Sunday, August 29, 2021

In Eucharist we receive the love of Jesus; in Eucharist we are missioned to live and witness to the love of Jesus in the actions of our lives.

 

Twenty Second in OT  B  2021

 

In the first Scripture reading, Moses said to the people: “Now Israel hear the statues and decrees which I am teaching you to observe; observe them carefully for you to be a wise and intelligent people.”

 

The laws of God’s people serve like an invisible fence -- the fence you put in your yard to keep your dog from wandering into the street or menacing the jogger out for a bit of exercise or wherever your dog would like to wander to.  This fence serves an excellent purpose so that the dog can play in the yard without getting hurt.  So too, the Ten Commandments are our invisible fence that helps us to live in right relationship with one another and with our God.  They make all the sense in the world. 

 

But strict observance of the law doesn’t determine whether God is going to love us or not.   No matter what, God cannot stop loving us.  But the commandments are meant to hold us accountable as to how we respond to God’s great love for us.

 

In the Gospel, we see the anger of Jesus in confronting the hypocrisy of the Pharisees.  Jesus says: “This people honors me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me.”  Few situations moved Jesus to anger like the hypocrisy of people who distorted the Law’s intent.

 

Please note that Jesus is not venting against the Pharisees because of their fidelity to religious observance and the ritual tradition.  This is a good thing.  Jesus labels them hypocrites because the words they spoke from their lips did not come from hearts filled with compassion.  They worshipped ritually in solemn ways, but this did not translate into deeds filled with love.  

 

Jesus is so clear in His teachings.  He tells that He did not come to destroy the Law and the Prophets, but to fulfill them.  Jesus has no problem with the person who ritually washes his hands and still serves the poor and the needy.  The problem is with us who make sure to wash our hands but never pay attention to the poor and the needy.

 

 

 

 

Pope Francis’ favorite image for the Church is to see the Church as a “field hospital.”  In the field hospital of the Church of the Holy Spirit, we humbly recognize that all of us are sinners.  Using this image can help us to avoid self-righteous attitudes.   The sacraments are not rewards for us who are perfect; rather the sacraments are spiritual medicine for us who are weak. 

 

In today’s Scripture, Jesus gave us a new tradition that begins and ends with love.  He asks us to let love transform our hearts and our souls so that we can transform the world.

 

In the Gospel, Jesus responded to the self-righteous  purity police by citing the prophet Isaiah:  This people honors with their lips, but their hearts are far from me.”  In the second scripture reading, James proclaims:  “Religion that is pure and undefiled before God is this:  to care for the orphans and widows and to keep oneself unstained by the world.”

 

Isaiah accuses the people of being more concerned with ritual defilement than with ethical defilement. 

And so, yes, we can spiritually get lost even when we are obeying the law and seemingly being very religious if our hearts are not filled with the merciful love of Jesus.

 Our discipleship of Jesus is not primarily about legalism; it is about loving God and neighbor.

There is a new elephant in the room of spiritual legalism – whether to wear a mask or not, whether to be vaccinated or not.  I was in a meeting this past Wednesday with some parents of St. Joseph’s School .  Much passion and anger expressed whether children should wear masks in school  when they are indoors and not six feet apart.  The question was whether this should be the decision of the parents or whether there should be a school policy that provides for the health and safety of all the students.

 

My hunch is if we had an open forum right now, we would have both points of view represented rather vigorously.  My point is not to start a debate.  My point is to say we all need to have hearts filled with love and the capacity to listen to one another. 

 

At all times and in all situations, we need to speak our convictions but we all must witness to the love of Jesus in our dialogue with one another.

 

In all truth, all of us probably need to acknowledge a bit of hypocrisy when our egos get in the way of reaching out to people in need and reaching out to people whom we find unlovable for whatever reason.  There is sin in the world and sin in our own hearts.  We always need to recognize our own sinfulness and come before our healing, forgiving God.

The North Star of our spiritual lives is rooted in our faith conviction that there is nothing hypocritical about God’s love for us.  It is unconditional and unending.  I invite you to hold on to the truth:  There is nothing we can do to stop God from loving us.  God is love.

This pandemic crisis is capable of getting all of us stressed out.  May the saving grace for all of us to trust, to be a people of faith and affirm that indeed that is nothing hypocritical about God’s love for us.  This virus does not separate us from the merciful and forgiving love of our God.

