Archive for the ‘Fr. Joseph Manship’ Category

Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Friday, January 27th, 2012

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Readings: Deuteronomy 18:15-20 1      Corinthians 7:32-35       Mark 1:21-28

A number of years ago I was walking through the campus at Harvard on my way to my car. The senior graduation was in progress on the lawn. The guest speaker was Alexander Solzhenitsyn. I caught bits and pieces of his address as I was walking. One statement he made was that “America had lost its courage.” A few weeks later I read the mixed reactions to his speech. Many people found them hard to accept; they took the position that since Solzhenitsyn was not native to America, he could not really know or understand the American version of democracy, and so what he said was not really applicable or true. The reaction of these people, then, was simply to dismiss what Solzhenitsyn was saying to them. Certainly they may have found his message threatening to them; they were perhaps frightened that if what he was saying was true, then their whole way of life and their values were in danger. Since this would be quite painful to accept they simply dismissed it by denying the authority of Solzhenitsyn to speak about those things.

The other reaction was quite different. These people seemed to understand what Solzhenitsyn was saying even though what he was saying was also quite difficult and threatening to them. Still they heard it in a different way. They were even grateful that at least someone came along who had the courage to say what, they felt, needed to be said and should have been said a long time ago. This latter group saw him as one speaking out of his own painful experience, and, therefore, “with great authority.”

Whether we agree with what the Russian author said or not, it illustrates the point of the Gospel of this Sunday’s Liturgy. Whenever someone speaks with new ideas or a new way of seeing things that is contrary to our way of seeing them, or that challenges our value system, it is natural to react to them with a certain degree of hostility. We often demand proof of them and wonder by what right they say these things.

This is the situation that we see in the Gospel. Christ has been invited, as was the custom, to teach in the synagogue. And, as we read in the Gospel, he spoke to them in a manner that was different from the one they were accustomed to hearing. He spoke “with authority,” that is to say, as one who knew what he was talking about. As proof of this, he then performed the miracle of exorcising the man of the unclean spirit. This direct proof of his authority was even more of a challenge to many of the religious leaders of his time, and it provoked in them an even greater resistance. They did not recognize Jesus as the Messiah, and the fact that he might possibly be the Messiah was upsetting and disturbing to them. It was a challenge to their value and even to their temporal position as leaders of the people.

It is normal for us, when we’ve heard someone present to us a new way of looking at things, to find it rather disturbing. We are then forced to re-evaluate our past way of doing things and consider the possibility of adopting new values. Because this can be disturbing, we first tend to block out or deny what the speaker is saying. Still we must try to understand him, as in fact, a great number of people did in the reading today.

They were open to Christ’s teaching and to the miracle that he worked; they recognized his authority. In this way their reaction was quite different from the people who were in the position of power as their religious leaders. They accepted his teaching and made it known throughout the whole countryside; “at once his fame spread everywhere throughout the surrounding region of Galilee.”

Their reaction might teach us also to listen to what others say to us, particularly those who speak from experience, even though we may not always like or even ultimately agree with what they say. We can never be in a position of possessing the whole truth. And each person can teach us something, if only we are open enough to try to understand them.

What efforts are you making to refine your skills of listening to patients, residents and fellow workers?

Rev. Joseph Manship
Pastoral Care

 

Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Sunday, November 13, 2011 

Proverbs 31:10-13, 19-20, 30-31        I Thessalonians 5:1-6        Matthew 25:14-30

When we hear the word “talent,” we most often think of it in terms of intellectual, artistic, or athletic ability. We speak of a “talented person” as being quite gifted, with many creative skills and a high “I.Q.” Talent searches are conducted to find just such capable people. It may be somewhat surprising, therefore, to realize that a “talent” in its original use, was a Roman coin.

Our present meaning of the word is then an analogy, drawn from Christ’s illustration in today’s Gospel Reading. So, we have generally understood this story in terms of a person’s intelligence, special aptitudes, and other personality factors. In this view, the interpretation we give the “Parable of the Talents,” is that the more gifted we are, the more we must achieve with these gifts whenever we hear this familiar story.

