Thursday, May 31, 2018

Walking The Longest Mile


And Mary said:
"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.
From this day all generations will call me blessed:
the Almighty has done great things for me,
and holy is his Name.
He has mercy on those who fear him
in every generation.
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.
He has come to the help of his servant Israel
for he has remembered his promise of mercy,
the promise he made to our fathers,
to Abraham and his children forever."



Today is the feast of the Visitation. Mary has just conceived Jesus and instead of doing what most women of the time would do, such as resting and remaining at home, Mary set off in haste to visit her cousin Elizabeth.   This was not a simple walk around the corner.  From Nazareth to Hebron is eighty-one miles as the crow flies, about one-hundred to 0ne-hundred-twenty miles by road since Mary could not fly like a crow!  So, her visit to Elizabeth was an act of great charity. She went and stayed, most scholars say until John the Baptist was born and then she returned to Nazareth after being gone for three months, arriving back, three months pregnant. This would cause some concern for her fiance Joseph but that will come later.  

When Mary arrived, John the Baptist leaped in Elizabeth's womb or as some translations have it, he danced in her womb because he could tell that the Son of God being carried in the womb of Mary was close by.  There is no record stating that the met again until John was baptizing at the Jordan. 

Then Mary, after exchanging greeting with Elizabeth who wonders aloud why she is graced by the presence of the Mother of My Lord, gives us a look at her ultimate humility when she proclaims: 


"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.
From this day all generations will call me blessed:
the Almighty has done great things for me,
and holy is his Name.
He has mercy on those who fear him
in every generation.
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.
He has come to the help of his servant Israel
for he has remembered his promise of mercy,
the promise he made to our fathers,
to Abraham and his children forever."

Yes, my Protestant friends, Mary rejoices in God her Savior. You read that right.  So how can Mary be immaculately conceived if she herself states that God is her savior?  Well, God was her savior.  By special favor, God the Father who does not live in time applied the merits of the death of Jesus to Mary at the moment she was conceived in her mother's womb.  He carried her over the pit we fell into because of the original sin of Adam.  So, yes, Mary indeed was saved by God and in that respect, she is like you and me.  The fact that original sin never touched her soul meant that her whole being was turned towards God and while she still had the great gift of free will, her desire was to always be in sync with the will of God and she would do whatever He wanted.

We see clearly that Mary was the first Christian. She believed from the start that the baby she was carrying was the Messiah, the promised one of God and her excited proclamation gives notice to the world that God was keeping His covenant, that the savior was at hand.  Through it all, Mary was forever humble.  Her words are not recorded fully in Scripture, but what she does say is telling.  No matter what words come out of her mouth, they always point to Jesus and never to herself.  This is how we know that she is the first Christian, the first convert to the new covenant.  Praise you, Mother Mary, look down on us with love and place into our hearts a burning love for Jesus that is so strong that we feel the pain of every sin and the complete joy of our return to Him.  Praise you God the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit for giving us a mother so true, so beautiful in spirit, and so holy and humble.  Make us like her in her joy of serving the one True God Amen. 

The poor souls in purgatory need help.  Remember, purgatory is real and you might have friends or relatives that are there right at this very moment.  They wait for your prayers.  Do not abandon them at the edge of the grave.  Prayer and sacrifice will help them more than you know.  Remember too that as they are today you might be tomorrow. 


Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Leading Is Hard Work

Then James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came to Jesus and said to him, "Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask of you." He replied, "What do you wish me to do for you?"
They answered him,
"Grant that in your glory
we may sit one at your right and the other at your left."
Jesus said to them, "You do not know what you are asking.
Can you drink the chalice that I drink
or be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized?"
They said to him, "We can."
Jesus said to them, "The chalice that I drink, you will drink,
and with the baptism with which I am baptized, you will be baptized;
but to sit at my right or at my left is not mine to give
but is for those for whom it has been prepared."
When the ten heard this, they became indignant at James and John.
Jesus summoned them and said to them,
"You know that those who are recognized as rulers over the Gentiles
lord it over them,
and their great ones make their authority over them felt.
But it shall not be so among you.
Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you will be your servant;
whoever wishes to be first among you will be the slave of all.
For the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve
and to give his life as a ransom for many."


