Sunday, June 26, 2016

The Death Penalty

On June 21, 2016 Pope Francis that "No matter how serious the crime it is an offense to the inviolability of life and the dignity of the human person, as well as a contradiction if God's plan and His Merciful Justice." (Catholic News Service) He went on to say that the death penalty is not justice, it is revenge.  
The pope is correct in his thinking here.  Although there are many examples of people being condemned to death and being executed in the Bible, let's look at the first reported murder, the case Cain versus Able. The motive for this killing was simple jealousy and Cain slew his brother because he was jealous because God did not accept his sacrifice.  God of course knew what Cain had done.  Did He apply the death penalty? Actually no he did not. He sent Cain off to exile. 

The Bible says "Whoever sheds the blood of men shall his blood be shed for God made man in His image."  The catechism says that the death penalty may be used if there is no other way to protect society from harm from the perpetrator.  Today we have such a method, it is called "Life in prison without the possibility of parole."  We can take the worst of the worst and keep them away from others until such time as God calls them home in order to answer for their crimes before His tribunal. 

Maybe we are too concerned about the perpetrators here and are not considering the victims?  Let's talk about them a bit. Very often it is claimed that the execution of the one that hurt their loved one brings closure.  If you do a little bit of research you will find that, in America, the long time between conviction and the ultimate execution keeps the wound fresh red and raw in the victim's family.  Then when the execution finally does occur there is no closure because many of the families realize that this second killing did not bring back their loved one. 

What are Christians such as you and I supposed to do?  Jesus is very clear on this.  We are to love one another as ourselves and we are to include our enemies in this.  We are to turn the other cheek.  But since we are to love others as we love ourselves we are also allowed to deal a lethal blow to defend our lives against an aggressor.  What I think we are being asked to do is to err on the side of mercy.  

Let me tell you a personal story.  My mother, Violet, was a wonderful woman. She had a hard life growing up during the depression.  Her mother wasn't especially good to her during her childhood.  She grew up, dropped out of high school and obtained work in a defense plant.  After the war she met my father, married, and gave birth to me and my siblings. She was always looking for happiness to come into her from outside, she never learned that happiness comes from within. She ended up divorcing my father and she went to work for our family doctor. When he retired she continued working for the doctor that bought the practice.  Part of her compensation package was that she was to receive free health care from them.  This doctor apparently took this obligation with a grain of salt.  She misdiagnosed a growth on my mothers skin and prescribed an ointment to fix it.  It was not going away but she really could care less because she was not receiving any money for treating my mother.  Mom was getting very concerned and she went to see her former employer who recognized it as what it was, cancer.  She was immediately put into the hospital where she received the news that it would have to be removed.  The surgery went well and afterward the follow up showed no return of the cancer.  Then on the third follow up it was discovered that the cancer had indeed returned and had invaded her lungs and that her condition was terminal.  She went to a surgeon who said she could buy herself more time if she had the tumors removed.  She was scheduled for surgery and the doctor came to see us and gave us the good news that it had gone well and that she might have as much as a year or a year and a half to live.  Three days post op she went into a coma and died.  At the funeral a lady came up to me and offered condolences which I accepted.  My younger sister came up to me and said that that was the doctor mom had worked for.  I looked at this so called doctor and my heart filled with hate and rage.  I never knew I could feel such negative emotions as I did at that minute.  I nurtured those feelings over the next months.  I also went into a deep and dark depression that lasted for six months!  Then one day I realized that I was a Christian and Jesus was calling me to forgive.  I did forgive this worthless excuse of a doctor, gave her an unconditional pardon and at that moment my depression lifted and I felt once again the warmth of God's love filling my heart.  Don't get me wrong, I wound not cultivate a relationship with this doctor, I would not take her to lunch, or play Parcheesi with her, but I no longer wished her any harm and placed her under God's care. 

Jesus knew that forgiving brings its own rewards and that is why he asks us to do not the impossible, but the very, very, very, difficult and forgive those that do harm to us. 

What are my views on the death penalty?  In general I am against it.  I think there are some people whose offenses are so heinous that the death penalty has to be on the books to deal with them.  I cannot imagine the world would be better off if we kept people like John Wayne Gacy, Ted Bundy, or others like them alive.  But they are the exceptions to the rule. 

The death penalty is fraught with the danger that an innocent person will be put to death.  IF you are poor, black, living in Texas, or California, Alabama, or Florida you are likely to get the death penalty if you are found guilty of murder.  In Texas there is was a ruling that a capital defendant is entitled to a lawyer but they don't have to be awake during the trial.  This is true I swear it.  Let's face it, once you are dead, you are dead even if ten minutes or ten years later DNA evidence proves that you are not guilty.  And let's not forget if you execute the wrong person, the killer is still at large. 