In sports we know how self-defeating it can be for a team or any individual player, to be too anxious about losing. In a similar way, as a result of industrial and highway studies, the term “accident proneness” was devised. It characterizes the person who, too worried about being involved in accidents, tends to have them. Similarly, athletes who are too cautious often lose in the last minutes, when with a little courage and daring, they might have won.

It is this self-defeating element of anxiety that Christ is also emphasizing today. Notice how the man with one talent projects his fear and anxiety—making the one in charge seem to him to be a tyrant. Setting such conditions up in his mind, then, in a way that the others did not, he scares himself into playing it “completely safe.” His distorted version of the situation was that he would please the master most, and do his best job, by taking no chances. As we know, this is the exact opposite of what the project was about.

The German word, “eng,” meaning narrow, catches the first sound of the “anxiety.” It suggests, therefore, that when we are trapped by an anxious state, we are, by our narrowed view, in danger of putting ourselves into a self-defeating system. This anxiety seems to be in all of us at a very deep level. It can even affect the attitude of a whole nation. This is why President Franklin Roosevelt will never be forgotten for his challenging words, during the dark days of the depression, “We have nothing to fear but fear itself.”

This is then, one of the additional points in “The Parable of the Talents.” Faith is a leap, in the analogy of a trapeze act, and not clinging safely to the bar. Christ assures us here, that one of the major purposes of our lives is to invest in ourselves, and in others. We can be confident in what we are, and be certain of God’s strength and support in the midst of the risks we must take. “Do not be afraid,” was one of Jesus’ most common greeting. Loving us as he does, he greets us, too, with the same consoling reassurance.

Reflection Questions:

What talents has God entrusted to me?

My daily living and working is concerned about increasing these talents whenever I_____________ _______________________________________.

As I consider my God-given talents and my responsibilities to God and others, what causes me to live sometimes in “fear” or to be lazy?

What kind of God entrusts “his servants” with the kind of wealth depicted in the Gospel?

Fr. Joseph Manship 

Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Saturday, September 3rd, 2011

Sunday, September 4, 2011

First Reading:  Ezekiel 33:7-9     Second Reading: Romans 13:8-10     Gospel: Matthew 18:15-20 

None of us likes to be called on the carpet.  It may mean that we must submit out will to another or to the group.  It also may mean that we have to face up to the fact that we are not perfect in spite of the fact that we tend to see the wrong in another before we recognize wrong in ourselves. 

The gospel this Sunday is about being called on the carpet.  It goes through great lengths to help the erring person see their waywardness—first someone close tries, then a couple or three friends try, then the whole community.  If the individual still doesn’t correct their ways, they are to be treated like “a Gentile or tax collector” (which is to say, like an outcast). 

But the real crunch of this gospel’s challenge is not so much personal conversion as safeguarding the welfare of the entire community.  So, either the individual changes or he or she is expelled from the community.  To warrant so drastic a punishment suggests that the “sin against you” (not to be misunderstood as a personal wrong committed directly toward another individual but as something that clearly harms the community) must be something pretty serious. 

Giving and receiving corrections is one of the hardest things we can do.  Some strong motivation usually has to be present in order for corrections to be given or received and true reconciliation take place.  There may be many motivations: to save face personally, to please another, to get another to change behavior that simply annoys us, etc. 

The last line of this gospel gives us a clue as to what underlying motivation is really the strongest: “For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” In other words, our strongest motivation urging us to charitable correction is the fact that we share a common identity of being the body of Christ.  We want to preserve the integrity of that body as well as help others live the gospel values that are the guiding light of our community behavior.  We ourselves are not the reconcilers; it is the power of Christ acting through his body. 

Possible Reflective Questions:

  • How are you with receiving correction? With taking the risks to reach out and correct another?
  • Recall situations when correction led to a deeper harmony—within you, between you and another and/or within the larger community or even within your work situation.