Here is another example of the Apostles just not getting the idea of why Jesus is here and what He is about.  James and John want to sit on the right and the left of Jesus when He returns in His glory. Jesus tells them straight out that they do not know what they are asking for.  He asks if they can go through the things He must go through?  They say. "Yes." and he assures them that they will through what He will have to go through but to sit at His right and left is not His decision, it is the decision of the Father.  Then He tells them something strange.  He says that the leader of their group will have to be the servant of all the others.  This is not the sort of a leader that they or we are used to having.  A leader commands that feet be washed, he does not wash them himself.  Yet, this is what Jesus is telling us.  We need to serve one another.  The higher up you go, the more servant-like you should become. Like Jesus, we are not here to be served but to serve. 

Please remember the Poor Souls in Purgatory.  Pray for them every day. 

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

You're Gonna Get It!

Peter began to say to Jesus,
"We have given up everything and followed you."
Jesus said, "Amen, I say to you,
there is no one who has given up house or brothers or sisters
or mother or father or children or lands
for my sake and for the sake of the Gospel
who will not receive a hundred times more now in this present age:
houses and brothers and sisters
and mothers and children and lands,
with persecutions, and eternal life in the age to come.
But many that are first will be last, and the last will be first."

Peter asks Jesus a question that has to be on all of our minds simply because we are human. "What's in it for me?"  Heaven help us that we should want to do good without some reward.  When I was in grammar school at one of the bastions of the Catholic Faith called "St. Joseph and St. Anne School" on the southwest side of Chicago the sisters that taught us showed us just how this system worked.  If you learned your lessons well and behaved just like a son or daughter of a saint in class, you would receive marks of sister's favor.  For example, you might be assigned to pick up or distribute papers or erase the blackboard.  All of these things showed that you had done something that pleased sister and was, at least for that moment, one of her favorites. Of course, if you did something really wonderful such as selling more World's Finest Chocolate than anyone else in the room, you might be inducted into what you would call in prison a trustee but in the hallowed halls of St. Joseph and St. Anne you would be called a monitor and would be placed in charge of the classroom whenever sister had to leave for a moment.  Your sworn duty would be to place the names of anyone who talked on the blackboard so that sister could deal with them when she returned.  To sister, you were a monitor, to your classmates you were a blackboard writing snitch.  You were also a girl since no boy would ever qualify as a snitch nor would he want to. Writing someone's name on the blackboard meant that they would be punished and that would mean trouble on the playground or most likely after school.  Girls didn't seem to mind being snitches because, of course, no girl ever misbehaved while sister was out of the classroom so there was no danger of them ever being punished. So, we gave and we got.  What we got might not be what we wanted in the case of a boy dumb enough to dare a girl to write his name on the blackboard.

So, we tend to want some sort of reward for being good.  Jesus told Peter that he was going to receive everything that he left behind back a hundred times over.  Peter did receive a church family that grew into the thousands which dwarfed his natural family.  He also received the other thing that Jesus promised him, persecution, being crucified upside down because he felt unworthy to die as his Master died. 

We who follow Christ receive all of the riches that the Faith can offer.  We receive graces from the Father, the joy of Christian companions that walk with us on the journey and the feeling of happiness in our soul because we know that we are pleasing the Father.  We also receive persecution.  People who have starved their spiritual selves hat us because our beliefs are "old-fashioned."  Our beliefs keep them from being totally free to engage in whatever behavior that comes to mind that goes against the laws of God.  They do not suffer us in silence.

So we will receive both good things and bad things if we remain faithful.  Enjoy the good, embrace it and savor it for it is our reward.   When the time comes and darkness begins to cloud our vision, remain faithful and pray for light and it will break in majesty and great beauty when it pleases the Father. 

Remember to pray for your relatives and friends who may be in purgatory. 

Monday, May 28, 2018

Are There Any Rich People in Heaven ?

As Jesus was setting out on a journey, a man ran up,
knelt down before him, and asked him,
"Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?"
Jesus answered him, "Why do you call me good?
No one is good but God alone.
You know the commandments: You shall not kill;
you shall not commit adultery;
you shall not steal;
you shall not bear false witness;
you shall not defraud;
honor your father and your mother."

