Sharing – 3rd Week of Lent

More wisdom from Fr. Ed Hays—

The Feast Day of Your Conception–This week on March 25, we will celebrate the Conception of Jesus, whose birth will be celebrated nine months hence on Christmas.  Today is a feast to remember the day you were conceived in your mother’s womb.  As a symbolic gesture, count down nine months from the date of your birth and turn to that day on the calendar. As one of your Star-Date entries, inscribe it as Conception Day. When we come to that day, remember your father and mother prayerfully and with gratitude.  Then reflect on how, along with their love, the Holy Spirit was also involved as the Spirit of Love in the holy act of your conception.


If you believe the life begins at conception, then consider measuring your years from that date instead of your birth date. When asked your age, you can playfully give two numbers.

Or you can count six months from your birth date and inscribe that day on your calendar as your half-birthday. Consider throwing a half-a-party for yourself on that day. On your half-birthday you might reverse the usual birthday custom and give gifts to those you love to celebrate the occasion.

Life is a celebration, and the more personal feast days we enjoy the more life can be lived as a joy instead of a duty.

Homily – 1st Sunday of Lent

Friends, in preparing for today, I came upon a homily that I shared with you six years ago and it lays out rather succinctly, through the help of Scripture scholar, Diane Bergant, the whole of Lent this year through the readings that the Church gives us for this holy season. Being that I will be gone the next two weekends, I thought this a good one to share again with a few updates.

We begin then with the traditional thought that Lent has been a time to reflect on our sinfulness, our unworthiness before God and as a time to mortify ourselves—to do penance in reparation for our sins.   We all, as Catholics, have this sense of “unworthiness” in our blood—we call it “fondly,” “Catholic guilt.” But, as with any message, there can be over-kill, that is why in our masses at All Are One and in many women priest led liturgies, before communion, rather than using the old prayer that, “we would be made worthy,” our prayer is more in thanksgiving that, “we are worthy in Jesus.”  If we were to lay out the readings for Lent on a graph looking at the themes presented, we would get a picture that does indeed lift up the fact of our sinfulness but that is only done so as to reflect on the graciousness of God who put the “earth creatures” in the garden, complete with beauty and sustenance, blew life into their nostrils—all so that they could experience the gift of life in the garden of paradise.

The reading from Genesis doesn’t speak of any falling from grace, any repentance that is required of them; in fact the reading stops at the point where they realize that the result of their choice to possess wisdom like unto God is not all that they had imagined it to be.

The remainder of the first readings for the Sundays of Lent follow a similar vein—sinfulness of the people as in the 3rd Sunday when we will read of Moses and the people in the wilderness—their lack of faith in God as they cry for food and water, totally forgetting that God had brought them out of Egypt so probably would not have done that to let them die in the desert;  in the 5th Sunday in the reading from Ezekiel, when even though the people had been unfaithful, “God will open up their graves and send the Spirit so that they can live.”  The sinfulness of the people is always overshadowed by the gracious goodness and care of God for them as evidenced in making this people a chosen people as related on the 2nd Sunday, through the calling of Abram to go to a new land, raising up David as their king as we will hear on the 4th Sunday and then on Palm Sunday through the prophet Isaiah, we read of God’s most profound gift of graciousness, Jesus—the one who would become one of us in order to show us how to live and love and die and rise.

I believe this graciousness and ultimate love of God for us is best expressed through Psalm 51 today where the writer asks for compassionate love in regard to what is needed. The Hebrew word used to describe this love comes from the root word for “womb.” So, we would translate it as “womb love.”  We recall the intimate language from Isaiah last week in comparing God’s love for us to a mother with her newborn, feeding at her breast.  The psalmist is asking for this same kind of love that a mother would give to the child of her womb and is expecting to get it!  This expectation comes from such love received from God in the past. This is the love that ultimately Paul is speaking of when he writes to the Romans in today’s epistle about God’s great love and compassion for them in sending Jesus.