 Father Joseph Manship

Easter Sunday

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Acts 34a, 37-43        Col 3:1-4          John 20:1-9

A story is told of an art collector who asked an expert art historian to examine a painting to determine if it were an original by a famous artist.  The art historian gazed at the painting for a few moments and then said that it was an imitation.  When asked how he knew, the art historian replied, “Ah, but it is impossible for it to be an original for when I gaze on a work by this artist, I swoon.”

We don’t like to be tricked about art or anything else; we want authenticity.  The disciples don’t want to be tricked about where Jesus is after they bury him and then find an empty tomb.  They did not understand, yet, about what truly happened —he had been raised from the dead.

The gospel account for this Easter morning tells how Mary, Peter, and the beloved disciple are struggling to find out what happened to Jesus.  Details in the story indicate they are far from expecting resurrection, even though Jesus had told them he would rise after three days.  The tomb is empty, but Mary expresses the sentiment, “We don’t know where they put him.”  She is still thinking that his body has been taken but is not able to read the signs to point here to another conclusion.  Other details in the story give evidence that the body wasn’t merely taken and hidden.  The burial clothes were there and the head cloth had been “rolled up in a separate place.”

The beloved disciple “saw and believed” but the gospel concludes with “they did not yet understand.”  Here is the mystery of Easter; we want to see and believe, but since resurrection is so out of the human experience we still simply don’t understand.

Belief came gradually to those first witnesses, and then only when they had a personal encounter with Jesus (some disciples “ate and drank with;” see first reading). Our own belief in the risen Jesus gradually grows throughout our life as we continually encounter him in our own eating and drinking with him.

We encounter the risen Jesus in Eucharist when we eat and drink with him – when Jesus’ very Body and Blood becomes our nourishment.  We also encounter the risen Jesus in each other when we witness by the goodness of our lives to gospel values.  We encounter the risen Jesus in the sure joy that comes from reconciled relationships with each other that witness to our reconciled relationship with God.  We encounter the risen Jesus when we surrender to him as Lord and Savior.  All of this assures us that we are a new creation in this resurrection life – the source of our Easter Joy.  Alleluia!

For reflection:

I “swoon” with the joy of Easter resurrection when_______________________________.

I find it easiest to encounter the risen Jesus when ______________________________.

Others who help me to see and believe are ____________________________________

because_____________________________.

Rev. Joseph Manship
Pastoral Care

The Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ the King

Sunday, November 14th, 2010

2 Samuel 5:1-3                              Col 1:12-30                                   Gospel: Luke 23:35-43
Sunday, Nobember 14, 2010

We end our liturgical year with a festive solemnity—that of Our Lord Jesus Christ the King. Yet the readings do not permit a one-sided approach to this day by only celebrating Christ’s glory.

Paul’s exalted vision of Christ as ruling over all powers and all creation (see second reading) is tempered by the sober presentation of Jesus as a crucified “King of the Jews (Gospel).

The tension between the two readings (and an inherent tension in this solemnity) is that we can never celebrate an exalted Christ without also acknowledging the suffering of Jesus.

Yes, even a jubilant celebration of Christ our King includes the reality of our King as savior—one who suffered and died for us. This is the pattern of our own lives: we suffer, die to self, and only by joining ourselves to the suffering Christ will we share in the glory of the victorious Christ.

How is Christ a king? Not by sitting on a throne; he hangs on a cross. Not by accumulating property; he establishes a kingdom of mercy and forgiveness. Not by wielding power; he does not save himself. What makes Christ our King is that he gave himself for the salvation of others.

Although Jesus, in fact, has the power to “save himself” he chooses, rather to save a condemned criminal. The extent and reach of his kingship is revealed in saving mercy. In this Gospel, one criminal acknowledges that “we have been condemned justly.”  Yet, when the same criminal asks, “Jesus, remember me,” Jesus responds, “Today you will be with me in Paradise.” In this short exchange Jesus reveals the kind of King he is—one who is full of mercy and uses his power to save others. When we, like the criminal, confess our own sinfulness and seek divine mercy, then Jesus can be for us our merciful King.