Our prayer and liturgy must lead to witnessing to the love of Jesus in our lives.  In the dismissal rite of the Mass, I will say: “Go in peace glorifying the Lord by our lives.”  This is not a simple throw-away statement to head to the parking lot.  This is our call to live the meaning of the Eucharist 24 hours a day.  In Eucharist we receive the love of Jesus; in Eucharist we are missioned to live and witness to the love of Jesus in the actions of our lives.

 

May God grant you peace.

 

 

Sunday, August 22, 2021

You and I are stewards of an amazing Gospel message.. God's love for us is not too good to be true.

 

Twenty First Sunday in OT B 2021

In today’s first Scripture reading, Joshua was asking for a decision from the Israelites: “Decide today whom you will serve?”   Joshua goes on to affirm: “As for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.”

In today’s Gospel, many of the disciples have abandoned ship and returned to their former way of life.  Plain and simple, the demands of discipleship were more than they bargained for.  According to the evangelist John, many of Jesus’ disciples who were listening said: “This saying is hard:  who can accept it?” Jesus then said to the Twelve, “Do you also want to leave?”  Simon Peter answered him, “Master, to whom shall we go?  You have the words of eternal life.”

 

 If you were there at the time would you be one of the many disciples who returned to his/her former way of life or one that stayed with Jesus? Is there any middle ground here?

 Just as Jesus’ question, “Do you want to leave?” was a moment of crisis for some of the disciples, so has been the pandemic a moment of crisis or decision making for us.

At that time “many of his disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer accompanied him.” Jesus decides to question the apostles. Jesus then said to the Twelve, ‘Do you also want to leave?’ Make a decision.

A moment of crisis is a moment of choice; it is a moment that puts us in front of the decisions we have to make.

Peter’s response with a confession of faith is an example of faith and trust amid a crisis. Peter responded: “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”

This helps all of us to live through moments of crisis. This pandemic is also a time of social crisis.

This is not the time to make changes. It is a moment of fidelity, of fidelity to God, fidelity to the decisions we have made before. Also, it is a moment of conversion because this fidelity will inspire some of us to change for the better. In times of crisis, be very firm in the conviction of faith.

What about our commitment to our discipleship of the Lord Jesus?  Are we able to get in the lane of discipleship and stay in the lane -- come what may?  This is the commitment question the Scriptures are inviting us to reflect upon.

It wasn’t just first century disciples who grumbled, questioned difficult teachings, and chose not to follow Jesus.  People today wonder if the Gospel has anything of value to say to their life situation or to the human condition.

 

In the wake of the clergy sex abuse scandal, has our trust in the spiritual leaders of our Church derailed our trust and our participation in the life of the Church?  AS we deal with the pandemic crisis that has turned our lives upside down, are we now having trouble finding our spiritual footing?  AS more and more people question the rituals and practices of the institutional Church, can we stay in the lane of God’s unending love for us?   Now is not the time to hide.  We need to be honest, to be forthright, to be seen and to come before the light of Christ.

We live in challenging times.  Today’s seeker is bombarded by a myriad of competing claims about where to go and whom to follow.  Deciding what course is not a simple task.  There are too many scandals with spiritual and government leaders.   Sexual morality seems to be up for grabs, our mounting national debt, our escalating environmental questions, the tragic conflict in Afghanistan, ongoing poverty both locally and globally make us want to throw up our hands and cry “uncle.”

In out discipleship of the Lord Jesus, can we say with conviction that Jesus is the North Star of our lives?  It is one thing to be born a Catholic; it is another to choose to remain one.  To be born a Christian could be an accident.  To decide to remain one is a decision.

I entered the seminary at age 14 on my journey to the priesthood 65 years ago, my level of commitment as a 14-year-old has evolved over the years in the joys and the challenges and the struggles in my priestly life and ministry.  Yes, I have been disillusioned by the institutional church; yes, I have seen spiritual leaders in the Church that haven’t walked their talk at times; yes, I am concerned by the declining number of candidates for the priesthood; yes, I can’t say that I am enthusiastic about all the human canonical regulations of our Church.  So, you can ask, why do I stay a priest?

 

I take the apostle Peter in today’s Gospel as my model. In the words of Peter, “Lord, where else would we go?  You have the words of eternal life. I have been and will continue to be a generous recipient of God’s unending love for me.  Jesus has been and will continue to be the North Star of my life.

