A Soul Surrendered

Carmelite homily for Friday, December 13, 2019 – Lectionary 185

In today’s Gospel Jesus remarks about the gripey people.  That he says, “We played you a flute but you would not dance so we sang you a dirge but you would not wail.  That John the Baptist came neither eating nor drinking and you said he’s crazy and so Jesus came eating and drinking and you said he’s a glutton.  No matter what happens people will complain.  Teresa of Avila says, ahh, put that all aside.  One of her great lines is, “For a soul surrendered into God’s hands doesn’t care whether they say good or evil about it.”  That could sum up today’s message of the Gospel.  

Here All Are Loved

Thursday, December 12, 2019 – Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe — Carmelite homily for Lectionary 690a

Today we celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe where Mary appears in Aztec and Christian symbols on a hill in Mexico City, Tepeyac, to an indigenous man, Juan Diego, and has a message of unity and brotherhood and sisterhood and love — that it is an embrace of God.  That’s a wonderful message.  Teresa of Avila, when she’s describing her reformed Carmels, her new foundations, says, “Here all are friends; here all are helped; here all are loved.”  Even though that comes from Teresa of Avila that is exactly the message of today’s Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe.  

Yoke is Easy; Burden is Light

Carmelite homily for Wednesday, December 11, 2019 – Lectionary 183

In today’s Gospel we have words of great comfort.  Jesus says, “Come to me all who labor and are burdened and I will give you rest.  For my yoke is easy; my burden is light.”  Who doesn’t want that?  But between those two parts is the key where he says, “Learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart.”  Ahhh, I don’t know if we want that – that meekness thing, that humble thing?  No.  But that’s the key.  As Teresa of Avila says, “May the Lord be praised who freed me from myself.”  We’re trapped by our pride; we’re trapped by our appetites; we’re trapped so many times.  Enslaved by these.  It’s when we are freed and we learn to be meek and humble of heart, then the yoke is easy and the burden is light.  

Getting Lost

Carmelite homily for Tuesday, December 10, 2019 – Lectionary 182

In today’s Gospel we have the well-known parable of the Lost Sheep.  Jesus asks, which of you who have a hundred sheep, if one is lost would not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness and go look for the one?  But how do we not be the one?  How do we avoid that?  How do we prevent that?  Teresa of Avila has a very simple answer.  She writes, “For all who follow Christ, if they don’t want to get lost, must walk along the paths he trod.”  It’s as easy as that. 

Castles in the Air

Carmelite homily for Thursday, December 5, 2019 – Lectionary 178

Saint Teresa’s Bookmark

Carmelite homily for Sunday, December 1, 2019  |  The First Sunday of Advent  |  Lectionary 001

Today we begin a new season and a new year – it’s the Season of Advent.  But the Gospel’s kinda scary.  It says that it’s going to be like the days of Noah when the floods came and swept everyone away.  Or there’ll be two people working in the field – one will be taken, one will be left.  Or grinding meal – one will be taken, one will be left.  And the homeowner would not have slept if he knew when the thief was coming.  All kind of scary.  But it shouldn’t be.  This is the season of patience, the season of hope – Advent.  I think Teresa of Avila tells us how to react to all this with her probably best-known quotation – the Bookmark.  It’s something she wrote in the corner of her Breviary to remind her of this everyday.  She writes, “Let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you.  All things are passing away, God never changes.  Patience obtains all things.  Whoever has God lacks nothing; God alone suffices.”  Let’s make that this season.  Let’s make that our lives.  Let’s make that our journey as we journey to the Nativity. 

Four Waters

Carmelite homily for Friday, November 29, 2019 – Lectionary 507 

One of Teresa of Avila’s best-known images is that of water.  She writes, “It seems the garden can be watered in four ways; you may draw water from a well, or by means of a water wheel, or it may flow from a river or stream, or the water may be provided by a great deal of rain.”  What she is talking about is prayer; and the love and the life that comes from prayer.   You notice that each of those is easier and easier.  You can haul water from the well.  Or easier yet, from a water wheel.  Or easier yet, irrigation from a river.  Or easiest of all, rain.  The more we pray, the more we live, the more we love, the more our garden grows.   So Jesus talks about the fig in springtime when it’s just opening.  But I think the goal is not to just recognize when it’s opening, but to bring it to full bloom and to full harvest, in his love and in his life.  

God Gives the Hundredfold

Carmelite homily for Lectionary 499 | Wednesday, November 20, 2019

In today’s Gospel we have the retelling of the coin parable.  This is in Luke’s Gospel where each servant is given one coin and when the master returns they present the one coin.  And the first says, “I’ve earned ten,” and the second says, “I’ve earned five,” and the third says, “I’ve buried it and put it in a handkerchief.”  It doesn’t matter what coins you get because, I think Saint Teresa of Avila tells us, “Never cease to believe that even in this life God gives the hundredfold.”  If we work with God, no matter what coins we get – one or ten – even in this life God gives the hundredfold.  

Strikingly Shrewd

Carmelite homily for Lectionary 489 – Friday, November 8, 2019

We have a very interesting parable Gospel passage today – about the shrewd steward who lessens everyone’s invoice so they feel indebted to him and take him in when he’s fired.  And Jesus admires this!  Why?  Maybe because the steward shows gumption and creativity.  And that’s what Jesus wants.  Even the great Teresa of Avila says, “I was strikingly shrewd when it came to mischief.”  I think that’s the call of today’s Gospel – to be strikingly shrewd.  Jesus seems to like it.  

Looking At Christ Who Is Looking At Us

Carmelite homily for Lectionary 488 – Thursday, November 7, 2019

In today’s Gospel we have two parables, very similar – the lost sheep and the lost coin.  Jesus is looking for us.  But Teresa of Avila reminds us that we should be looking for Jesus.  She writes, “We should occupy ourselves in looking at Christ who is looking at us.”