5/1/11

Doubting Thomas... or Thomas the believer?

Doubting Thomas by Carl Bloch

Homily for the Second Sunday of Easter
(Scriptures for today's liturgy)

Audio for homily



There are, of course, two ways to look at Thomas.
We know him as Doubting Thomas but in the Eastern Christian rites,
he’s known as Thomas the Believer - and rightly so.

There’s no long string of gospel accounts of Thomas doubting things.
He was an apostle, a close and faithful follower of Jesus.

Think back to just a few weeks ago when Jesus was getting ready
to head to Bethany where his friend Lazarus lay dying.
Some of the apostles were reluctant to go
for fear they'd run into trouble there
but it was Thomas who said, "Let us also go to die with him…”
that is, go to die with Christ.

Thomas was a believer before he was a doubter
and he was a strong and brave believer in Christ.

So what happened? 
What caused Thomas to doubt?
What happened was the painful, inglorious death of Jesus,
crucified as a common criminal.
It wasn’t supposed to come to this. 
It wasn’t supposed to end like this.

So the other disciples’ reporting that Jesus had risen
did little to kindle faith and trust anew in Thomas’ heart.

I can’t help but wonder if there aren’t many, today, who, like Thomas,
have a history of strong faith and belief
but who, like Thomas, find themselves saying,
for one reason or another,
It wasn’t supped to come to this. 
It wasn’t supposed to end like this.

Perhaps it’s the death of a loved one, a young one, a good one;
someone prayed for, for a long time, and by so many.

Perhaps it’s the death of a dream, a plan, a hope:
It wasn’t supped to come to this. 
It wasn’t supposed to end like this.

Or perhaps it’s the death of a promise, a pledge, a word given, a marriage.
Or maybe it’s the passing of a parish structure or the selling of a church,
or the death of trust in those whose pedestals crumbled in scandal.
It wasn’t supped to come to this. 
It wasn’t supposed to end like this.

Thomas’ stance that he would not believe
without seeing and touching Jesus’ wounds
may have been as much his expression of anger, hurt and disappointment
as it was a demand for tangible proof.

In fact, although when he appears to Thomas
Jesus offers his side for probing and his wounds for touching,
the gospel doesn’t tell us whether or not Thomas accepted the offer.

We do know that upon seeing Jesus and hearing his voice,
Thomas lets go his grief, his hurt, his sadness, his disbelief and says,
“My Lord and my God!”

What Thomas did and what Jesus helped him do
was to confront the death-dealing wounds and the pierced side,
to look at his loss, to accept his loss and to see
that even if it wasn’t supposed to have come to this,
even if it wasn’t supposed to have ended like this,
there is, indeed, life, again - even after death.

What are the deaths, the losses, the hurts, the disappointments
that weaken the strength of our faith - yours and mine?

If we persist in our anger and hurt,
in our doubt and disappointment,
what comes of that?

If we cease to trust, to hope,
what deeper losses will eventually be ours?

Do we need to look into the wounds of our own hearts
pierced by what we thought would never come, and there, in the loss, 
watch for the presence of Jesus and listen for his voice,
calling us to believe, to trust again in him,
with a faith stronger than death itself?

As surely as Jesus returned to strengthen Thomas in faith
so he comes looking for each of us, too,
to strengthen us when our faith fails. 

This very morning, at this altar,
Jesus comes and stands among us and sits at our table,
offering his divine mercy.

He invites us not just to reach and touch his body and blood,
his wounded, sacrificed self,
but rather to receive, to take into ourselves
his gift of life-stronger-than-death,
the gift of his life and mercy
offered to all who will believe in him,
who see him and say,
"My Lord and my God!"


 
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4/29/11

Variations on Carravaggio's Doubting Thomas


Doubting Thomas by Caravaggio (click on image for larger version)



Contemporary rendering of Doubting Thomas, based on Caravaggio, found at The Crossroads Initiative



Another contemporary rendering of Caravaggio: Still Doubting by John Granville Gregory

If you haven't yet done your scripture homework in preparation for Mass this weekend, I hope these renderings of the Doubting Thomas might pique your interest and lead you to those
texts which, complete with background materials, can be found here.

And here's another one!