He replied and said to him,
"Teacher, all of these I have observed from my youth." 
Jesus, looking at him, loved him and said to him,
"You are lacking in one thing.
Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor
and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me."  
At that statement, his face fell,
and he went away sad, for he had many possessions.

Jesus looked around and said to his disciples,
"How hard it is for those who have wealth
to enter the Kingdom of God!"
The disciples were amazed at his words.
So Jesus again said to them in reply,
"Children, how hard it is to enter the Kingdom of God!
It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle
than for one who is rich to enter the Kingdom of God."
They were exceedingly astonished and said among themselves,
"Then who can be saved?"
Jesus looked at them and said,
"For men it is impossible, but not for God.
All things are possible for God."

Our Lord says some very sobering words to us today. He says, "It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for one who is rich to enter the Kingdom of God."  Think of some of the people that have been blessed with an excess of money and the things of this world.  I can name a few actors and actresses that think that they have done it all on their own.  I can think of men and women of industry whose focus in life is to climb the ladder and stuff their pockets with cash and have all the accouterments of wealth on or about them.  They have all of the comforts life can bring.  Yet, with all that, they too will someday die. Even in death some of them try to keep the illusion of wealth alive. For example, Michael Jackson, and I am not picking on him, spent a ton of money on his going away party. One newspaper reports: 

The funeral bill alone from Forest Lawn Cemetery totaled $855,730, which included entombing Jackson inside the Grand Mausoleum, costing $590,000. His casket cost$25,000, his burial garments came to $35,000, while $175,089 was spent on security.

Mr. Jackson, who was a talented entertainer, knew how to spend his money.  His mansion which included carnival rides is now abandoned and falling into disrepair.  If you were to open his casket today, he would be nothing much to look at.  Everything that was important to him is rotting away being eaten by moths and gathering rust.  

Like I said, I am not picking on Michael, he is just a convenient example because the facts are easy to harvest on the internet. I do not make any judgments on the state of his soul upon death, nor do I judge his life.  I just point out that as a rich man, he learned to depend on himself and could always have things his way.  This is true for most of the wealthy people in the world.  

Wealthy people live under the delusion that they own things. This house is theirs, the silverware, the closets full of clothing, dozens of pairs of shoes, that automobile collection, those coins and stamp collections, that vault filled with golden Kugerands.  

The fact is, we own absolutely nothing on this planet.  We came into it with nothing and nothing except that which is carried in our hearts will leave with us.  God gives and withholds from us because He is doing what He knows will benefit us in eternity. He has given us His Church to help us align our moral compass with His will and he has given us His word in the Bible to use as a map. It is what is in our heart that God will judge.  The wealthy people that will be doomed will be the ones that kept everything in their own pockets and used it for their own pleasure and cared not at all for their fellow creatures. 

Sadly, it is the poorest people that seem to be the most generous with their fellows.  True, even some of the poor in spite of their circumstances adopt the mannerisms of a rich man when dealing with others and that is sad because their malaise is just as bad as the rich man's and will have the same result when we are judged. 

God gives to us freely and joyfully. He expects us to do the same to those of "lower station" as well.  As far as the camel goes, the "eye of the needle" was an entrance to a town that would admit one person on a camel.  Not one person and five hundred pounds of good, no, they would have to be removed from the camel and passed through after camel and rider got through.  If we arrive at the gates of heaven on our camel and pass through without dismounting and discarding the baggage we carry, we will enter without a problem and be welcomed to our new home.  On the other hand, if we have to stop and unload our camel, get rid of the baggage, well, it may take quite a while before we can enter heaven.  But, do not despair for Jesus does say that "All things are possible with God." 

May the souls of the faithfully departed, through the mercy of God rest in peace. Amen. 

Sunday, May 27, 2018

Marching Orders


The eleven disciples went to Galilee,                                                  
to the mountain to which Jesus had ordered them.
When they all saw him, they worshiped, but they doubted.
Then Jesus approached and said to them,
"All power in heaven and on earth has been given to me.
Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.
And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age."