So I guess I for the most part agree with Pope Francis. Let's get rid of the death penalty.  It's time to prove that we can be better that the people we jail.  It really makes no sense to kill people to teach them not to kill.   What do you think?   

Sunday, June 19, 2016

The Cross


The cross is a very personal thing. Jesus knew this. The cross of Jesus affected his whole body. The pain he was feeling was so severe that the temptation to prove his power by removing himself from the cross had to be running through his head.  Jesus is both fully human and fully divine, it is this fact that makes the cross relevant. If Jesus were just human He could not use the cross to show God's great love for us, He would have been just another sacrifice like those being made at the temple. On the other hand if Jesus was just divine, He would not have experienced life and the dying process as we His creatures do. Both of the elements, humanity and divinity,  had to be and were present.  So the first way the Cross affected Jesus was mentally.  He had to refuse the all too human facility to go against the desires of the Father by using the power that He had as the Son. This required Jesus to put complete trust into God and surrendering Himself as a human to the will of the Father.  


The next way the Cross affected Jesus was physically. Death by crucifixion was a death by inches. The major process was suffocation.  The woulds caused by the nails were just "minor" injuries that the body could healed if the person had been taken down from the cross while still alive. The process that a person goes through while dying on the cross is this. You had to hold yourself up to breathe and that strain on your arms was monumental and the fatigue was cumulative as lactic acid built up in the muscles. The condemned used their legs and the nail that had been pounded through the feet to give some purchase to stay where one could breath. But the pain from the wound in the feet was great and the arms tired and the culprit would sag down into a "Y" formation. The pressure on the diaphragm would make it impossible to breathe and the victim would have to push himself up again.  Depending on the strength of the one on the cross, this could go on for days.  In the case of Jesus, He was already battered and beaten and so his strength was expended in mere hours.  Death on the cross as I said was a death in inches.  The merciless sun beat down upon the criminal and insects of all types alighted on the body. There was the psychological aspect of the punishment as well to consider.  In most of the empire the criminal was exposed naked on the cross. In Israel, the benevolence of Caesar allowed the wearing of a loin cloth because the Jews were scandalized by nudity.  

So for hours Jesus suffered through the dying process. Then near the end he did several things that showed that this was no ordinary execution.  He awarded sainthood to a fellow criminal suffering with Him on that day. On the cross a criminal could be counted on to answer the scorn heaped upon him with curses. Jesus said, "Father, forgive them, they do not know what they are doing." Jesus perfectly fulfilled his obligation to honor His mother and father when he put the Virgin Mary, who had no other relatives to help her into the care of the apostle John for a widow with no relatives would have to resort to begging to meet the needs of the day.  Just before He died, he said, "I thirst."  A sponge was soaked in cheap wine and held up to His lips. He took some and he then said, "It is finished."   What was finished?  Do you remember the last supper? It ended before all of the ritualistic rubrics had been completed. They sang a long hymn. After the hymn there was supposed to be a final cup of wine that would conclude the Passover meal.  It was never consumed and the Passover meal was never completed.  By taking that wine on the Cross, Jesus, the Lamb of God, completed the New Passover and redeemed us,  Then one of the evangelists says "He uttered a loud cry."  A loud cry? From the cross? After being scourged, beaten, bled and bloodied?  The loud cry was followed by Jesus handing over His spirit.  voluntarily for us.  It was very hard to speak at all from the cross. To hear a loud cry come from someone near to death must have been  startling to the onlookers.  The loud cry shows that Jesus handed over His life, that it was not taken from Him, He gave it willingly. 


Today at Mass we read the Gospel where Jesus asks who do the people think I am.  After a few answers he asks the apostles who they think He is. Peter answers "The Christ of God."  He then tells his followers that to be his follower we have to take up our cross daily and follow Him.  What does this mean?  The cross is a very personal thing.  But we as followers of Chris, what we need to do is this,  We need to wake up each morning and pick up our cross and follow Jesus with it.  A cross is a very personal thing.  For many of us it may be a fault we are working to correct and never can seem to conquer it and it is causing us anguish. For some of us it might mean going to a job you hate because you receive no recognition for your contributions and to contribute to the best of your ability anyway.  It may be dealing with any number of things, but we must pick it up, put it on our shoulder and carry it every day for that is what is means to be a follower of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. 



Friday, June 17, 2016

Some Random Musings

These are just some random thoughts that are going through my mind on this 17th day of June in the year oi the Lord Two Thousand and Sixteen. 

