Posts

Accompaniment

Caspian Terns, Royal Terns and Laughing Gulls – Mustang Island, Texas

Caspian Terns, Royal Terns and Laughing Gulls – Mustang Island, Texas

We live in a world of division.  Each side seems to hate each other.  Often the things that divide one-side against the other are NOT insignificant, but let us follow Jesus’s lead…….

 Jesus, the Son of God, God’s very Word made flesh, came down from heaven to accompany us in our life here on this beautiful planet.  I don’t care how good we think we are, we are not in any way close to his glory.  Yet he joined us.  He became fully man.  He accompanied us and still accompanies us today.  Why?  To lead us to heaven, to make us like him, to be a part of his family so we can live eternally surrounded and filled with his love.

 Jesus demonstrated the practice of accompaniment throughout his life.   How was Jesus able to accompany people that might be practicing the most deplorable of sins?  Perhaps he, being God, looked into their hearts?  Perhaps he saw them kissing their son, their spouse or their mother at the end of the day?  Perhaps it was because he saw them dancing and singing joyfully at the start of a new day? Perhaps he saw them giving money to a stranger, a prisoner, a widow in need? Somehow, someway, Jesus saw the good and the potential of each person, each person that he had made in his own image and likeness.  Jesus did not give up on them.  And he does not give up on you or me today.

 Accompaniment to Jesus, was not a way to water down the truth, he always lead people to the truth but his method was and continues to be; to meet people where they are and lead them to the truth.  The beauty of this method for us is we are not always set firmly on the truth and in encountering others we might also be lead closer to the truth.  Often when people are accompanying each other, both are brought closer to the truth, closer to God, closer to Jesus.

 Accompaniment for the Christian requires many things but it begins with grace, then faith, and then a listening to the Holy Spirit.  Often this listening to the Holy Spirit is done by listening to the Holy Spirit talking to you through the other. 

 Let us today challenge ourselves to accompany the other instead of accusing the other.  We must remember that the people that Jesus confronted the most were those that only pointed fingers and were unwilling to accompany the other (see the many accounts of Jesus challenging the Pharisees and Scribes).  

 Accompaniment is hard, it is challenging.  I believe it starts in sharing the things we have in common, the things we love and then embracing them in each other.  Then, perhaps, we can begin to venture into the areas of disagreement.  At the end of the day we may still disagree but we pray; that with God’s help, we will meet again on another day, seeing the beauty in each other a bit clearer than we did the previous day.

 May God bless you during this Lenten season.

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God is Color Blind

Red-breasted Grosbeak, High Island, TX

Red-breasted Grosbeak, High Island, TX

This month we celebrate the lives of two African Christian saints that were martyred in the year 203 A.D.  Both were young mothers when they were executed in the public games in the amphitheater at Carthage in the Roman province of Africa.  Their names are Saint Perpetua and Saint Felicity.  They were killed for refusing to deny Christ.  As St. Perpetua wrote in her diary, “I cannot call myself by any other name than what I am—a Christian.”

 God is color blind when it comes to human skin color; but regretfully, humans are not.  We should take time to thank and reflect upon the great contributions to Christianity that came from, and continue to come from, the African continent.  Great is perhaps too small of a word when it comes to the tremendous spiritual and theological insight that have come from the people living on this continent. 

 Saint Augustine, one of the greatest Christian theologians and perhaps minds of all times, was an African.  St. Augustine is just one of many early Christians that contributed so greatly to Christ’s church.  Today this deep tradition continues with the deeply spiritual and theological insights provided by the people of this continent.  For example, just look at the books by Cardinal Sarah such as “The Power of Silence” or “God or Nothing”. 

Regretfully, the African continent continues to have many Christians that are being martyred for their beliefs. May Saints Perpetua and Saint Felicity join us, in our prayers to God, that all may be allowed to practice their faith with religious freedom.  Amen

 Additional information on the lives of Saints Perpetua and Felicity can be found at https://www.franciscanmedia.org/saints-perpetua-and-felicity/

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Following Jesus

Sunset, Olympia, Washington

Sunset, Olympia, Washington

When Christ selected his closest followers they left everything behind.  Initially, they may have followed him because they thought he would free their nation from foreign rule, or perhaps they thought they would get a seat of power in this new kingdom he was going to establish. 