Silence prevailed in the camp but you could see that morning rituals were beginning. The guards stationed at the perimeters of the encampment could be seen by the naked eye. Smoke curled up near the cook tent as the cooks who had been the first to arise began to make the morning meal. The sun peaked over the horizon and the trumpeter who arose and got himself ready at the same time as the cooks did, raised his horn to his lips and blew Reville and the rest of the camp stirred to life.  The soldiers hurried through their morning ablutions and scurried to breakfast.  The mood in the chow tent was jovial and the usual jesters played the usual pranks on the usual victims to the amusement of all.  They ate quickly for they would soon be called to assembly.  The trumpeter now played "Boots and Saddles" and the soldiers ran to their position in the ranks.  The mood was still somewhat casual because the commander had not arrived yet.  Squad leaders took stock of their squads, making sure that they looked sharp and ready to march.  Company commanders inspected their companies so as to make sure that their company was the best looking on the field this morning.  Then the call went out, "Battalion, Attention.!"  With that, all casualness disappeared and the soldiers stood at attention, eyes to the front and weapons on their shoulders.  The commander came out of his tent and looked proudly at his army.  They looked sharp, their training had been hard but he saw to it that they were ready to fulfill their mission.  He summoned the company commanders to his side and he gave them the orders. The company commanders hurried back to their commands and gave the orders of the day to the squad leaders who informed each member of the squad.  The call went out and the army, in unison, began to move. 

Wow, that sounds like the beginning of an exciting story, doesn't it?  Well, it is an exciting story because in today's Gospel we have been given our marching orders.  We have been commissioned to conquer the world for Jesus.  If that sounds like a mission that is too grand, too hard for us to accomplish, well, get used to the idea, because it is what we are commanded to do.  We are to go out from our camp and march throughout the whole world and we are to be the bearers of the Good News of the Gospel.  It is not an easy mission and there will be casualties along the way.  Why some of the soldiers may turn tail and run!  But for the majority of us, like good soldiers, we will bring the fight to the enemy.  We will leave the message wherever we march to.  The message is one of such great power, that when they see how joyfully we are fulfilling our mission, the people in the lands we are conquering will join us too and soon there will be but a single army, a single Lord and Savior over all the world.  The fight will be long and at times brutal but the commander of our army has said that He would be with us even to the end of time!   

Please remember to pray for the poor souls in Purgatory this weekend. 

Saturday, May 26, 2018

Practical Christianity - Plain Talk

Beloved:
Is anyone among you suffering?
He should pray.
Is anyone in good spirits?
He should sing a song of praise. 
Is anyone among you sick?
He should summon the presbyters of the Church,
and they should pray over him
and anoint him with oil in the name of the Lord.
The prayer of faith will save the sick person,
and the Lord will raise him up.
If he has committed any sins, he will be forgiven.
Therefore, confess your sins to one another
and pray for one another, that you may be healed.


The fervent prayer of a righteous person is very powerful. Elijah was a man like us; yet he prayed earnestly that it might not rain, and for three years and six months, it did not rain upon the land. Then Elijah prayed again, and the sky gave rain and the earth produced its fruit. My brothers and sisters, if anyone among you should stray from the truth and someone brings him back, he should know that whoever brings back a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul from death and will cover a multitude of sins.

You really have to love the book of James.  It is absolutely filled with easy to understand suggestions on what we should do be a more Christian community.  He is very practical and the suggestions just seem to make sense.  I can see why Martin Luther didn't like the book and had to be talked out of removing it from his personally vetted canon. The book dispels the notion of sola fide which is what got it an honored position on Martin's hit list. 

Look at the practical advice we are given in today's reading.  If you are suffering? Pray.  If you are in good spirits - sing.  If you are sick, summon the church and they will anoint you. If you never read any other book in the Bible, read the Book of James - it is refreshingly simple and yet profound. 

Pray for the Poor Souls in Purgatory. 

Friday, May 25, 2018

Praise to the Holy Flea!

Do not complain, brothers and sisters, about one another,
that you may not be judged.
Behold, the Judge is standing before the gates.
Take as an example of hardship and patience, brothers and sisters,
the prophets who spoke in the name of the Lord.
Indeed we call blessed those who have persevered.
You have heard of the perseverance of Job,
and you have seen the purpose of the Lord,
because the Lord is compassionate and merciful.








