Bulletin – 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time

  • NO MASS THIS SUNDAY, October 26, 2025 – Pastor Kathy and Robert will be away. I will put out a homily for your use later in the week. Feel free to attend services with First Congregational if you wish. Mass will resume at AAO on November 2, 2025.
  • Please never hesitate to call, 507-429-3616, or email, aaorcc2008@gmail.com if I can help you in any way.

_____________________________________________________________________

Dear Friends,

We will be away this Sunday for a bit of family time. As we continue on in Ordinary Time, let us contemplate on the difference between “righteousness” and “self-righteousness,” always striving to be our best for ourselves and others.

Peace and love,

Pastor Kathy

____________________________________________________________________

Readings:

  • Sirach 35: 12-14, 16-18
  • 2 Timothy 4: 6-8, 16-18
  • Luke 18: 9-14

____________________________________________________________________

Homily – 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time

My friends, Ordinary Time is beginning to wind down and within a few short weeks, the end of the Church Year will be upon us and the beginning of a new Church Year with the coming of Advent the end of November.  But before that happens, we will continue to be challenged to “be our best,” as we are today. 

   Let’s begin with the 1st reading from the Old Testament Book of Exodus, which I think you maybe would agree, we could have skipped because of its theme of the Israelites waging war on their neighbors and the fact that our God appears to be supporting this action.  And upon reflection, we might be thinking that “this God” doesn’t sound like the God of our brother, Jesus, who in fact, we believe, becomes “the Christ,” Jesus that is – a God big enough for all, a God surpassing all religions. 

   Even so, exegetes tell us not to skip this 1st reading, but to look deeper than just the surface story of humans going to war against each other.  And, in our own reality, we are aware of too much war and fighting in our world today, among the Israelites and the Palestinians – not yet fully settled, among the Ukrainians and the Russians, and we long for the ability among all these humans to seek after peace. 

   I mentioned exegetes telling us, “Not to skip this 1st reading, and to “cut the people writing this story, a break” because they didn’t yet “know Jesus as we do, to show them the way.”  Thus, my friends, going deeper, the psalm refrain for today is a better, higher perhaps message to hold onto, “Our help is from God who made heaven and earth” – and that coupled with our knowledge of Jesus’ life among us, does more clearly, show us the way.  In other words, no matter what life brings, God will be there for us! 

   And this notion then moves us nicely into Paul’s letter to Timothy in the 2nd reading, “preach the Word…stay with the task whether [it is] convenient or inconvenient…never losing patience.” 

   And finally, in Luke’s gospel, Jesus’ words are both an encouragement and a challenge, “[pray] always and [do not] lose heart,” – persist – persevere.  It seems that Jesus is saying, in the story of the unjust judge, “if a person who cares little can do good, how much more will our God do, for those who ask?” – this God who loves us beyond all imagining!

   So then, if we were looking for an overall theme in the readings, “persistence,” exegetes say should be the theme that unites all of the Scripture choices today. Along with persistence, perseverance is a quality we Christians should strive after.  While the two words are similar, perseverance is a “step up” in that it comes into play when what we strive to accomplish, like “justice for all,” becomes very difficult. 

   “Persistence,” is continuing an action consistently, for whatever purpose.  A recent article in the Winona Daily News about the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration who have been praying in Lacrosse, Wisconsin for 147 years all day and all night for the rest of us would be an example of persistence. 

   An example of “perseverance” would be the Monday night demonstrations in Winona, Minnesota asking for “justice for all,” in a climate that at times is quite depressing.  The postcard writers on every Thursday morning in Winona is also an example of this “perseverance” in troubling times. One could perhaps argue that the FSPAs in Lacrosse are not only persistent, but that they persevere in praying for all of us humans that we will one day strive more wholeheartedly toward being our best selves. 

   Along these lines, I would like to lift up Clarissa Pinkola Estes, author of Women Who Run With the Wolves, whom I consider her to be “a friend for the journey” even though I have never met her, because she was the 1st woman writer that I discovered back 30 years ago in my own personal journey, who was putting into words what I had believed for so long about the equal natures of women and men, and that the voices of women were simply not being heard. 

   Clarissa names our perseverance to stay at a task until it is completed, especially when it is about, “justice for all,” “soul-showing.”  She has this to say about becoming “disappointed/discouraged” by the meanness, selfishness and greed that we may see in our world:

    “There will always be times when you feel discouraged.  I too have felt despair many times in my life, but I do not keep a chair for it.  I will not entertain it.  It is not allowed to eat from my plate.  The reason is this: In my uttermost bones, I know something, as do you.  It is that there can be no despair when you remember why you came to earth, who you serve, and who sent you here.  The good words we say and the good deeds we do are not ours.  They are the words and deeds of the One who brought us here.” I too,  often find myself feeling, very humbly, that the words I give you each week are not mine alone, but given me by the Spirit of our good God.

