The End of Summer

September has barely poked its nose through the door, but already we see signs of Autumn.  A slight gold shimmers on the trees.  Geese gather in noisy expectation.  Early morning sheds its night veil in slower layers of magenta and blue.  There have even been a few sweet nights when we can open the windows wide and sleep in the crisp September air.  All the signs are there — it is a new season – “The Season of Freshness”.


“Fresh” is a powerful word.  Who can resist the crisply-aproned waiter suggesting, “Fresh ground pepper?”  Who can ignore the aroma of fresh baked bread?  Some of us even remember with appreciation the scent of linens fresh from our mother’s clothesline.

Let this beautiful season remind us that each day the Creator shakes out a fresh beginning for every one of us.  With every radiant morning, the slate is clear with mercy. The opportunity to re-create the world awaits us.  Our lives, our work, our relationships are the fresh bread of God’s hope for us. Within them, we are invited to reveal that powerful grace which runs just under the visibility of the ordinary.  It whispers to us, “You are Beloved, and I want your life to be a fountain of joy.”

September is for fresh beginnings:
a sparkling season, an unmarked semester,
a turning of the garden, a clean page.  
It is nature’s way of saying
forgiveness is possible,
life is resilient,
hope is eternal. 


Imagine September as the white-aproned waiter inviting you to freshness.  At the Creator’s table, the tablecloth is clean and the sacred menu is forgiveness, hope, mercy and renewed beginnings. Don’t miss this opportunity to assess what needs refreshment in your life.  Feast on September’s graces! They can be life-changing!


Music: Summer’s End – Michael Jones

The Chandelier

Monday of the Twenty-second Week in Ordinary Time

September 2, 2019

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Today, in Mercy,  our scriptures may lead us to think about where we have come from and where we are going.

Indeed, we tell you this, on the word of the Lord,
that we who are alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord,
will surely not precede those who have fallen asleep.

My reflection on this passage will be rather personal today. I hope you don’t mind.

As I write, I am blessed to be sitting in a beautiful breeze at our community’s vacation house. It couldn’t be a more lovely day.

1 Th4_17 chandelier

While I pray about these scriptures, a simple chandelier over our dining room table sways in the soft wind. Under its corona, I can’t help remembering all the friends who, over many years, have shared a meal and enjoyed past summer days here.

What an indescribable blessing it is to live in community with holy, joyful and loving women! 

Many of them, over these present days, drop in for a cup of home made soup or a glass of wine. We love one another, and we are entwined in each other’s journey to God. We inspire one another by our radical embrace of the Gospel, and our longing to give even more for God. What a comforting, sturdy, and supportive fabric we weave to enfold one another!

The chandelier rhythmically dances, like a fragrant censor over a sacred table. I remember with immense gratitude those beloved Sisters, now gone, who have blessed my life here at this refreshing seaside. Their names surround me in a grateful litany: Kitty, Marie, Fidelis, Jodi, Maureen, Suzanne, Ronnie, Janet, Giovanni, Mary Joan …

Others too who have sat at this table – not Sisters only, but family in faith, love and ministry bless me as I let the Holy Spirit of the waning summer waft over me.

We have shared crabs and meatballs, tears and laughter, prayer and politics, movies and ball games, hope and a holy, honest ember that warms the soul.

My dear Sisters, as you read this, you will have your own Sea Isle litanies to pray. Are we not indescribably blessed in one another!

Others of you, my dear readers, you will let you own loving list write itself across your heart as you pray.

A family is an eternal line between God and the generations, clear and stable.

A community is a wider path, rich in differences and, because of them, profound in its gifts.

In an interesting reversal, this holiday has come to be more about leisure than labor. And it is at leisure where we are most easily blessed by the joy, sincerity, trust and love of our families, friends, and communities.

Let us thank God for them today, remembering the past, cherishing the present, trusting the future.

Happy Labor Day!

Music: Sea Breeze – Keiko Matsui