I am in the lane of being a disciple of Jesus and witnessing to God’s love in the midst of our flawed Church.  Yes, we are flawed.  But we are also loved and forgiven by the unending love of Jesus for us.

You and I are stewards of an amazing Gospel message.  God’s love for us is not too good to be true.  God is faithful in His love for us in all experiences of life.  We are still called to live and share this commitment to faithfulness.

My question for you in your journey of faith has there come that time for you to say that there is no turning back, that Jesus is indeed the way, the truth, and the life, and that we are called to follow Him no matter the course or length or difficulty of the journey.  Oh, sure, there may still be times of doubt or darkness, or dismay and difficulty, but the course is clear; there is no other choice about whom we will follow.  Even in the suffering we experience in life, can we stay in the lane of trusting in God’s unending love for us?

We ask ourselves what are the important commitments of our life?   What is our commitment to God?  How does our discipleship of the Lord Jesus shape the way we live our lives?

What is your commitment level to your family? 

What is your level of commitment to the faith community of St Joseph’s?  Are we a parish community that fosters the development of soul friends that are life giving to our spirit and to our faith life?  As a parishioner, are you more than a pew-sitter?  May we be a community that witnesses to the love of Jesus Christ by our sharing of our love and friendship with one another?

May God give you peace and a sense of commitment to discipleship of the Lord Jesus.

Sunday, August 15, 2021

My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord. My spirit rejoices in God my Savior.

 

Assumption 2021

 

In celebrating the Feast of Mary’s Assumption into heaven, we are aware of the gift given to Mary at the beginning and at the end of her life – in her Immaculate Conception she was freed from original sin, and in her Assumption she was immediately taken up onto heaven body and soul.

 We look to Mary as the model and example of our discipleship.  We celebrate the gifted relationship with her son Jesus.

 For Mary heavenly glory is not so much a place but an intensified relationship. She was taken up to be where Christ is. In her the Lord fulfills his promise to the Church ‘where I am you may be also.’ (Jn.14.3).

Whereas we are still pilgrims on the way.  Mary is no longer on the way home to God. She is a pilgrim no longer.

This is her glory we celebrate in the Feast of the Assumption.

The key to the celebration of this feast is relationship.  Being without sin the relationship of obedient love was never broken. She also enjoyed the relationship of maternity. Jesus grew in her womb; they shared a common life. They were of ‘one flesh’  in virtue of her maternity. It is this flesh, the total bodily reality of the Incarnate Word which ascends to heavenly glory. At the end of her earthly life it is this body in which the redeemer of the world was welcomed and nurtured which is re-united with the glorified Christ.

As shown in today’s Gospel,  Mary came to know more fully the call of God in her life in the context of her relationship with her cousin Elizabeth.  In today’s Gospel, “Mary set out and traveled to the hill country in haste to a town of Judah, where she entered the house of Zechariah and greeted Elizabeth.”  In this visitation, Mary did not come to tell Elizabeth what to do, but simply to share hospitality, availability, friendship, and their love for each other.

It is in the context of their sharing of their friendship that Mary proclaimed her beautiful song of praise:  “My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord; my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, for he has looked with favor on his lowly servant.”

 

Mary’s Magnificat can be compared to the Beatitudes.  “He has shown the strength of his arm.  He has scattered the proud in their conceit.  He has cast down the mighty from their thrones and has lifted up the lowly.  He has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent away empty.”

What is significant about this visitation Gospel is how we discover the call of God and the presence of God in our lives.  For certain, God speaks to us in the silence and the solitude of prayer.  As the psalmist tells us:  “Be still and know that I am God.”

But the silence of prayer is not our only path to God; as for Mary in today’s visitation Gospel, it is also in the context of the friendship and loves of our lives that we come to know God’s call in our lives.

Value the spirituality of the friendships of our lives.  It is in the joy of relationships that are privileged ways of encountering the God of friendship and the God of love.  Yes, our spirituality is very, very relational – relationship with our loving God and our relationship with one another.

Who in your life has been Elizabeth for you confirming  the presence of God?  Who in your life has been like Mary encouraging you to give praise to God.

If you were to write your own Magnificat, what in your life would you mark as your blessings what you wish to give praise and thanks to our loving God?