Doubting Thomas by Ben Steele

At the top of this post you saw 3 renderings of "Doubting Thomas," including Caravaggio and his imitators. The image here by Ben Steele takes us in another direction... or does it?  Steele's site is worth a visit for his take on art and how we view it. I'd apologize to fans of Kinkade but that would be disingenuous on my part: the visual pun in Steele's piece and title is too sweet to pass up! For some insightful commentary on all of this, check out Anneke Majors post at A Motley Vision.

And finally:



Photograph by Andy Moxon.



 
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Another view from your windows...

Photo by Phil Ewing

Just before taking off to Rome for the international meeting of bloggers at the Vatican, Phil of Blue Eyed Ennis sends along this beautiful view from her window.

Bon voyage, Phil, and keep us informed!


 
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The view from your window...

Photo by ND

ND, a faithful reader, sends along this photo with the caption: This was the view from my kitchen window this morning.  I've lived on this lake nearly 2 years and have never seen this before!

What's the view from your window?  This season of new life offers many glimpses of beauty - send along what's just outside your window, your door!

 
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4/28/11

Prayer after the Tornadoes

Tornado in Alabama: (AP Photo/Gary Cosby Jr.)

Again, our friend Alden Solovy, over at To Bend Light, offers us a prayer for the moment: this time a prayer for the victims of the deadly weather in the South.

After the Tornadoes

G-d beyond my understanding,
The sky has turned violent,
Crushing homes and lives,
Upending dreams,
Toppling the foundations of hope and sustenance.
Crisis and chaos,
Confusion and loss,
A scene of sweeping destruction.

G-d of justice and mercy,
We pray for the people of the Southern United States,
And the victims of any disaster,
Any violence, suffering or despair.
Grant them shelter and solace,
Comfort and consolation,
Blessing and renewal.
May people of righteousness and mercy
Come swiftly to their aid.
Grant them endurance to survive,
Strength to rebuild,
Faith to mourn,
Courage to heal,
And devotion to each other.

G-d of heaven and earth,
Heavenly Guide,
Hand of love and shelter,
Grant the people of the Southern US
Your protection,
Your radiance,
And Your peace.

© 2011 Alden Solovy and www.tobendlight.com.
All rights reserved. Used with permission.

 
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Yom Hoshoah 2011: Holocaust Memorial Days


Image: WSHERC

I urge you to attend and participate in local Holocaust Memorial Observance in your community this spring.

The official date for Yom Hashoah 2011 is May 2, while the memorial week runs from May 1- May 8. The theme for this year's observance is: From Bondage to Freedom. 

Communities mark this memorial on different days so you'll need to consult your local town or city calendar for information on dates, times and places.

In Concord, Massachusetts, the town observance will take place on May 2 at the Town House at 7:30 p.m.

When is your community's observance?


Will you be there?


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Word for the Weekend: May 1


Doubting Thomas by Caravaggio 

I'm late!  My post-Holy Week crash made me almost forget to post my weekly piece on the coming Sunday's scriptures.  So, it's definitely time to begin to prepare to hear the Word for the Second Sunday of Easter, May 1.

You'll find the scriptures and commentary on them here and if you're bringing children to Mass with you, tips for helping them prepare to hear the Lord's Word are here.

You'll note that through the whole Easter season the first reading each Sunday is from the Christian and not, as is usually the case, from the Hebrew scriptures. I'd count myself among those who find this to be a weakness in the lectionary. Our experience of the scriptures at the Easter Vigil (seven lections from the Hebrew and two from the Christian scriptures) is good evidence that this season benefits richly from the whole of God's revealed Word.

The first lesson for the day, from Acts, gives a snap shot of the early Church - a time when even Peter's shadow overflowed with healing power! We'll be hearing from the Book of Revelation each Sunday in the Easter season and this week's first installment finds John exiled on Patmos and offering us his mystical vision of Jesus, the Alpha and Omega, the first and the last of all.


A contemporary rendering of the Caravaggio at the top of this post:  
Still Doubting by John Granville Gregory

Every year on the Second Sunday of Easter we hear the story of Jesus appearing to the apostles "on that first day of the week" and breathing the Holy Spirit upon them for the forgiveness of sins. And of course, this same pericope includes the story of Thomas, the doubter.


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4/26/11

Noli me tangere!