However; as time went on they began to realize who he was, what his kingdom would be like, and what following him might be like.  It was on Christ’s final trip to Jerusalem before his passion, after the bread of life discourse, that many of his followers left him.  It was then that Jesus looked at his twelve apostles and said, “Do you also want to leave?” Simon Peter answered him, “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and are convinced that you are the Holy One of God.”  (John 6: 67-69)

We must periodically ask ourselves: Are we willing to follow Jesus to the end?  Are we willing to leave everything behind to follow him?

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Seeing Beyond

View of Sangre de Cristo Mountains from Bosque del Oso State Wildlife area, Colorado

View of Sangre de Cristo Mountains from Bosque del Oso State Wildlife area, Colorado

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Freedom

Scissor-tailed Flycatcher perched on barbed-wire fence, Bulverde, TX

Scissor-tailed Flycatcher perched on barbed-wire fence, Bulverde, TX

What takes away your freedom? Ask God for the grace to understand what enslaves you and to seek his assistance to become truly free.

 

God give me the grace to be truly free,

to see and know the Truth,

to see myself, the world and others in light of the Truth,

to allow you to change me in accordance with the Truth.

 

John 14:6 Jesus said to him, “I am the way and the truth and the life. 

  

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Bless the Lord, my Soul!

Sunset, Wet Mountains, Pueblo West, Colorado

Sunset, Wet Mountains, Pueblo West, Colorado

3000 years ago a young boy looked out at the night sky as he kept his father’s sheep, 

he looked at the mountains and the deserts and the valleys,

he saw rain and draught,

he saw lion and hare,

and in all things he saw the Lord God.

 

Psalm 104 is a great meditation for all who love God and this beautiful world He created.

http://www.usccb.org/bible/psalms/104

 

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Very Small but So Very Important

Great Egret chick emerging from egg with parent watching, High Island, TX

Great Egret chick emerging from egg with parent watching, High Island, TX

What a beautiful mystery, that the One that created matter, space, energy and time would adopt us as His children so that we could cry out to Him, “Abba, Father”. (see Romans 8:15)

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In the Presence of Your Love

Axis deer surround by wild flowers, Spring Branch, TX

Axis deer surround by wild flowers, Spring Branch, TX

Happy New Year!  As we reflect on the year behind and look forward to the year ahead, let us examine the times when we walked closely with our God and the times when we may have walked away from his presence.  Let us resolve to walk closer with our Lord Jesus Christ in the year to come. 

 

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Merry Christmas

Sunrise Galveston, TX with background mosaic from Basilica of our Lady of the Rosary, Lourdes, France

Sunrise Galveston, TX with background mosaic from Basilica of our Lady of the Rosary, Lourdes, France

God grant us the grace…

to hear the cooing of the baby in the manger,

to see Mary softly kiss his cheeks,

to see the joy on Joseph’s face,

to understand that God became man to show us “The Way”,

to live as Christians according to “The Way”.

 

Merry Christmas everyone, the Lord has come.

 

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Search and Examine

Search and Examine.jpg

Green-winged teal, Galveston, TX

A self-examination of conscious is a long held Christian tradition for growth in the spiritual life.  You see it in the bible many times.  St. Paul, in particular; recommends an examination of conscious (see 1 Cor 11:28, 2 Cor 13:5, 1 Cor 11:31, Gal 6:4).  My favorite examination of conscious in the bible; however, is the one told by Jesus in the story of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15 11-32).  The Prodigal Son is cleaning the stalls of pigs.  For a first century Jew, who by law avoided all pork, this must have been a rock bottom point in his life.  At this point the son examines his life, understands his errors and returns to his father to be embraced and loved.    As we prepare ourselves for Christmas let us examine our conscious and run to the embrace of our Heavenly Father.

 

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Feathers and Wings

Feathers and Wings.jpg

Painted Bunting, Pedernales Falls State Park, Texas

St. Francis was said to have talked to animals, but wasn’t this mystic and saint really talking to us?  If birds have an obligation to praise the Creator, how much more should we?  As we prepare for Christmas let us praise the Creator that has made us in his image and has revealed to us, through the life of his son, our true vocation, to seek and love what is true and good (see CCC 1701-1715). 

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I try to make each photo new and fresh in my blog, but when I read this quote of St. Francis I could not help but use this photo of a Painted Bunting that is quite similar to a photo I put in an earlier post.  I figure no one can ever get enough of a Painted Bunting.