Corrie ten Boom was a Christian prisoner in the infamous Ravensbuck Concentration Camp.  She and her sister were sent to the camp for hiding Jews in their house.  Here is a rather famous story that comes from her book "The Hiding Place."  If you've never read the book, put it on your bucket list - this is a Christian lady that was very close to God and as a matter of fact, her sister was even more holy.


Excerpt from The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom

"Barracks 8 was in the quarantine compound. Next to us--perhaps as a deliberate warning to newcomers--were located the punishment barracks. From there, all day long and often into the night came the sounds of hell itself. They were not the sounds of anger, or of any human emotion, but of a cruelty altogether detached: blows landing in a regular rhythm screams keeping pace. We would stand in our ten-deep ranks with our hands trembling at our sides, longing to jam them against our ears, to make the sounds stop.
"It grew harder and harder. Even within these four walls, there was too much misery, too much seemingly pointless suffering. Every day something else failed to make sense, something else grew too heavy.
"But as the rest of the world grew stranger, one thing became increasingly clear. And that was the reason the two of us were here. Why others should suffer we were not shown. As for us, from morning until lights-out, whenever we were not in ranks for roll call, our Bible was the center of an ever-widening circle of health and hope.
"Like waifs clustered around a blazing fire, we gathered about it, holding out our hearts to its warmth and light. The blacker the night around us grew, the brighter and truer and more beautiful burned the Word of God.
"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?...Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us."
"I would look about us as Betsie read, watching the light leap from face to face. More than conquerors...It was not a wish. It was a fact.
"We knew it, we experienced it minute by minute--poor, hated, hungry. We are more than conquerors. Not "we shall be." We are!
"Life in Ravensbruck took place on two separate levels, mutually impossible. One, the observable, external life, grew every day more horrible. The other, the life we lived with God, grew daily better, truth upon truth, glory upon glory.
"Sometimes I would slip the Bible from its little (sack) with hands that shook, so mysterious had it become to me. It was new; it had just been written. I marveled sometimes that the ink was dry...I had read a thousand times the story of Jesus' arrest--how soldiers had slapped Him, laughed at Him, flogged Him. Now such happenings had faces and voices.
"Fridays--the recurrent humiliation of medical inspection. The hospital corridor in which we waited was unheated and a fall chill had settled into the walls. Still, we were forbidden even to wrap ourselves in our own arms but had to maintain our erect, hands-at-sides position as we filed slowly past a phalanx of grinning guards.
"How there could have been any pleasure in the sight of these stick-thin legs and hunger-bloated stomachs I could not imagine. Surely there is no more wretched sight than the human body unloved and uncared for.
"Nor could I see the necessity for the complete undressing: when we finally reached the examining room a doctor looked down each throat, another--a dentist presumably--at our teeth, a third in between each finger. And that was all. We trooped again down the long, cold corridor and picked up our X-marked dresses at the door.
"But it was one of these mornings while we were waiting, shivering in the corridor, that yet another page in the Bible leaped into life for me.
"He hung naked on the cross.
"...The paintings, the carved crucifixes showed at least a scrap of cloth. But this, I suddenly knew, was the respect and reverence of the artist. But oh--at the time itself, on that other Friday morning--there had been no reverence. No more than I saw in the faces around us now.
"'Betsie, they took His clothes too.'
"'Ahead of me I heard a little gasp. 'Oh, Corrie. And I never thanked Him...'
"Every day the sun rose a little later, the bite took longer to leave the air. It will be better, everyone assured everyone else, when we move into permanent barracks. We'll have a blanket apiece. A bed of our own. Each of us painted into the picture her own greatest need.
"The move to permanent quarters came the second week in October. We were marched, ten abreast, along the wide cinder avenue...Several times the column halted while numbers were read out--names were never used at Ravensbruck. At last Betsie's and mine were called...We stepped out of line with a dozen or so others and stared at the long gray front of Barracks 28.
