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Saturday, August 26, 2017

GOSSIP


GOSSIP

A good description of the power of gossip suggests you go up on a roof with a feather pillow, tear the case open and let the feathers fly out, then try to gather the feathers and put them back in the case. Like the feathers, once the gossip is out there, it is impossible to call it back. How many lives have been ruined this way is impossible to calculate.  Even some so-called historical facts are actually gossip. Today with information gushing at us like water from a fire hose, there is no time to stop and ask questions.  Before you know it, everyone has heard it and believes it.
The amount of damage that is done by gossip is immeasurable and yet we are very casual about it.  Someone says, “This is just between you and I”, and while they are telling us the story, we are thinking, “Who shall I tell first?”

Another facet of gossip is the tendency to embellish.  Everyone wants to be part of the story so why not include a little spice in the retelling?   That, then, sets off yet another lie attached to someone else’s name.

During Jesus’ ministry, some people tried to stone him twice and once tried to throw him over a cliff. Then finally applauded when he was whipped, scourged, humiliated and ultimately crucified.  How much of the anger toward him was fueled by gossip like this:

“He is an enemy of the people.  I heard he wants to usurp the power of the priesthood. He wants to overturn all that Moses commanded.  I heard he killed a boy when he was a child.  He is a murderer.  He is an abomination, he travels with women.  He flies in the face of all our laws.   He is a blasphemer and a liar.” 

In his anguish, Jesus could not have been unaware that gossip about him had fueled the rage of the mob and yet he called out to the Father to forgive them.  We must pray that God forgives us.  God calls us to love one another.  How about in this one area we pledge to do just that?  What if we say before the story is told that we don’t want to hear it?  What if, even if we know a story, we don’t repeat it?  What if all of us enlist the Holy Spirit to help us? 

We could start a trend with a raised palm that says, “Don’t tell me. I don’t want to hear it.”  That could go along way toward stemming the tide of gossip, which has become the National Pastime.  No one escapes and almost no one is innocent of this sin. 

Years ago a couple walked past me down the church aisle. The woman next to me, whom I hardly knew, leaned over and said, “He’s got a nerve coming to church.  He’s having an affair. At the time I was only interested in the gossip but since then, I’ve carried the burden of that knowledge. Gossip stains everyone, the subject, the teller and the listener.

May God be with us as we strive to love our neighbors.

Carol Lemelin OPA

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Mustard Seeds and Mountains

MUSTARD SEEDS AND MOUNTAINS

“Come to me, all you who are burdened and I will give you rest.” 
(Matt 11-28)
As promises go, this one is actually impossible to resist.  It’s the kind of offer that makes one say, “ What do I have to lose? I’m going for it.”

Let’s say you do go for it.  What happens next? A lot of that depends on what you expect.  If you expect that all your problems will disappear and you will never be burdened again, you will be disappointed.  God does not promise to live our lives for us.  God wants us to be happy in this life, but in order for that to happen, we have to be in control of that life.  We have to make the mistakes, correct the mistakes and make amends for the mistakes so that we are truly living. 

What Jesus promises is to be with us all along the way.  It takes faith to believe that.  Jesus said if you have faith the size of mustard seed you could move mountains.  I don’t want to move mountains; I just want to get through this life without screwing up too much.  Of course, that often seems like moving mountains.

Here Jesus promises to help with the moving.  Certainly he knows life on earth. Every human thing that happened to Jesus can be found in the Gospel stories.  Read them. Put yourself in his place.  See how deeply connected we are to him. 
His boyhood friend and the only person who understood his mission, with the possible exception of his mother, was cruelly murdered by the king, leaving him alone to continue his work.  He was accused of blasphemy against God, while all he was trying to do was show the immense love of God to people whose understanding of that had been buried in law and punishment.  He went home to visit his mother and his neighbors tried to kill him.

Nothing that can happen to you is unknown to him.  All of human promises, like lifetime guarantees and ironclad contracts, come with asterisks.  The promises of Christ do not.  They are real, they are meant specifically for you and you can put your trust in them. You have absolutely nothing to lose except the loneliness of trying to carry your burdens alone. 

Come to me.  I will give you rest.”

Blessings,

Carol Lemelin OPA 




Praying for Peace?