The remainder of the psalm responses for the Sundays in Lent speak of a combination of themes that are all interrelated—God’s mercy, God’s trustworthiness, God’s tender care, all beautifully expressed in the 5th week in the 23rd psalm.  As we move toward Holy Week, again the focus shifts from lamenting over our own plight to focus entirely on Jesus who will carry all the sorrow, pain and grief upon himself.

I find in my life, that there are times when I so desperately wish that I could take away someone’s sadness, their pain, allowing them to know life in its fullness—and I would guess this is true for many of you as you relate to family members and friends. Sometimes people are held back due to their own choices as with our human ancestors in the Genesis reading today, but other times, “life happens,” as we say, to people, not through their own choices. I take great comfort and hope in knowing that I can turn to Jesus to help carry the pain and sadness that is too much for me to carry alone.  I can also with great assurance, direct people who feel so overwhelmed, to this God-Man-Jesus, who loves them so much.

The epistle readings for the six Sundays of Lent follow the same pattern as the first readings and psalm responses—we are directed not to focus on ourselves, but to keep our focus on God who will show us the way to go—especially in Jesus.   These epistle readings assure us that our sinfulness is never greater, nor more powerful than God’s grace.  They will let us know that if we keep our eyes on Jesus we will see and walk in the light of the Spirit who lives within each of us. And then on Palm Sunday, our full attention will be squarely on Jesus who humbled himself as we will read in Philippians 2 on that day—“he was divine…but became as all humans are.”

In the Gospels for Lent, we will see clearly what an extraordinary person Jesus is.  With today’s selection, we see him fasting 40 days and nights to prepare himself for the temptations that will come at the end of the 40 days.  Disciplining ourselves would appear to be important if even Jesus needs to do it!  Whether it is food, material goods, self-righteousness, pride, drugs, power and control—name your own addiction that needs to be put in balance; the ability to discipline ourselves against the subtle temptations of life that inhibit us from being our best selves, seems to be something worth looking at.  As we saw with the earth creatures, temptations are often not what they seem as far as what they ultimately bring into our lives.

Next week we have the gospel of the Transfiguration of Jesus which is truly an awesome event—one to encourage our belief.  Then on the 3rd Sunday there is Jesus’ encounter with the Samaritan woman, and his revelation to her that he is the Messiah. Then on the 4th Sunday, we read of the curing of the blind man and the revelation to him by Jesus that he is the Son of Man, a term generally meaning, God.  Finally, there is Jesus’ astounding rising of Lazarus from the dead on the 5th Sunday.

All of this together makes what happens on Palm Sunday in the reading from the Passion so much more astounding! Knowing and truly believing that Jesus is God which he has proven time and again through his life and deeds, we see that Jesus wasn’t overpowered and had his life taken from him—but that he gave it freely—all of it—from the moment of conception to his death on the cross—he chose to be one of us—to walk our journey. He certainly had the power to stop it as is evidenced by the actions and deeds recorded in Scripture which we will share throughout these Lenten Sundays. He took on the life of any human person, showed us how to live it, and gave it up in total sacrifice. In the dying then, the God-head alive in him could rise as each of us will rise one day.

So my friends, without denying our sinfulness, Lent really invites us to keep our eyes on Jesus and on God’s graciousness. We can do that in part by remembering that we are dust as we will be marked with ashes today—not for the purpose of groveling in it, but simply to see ourselves in relationship to God, one who is all powerful, all merciful, all just—gracious beyond belief, and who loved us so much as to become one of us to show us the way, the truth and the life.

Bulletin – 1st Sunday of Lent

Dear Friends,

Mass on Sunday, March 5, 2017 at 10 A.M. 

Our Ash Wednesday ritual of dispensing ashes will take place this Sunday.

March 2017 is FoodShare Month to supply the Winona food shelf with needed supplies of non-perishable food for this next year.  Please be generous! Pick up a list of needed supplies on Sunday. 

We have begun our yearly journey through Lent. The ashes of Wednesday remind us to search after what is best in us and others and perhaps “fast” from those things that don’t bring about the “best” in us.

Come; be with us this Sunday as we ponder the mystery of this holy time.