Detail from Noli Me Tangere by Giotto di Bondone
Today's gospel includes the account of the post-Resurrection encounter between the Risen Christ and Mary Magdalene. FB friend LM posted this reflection today:

Mary Magdala’s Easter Prayer

I never suspected
   Resurrection
      and to be so painful
      to leave me weeping
with joy
   to have met you, alive and smiling, 
      outside an empty tomb
with regret
   not because I’ve lost you
   but because I’ve lost you in how I had you –
      in understandable, touchable, kissable, clingable flesh
   not as fully Lord, but as graspably human.

I want to cling, despite your protest
   cling to your body
   cling to your, and my, clingable humanity
   cling to what we had, our past.

But I know that . . . if I cling
   you cannot ascend and
I will be left clinging to your former self
… unable to receive your present spirit.



by Ronald Rolheiser, OMI

 
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An Easter Thank You!

On the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, the disciples said to Jesus, "Where do you want us to prepare for you to eat the Passover? He said, "Go into the city to a certain man and tell him the Teacher says, "In your house I shall celebrate the Passover with my disciples. Make the preparations for us there" The disciples did as Jesus had ordered, and prepared the Passover.
(Matthew 26: 17-19 and Mark 14:12-16)


Around the world, there are people breathing a sigh of relief and relaxation as the Triduum celebrations come to a close. Like the disciples before the last supper Jesus shared with his disciples, these folks have been preparing for you to celebrate the Passover Triduum of the Christian faith.

There are so many who help to prepare the liturgies we celebrate. Some of them are obvious to everyone because they are in the sanctuary, in the choir, welcoming you at the door, proclaiming the word, serving at the altar; sharing the Sacrament with you. Others work quietly, ahead of time, preparing the liturgy, in and outside the sacristy, in and outside the sanctuary; cleaning the worship space; scheduling liturgical ministers; preparing worship aids; arranging flowers and the environment for worship; counting palm branches and tapers; ironing, polishing, vacuuming, sweeping and dusting; hanging banners; cleaning out pews as you leave for the people coming in for the next liturgy; and in general, worrying about things you'd never dream need to be worried about -- but that you'd notice right away if someone hadn't worried about them!

Catechumenate teams meet weekly or even more often to prepare the elect and candidates for the Easter sacraments; Spiritual Life Commissions prepare Lenten programs to enhance spiritual preparation for Easter; Christian Service Commissions plan opportunities for Lenten sacrificial giving in preparation for Easter; Youth Ministers and Faith Formation teams work Lenten and Easter themes into their programs in preparation for the Easter liturgies; Liturgical Commissions meet months ahead of time to prepare for the Triduum; music directors, musicians, choirs and cantors spend hours upon hours rehearsing; good lectors spend hours preparing to proclaim the word; presiders devote themselves to becoming familiar with the ritual of these days so that they might lead the assembly and other ministers in graceful rites; preachers spend hours preparing homilies; and pastoral associates and parish administrators assist in a host of ways, not the least of which include answering phone calls, replying to emails, making lists, going to the printer, running copies, answering questions and making sure that the little things that can easily fall through the cracks - don't!

(And a great and hearty thank-you to visiting priests who came to rescue the pastor from the burden of the whole Sunday schedule on the morning following the Vigil and all of Holy Week!)

When things go well, it's often the pastor who gets the kind words and compliments but in hundreds of ways, the thanks should go to scores of others who work so hard to prepare and provide the time, the place, the word, the song and the stuff of sacraments and rites for these holy days.

I know these folks in my own community and I'm ever grateful for their faithful devotion to the prayer and worship we offer as a parish. Without them: there would be no Triduum at all!

You know these folks in your parish (and if you don't, find out who they are!) Seek them out, speak to them after Mass, call them, email them and let them know that you appreciate all they've done -- because through their work, the Lord saves his people!



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Reflecting on Triduum 2011


Image: DupontWorldMedia

(Click on any of the images on this post for larger versions.)
 
The Paschal Triduum.

The three most important days on the Church calendar, beginning with sundown on Holy Thursday and the Evening Mass of the Lord's Supper and closing with Evening Prayer on Easter Sunday after sundown.

Three days but only one feast: a feast so great that no one day could possibly contain it.

It is the Paschal Triduum.  I believe we have a long way to go in helping worshipers understand how the Triduum is Passover for us Christians.  One of the many reasons I treasure the First Eucharistic Prayer for Reconciliation which I use on all the Sundays of Lent is this one phrase: We do this in memory of Jesus Christ, our Passover and our lasting peace...  Likewise, I delight in lifting the consecrated Bread and Cup before Communion in the Triduum liturgies and saying, Christ our Passover has been sacrificed: this is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.  Happy are those who are called to his supper!

