Saturday, September 13, 2025
SPLINTER PATROL
Monday, September 8, 2025
AN UNFREE GOD?
I have been rereading the Franciscan Richard Rohr’s “Immortal Diamond” and would like to share with you some of his thoughts about death. Everything that follows below is directly quoted from his book.
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The crucified one is God‘s standing solidarity with the suffering, the tragedy, and the disaster of all time, and God‘s promise that it will not have the final word.The Risen One is God‘s final word about the universe and what God plans to do with all suffering.
ABOUT DYING
In all of nature, one form has to die and decay for another to take over, so this pattern should be obvious and clear, although it is largely not — until you really observe or actually study the patterns of almost everything. Again, we appear to be in gross denial.
Jesus’ own dying has to be made quite clear and forthright in the gospels; in Mark, it is almost half of the text. His. “ necessary death” had to be made visible and compelling, because we all want to deny death and avoid the obvious. Quite unfortunately, we made Jesus‘ necessary dying into a mechanical atonement theory demanded by a “just” God, which had the side effect of keeping the spotlight away from our own necessary dying. Jesus indeed became our scapegoat, but not at all in the way that he intended. Avoiding our own necessary “pattern of dying” (Phil 3:11), we constructed instead, a kind of metaphysical transaction, called “paying the price“ or "opening the gates,“ that was necessary for Jesus to complete. Then we worshipped him for doing this, which is understandable, but also avoids the point that we all have to pay the price for growing up and for loving.
Is God really unfree? |
Fortunately, we Franciscans never officially believed this common substitutionary atonement theory. We were always a kind of alternative orthodoxy inside Catholicism. In the teaching of John Duns Scotus, Jesus was pure gracious gift, and not necessary at all. God operated out of total and absolute freedom in the gift of Jesus and the Christ to the world.
Sunday, August 31, 2025
SANDALS AND MOSAICS
A close friend asked me to write a note to her sister, a firm believer who is fighting a losing battle with cancer, and has been wondering how we can be sure that God really is present in the midst of our sufferings. Since I've been praying hard for her for months, I felt that the Lord might offer me a few words of comfort to her. Here is what I wrote to my friend's sister a couple of days ago:.
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Dear_________________,
Here are a couple of thoughts that might be helpful to you right now.
So when you or I are standing in the presence of some terrible suffering or some awful evil or some tragedy, the first thing we must do is take off our shoes! We are in the presence of a deep mystery that we cannot comprehend. That means that we cannot really “know” for sure if God is really here in the midst of all this suffering. All we have is the gift of faith.
Today is the feast day of Saint Augustine. He once wrote that our
But the way things are in this life, we don’t get to see the whole thing.
Yet if you listen hard, you can hear the Lord apologizing to you. “I’m sorry. I wish you could see the whole picture right now, but in order for you to do that, you would have to be God. So, I’m sorry. I apologize. But for right now, please try to trust me. Look for all those bits of love that I reveal to you every day. That’s the best I can do.”
There. That’s at least my way of looking at things.
I hope this was of some help.
Love and prayers,
Fr. Albert
No Shoes, Please |
Sunday, August 24, 2025
PHARISEES' FAULT
The great Protestant theologian Paul Tillich defines religion as “the dimension of depth in reality.“ We humans are by nature symbol making creatures. Whatever dimension of depth we experience, we usually try to express it in various symbolic forms in story, poetry, music, ritual and other kinds of metaphorical language.
This God of the Pharisees was quite knowable and indeed quite under their control. All one had to do was obey all the laws and perform the rituals correctly and you kept God at bay. I once heard a super-religious person described this way: “He had God in his pocket.”
What a terrible loss! To have a God who is so small and weak that he fits in your pocket!
But before we get too smug, we should notice that the gospel writer ends this passage with a warning his fellow Christians to beware of falling into the same trap:
As for you, do not be called 'Rabbi.' You have but one teacher, and you are all brothers. Call no one on earth your father; you have but one Father in heaven. Do not be called 'Master'; you have but one master, the Christ. The greatest among you must be your servant. Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, but whoever humbles himself will be exalted."We are warned: we may be very observant practicing Christians, but observances and religious practices will not get us into heaven any more than they did for those Pharisees.
Saturday, August 16, 2025
MAKING THE CHOICE
The first reading at mass today, August 16, is from a very important chapter in the Bible,
While I suppose that the idea of "covenant renewal" may provide a good meditation for you and me, there is one verse that really challenged me: “Put away the foreign gods that are among you.”