"Betsie and I followed a prisoner-guide through the door at the right. Because of the broken windows, the vast room was in semi-twilight. Our noses told us, first, that the place was filthy: somewhere, plumbing had backed up, the bedding was soiled and rancid.
"Then as our eyes adjusted to the gloom we saw that there were no individual beds at all, but great square tiers stacked three high, and wedged side by side and end to end with only an occasional narrow aisle slicing through.
"We followed our guide single file--the aisle was not wide enough for two--fighting back the claustrophobia of these platforms rising everywhere above us...At last she pointed to a second tier in the center of a large block.
"To reach it, we had to stand on the bottom level, haul ourselves up, and then crawl across three other straw-covered platforms to reach the one that we would share with--how many?
"The deck above us was too close to let us sit up. We lay back, struggling against the nausea that swept over us from the reeking straw...Suddenly I sat up, striking my head on the cross-slats above. Something had pinched my leg.
"'Fleas!' I cried. 'Betsie, the place is swarming with them!'
"We scrambled across the intervening platforms, heads low to avoid another bump, dropped down to the aisle and hedged our way to a patch of light.
"'Here! And here another one!' I wailed. 'Betsie, how can we live in such a place!'
"'Show us. Show us how.' It was said so matter of factly it took me a second to realize she was praying. More and more the distinction between prayer and the rest of life seemed to be vanishing for Betsie.
"'Corrie!' she said excitedly. 'He's given us the answer! Before we asked, as He always does! In the Bible this morning. Where was it? Read that part again!'
"I glanced down the long dim aisle to make sure no guard was in sight, then drew the Bible from its pouch. 'It was in First Thessalonians,' I said. We were on our third complete reading of the New Testament since leaving Scheveningen.
"In the feeble light, I turned the pages. 'Here it is: "Comfort the frightened, help the weak, be patient with everyone. See that none of you repays evil for evil, but always seek to do good to one another and to all...'" It seemed written expressly to Ravensbruck.
"'Go on,' said Betsie. 'That wasn't all.'
"'Oh yes:'..."Rejoice always, pray constantly, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus.'"
"'That's it, Corrie! That's His answer. "Give thanks in all circumstances!" That's what we can do. We can start right now to thank God for every single thing about this new barracks!' I stared at her; then around me at the dark, foul-aired room.
"'Such as?' I said.
"'Such as being assigned here together.'
"I bit my lip. 'Oh yes, Lord Jesus!'
"'Such as what you're holding in your hands.' I looked down at the Bible.
"'Yes! Thank You, dear Lord, that there was no inspection when we entered here! Thank You for all these women, here in this room, who will meet You in these pages.'
"'Yes,' said Betsie, 'Thank You for the very crowding here. Since we're packed so close, that many more will hear!' She looked at me expectantly. 'Corrie!' she prodded.
"'Oh, all right. Thank You for the jammed, crammed, stuffed, packed suffocating crowds.'
"'Thank You,' Betsie went on serenely, 'for the fleas and for--'
"The fleas! This was too much. 'Betsie, there's no way even God can make me grateful for a flea.'
"'Give thanks in all circumstances,' she quoted. It doesn't say, 'in pleasant circumstances.' Fleas are part of this place where God has put us.
"And so we stood between tiers of bunks and gave thanks for fleas. But this time I was sure Betsie was wrong."
"They started arriving soon after 6:00 o'clock, the women of Barracks 28, tired, sweat-stained, and dirty from the long forced-labor details. The building, we learned from one of our platform mates, had been designed to hold four hundred. There were now fourteen hundred quartered here with more arriving weekly as concentration camps in Poland, France, Belgium, Austria, as well as Holland were evacuated toward the center of Germany.
"There were nine of us sharing our particular square, designed for four, and some grumbling as the others discovered they would have to make room for Betsie and me. Eight acrid and overflowing toilets served the entire room; to reach them we had to crawl not only over our own bedmates but over those on the other platforms between us and the closest aisle, always at the risk of adding too much weight to the already sagging slats and crashing down on the people beneath.