Prepare our Hearts

Cow Moose, Rocky Mountain National Park

Cow Moose, Rocky Mountain National Park



As we begin this Advent Season let us ask the Holy Spirit to prepare our hearts for the birth of Jesus, the only begotten son of God.  Come Holy Spirit, Come. 

Heavenly Home

McClure Pass, Colorado

McClure Pass, Colorado

These words of St. Augustine, which have been echoed by the saints throughout the ages, seem foreign to us.  It seems as if these saints do not enjoy life.  On the contrary, they love life.  This love for life can be seen by the love they show the poor, the vulnerable and all mankind.  The saints’ love of the created world can be seen in their prose and songs of flowers and animals and sun and moon and stars. 

The saints; however, have a keen insight that life in its full will be realized when we sit at the foot of our Heavenly Father and peer into his eyes.  St. Augustine, when reflecting on how it will be for us in heaven wrote these words, “Instead of the ray of light which was sent through slanting and winding ways into the heart of your darkness, you will see the light itself in all its purity and brightness.”

Lord, help us to always see and be your rays of light on this earth as we hope to eternally live in the glory of your light in heaven.

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Liberty to Captives

Captives Free.jpg

American pronghorn antelope, Pueblo, CO

“For freedom Christ set us free.” (Gal 5:1)  Let us seek the true freedom that Christ offers. 

 

“Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart; and you will find rest for yourselves. For my yoke is easy, and my burden light.”  Matthew 11:  28-30

 

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The Fire of Your Love

The fire of your love.jpg

Morning Dove, Big Bend National Park, TX

Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful.
And kindle in them the fire of your love.
Send forth your Spirit and they shall be created.
And you will renew the face of the earth.

Lord,
by the light of the Holy Spirit
you have taught the hearts of your faithful.
In the same Spirit
help us to relish what is right
and always rejoice in your consolation.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.

 

 

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Eyes on Jesus

Eyes on Jesus.jpg

Fall colors, Ten Mile Creek, Frisco, Colorado

St. Ignatius of Antioch was publicly torn to pieces by lions in the Circus Maximus in the year 107 A.D. 

 

A disciple of John and appointed as bishop of Antioch, Syria by St. Peter, St. Ignatius refused to deny his faith in Jesus Christ as the son of God.   As a result, he was put in chains and carted to Rome where he was publically executed in the year 107 A.D.  While being transported to Rome, St. Ignatius wrote seven letters to the Christians in Asia Minor.  In these letters, St. Ignatius discusses his unwavering faith in Jesus and the certainty that he will be joining Jesus in heaven after his death.  St. Ignatius always kept his eyes on Jesus no matter the hardship he encountered. 

 

"I know what is to my advantage. At last I am becoming his disciple. May nothing entice me till I happily make my way to Jesus Christ! Fire, cross, struggles with wild beasts, wrenching of bones, mangling of limbs-let them come to me, provided only I make my way to Jesus Christ. I would rather die and come to Jesus Christ than be king over the entire earth. Him I seek who died for us; him I love who rose again because of us."  ~ St. Ignatius of Antioch

 

St. Ignatius in his letters consistently askes the churches in Asia-Minor to have unity and order; in belief, practice and faith. 

 

St. Ignatius, pray for us.

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Behold Your Mother

Black-bellied Whistling Duck and chicks, Galveston, Texas

Black-bellied Whistling Duck and chicks, Galveston, Texas



Why were some of Jesus’s final words on the cross as each breath, each word uttered, became a struggle, “Woman, behold, your son.”  Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother” (John 19:26-27)? 

John’s mother was still living (see Matthew 20), so if Jesus’s sole intent was to make sure Mary was taken care of shouldn’t he have simply said to John “Take care of my mother.”  At this last moment was Jesus just trying to be poetic, or was there a deeper meaning in his words? 

The early Church fathers saw John as the beloved disciple but they also saw John symbolizing all of the Christian faithful that are on the journey of faith following Jesus to the cross.  Pope Francis has said there is a genius in the spirituality of women that is desperately needed by all the faithful.  This genius is the radiant beauty of humility, which allows us to see God and serve others.  Often, us men in particular, get absorbed in pride and self-accomplishment that takes our eyes off of Jesus and serving others.  Perhaps Jesus knew, in his infinite wisdom, that we need a spiritual mother to guide and direct us into his loving arms, the loving arms of Jesus, the son of God.  What better spiritual mother than his mother, Mary?

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