Patriot

July 4, 2024

Several years ago, on the Fourth of July, I planned to meet elderly friends for dinner and had arrived early to await them in the restaurant parking lot. As Carlos and his wife arrived, they headed for the last open handicapped space, only to be cut out by another car. Carlos went on to find a space at the back of the lot as I observed the other couple emerge from their souped-up muscle car, sporting a decal which read ”It’s America, Stupid. Speak English!”. The driver was a muscular guy in cut-offs and tank top, head wrapped in an American flag kerchief. Laughing at their parking prowess, the two threw a handicapped placard on the dashboard and ran into the restaurant.

Meanwhile, Cuban-born Carlos, a WW II vet, awarded a Purple Heart and a Silver Star, struggled from a distance in his wheelchair. At twenty-two years of age, Carlos’ legs were shattered as he saved his platoon by throwing his body on a live grenade. As a price for their lives, he had spent the rest of his life confined to a wheelchair.

Carlos and his wife died years ago. But over the years, I have often reflected on that indelible parking lot scene. For me, it is the perfect parable of the difference between true and false patriotism.

Amidst the fireworks, barbecues and baseball games of the Fourth, a subtle truth runs like a quiet, life-giving stream: we are profoundly blessed to be Americans. Most of us know and believe that, but sometimes, a few distort it or take it for granted. This star-spangled time each summer invites us to look more closely at the gift of our citizenship.

  1. Do we vote?
  2. Do we diligently study candidates’ philosophies and voting records?
  3. Do we disregard party and personality in the interest of ethical, world-conscious leadership?
  4. Do we consistently study issues and express beliefs to elected officials?

When I listen to some political talk shows, it scares me. Some of these pundits have badly confused patriotism with nationalism. Patriotism is always fed by unbiased truth, mutuality and respect. At its heart is freedom — for everyone. Nationalism breeds states like Nazi Germany in the past century and North Korea in our own. It is fed by unexamined fears, conspiracy falsehoods, control and abuse. At its heart is domination – over everyone.

We live in a wonderful country where most citizens understand the huge difference between patriotic devotion and nationalistic arrogance. Our young men and women are willing to fight and die for that difference. Our brightest leaders have given their lives for it. We must never cheapen these sacrifices by espousing the false “Americanism” of isolation, exclusion, domination or conceit.



Let’s turn off the exploitive and manipulative cable channels. Let’s listen to our own hearts where the essence of freedom beats like a minuteman’s drum – where truth was breathed into us long before we even knew we were Americans.


Courage

Thursday of the Thirteenth Week in Ordinary Time
July 4, 2024

Today’s Readings:

https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/070424.cfm


… people brought to Jesus a paralytic lying on a stretcher.
When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic,
“Courage, child, your sins are forgiven.”


This passage describes a situation found in just a few of Jesus’s miracles. The miracle occurs because of the intervention of others, not the one in need. When Jesus sees the faith of those who carried this young man, his Infinite Mercy was moved.

It seems that perhaps the afflicted person had lost hope. It was his friends who hoped – his friends who carried him. What a gift it is to have friends who will stand by you in life’s sometimes crippling circumstances. What a blessing to have companions who see your salvation when you have lost the vision!

Acting on the faith of these steadfast friends, Jesus tells the paralytic to reach down into his soul and recover the courage that will make him whole.

Today, in God’s Lavish Mercy:
We pray to be faithful friends like the ones described in this passage. We pray in gratitude for those who are such friends to us.


Thought:

There is nothing on earth
more to be prized
than true friendship.

St. Thomas Aquinas

Music: I Will Carry You – Sean Clive

Conditional

Feast of Saint Thomas, Apostle
July 3, 2024

Today’s Readings:

https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/070324.cfm


So the other disciples said to him, “We have seen the Lord.”
But Thomas said to them,
“Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands
and put my finger into the nailmarks
and put my hand into his side, I will not believe.”
John 20:25


There’s that tiny word for which, despite a magnanimously holy life, Thomas remains famous:

Unless …

At that particular moment in his life, Thomas’s faith was conditional. He would not believe Jesus was alive unless he saw and touched him.

I doubt that Thomas was alone in his “conditionality”. The faith of many of those scared disciples was probably a bit shaky. Thomas was just more forthcoming in his doubts and hadn’t, like some of them, already seen the Risen Lord.