WE SHOULD STOP PRAYING FOR PEACE.

Why do I say that?  Is it because I don’t think God is listening?  Is it because I don’t think God cares?  Nothing could be further from the truth.  It’s just that praying for peace won’t work because we think that’s all we have to do.  We think if we pray long enough and often enough that will do the trick.  We believe that God will bring the peace.  But peace doesn’t come.

 Jesus said:  My peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives.  Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”  (John: 14-27)

But we are afraid.  We do not behave as those who trust in God.  We take a defensive position and arm ourselves both mentally and physically.  Jesus said that he bestowed on us His peace.  That didn’t mean that he was covering us in an impenetrable Invisibility Cloak like the one Harry Potter had.  He meant he was putting his peace in our hearts, but we don’t accept it.  We don’t live like people who are at peace.  The only way the world will know peace is when those of us who have been given Christ’s peace share it. To do that, we have to nurture that peace within us so that the peaceful response will be automatic. 

I don’t have my head buried in the sand. I know how violent this world is, but, I also know that peaceful solutions must be found.  Peaceful solutions must be spoken.   Take, for example, the issue of refugees.  Amid the turmoil caused in Europe of thousands of refugee pouring across borders, Pope Francis said that if every Christian Congregation in the world took in one family, there would be no refugees. 

We are not listening.  We have allowed the agents of fear and distrust to cloud our vision. When we read scripture, we see that Jesus was a victim of the violence of his world on purpose. He could have avoided it, but he chose not to. Was he naïve, or was he setting an example?

It seems to some of us that we would be more peaceful if we had a gun.  Violence is the easy answer.  Consider at the time of Jesus’ arrest.  Peter, who had walked beside Jesus for three years, tried to fight them off by grabbing a sword and cutting a man’s ear off.  Jesus quietly said, “No, Peter” and calmly re-attached the ear.  The words,  Those who live by the sword, die by the sword” must have rung in Peter’s head the rest of his life.

Don’t get me wrong; I know what courage it takes to be peaceful. Most people inherently know how dangerous the peaceful path is, but it is still the only way. 
The Dominican Sisters of Peace, with whom I am honored to be associated, have one message: Be Peace.   Pray with them, that God will continually remind you that his Peace is within and you have the power to bring peace.



Carol Lemelin OPA

Following Moses

FOLLOWING IN MOSES’ FOOTSTEPS


I don’t think there is anyone more put-upon in scripture than Moses. Even Job has to take a back seat.  From the day he heard God’s command to free his people from slavery, Moses faced danger and resistance, enemies within and without.  The most difficult had to be the constant whining, scolding, disobedience and ingratitude of the people for whom he had dedicated his life.  Finally, in the book of Numbers (11:4b-15) Moses cried out his frustration by saying something we often hear in our own time.  “Just kill me now. ” Who would guess that Moses would be the first person quoted as saying that?  God declined, however, and ordered Moses to persevere. "Why are you crying out to me?  Tell the children of Israel to go forward.”

Finally, as recorded in Deuteronomy, the life of Moses comes to an end.   It is the common interpretation that he had been denied seeing the Promised Land as a punishment for having doubted God at some point.  I disagree totally.   I think it was a reward.  I think God said to Moses,

“You did it, Moses.  You got them this far.  You obeyed me and I thank you. You’ve suffered enough punishment from them. We’ll let Joshua take over.  Now come home to me and rest.”

As I was planning to draw a comparison between Moses and ourselves, I read a letter from the Dominican Sisters of Erbil-Iraq. Driven from their homes by ISIS in 2014 because of the betrayal of their neighbors, they are now attempting to rebuild from the horrible devastation they found when they returned.  Their words struck me to the heart; “It wasn’t weapons that caused the damage but hate. Only God knows how much love we need to heal these deep wounds. Inspired by the Biblical Characters, we believe that God will raise us again in a new way.”

What can I possibly add?  From the Exodus to ISIS, the people of God lean on Him and soldier on doing His will.  We have an obligation to follow their example and trust that He is with us and will not leave. Trust that you are not alone and never be tempted to say “Just kill me now.” Instead, always and forever say, “I will go forward so that Thy Will may be done.”

Blessings,
Carol Lemelin OPA