The Israelites, like the pagan tribes around them, have been serving a variety of gods. Some of the gods are from back in the days of captivity in Egypt, while others have been picked up along the way.
Joshua now challenges the Israelites to “Put away the foreign gods that are among you and turn your hearts to the Lord, the God of Israel” (v.23).
This verse has proven to be a good challenge for me. When God’s Help is not enough, what are the other helps that I turn to? The substitutes for God are too many to count, but some of the most common are possessions, controlling others, physical, pleasures, and distractions.
Joshua is challenging me today to stop turning to those false gods and to leave myself completely in the hands of the Lord.
This challenge has been coming up repeatedly in my life over the past couple of months. I
have to learn how to leave myself completely vulnerable to the father, Exactly as Jesus did.As he hung on the cross, I receive your said “father, into your hands, I commend my spirit.“
Am I ready to repeat those words in my own life or do I still hang on to some of those old gods that offer a sense of security?
Let’s pray for one another that we can accept Joshua’s challenge today to put away both foreign gods and turn to the Lord, the Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Saturday, August 9, 2025
THE SECOND STRIKE
This past Thursday the first reading at mass was from the book of Numbers. The scene isone from the so-called “murmuring traditions.“\
Chapter 20 verse 11 tells us what happens next. Moses strikes the rock twice and water immediately gushes forth in torrents. Then in the next verse, the Lord says to Moses and Aaron, “Because you were not faithful to me in showing forth my sanctity before the children of Israel, you shall not lead this community into the land I will give them.”
What just happened? What provoked God‘s wrath against Moses and Aaron? Scholars have various explanations, but the one I have always preferred is this: Moses made a mistake by striking the rock a second time. When he strikes the rock he is following the Lord‘s command, and this one blow will be sufficient to work the miracle. But then Moses strikes the rock the second time, adding his own effort to God‘s power just to be sure. It is as if he doesn’t trust that God can really pull this off on his own. So the Lord complains “You did not have confidence in me!”
How often am I tempted to strike the rock twice myself? Do I always manage to trust God‘s power implicitly, with all my heart? “Just trust me, Albert, I will take care of it. You can stop striking that rock now, I’ll take care of everything! Or don't you have confidence in me?”
Too often, though, if you were to watch me carefully, you might catch me standing at this big rock and striking it over and over and over with a heavy stick. In the background, you will see the Lord smiling patiently, watching as I exhaust myself instead of asking the Lord to help.
The next time you start to lose confidence in the Lord's power, think of Moses and that fateful second strike on the rock,
Sunday, August 3, 2025
NEVER ENOUGH
In the Gospel reading for this Sunday, August 3, Jesus warns his followers to “avoid any kind of greed.” I'd like to share with you a reflection that may bring this Sunday’s message close to home.
Do you remember the scene from the movie version of the musical "Oliver!"
No matter how much we have, our insatiable yearning soon returns. This constant incompleteness is the source of our greatness: all human creativity, all ambition and our accomplishments are a response to this built-in urge to complete ourselves.
Our attraction to “more” is also however, at the root of one of the major vices in the New Testament: Greed. The Greek word is pleonexia, the word that Jesus uses in the gospel reading today. Usually translated “covetousness,” or “greed,” pleonexia is a combination of pleos, “more,” and exo, “have.” The underlying idea is “wanting more,” or, maybe better, "being addicted to 'more.'"
Pleonexia makes it onto several New Testament lists of nasty habits. The long litany of pagan vices at the beginning of Romans, for instance, includes “every form of wickedness, evil, greed (pleonexia), and malice;… envy, murder, treachery and spite. (Rom 1:29)” In Ephesians it's on a short list of sins that are particularly contrary to the Christian ideal: “Immorality or any impurity or greed (pleonexia) must not even be mentioned among you, as is fitting among holy ones (Eph 5:3).”
Augustine of Hippo (354 -430 AD) |
This may be a lot easier said than done. One place to start, though, is with the advice in the last sentence from Colossians: "Think of what is above." I know how easily my mind can get filled with concerns about class preparations, ,……., I know how easy it can be - even in a monastery - to forget what life is ultimately about.
These extreme examples can be more than just quaint studies in fanaticism. They can be jarring reminders to us Christians who live in a culture that praises pleonexia.
Their message is a bedrock truth of spirituality for any Christian, from the parent with a house full of children, to the cloistered nun with a vow of poverty, once God truly becomes the center of your life, you need less and less of what the world has to offer in order to be truly content.
The constant search for created things that preoccupies so many other people doesn't hold any attraction any more. My longings are now aligned in one single direction -- I'm hungry all the time for God.