Today, in God’s Lavish Mercy:

We all know what it’s like to have doubts – about big things, like our faith, and about little things like our appearance. It feels like we’re being dropped into a safety net that might have a hole in it. Will it hold, or will it fall through? And what happens to us in either case!

Decades ago, when I taught eighth grade, one of my brightest students asked me this:
“Sister, you’ve dedicated your whole life for the faith. What if, in the end, there is no God or heaven?”

I’m not going to tell you my answer. I’m going to suggest that you consider what your own answer would be. Is your faith conditional or unconditional?


Poetry: St. Thomas the Apostle – Bishop Edward Henry Bickersteth (1825-1906)

The Paschal feast was ended. Multitudes,
Unweeting what was done, that day had left
The gates of Zion for their far-off homes;
And there was silence, where but yesterday
Had been the hum of thousands. Olivet
Slept calmly underneath the waning moon,
And darkening shadows fell across the steeps
And hollows of Jerusalem. Deep night
Had drench'd the eyes of thousands. But, behold,
Within the upper room where Jesus broke
The bread of life, and pour'd the mystic wine
The night before He suffer'd, once again
The little band of those who loved Him most
Were gather'd. On the morrow morn they thought
To leave the holy city, holier now
Than ever in their eyes, and go to meet
Their Lord upon the Galilean hill.

All bosoms swell'd with gladness, all save one;
One heart amid that group of light and love
Was desolate and dark: nine weary days
Of doubt, which shadow'd all eternity,
Had written years of suffering on his brow.
The worst he fear'd to him was realized,
Life quench'd, for ever quench'd, and death supreme.
Jesus was dead. And vainly others told,
How they had seen and heard their risen Lord;
Himself had seen the lifeless body hang
Upon the cross; and, till he saw like them
And like them touch'd the prints in hands and side,
He would not, for he could not, hope again.

But there has been enough of sorrow now
For that true mourner, sorely tried but true:
And as they communed of an absent Lord
Jesus was there, though doors were shut and barr'd,
There in the midst of them; and from His lips,
Who is Himself our Peace, the words of peace
Fell as of old like dew on every heart,
But surely sweetest, calmest, tenderest
On one most torn and tost. The waves were still;
Day broke; the shadows fled: nor this alone,
Love offer'd all which bitterest grief had ask'd,
And laying bare the inly bleeding wound
Heal'd it, which haply else had bled afresh
In after years, till faith adoring claim'd
In One, whom sense no longer sought to touch,
The Lord of life, the everlasting God.

O Master, though our eyes have never look'd
Upon Thy blessèd face and glorious form,
Grant us to trust Thee with a perfect trust,
And love Thee and rejoice in Thee unseen,
And prove the heaven of Thy beatitude
On those who, though they see Thee not, believe.

Music: When I Survey The Wondrous Cross – Keith & Kristyn Getty

A Second Wave

Tuesday of the Thirteenth Week in Ordinary Time
July 2, 2024

Today’s Readings:

https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/070224.cfm

Sometimes a reading will be repeated rather quickly in the Liturgy. Such is the case with today’s Gospel which we read on June 23. So, I may be being a little lazy, but I too have repeated the reflection. I think it might be worth a second glance. 😉



A violent squall came up and waves were breaking over the boat,
so that it was already filling up.
Jesus was in the stern, asleep on a cushion.
They woke him and said to him,
“Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?”
He woke up,
rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, “Quiet! Be still!”
The wind ceased and there was great calm.
Then he asked them, “Why are you terrified?
Do you not yet have faith?”
Mark 4:37-40


Many years ago, at a particularly critical crossroad in my life, a revered mentor rescued me. She did it with a simple phrase, “Do not go down under this wave.”

Her counsel challenged me stand up and reach for my faith, despite having been knocked down by gross misjudgment. Her confidence led me to realize that with faith we can find God within our circumstances, releasing a power we may not have recognized before.

In today’s passage, Jesus urges his disciples to live this kind of faith. God is with them, even when seemingly asleep. Fully trusting that Presence will allow their lives to unfold in peace, despite any passing storm. And yes, all storms are passing. 🙂


Poetry: I Go Down to the Shore – Mary Oliver

I go down to the shore in the morning
and depending on the hour the waves
are rolling in or moving out,
and I say, oh, I am miserable,
what shall—
what should I do? And the sea says
in its lovely voice:
Excuse me, I have work to do.

Music: Every Storm Runs Out of Rain – Gary Allen