As the Good Thief had the insight of faith to recognize who Jesus was, so do we share in the same faith and the same glory, as we recognize who Jesus is for us. We can never celebrate the sovereignty of God revealed in Jesus without first acknowledging the suffering Christ.

Where in our own lives have we received or do we need God’s mercy?

What repetitive, self-centered weakness keeps us from being mediators of Christ’s gift of mercy?

Do we see the opportunities to reach out and extend mercy to those who are sick and suffering as our participation in Christ’s saving Kingdom?

Father Joseph Manship
Pastoral Care

Twenty-fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Monday, September 20th, 2010

Exodus 32:7-11, 13-14 1 Timothy 1:12-17 Luke 15:1-32

Sunday, September 12, 2010

The gospel for this Sunday includes three parables, all of them quite outrageous to a practical-minded, economically sensitive follower of Jesus. Who would go after one stupid, lost sheep and take the chance of losing the other ninety-nine? If “rejoice with me” includes food and drink – and we can hardly imagine that it wouldn’t — then the shepherd is still going to lose some of his property! Or who would bother to clean a whole house for one coin? And if “rejoice with me” includes food and drink, then the woman spent more than one coin partying with her friends! Or who would “celebrate with a feast” a rascal son who has the audacity to ask for his inheritance early, squander it, and then come home to a party rather than to punishment and disgrace? This just doesn’t make sense. And that’s the point-no, it doesn’t! What we have here is the reversal of our expectations. There is an outlandish disproportion in the three parables. Herein is our lesson: these parables speak without a doubt to us about the compassion and fidelity of God.

In the first two parables, there is no concern for how the sheep and coin are lost. All that matters is that they are found. By contrast, the prodigal son is culpable; he is “lost” because of his dissolute life. However, the father (unlike the older brother) is not concerned with who is to blame. His only concern is that he has his son back, as though from death.

The older son, on the other hand, has great concern for how the younger son was lost (swallowed up…the property with prostitutes) and refuses to come to the feast and rejoice at his return. The bitterness of the older son stands in stark contrast to the mercy and generosity of the father. So, too, with God, who is more eager to welcome and receive sinners than to hold them accountable. This is Good News!

Both readings describe the mercy of God extending to sinners, whether the sin is idolatry (first reading), dissolute living (younger son), or refusing to forgive.

Forgiving an unintended hurt is sometimes difficult for us; forgiving an intended hurt is still more difficult. Yet God’s response to sin, which is intentional, is always one of mercy, compassion, and forgiveness. God always seeks the lost. This is indeed Good News!

It is not always easy to forgive, especially when the hurt is intentional. Here are some possible steps towards forgiveness:

1. Consider the good in the person who needs our forgiveness.
2. When we are “angry”, recite a “litany” of positive virtues.
3. Think of the dignity of the other as a son or daughter of God.
4. Maybe we need to consider our own goodness.

Fr. Joseph Manship
Pastoral Care

Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Deuteronomy 30:10-14 Colossians 1:15-20 Luke 10:25-37

We have a mindset today that keeping or breaking a law doesn’t really make any difference as long as we don’t get caught. Avoiding punishment is the name of the game and choosing to break laws is about getting what we want–whether it involves shoplifting, running a red light or cheating on our income tax. All too many of us live lives that revolve around personal gain–looking after “number one.”

At first glance the Gospel this Sunday is about keeping the two great commandments. By answering the lawyer’s question with a parable, Jesus shows us a broader issue-that of giving up personal gain for the good of another.

In the Gospel the lawyer approaches Jesus to “test” him with the question about eternal life. The issue here isn’t whether we have life or not–Jesus wishes us to have life–but on how we gain that life. The lawyer knows that the two great commandments of love of God and love of neighbor sum up the whole law and prophets. One only needs to live that love. The lawyer focuses on himself and refuses to see the broader issue.