I have served as a priest for nearly 38 years and each year has deepened my understanding and love for this Passover celebration which is ours in the New Covenant, sealed in the Blood of Christ which has covered the doorposts and lintels of our souls and marked us for deliverance from sin and death.

This year I was under the influence of a massive congestion that visits my head and chest every spring.  This is the second time it has coincided with Holy Week.  As nasty as it was, it had the salutary effect of focusing me and my energy on the Three Days.  At the beginning of the week I laid low, hoping that rest would ready me for the liturgical demands ahead.  Perhaps the Spirit supplies a kind of graced adrenaline for such circumstances - I know that in spite of a foggy voice and a coughing jag at the end of my Holy Thursday homily, my physical condition somehow put a keener edge on my desire to pray and lead well the prayer of the people around me.  Praise God from whom all blessings flow!

Jerry Galipeau's fine blog, Gotta Sing, Gotta Pray, invites readers to mention in the combox there what moments in the Triduum had been found most telling.  Allow me, here, to respond to that question - and I invite you to offer your reflections in the combox following this post.

HOLY THURSDAY
Washing of feet on Holy Thursday - DupontWorldMedia

In our parish we invite anyone present to participate in the washing of the feet on Holy Thursday. Each person who comes forward to have his or her feet washed in turn washes the feet of the next person.  This means that sometimes children wash a parent's or a sibling's feet, or a teen washes the feet of one of our elder parishioners.  To see Christ's mandatum, his command that we do as he had shown us to do, so beautifully fulfilled is a grace for the whole assembly and I take joy especially in watching our younger members take up this work so early in their lives.

Washing of Feet on Holy Thursday - DupontWorldMedia

After Eucharistic procession, Holy Thursday - DupontWorldMedia

GOOD FRIDAY

On Good Friday, at the Veneration of the Cross, four parishioners carry in procession a near-life-size Cross.  Then in teams of two, they alternate keeping the Cross steadied as the assembly comes forward to venerate.

Procession with the Cross, Good Friday - DupontWorldMedia

Some come barefoot; some genuflect; some touch and "take a blessing" from the wood on which has hung our salvation; some embrace the Cross; some kiss it; some bow before it; some kneel and embrace its base...  This veneration usually takes 30-40 minutes, so prayerfully do all come forward and so graciously do all allow each person the time and space to venerate.  From my seat in the sanctuary, to the back of the Cross, I see the faces of those who come forward and I know the stories that many of them bring in their hearts to the Cross of Jesus.  More than once I found myself weeping, knowing the suffering that was left at the foot of the Cross of the One who suffered for us.

Veneration of the Cross, Good Friday - DupontWorldMedia

At the end of the Veneration, the deacon and I laid this large Cross on the altar.   While we waited for the Eucharist to be brought into the assembly, I spoke about the appropriateness of resting the Cross of Christ's sacrifice on the altar of sacrifice where, every Sunday, we celebrate the sacrifice by which Christ, once and for all, redeemed his people.

EASTER VIGIL

Laying on of Hands at Easter Vigil - DupontWorldMedia

At this year's Vigil we welcomed one man to full Communion with the Catholic Church but we had not catechumens for baptism.  Surely, something important is missing in the Vigil liturgy when there are no baptisms to be celebrated but that did not keep us from celebrating the mother of all vigils as fully as possible, even without that sacrament which brings to life our share in the dying and rising of Christ in baptism.

Chrismation at Easter Vigil - DupontWorldMedia

In this past year we have experienced great growth in our choir and a new voice on the parish staff brought not only new songs but also musical settings for parts of the Vigil we had not sung before.  All this brought a freshness to our Vigil that was as sweet as spring itself.  Our lectors surely spent many hours preparing to proclaim the eight lessons and during the Alleluia we unfurled the banner which we had "buried" on the Sunday before Ash Wednesday.

Resurrecting the Alleluia Banner! - DupontWorldMedia

I left the Vigil knowing clearly that we, God's people, had with one voice prayed and sung the praises of the Risen Lord, lifting up an offering with one heart, united in the Spirit of the One whose rising we had come to celebrate.

ALLELUIA! - DupontWorldMedia

If you like, please share with us in the combox your own experience and reflections on the liturgies of the Paschal Triduum.

 
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