ORLANDO
I was puzzled by the reaction of the LGBT community at what a certain Catholic bishop said about the killings.  He condemned the killing of innocent people. I read comments by the LGBT community that scorned the bishop because he failed to mention that they were gay.  I am confused. Are people their sexuality or are they people first.  The LGBT community seems to think that their sexual status should somehow make them a higher status.  I am sorry but we are human beings first and our sexual orientation is a secondary characteristic.

ORLANDO 2
My sympathies go out to the family that lost their little boy to the alligator.  They are not to blame for this tragedy.  I pray that the lord touches their family in a very special way and that in spite of the event that they keep their marriage together.  Often times the death of a child tears a family apart.

DONALD TRUMP
So, Donald Trump is going to sit down with the dictator of North Korea, provided that Kim Jung Un comes to The Donald for The Donald with not go to the Dear Leader.  Trump says that it would not hurt to talk to the man.  Well, maybe not.  It certainly could not be a debacle like the one grown by our dear leader Barrack Hussein Obama between us and Iran.  That deal reminds me of Chamberlain coming back from Munich in 1938 saying that he had secured "Peace in our Time."  I have to say as inept and ineffective is, the Donald (if elected...please God no) will make Obama look lie a genius. The only thing that works on Donald is the mouth.  Obama was right when he said that Trump's yapping did more harm then good.

HILLARY CLINTON
So, if I can't vote for Donald, is Hillary a better choice?  I don't think so. She DOES have experience in higher government and that certainly is in her favor. But, the Benghazi affair and her stupidity of using a private mail server for official and often secret communications shows that her brain is not firing on all cylinders.  Besides, did you see what she looked like while being under the pressure of being the Secretary of State?  She let herself go, she forgot how to look good in front of a camera.
Now if she was affected that badly by the Sec State job, how in the world do you think she will fare under the pressures of the presidency?  Even Obama's hair is turning white because of the intense pressure that he is under day after day.

CHICAGO
My heart weeps for my ancestral home town. My family landed in the city in the early 1900's and enjoyed being part of a vibrant, living, city.  Today not a day goes by when we do not hear of another child caught in crossfire, or a gang of thugs marching down the Magnificent Mile robbing citizens. Just recently a bunch of rowdy men and women tried to rob a couple of tourists. The tourists ran out in the street to get away from the thugs and the lady was fatally hit by a car.  My old neighborhood which used to be a wonderful place to live called Brighton Park now requires you to wear a flack jacket to keep yourself safe.  I would not visit, nor would I recommend anyone that I loved to visit Chicago.  Like I said my heart weeps.

That;s it for now.  Leave a comment if you want to - even if you want to curse me out.
God bless, my usual blog entries will resume tomorrow. Thank you for reading my rants.

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Stop That Hearse

"Young man arise!"
The Gospel being proclaimed at mass this weekend is from Luke 7: 11-17, the story of the widow at Nain.  If you recall this widow had already lost her husband and now her son had been taken from her. In her world, having no man in the household to support her, she would be reduced to begging to sustain her life. Jesus entered the town and saw the widow in loud mourning, he saw the funeral procession proceeding to the tomb. The gospel says "He was moved with pity for her."  He stopped the procession and commanded, "Young man, arise." The man sat up in the coffin and began to speak,  Jesus gave him back to his mother and the crowd praised God,  They said, "A great profit has arisen in our midst." And further the shouted "God has visited His people."  They were filled with awe. 

Our deacon at mass made a couple of points that I want to share with you. First, this reading is heard on the 10th Sunday in Ordinary time every third year. But this Sunday very often is either Corpus Christi Sunday or Trinity Sunday whose readings would take precedence. The next time this gospel will be proclaimed on a Sunday will be in the year 2043!  Chances are very good that I will be speaking to the widow in heaven when this comes around again. The other thing he mentioned I found fascinating.  In our translation of the Bible we read that Jesus was moved with pity for this widow who would have been reduced to begging to earn her daily bread.  In actuality the phrase used her in the Greek is, "He was filled with gut wrenching love for her."  That is quite a difference.  Feeling pity is one thing and being filled with gut wrenching love is quite another. Luke uses this same phrase in two other passages. Of course I can only remember one of them!  It was used when the Prodigal Father saw his son afar of and ran to greet him. 

Gut wrenching love is what God has for us. There is no reason to be afraid of Him. He will take us back as long as we want to be restored to His friendship.  This coming week remember the love the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have for you and spread that love wherever you go.  Small tender acts of mercy are well within our reach. Maybe instead of cursing the guy that cuts you off in traffic you can utter a prayer that he receives the mercy of God that day.  Maybe stop at the church and put a couple of dollars into the poor box.  Go home and be extra gentle and loving with your spouse. Put on Jesus and share the gut wrenching love He has for us with others.