Seeking the intercession of Mary, may we be a Church of friendship, a Church of love.  In the words of Jesus, “By this all shall know you are my disciples, your love for one another.”

Yes, we discover the presence and the call of God in our lives in the context of the friendship and love we have for one another.

The challenge for all of us, without exception, is to recognize the call of God, emanating from deep within our spirit.  We live in a noisy culture which seeks to compete with God’s call in our life.

Today’s Gospel truth calls us to look to Mary and follow her example in discovering the call of God in our lives.  Clearly, Mary is a person of prayer.  She pondered in her heart the workings of God in her life.  As shown in today’s Gospel, Mary also came to know the call of God in her life in the context of her relationship with her cousin Elizabeth. 

It is in this setting that we will recognize more clearly the call of God in life.  I have prayed over the events of this past week in the light of today’s beautiful Gospel. 

This past week, I had the privilege of celebrating Mass at Camp Stella Maris.  It is an inspiring vibrant liturgy.  Very personally inspiring for me, my grandnephew Jake and grandniece Lilly were campers and I gave them Communion at Mass.  Also, my grandniece Katie is a counseling intern at Camp Stella Maris.  I was overjoyed in seeing Katie as an intern counselor for the campers.

Being among these beautiful campers and leading them in prayer deepens the call of God in my life as a priest.

I also had the opportunity of visiting my sister and having a picnic dinner with Anne and her children and grandchildren.  This was a such a God moment for me.

I very much invite you to reflect on the call in your life in the context of your family and all the relationships of your life.

This is the grace of the Visitation Gospel.  In the context of her friendship and love with her cousin Elizabeth, Mary spoke the beautiful Magnificat prayer.

So too for us, in the context of our family life and in all the relationships of our life, may they be God moments for us where we too proclaim:  “My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord; my spirit rejoices in God my Savior.

As we celebrate the gifted relationship of Mary with her son, we celebrate both her Immaculate Conception at the beginning of her life and the Feast of the Assumption at the end of her life.  Mary is our intercessor and our guide.

The words of Jesus spoken at the Last Supper are meant for us as well: “ I am going to prepare a place for you that where I am you also may be.  I will come back again and take you to where I am.”

Mary the Mother of the Lord Jesus has pointed the way for the direction of our lives as one day we too will go home to God; we will go to the place the Lord has prepared for us so that in the words of Jesus:  That where I am you also may be.  I will back again and take you where I am.

 

May God give you in peace in your journey of faith.

Monday, August 9, 2021

We ask for the grace to be touched by the merciful love of Jesus to renew us in spirit.

 

 

NINETEENTH SUNDAY IN OT  B  2021

Propagation of the Faith

 

In my 53 years as a priest,  I have never experienced a liturgy in which at 6:00 am on each and every school day 1,000 high school girls in full Catholic school uniform sing the opening hymn with enthusiastic voices accompanied only by one of their own beating her heart out in striking a well-worn drum.  I tell you looking out from the altar at these Tanzanian girls was a mystical moment of prayerfulness and joy.

 

We were indeed on holy ground.  Father Damian Milliken, a Benedictine priest from Elmira, New York, was presiding at the Mass.  Father Damian is a priest in his 80’s and has ministered in the last 50 years of his priesthood serving the poorest of the poor in Tanzania, East Africa.  The genuine love and respect that Father Damian enjoys with these young Tanzanians and their families and all who live in the area around Mazinde Ju is so Christ-like and uplifting. 

 

Equally impressive is a religious community of consecrated women who are such an important part of the teaching faculty.  These are the religious sisters of Usambara.  Dressed in their full habit, these sisters number 500 consecrated women in Tanzania.  These sisters know in their DNA the joy of the Lord.

 

To describe St Mary’s School in Mazinde Ju in Tanzania is a bit of a challenge.  It is a residential school where these students live during the academic year and are able to get three healthy meals each day.  The dormitories these students live in are filled with bunk beds.  Each girl has a tiny cubicle which houses all her worldly possessions including all her clothing.  I have a beautiful grandniece for whom to put all her clothes in this tiny cubicle would simply be impossible.

 These high school students, these beloved daughters of God have no sense of entitlement by which they expect people to take care of them.  They are so grateful for every opportunity in life that is given to them.  They are not saddened by the effects of the poverty of the country; they are joy-filled in the opportunity that is given to them as students in this quality academic setting that is filled with so much love and so much spirituality.