Peace and love,

Pastor Kathy


Readings: 

  • Genesis 2: 7-8; 3: 1-7
  • Romans 5: 12-19
  • Matthew 4: 1-11

Sharing – Ash Wednesday

We are reminded today that “to dust we shall all return” and with that we begin the holy season of Lent. You will recall that our community will have the opportunity on the First Sunday of Lent to receive ashes.

Something new that I would like to do this Lent is to share a weekly reflection from a good man of the Church, Fr. Ed Hays, now gone home to God, but for over 50 years served as a priest in Kansas and for many of those years, as the director of the Shantivanam Prayer Community for the Laity in Easton, Kansas. Fr. Ed was a self-taught artist, a contemplative and one who always “pushed the envelope,” moved “outside the box” to give readers of his prolific writing a fresh, open and spirited idea of faith and religion. I hope these reflections will enrich your Lent.


Lenten Satellite Day

This is a Lenten celebration not to see if you are like a moon orbiting around a planet or some NASA object orbiting the earth, but to see if you are an original satellite. The word, satellite was first used for a person who attended, or was a follower of, some prince or person of great importance.  The satellite was a parasite, who praised the prince and curried favor for personal gain.

Today, pause and ponder whether you are a disciple-follower of Jesus or only a satellite. A true disciple is called not to flatter or fawn over the master with pious songs and prayers, but to follow the master.  As Jesus himself said, “It is not those who say, ‘Lord, Lord,’ who shall enter God’s domain but those who daily do the will of God” (Mt. 7: 21).

In the prayer of Jesus, we say with one breath, “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as in heaven.”  To follow Jesus is to strive constantly to make God’s time-reign-kingdom come wherever you work, live or even visit.  No better definition for a disciple could be found than one who makes God’s time his or her time.  The prophets spoke of God’s reign as coming  at some distant time, and Jesus announced that this long-awaited time had come with him.  So it must be for all who dare call themselves his followers.  If our lives announce only the old time of injustice, inequality, and religious, racial and sexual division, regardless of how many times we have been baptized,  we should find another name for ourselves besides Christian.


A blessed Ash Wednesday! 

Peace and love, Pastor Kathy

News Item

Hello Friends,

Wanted to let you know that Lent begins this Wednesday, March 1, 2017. Our community WILL NOT be meeting that day, but I will have ashes at the Sunday, March 5th liturgy. I am including the list of  books and films from our library below, if you are looking for some good reading/viewing during Lent. Most are kept in our back room. Or if I can be of help in any way, please let me know. Blessings on each of you during this holy season. –Pastor Kathy

All Are One Catholic Church Library

  1. Accidental Saints: Finding God in All the Wrong People by Nadia Bolz-Weber
  2. A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy by A.W. Sipe
  3. Bergoglio’s List: How a Young Francis Defied a Dictatorship and Saved Dozens of Lives by Nello Scavo
  4. Confronting Power and Sex in the Catholic Church: Reclaiming the Spirit of Jesus by Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, Former Auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of Sydney, Australia
  5. Good Catholic Girls by Angela Bonavoglia
  6. Here I Am, I Am Ready: A New Model of Ordained Ministry by Juanita Cordero and Suzanne Thiel
  7. I Am Malala by Christina Lamb and Malala Yousafzai
  8. In God’s House by Ray Mouton
  9. Jimmy Carter: A Call to Action-Women, Religion, Violence and Power
  10. Joan Chittister: Her Journey from Certainty to Faith by Tom Roberts
  11. My Journey from Silence to Solidarity by Roy Bourgeois
  12. Pink Smoke over the Vatican by Jules Hart-DVD
  13. Practicing Catholic by James Carroll
  14. Quantum Theology: Spiritual Implications of the New Physics by Diarmuid O’Murchu
  15. Split: A Child, A Priest and the Catholic Church—a memoir by Mary Dispenza
  16. What the Gospels Meant by Garry Wills
  17. Whistle: Fr. Tom Doyle’s Steadfast Witness for Victims of Clerical Sexual Abuse by Robert Blair Kaiser
  18. Women Find a Way: The Movement and Stories of RCWP by Elaine Hainz McGrath, Bridget Mary Meehan and Ida Raming