   My friends, I am not sure I could have said from my heart all that Clarissa Pinkola Estes said here from hers, but I know that I am mightily challenged by her words!  In that spirit then, in a world that needs each of us every day to persevere in good, truth and justice—basically, love, in broad strokes, I invite us all to consider these final words from her: “When a great ship is in harbor and moored, it is safe, there can be no doubt [and most of us want to be here – safe].

 “But [she says], that is not what great ships are built for!”  Perhaps when we are most discouraged, and we can’t see, as the psalmist says today, that “our God is with us,”  maybe the “gift we get” is simply the strength to “hold on,” doing the good we do. And friends, whatever good we can do is so very important – not just for us and the people we can help, but as an example to others to know they are not alone, and to do the same!  Amen? Amen!

Bulletin – 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time

  • Mass on Sunday, October 19, 2025 at 10 A.M. Social time will be sponsored by All Are One with Pat P. and Eryn P. Thank you!
  • AAO will be bringing dinner tonight to the Catholic Worker House – Bethany – Five members do this ministry 4 times a year: Maureen G., Bill C., Shirley M., Eryn P., and Pastor Kathy – thanks to all!
  • Please never hesitate to call, 507-429-3616, or email, aaorcc2008@gmail.com if I can help you in any way.

___________________________________________________________________________________

Dear Friends,

Ordinary Time continues to challenge us this week “to preach the Word, both when convenient and when inconvenient.”

Come; ponder this challenge with us on Sunday.

Peace and love,

Pastor Kathy

_________________________________________________________________________________

Readings:

  • Exodus 17: 8-13
  • 2 Timothy 3: 14–4:2
  • Luke 18: 1-8

__________________________________________________________________________________

Homily – 28th Sunday in Ordinary Time

My friends, the readings this week from the prophets, Elisha, Jesus and Paul, call us to consider the virtue of faith, what it is, what it is not, and what it personally means to each of us.  We all come out of somewhat the same experiences, given our ages, as far as faith goes.  Prior to the 2nd Vatican Council when Pope John XXIII was about, “opening windows and doors,” speaking poetically about letting, “fresh air” into our beloved Church that hadn’t known any significant changes in belief or practice in hundreds of years, we all were trained to be “black and white” believers – that is, if Father said it, it was so – “Father,” the priest, was pretty much synonymous with God.

   Then came Angelo Roncalli – “Good Pope John” who wanted our beloved Church to be more open, inviting, and compassionate, where basically “love” would supersede law.  And history tells us that this was no simple fix – we humans very easily get stuck in our ways and find change hard, even if it is for the best.  In fact, we see a concerted effort at present within our Church, among some of the bishops, our own especially, to back track to pre-Vatican II times.

   So, that brings us to today’s readings which I said in the beginning revolve around our faith.  So, what is faith anyway?  If I were to ask each of you, the answers may be somewhat the same, yet somewhat different.  I will jump into the middle here and say first what I believe faith is not.  It is not “lack of doubt, but really the opposite.   So, to give us a working definition, I would say, “faith is believing in something or someone that we don’t have all the answers about, yet we believe, and trust in that “truth” anyway. 

   Think of the articles of faith that you have believed in, or perhaps accepted all your life that we really don’t have proof of:  creation of our beautiful world by a benevolent God who supposedly wants good and not bad for us; that this benevolent God became one-of-us in Jesus, to show us the way, that this same Jesus lived, died and rose from the dead, to give us a path to follow, and so on.  Now, we don’t have proof of any of this, except that if we look historically, there was a man, Jesus, from, as some have said, “the little backward town of Nazareth,” that did indeed live, but beyond that, the rest we take on faith from those who first believed.  And, without a doubt, our human ability and willingness to believe, has been abused over the years and centuries by those with power, to write the story for their own benefit. 

   In the past I have shared the untruth around the belief in our mother and sister Mary’s immaculate conception, which would have us believe that she was conceived and born without the “original” sin that the rest of us were supposedly “stained” with.  Now, it must be remembered that to be “human” means that we are “imperfect.”  If Mary was without sin at birth, or ever, then she was not human, which was why supposedly Mary was needed – to give Jesus the human component. 