"Even when the slats held, the least movement on the upper platforms sent a shower of dust and straw over the sleepers below--followed by a volley of curses. In Barracks 8 most of us had been Dutch. Here there was not even a common language and among exhausted, ill-fed people quarrels erupted constantly.
"There was one raging now as the women sleeping nearest the windows slammed them shut against the cold. At once scores of voices demanded that they be raised again. Brawls were starting all up and down that side of the room; we heard scuffling, slaps, sobs.
"In the dark, I felt Betsie's hand clasp mine. 'Lord Jesus,' she said aloud, 'send Your peace into this room. There has been too little praying here. The very walls know it. But where You come, Lord, the spirit of strife cannot exist...'
"The change was gradual, but distinct. One by one the angry sounds let up.
"'I'll make you a deal!' The voice spoke German with a strong Scandinavian accent. 'You can sleep in here where its warmer and I'll take your place by the window!'
"'And add your lice to my own!' But there was a chuckle in the answer. 'No thanks.'
"'I'll tell you what!' The third voice had a French burr. 'We'll open them halfway. That way we'll be only half-frozen and you'll be only half-smothered.'
"A ripple of laughter widened around the room at this. I lay back on the sour straw and knew there was one more circumstance for which I could give thanks. Betsie had come to Barracks 28.
"Roll call came at 4:40 a.m. here as it had in quarantine. A whistle roused us at 4:00 when, without even shaking the straw from clothes and hair, the stampede began for the ration of bread and coffee in the center room. Latecomers found none.
"After roll call, work crews were called out. For weeks Betsie and I were assigned to the Siemens factory. This huge complex of mills and railroad terminals was a mile and a half from the camp. The "Siemens Brigade," several thousand of us, marched out the iron gate beneath the charged wires into a world of trees and grass and horizons. The sun rose as we skirted the little lake; the gold of the late fall fields lifted our hearts.
"The work at Siemens, however, was sheer misery. Betsie and I had to push a heavy handcart to a railroad siding where we unloaded large metal plates from a boxcar and wheeled them to a receiving gate at the factory. The grueling workday lasted eleven hours. At least, at noontime we were given a boiled potato and some thin soup; those who worked inside the camp had no midday meal.
"Returning to camp we could barely lift our swollen and aching legs. The soldiers patrolling us bellowed and cursed, but we could only shuffle forward inches at a step.
"Back at the barracks we formed yet another line--would there never be an end to columns and waits?--to receive our ladle of turnip soup in the center room. Then, as quickly as we could for the press of people, Betsie and I made our way to the rear of the dormitory room where we held our worship "service." Around our own platform area there was not enough light to read the Bible, but back here a small light bulb cast a wan yellow circle on the wall, and here an ever larger group of women gathered.
"They were services like no others, these times in Barracks 28.
"At first Betsie and I called these meetings with great timidity. But as night after night went by and no guard ever came near us, we grew bolder. So many now wanted to join us that we held a second service after evening roll call. There on the Lagerstrasse, we were under rigid surveillance, guards in their warm wool capes marching constantly up and down. It was the same in the center room of the barracks: half a dozen guards or camp police always present. Yet in the large dormitory room, there was almost no supervision at all. We did not understand it.
"One evening I got back to the barracks late from a wood-gathering foray outside the walls. A light snow lay on the ground and it was hard to find the sticks and twigs with which a small stove was kept going in each room. Betsie was waiting for me, as always, so that we could wait through the food line together. Her eyes were twinkling.
"'You're looking extraordinarily pleased with yourself,' I told her.
"'You know, we've never understood why we had so much freedom in the big room,' she said. 'Well--I've found out.'
"That afternoon, she said, there'd been confusion in her knitting group about sock sizes and they'd asked the supervisor to come and settle it.
"But she wouldn't. She wouldn't step through the door and neither would the guards. And you know why?"
"Betsie could not keep the triumph from her voice: 'Because of the fleas! That's what she said, "That place is crawling with fleas!'"
"My mind rushed back to our first hour in this place. I remembered Betsie's bowed head, remembered her thanks to God for creatures I could see no use for."