 

I tell you this first hand from having the privilege of sending time with these students in Mazinde Ju in Tanzania to be inspired by their faith, their desire to learn, the way they care for one another, and the opportunity St Mary’s School gives these students to continue their education.  Under the inspired leadership of this Benedictine priest Fr Damien Milliken and the religious sisters of the Usambara, these students are formed and fashioned after the mind and heart of Jesus.

 

The second collection today is the annual Propagation of the Faith collection.  Every cent of this collection goes to support the educational opportunity for these high school girls.  This school provides so much more than our excellent high schools.  These girls and their families live in such poverty that is hard for us to imagine as it is so far removed from our way of life.  This school is a residential school that provides such a healthy way of life for these students.  It is the promised land for these students.

 

Some of us make an annual $1,000 contribution to provide a scholarship for one on these deserving students.    Personally, I gladly make this $1,000 contribution each year.  I had the profound privilege of spending some time with this young Tanzanian girl I have sponsoring for the last three years.  I tell you I had to tell myself: “Be still my heart” when I realized the opportunity I was giving this daughter of God in my prayer and in my tithing commitment.  In all truth, l cannot think of a better use of this money. 

 

As I reflect on the enthusiasm, the joy and the gratitude of these Tanzanian girls, we reflect on today’s Scriptures.  In all three readings today, people are tired, exhausted, depressed, and full of complaints.  In the first Scripture reading, the prophet Elijah was having a pity party for himself; he was broken in spirit; and just slept under a broom tree waiting to die.  In the second Scripture reading, Paul was demanding the Ephesians stop all bitterness, fury, anger, shouting and reviling.  Then in the Gospel, the Jews were murmuring about Jesus because he said, “I am the bread that came down from heaven.”

 

 Does this sound like God’s chosen people?  Perhaps these folks need to read and enjoy Pope Francis’s letter on THE JOY OF THE GOSPEL.  Perhaps they need to sing the beautiful hymn to the God of all hopefulness, the God of all joy.

 

I tell you these girls living in the poverty of their family life in Tanzania have plenty of reason to be tired and depressed.  And yet, they are filled with joy and gratitude.  How can this be?  They are touched by the mystery of God’s unending love for them.  They feel the love and support of each other; they are much loved by Father Damien and the Sisters of Usambara; and they know the support of our generous tithing support.

 

In a word, these girls have experienced in the mystery of the Church people who love and support them, and they have encountered Jesus as their friend and as their Savior and Lord.  Wow!  Our parish mantra is that we are the Church.  These high schools have experienced the Church not as a building but as the people of God who care for each other and who trust in Jesus.

 

 

 

 Back to the Scriptures, the conversion experience for the Prophet Elijah, for the Ephesians in which apostle Paul preached to; and the followers of Jesus happened when they encountered God’s merciful love.  Then their negativity was transformed into trusting in Jesus.  They were renewed in spirit and discovered the blessings and the joy of knowing the Lord.

 

And so, we need to do an inventory of our faith journey when we are overwhelmed by tiredness, by stress, by our own negativity.  We ask for the grace to be touched by the merciful love of Jesus to renew us in spirit.

 

In our financial tithing in the second collection today, we are privileged to share from the blessings we enjoy with these beautiful young women.  In so doing, we are living as Jesus lived and we are doing what Jesus did in serving the needs of all of God’s people.

 

May God give you peace and generosity of spirit.

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, August 2, 2021

Our Gospel spirituality calls us to be mission-minded.

 

 

Eighteenth Sunday in OT  B  2021

Propagation of the Faith homily

In my 53 years as a priest,  I have never experienced a liturgy in which at 6:00 am on each and every school day 1,000 high school girls in full Catholic school uniform sing the opening hymn with enthusiastic voices accompanied only by one high school girl in the choir loft striking a well-worn drum.  I tell you looking out from the altar at these Tanzanian girls was a mystical moment of prayerfulness and joy.

We were indeed on holy ground.  Father Damian Milliken, a Benedictine priest from Elmira, New York, was presiding at the Mass.  Father Damian is a priest in his 80’s and has ministered in the last 50 years of his priesthood serving the poorest of the poor in Tanzania, East Africa.  The genuine love and respect that Father Damian enjoys with these young Tanzanians and their families and all who live in the area around Mazinde Ju is so Christ-like and uplifting. 

