.  Others we might drop entirely, realizing they were more like fairy tales, told to attract us through them into a more adult belief, but no longer of value. As we mature spiritually, our faith becomes not a theory but a love affair. We flourish!

For Cardinal Newman, the ideal Catholic institution of higher learning is a community of thinkers, engaging in intellectual pursuits not for any external purpose, but as an end in itself. Same for Sister Madeleva, who envisioned for Saint Mary’s a broad, liberal education which teaches women "to think and to reason and to compare and to discriminate and to analyze."  
 
So welcome to the community that is Saint Mary’s College. We do what we do here as a community because that’s who we are – individuals come together with unique talents and gifts in pursuit of a common goal –renewing the face of the earth!  Here we grow in knowledge of God by learning about the entire community of creation, everything that exists, visible and invisible, fact and theory.

No one of us knows God fully. So we learn together in classrooms and laboratories -- as a community We live and eat together --as community.  We pray together as community and we play together as community. 

You are most welcome to this community, not to fit into to something already established, but to join in forming the new community Saint Mary’s will become because you are now added to that great cloud of witnesses who have gone before.  We only continue to flourish if we welcome the addition of your presence, your gifts, and your talents. 

Jewish philosopher and theologian Martin Buber contends that community comes about first through living in mutual relationship with a Living, Ultimate Reality at its Center. For Christians,  the Living, Ultimate Reality at our Center is the Risen Christ, who walks with us through the narrow gate, We walk in mutual relationship with Him as we listen to His word and embody his incarnate Spirit into our common flesh—body and blood, as we will do anew in just a few minutes.

Second, Buber continues, community comes about when its members live in that same mutual relationship with one another. We become who we receive-one in communion with all creation as the Risen Christ. 

Our integrity as a community depends on the mutuality of our relationships.  We live as a community when we welcome all who journey with us and exclude no one for any of the reasons our world gives us to do so: differences of origin, socio-economics, race, ethnicity, sexual identity, religious belief or lack thereof—all are us and all are welcome.

We encounter Ultimate Reality through communal religious practices like this one, but also through nature, science, the arts, human relationships, and serving each other, because everything that is, is one—is Christ!  We are the Risen Christ! In knowing ourselves, we know Christ.  In living as one with Christ, we become our true selves, and we recline together at His  table as equals, as one in being with the living God.  Then, with all creation, we flourish! Welcome!  Flourish!  We need you and we love you, but ours is an easy discipline, because we know Christ and we know you.







 
          



Sunday, August 4, 2019

Trump address to the nation Sunday, August 4, 2019

For whatever reasons, I found myself wanting to write the speech I feel our president needs to deliver to the nation after this past weekend's mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton.  Your feedback is appreciated.

Donald Trump:

My fellow Americans, this has been a weekend of violence that has cost many fellow citizens their lives and even more their peace of mind and security. We mourn with the families of those who have been killed and mourn for our country in which such killings are entirely too frequent.

It has been said that my words have played a role in empowering those who are inclined through mental illness, violent addictions, or any other impetus to act on their violent tendencies. I can no longer deny that there is truth in these accusations. As the leader of our country, I now realize that I have an obligation to moderate my own speaking so that it can no longer be said to enable violent action. It is of small comfort, but I do apologize for any role I have played in bringing our country to this point.

I also challenge others who contribute through their rhetoric to the divide that is causing an emotional, political, and spiritual civil war within our beloved nation. I challenge all Americans to focus now on solutions rather than on blame.  Our nation is in need of healing which can only occur if we work on it together.

I ask the nation to join me with their thoughts and prayers for the victims: those who have died and all who are grieved by their losses. I ask the nation to join me in thoughts and prayers for the families of the perpetrators who must feel tremendous pain and even shame. But I also accept the criticism that thoughts and prayers are not enough.

Therefore, within the coming week, I will have established a group of bipartisan citizens–not just politicians –to begin to look at ways we might put an end to the spiral of violence and divisiveness that has become how our country is being seen by the rest of the world. I will ask this group to look at policies and procedures that contribute to violence and to propose,  by year's end, policies and procedures that will stop it from being the norm. I will direct them to look at legal, educational, social, political, and other solutions that will make America great again. The group will consist of survivors of mass violence, families of victims as well as national and spiritual leaders.  No proposed solution will be rejected out of hand. No voice will be discounted prior to consideration.

The history of our country is that when we come together as one we achieve great things. When we are divided we cause only ruin, hardship, and great pain. This weekend has brought me to realize that my job is to unite and that I have not done that job at all well. In whatever time I have remaining to serve as our president, by the grace of God I will atone for my failures in word and deed through healing words and loving deeds. Out of the blood of those martyred by violence may new life, new ways of thinking, and a new America emerge.

Thank you, and God bless America.