During the services, the Bible was read in Dutch, but translations were passed on in German, French, Polish, Russian, Czech, etc.

After a while, the yelling, slapping, crying, and words of anger changed to "Sorry!", "Excuse me," and "No harm done."

We can always and everywhere find reasons to complain. But look at what God puts up with from us.  We have to believe that everything that happens in our life is for some reason and that even the evilest things will eventually bloom with good as in the example of Corrie and Betsie.  The humble flea kept the SS and Capos out of the barracks and they were able to share the word of God.  Had they been caught doing this, their life would have been over.  Most likely, at the next roll-call, they would if lucky, been hung but more than likely, they would have been bludgeoned to death.  Jesus went to the cross for me and for you. His agony was unlike any ever suffered before or since and yet He beckons us to return to Him when we have sinned.  He does not utter a complaint against us, He just offers us his forever friendship.  So the next time someone cuts you off in traffic or someone upstages you at work and takes credit that they do not deserve or when a friend or relative or spouse disappoints you in some way, look for good to come out of it.  Remember Betsie and the flees. 

This Memorial Day Weekend I ask you to join me in a Rosary Crusade for the Poor Souls in Purgatory who may have fought for our country and died in protecting liberty or anyone who ever has had the honor of wearing the uniform. They need our help.  Please, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday say a Rosary with the brave men and women of the armed forces in mind. 

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Simply Sinfully Rich


Come now, you rich, weep and wail over your impending miseries. Your wealth has rotted away, your clothes have become moth-eaten, your gold and silver have corroded, and that corrosion will be a testimony against you; it will devour your flesh like a fire. You have stored up treasure for the last days. Behold, the wages you withheld from the workers who harvested your fields are crying aloud, and the cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord of hosts. You have lived on earth in luxury and pleasure; you have fattened your hearts for the day of slaughter. You have condemned; you have murdered the righteous one;
he offers you no resistance.

When we look at a poor person, we are doing something that a rich person will never do.  The poor among us can go unseen.  For example, do you notice the person running the lawnmower around the office or home that you inhabit every day?  Or are they just a lawn mower, a tool to be used until it breaks and then discarded?  Our poor blend into the landscape and they are all around us.  The maid at the hotel, the person working behind the counter at the doughnut shop, the janitor mopping a floor, all of these people are invisible to the rich.  Our greed will die with us and our wealth will be distributed to another and we will be judged on how we used our wealth, club or carrot, what did we choose? 

For any of us to believe that we own anything in this world is an amazing folly.  Everything that there is, every dollar ever minted, every fleck of gold pulled from the earth belongs not to those who possess it, no, it belongs to God.  We come naked into the world and at the moment of our birth, when our eyes first see the light of day, we can look at our hands and know that what is in them is the sum total of what we will be taking out when we leave this world. 

Take Harley Davidson for an example of corporate greed.  The company received a windfall because of the tax decrease engineered by the Republicans.  Many companies took that windfall and made life a little better for their employees, but Harley Davidson decided to use the money to fund a stock buyback and to help fund this they will lay off some eight hundred workers from their plants. James speaks of withholding the wages of the harvesters in our reading today and that is what this company is doing.  Enriching the owners by crushing the backs of the workers.  Do they have a right to do what they are doing?  Of course, they do!  This is America and you can manage your companies in any way you choose, within certain legal limits.  This right does not make it right to do so. 

The fact is that we are all rich.  We are all fabulously wealthy because of who we are.  What we have should not be stored away, it should be used to better the world we live in.  We cannot all be Bill Gates with billions of dollars to give but we can recognize the carriers of water and hewers of wood that are among us.  We can recognize the little people that do the work.  We can champion for them to receive not just a minimum wage but a living wage.  We can give dignity to those who only have known scorn.  We have so much, we have to share it with those that have so little. 

The Poor Souls in Purgatory are not nameless, faceless, unknown people.  They have names such as "Mom" or "Dad" or "Sister" or "Brother."  They are people who need our help. We must pray for them to shorten their time in Purgatory.  It feels good to think that Mom is in heaven...but what if she isn't?  What if she is in Purgatory?  Don't let your love and honor for her end at the grave.  Pray for her today.  Remember as they are, one day you might be.  

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Know Your Friends



John said to Jesus,
"Teacher, we saw someone driving out demons in your name,
and we tried to prevent him because he does not follow us."
Jesus replied, "Do not prevent him.
There is no one who performs a mighty deed in my name
who can at the same time speak ill of me.
For whoever is not against us is for us."

We have to know our friends in life.  If a person is on our side, doing something we approve of, following our way of life, but does not hang around with the same group as you do, well, that's okay.  Together you are working for the same end. You cannot criticize one another.