   My friends, this is just one example of how those with the power in our Church decide what the narrative that they want to promote will be, and then they back track, to basically make it so.  And that chosen narrative was that we humans really “blew it,” God became angry with us, and only the death of his beloved son could make up for our sins, and make us right with God again. 

   Now, if you have ever doubted that such a story could be true, I would submit that your faith is intact!  Because you see, faith does not mean that we have “certainty” about a given thing, but in fact, we may doubt because we just don’t know, but yet, we can believe perhaps in a bigger concept, such as, that our God loved us enough to become one-of-us, and live-with-us.  If we have “certainty,” then there is no need for faith. Let me repeat that: If we have “certainty,” then there is no need for faith.

   So then, let us turn to today’s Scriptures for the ways they can enlighten us.  In the 1st reading, Naaman, a man with leprosy is asked to believe in the prophet Elisha who tells him to wash in the river Jordan in order to be “made clean.”  He takes the prophet’s word on faith, not knowing if what he hopes for will come to pass.

   Paul, in his 2nd letter to Timothy tells us that, “there is no chaining the Word of God,” unlike the chains that imprison Paul as he writes to Timothy.  My friends, when our “faith” is based simply on “black and white” rules – do this, don’t do that, no questions asked, and often set in place by those, as I said earlier, who want to control the story, so as to control the people, then “faith” ceases to exist.  Faith, grownup faith that is, shouldn’t necessarily come easily –ideally, it is something that we should struggle with. 

   Jesuit priest and musician, Dan Schutte has rightly stated that our faith must be approached through both our hearts and minds, beginning with our hearts.  Using this approach, of starting with the heart, allows us to apply love, compassion, and understanding, to a situation which can really “open us up” to much more than just beginning with our minds – basically, the law says no, therefore it must be wrong. 

   Naaman’s cure from leprosy was about believing in something he couldn’t fully understand, yet trusted in – somehow…  Paul’s counsel to his student Timothy, was, “the Word of God couldn’t be chained” – boxed in, that is. 

   I have shared many times over the years that my personal call to priesthood moved outside of a man-made law that said, “this couldn’t happen” in order that I could hear, “the Word of God,” that wasn’t, “chained,” that could move beyond the law, in order that love, compassion, and understanding could happen.

   Finally, the story in Luke’s gospel today about the one man with leprosy, now cured, who returned to “thank” Jesus is compelling for us simply because of the more expansive reaction (love-gratitude) that his faith brought forth.  We see this same reaction in the response of Naaman to the prophet Elisha in the first reading today, who cures him from leprosy. Naaman wants to gift Elisha for what has been given to him, but Elisha won’t accept a gift for what he feels God has done through him. Still, Naaman takes the next step, which you may have wondered about, asking Elisha to give him “two mule-loads of earth” to take to his home – Naaman’s purpose was that he would kneel on that earth each day to pray to, and show gratitude to the God of Elisha.

   Jesus’ reaction to the man – a Samaritan in fact, who most Jews at the time looked down on, “your faith has been your salvation,” could no doubt be discussed at length as to what Jesus actually meant, and I would simply suggest that he meant more than physical salvation, but “heart and mind” salvation too, that ability then, going forward toward  becoming more open, more loving , more understanding – of all that he would meet. Amen? Amen!

Bulletin – 28th Sunday in Ordinary Time

  • Mass on Sunday, October 12, 2025 at 10 A.M. with social time to follow. Your board will also be meeting immediately after Mass on Sunday–send any concerns you may have to me. These meetings are open to all parish members, if you wish to attend.
  • A gentle reminder to the parish–5 people, Maureen G., Bill C., Shirley M., Eryn P., and Pastor Kathy produce a meal 4x a year for the Catholic Worker house on the 3rd Thursday of the month. October 16th will be our next offering. Many from the parish have served in this role in the past and have needed to stop due to health concerns. If there are any others out there who would like to help with this ministry, please let me know.
  • Another gentle reminder that AAO is on for treats after Mass each 3rd Sunday of the month, with October 19th being the next time. I have one person, would there be another person to help this month?
  • Please never hesitate to call, 507-429-3616, or email, aaorcc2008@gmail.com, if I can help you in any way.

_______________________________________________________________________

Dear Friends,

The readings for this Sunday call us to ponder what “faith” is all about for us, in the here and now.

Come; be with us, ponder and pray together.

Peace and love,

Pastor Kathy

____________________________________________________________________

Readings:

  • 2 Kings 5: 14-17
  • 2 Timothy 2: 8-13
  • Luke 17: 11-19

______________________________________________________________________