Equally impressive is a religious community of consecrated women who are such an important part of the teaching faculty.  These are the religious sisters of Usambara.  Dressed in their full habit, these sisters number 500 sisters in Tanzania.  These sisters know in their DNA the joy of the Lord.

To describe St Mary’s School in Mazinde Ju in Tanzania is a bit of a challenge.  It is a residential school where these students live during the academic year and are able to get three healthy meals each day.  The dormitories these students live in are filled with bunk beds.  Each girl has a tiny cubicle which houses all her worldly possessions including all her clothing.  I have a beautiful grandniece for whom to put all her clothes in this tiny cubicle would simply be impossible.

 

 These high school students, these beloved daughters of God have no sense of entitlement by which they expect people to take care of them.  They are so grateful for every opportunity in life that is given to them.  They are not saddened by the effects of the poverty of the country; they are joy-filled in the opportunity that is given to them as students in this quality academic setting that is filled with so much love and so much spirituality.

Why do I tell you all this?  I can you first hand from having the privilege of sending time with these students in Mazinde Ju in Tanzania to be inspired by their faith, their desire to learn, the way they care for one another, and the opportunity St Mary’s School gives these students to continue their education.  Under the inspired leadership of this Benedictine priest Fr Damien Milliken and the religious sisters of the Usambara, these students are formed and fashioned after the mind and heart of Jesus.

The second collection today is the annual Propagation of the Faith collection.  Every cent of this collection goes to support the educational opportunity for these high school girls.  This school provides so much more than our excellent high schools.  These girls and their families live in such poverty that is hard for us to imagine as it is so far removed from our way of life.  This school is a residential school that provides such a healthy way of life for these students.  It is the promised land for these students.

Some of us make an annual $1,000 contribution to provide a scholarship for one on these deserving students.    Personally, I gladly make this $1,000 contribution each year.  I had the profound privilege of spending some time with this young Tanzanian girl I have sponsoring for the last three years.  I tell you I had to tell myself: “Be still my heart” when I realized the opportunity I was giving this daughter of God in my prayer and in my tithing commitment.  In all truth, l cannot think of a better use of this money. 

 Lest you think I have forgotten the Scripture readings, in the first Scripture reading from the Book of Exodus, the Israelites weren’t having a good time.  Their complaints were mounting.  Nothing was going right for them.  Moses their leader was on the hot seat. 

 

God patiently works with them and responds to their complaints with bread from heaven.  As they gather the manna each day of their journey, they may learn to trust that God will always care for them.

 

But the truth of their journey lies in the reality that until the people learned to trust in God, they would never make much progress towards the Promised Land.

 

This is the truth of our spiritual journey as well:  Until we trust in God’s faithfulness to us, we wander a bit aimlessly.

I would our financial support for these Tanzanian high school girls is like manna from heaven given to them so they have an educational and life opportunity that otherwise they would never experience.

 

In today’s Gospel, remembering when Jesus fed five thousand people with only two fish and five barley loaves, the crowd chased Jesus down to ask for more, as if Jesus had a magic picnic hamper always full of food.  Jesus tells to look for a different kind of food.  Jesus said to them:  I AM THE BREAD OF LIFE.

 

Jesus now says that the deepest hungers and thirsts of the human heart are satisfied through the person of Jesus.  He is food for our souls.  Jesus is inviting us to a personal relationship with him.

 

Jesus is trying to refocus the inquiring minds of his disciples.  They are seeking him because they have filled their bellies on the loaves of bread.  But they have not understood the loaves as signs of God’s care for people.  They are well acquainted with their physical hunger and deeply attached to filling it.  But they are less acquainted with their spiritual hunger and unsure how to fill it.  Jesus tells them that he himself is the one who feeds them with eternal food.

Going back to how I began this homily, these students begin each at 6:00 am celebrating the Eucharist giving thanks to God for the blessings they now enjoy.

 

In our generous spiritual and financial support of these beautiful, beautiful Tanzanian high school girls, we are living the words of Jesus in the Last Judgment scene depicted in the Gospel of Matthew:  Jesus says: What you do to the least of my brothers and sisters, you do to me.”

 

May God give you peace and a generous spirit.