Jesus doesn’t directly answer the question about “who is my neighbor” because he knows the scholar has the law written within him (see first reading: “For this command I enjoin…already in your mouths and in your hearts; you have only to carry it out.”) Instead Jesus responds to the lawyer’s question with a parable that illustrates how keeping the law isn’t a matter of focusing on details and right and wrong or personal gain but is a matter of right relationship with one’s neighbors as exhibited by acting with compassion and mercy. The lawyer’s first question about inheriting eternal life has to do with his own gain. The episode and parable unfold not in terms of personal gain but in terms of compassion and mercy toward others.

Ironically, the way we inherit eternal life is by dying to self for the sake of another. The Samaritan in the parable isn’t moved to help the stricken traveler because of the external law but because he was a person of compassion and mercy. This is the law written within our hearts–not details about keeping specific laws but a general regard for the other that arises out of genuine care for the other. Moreover, this way of keeping the law is yet another manifestation of God’s reign being realized. It is an in breaking of a new order, a new way of relating to each other; personal gain is set aside in favor of the good of another.

  • What do you understand treating another “with mercy” to mean?
  • The Samaritan was “moved” not by the Law but by compassion. In your work at St. Mary’s, by what are you moved?
  • What is the difference in your service to others when you embody compassion?

Fr. Joseph Manship
Pastoral Care

Sixth Sunday of Easter

Monday, May 10th, 2010

May 9, 2010

Acts 15:1-2, 22-29
Rev. 21:10-14, 22-23
John 14:23-29

While attending the recent gathering in Augusta featuring the world renowned Maya Angelou, I was struck by her ability to make present the power-in-the-word. Recognizing the “power” in words, manuscripts and books were laboriously and beautifully hand copied in the past. This art was largely lost after the invention of the printing press in the fifteenth century. Tradition holds that the first book printed was a Bible. Today, the art of fine calligraphy and illumination has been recovered; we can see it most recently in Carl Jung’s The Red Book, but in particular, for our purposes, we can see it in a very special Bible commissioned by Saint John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota. In contrast to today’s mass-produced books, every page of this Bible is hand-lettered and illuminated. The Saint John’s Bible is a project of beautiful words, an expensive work undertaken out of love for aesthetics of the word and love for the word of God itself. This Sunday’s Gospel makes an important correlation between loving and living God’s word. The connection is a simple one: “Whoever loves me will keep my word,” Jesus says. For us today, however, it can be a real challenge to hear the Gospel as more than simply words, but as words we come to love, love so much that they become a way of life for us – a way of life, which will make demands on us. Jesus is telling us that his words cannot be simply skimmed and then discarded. They invite a commitment of self that is no less than the giving of self that Jesus modeled. These, indeed, are “expensive” words! “Keep my words,” Jesus commands. By this do disciples prove their love for Jesus. To help the disciples not to feel disheartened or afraid, Jesus gives his Spirit to guide them and his peace to reassure them. The risen Jesus gives us the same command and the same gifts. Like the disciples, we too are called to make keeping Jesus’ word our way of life; like the disciples, we have been given the power to do so. Jesus’ words usher in new life and a new way of being, one where the risen Christ dwells within us: “I will come back to you.” Jesus’ resurrection redefines everything. Words are no longer jots on a page, no matter how beautifully or lovingly done, but a command to a new way of living the intimate indwelling of Father, Son, and Spirit. Here is what is wholly new: God dwells within us! This intimate union between God and humanity is made possible by Jesus’ gift, the Holy Spirit. Indeed, in the Spirit all things are new!

  • Are you familiar enough with the “word of God” that the Holy Spirit can move you to live and act on that word?
  • In your interactions with patients, residents, and co-workers, what Scripture passages come to mind?
  • Are you convinced that the word of God is worth living?
    (If not, then opening your heart to Jesus, the Word, will bring you the Holy Spirit of conviction.)

Fr. Joseph Manship