31 December 2017

“Called to Be Saints in Family Life Today (w/Special Appeal to Men)": Homily #114


5pm Mass
(8 minutes)

12pm Mass
(8 minutes)

10am Mass
(includes St. Therese's family of saints)
____________________________________________

“Called to Be Saints in Family Life Today” (With a Special Appeal to Men)

Homily #114



SHORTER VERSION A
12pm Mass

Family.  F.A.M. – I.L.Y.  Forget About Me – I Love You.  (repeat 2x)

On this Feast of the Holy Family, there are 2 main points for meditation:

1.)  The Holy Family – Jesus, Mary and Joseph – is the “prototype and example” (FC 86) of all Christian families.

2.)  We too are called to be saints in family life today.


The Holy Family is the Child Jesus, the Virgin Mary, and St. Joseph.  In today’s Gospel, the Holy Family eventually settles in Nazareth.  It is here in the silence of ordinary family life that Jesus “grew (up) and became strong, filled with wisdom.”

They knew homelessness and fatigue.  They had to find work and pay their bills, to cook and put food on the table, do laundry, go to synagogue like a good Jewish family and learn the Scriptures, and make ends meet.  They very much went through things our families do today, and they do so in all things but sin.  Ordinary family life, when done with love for God, becomes extraordinary and holy.

In particular, St. Joseph, an ordinary carpenter, had the pressure and stress of having to provide for his family and his foster Son, who was the Son of God.  Joseph, a silent man yet a just man who taught Jesus human manhood, felt unworthy to raise the Son of God.  He is also the patron saint of a happy death, a death where one dies in the state of grace and friendship with God.

But aside from being an earthly model, this Guardian of the Redeemer is a spiritual model for us men, who offers us a spirituality of Christian manhood: husbands, fathers, teenage boys, grandfathers, godfathers, single men, uncles, stepfathers, and men who care for others.  St. Joseph’s fatherhood is “expressed concretely” (Redemptoris Custos #7) in not just serving others, but in sacrificial service, a total gift of self, a total oblation of his heart.  Joseph shows men in our confused, selfish society which attacks manhood that a real tough man is a man who bends his knee to God who is love.

Society – and even the Church – is in crisis because the family is in crisis!   Men, stand up and fight for our families!  Defend the Church!  We are spiritual leaders in spiritual warfare, where prayer, the Sacraments, the Word of God and love are weapons of love. 

The family today is patterned after the Trinity, a community of persons.  The Father loves the Son – and gives Himself to the Son – completely.  The Son loves the Father.  And the third person, the Spirit of Love, gives Himself to the Father and Son.  The persons of the Trinity say to each other: Forget about me, I love you.

Likewise, within our earthly family, made in the image and likeness of God, the person of the daddy gives himself completely to mommy, and the mommy loves gives herself to the daddy, and from their love a third person, love made flesh, a child, proceeds.  Children, in turn should honor their fathers and mothers.  It is by focusing on the good of the other that we ironically fulfill our own persons.

This image of the Holy Family and the Holy Trinity as a self-giving communion of persons poured out in love means that we too are called to be saints, to be holy, and we do so in our vocation.  This is my second point.  We are called to be saints in our own family life – Yes!  We are called to be holy in our wounded, hurtful, and broken married family life.  As St. John Paul the Great said, “We are not the sum of our failures and weaknesses, but we are the sum of the Father’s love for us…”

Here are some practical ways to sanctify or make holy ordinary family life, so we, too can become saints within our own families.  Since we cannot be good without God’s grace and help, we need the Eucharist, the Sacraments, and prayer.  Have we considered consecrating our family to the Hearts of Jesus and Mary?  Can you and I be an Apostle to our broken families in the nuclear and extended family today?  If there are members in our families that have not received the Sacraments, have we invited them?  Are our adult children married in the Church with the Sacrament of Matrimony?  Do we know people that need a convalidation of their civil marriages or an annulment? If there is hurt and wound in the family that needs forgiveness, perhaps the Sign of Peace during Mass can be a first step to heal and say, “I’m sorry” or “I forgive you.”  The Sacrament of Reconciliation might help, too, esp. for the New Year.  Maybe our New Year’s resolutions can focus more on strengthening our families, and in living a more prayerful and sacramental life.   

In closing, we reflected on:

1.)  the Holy Family as the “prototype and example” (FC 86) of all Christian families, especially St. Joseph who gave himself totally to his family;

2.)  And we reflected on practical ways to live out the universal call to holiness in family life today.

Dear Holy Family of Nazareth, we love you.  Be with us in our own family life and teach us how to be a holy community of persons in our own family.  F.A.M. – I.L.Y.  Forget about me.  I love you.


_________________________________

LONGER VERSION B
(10am Mass)

Homily #114

Family.  F.A.M. – I.L.Y.  Forget About Me – I Love You.  (repeat 2x)
On this Feast of the Holy Family, there are 2 main points for meditation:
1.)  The Holy Family – Jesus, Mary and Joseph – is the “prototype and example” (FC 86) of all Christian families.
2.)  We too are called to be saints in family life today (like Martin Family).

The Holy Family is the Child Jesus, the Virgin Mary, and St. Joseph.  In today’s Gospel, the Holy Family eventually settles in Nazareth.  It is here in the silence of ordinary family life that Jesus “grew (up) and became strong, filled with wisdom.”
They knew homelessness and fatigue.  They had to find work and pay their bills, to cook and put food on the table, do laundry, go to synagogue like a good Jewish family and learn the Scriptures, and make ends meet.  They very much went through things our families do today, and they do so in all things but sin.  Ordinary family life, when done with love for God, becomes extraordinary and holy.
In particular, St. Joseph, an ordinary carpenter, had the pressure and stress of having to provide for his family and his foster Son, who was the Son of God.  Joseph, a silent man yet a just man who taught Jesus human manhood, felt unworthy to raise the Son of God.  He is also the patron saint of a happy death, a death where one dies in the state of grace and friendship with God.
But aside from being an earthly model, this Guardian of the Redeemer is a spiritual model for us men, who offers us a spirituality of Christian manhood: husbands, fathers, teenage boys, grandfathers, godfathers, single men, uncles, stepfathers, and men who care for others.  St. Joseph’s fatherhood is “expressed concretely” in not just serving others, but in sacrificial service, a total gift of self, a total oblation of his heart.  Joseph shows men in our confused, selfish society which attacks manhood that a real tough man is a man who bends his knee to God who is love.
Society – and even the Church – is in crisis because the family is in crisis!   Men, stand up and fight for our families!  Defend the Church!  We are spiritual leaders in spiritual warfare, where prayer, the Sacraments, the Word of God and love are weapons of love.  [IF TIME ALLOWS: Church ain’t just for the cute, sweet little old ladies.  Church is also and especially for men.  So dudes, come to church—and keep coming to Mass with your families.]
[IF TIME ALLOWS: Like St. Joseph, let us lay down of lives for our beloved brides, for our children, for the weakness members of society, for the poor, for the neglect, and it starts with our family first.  Forget about me, I love you.]
[Joseph, along with Mary, shows our troubled society the need to have both a mother and a father to raise children.  It takes both a mother and father to raise a child.  Children need male role models who bend their knees and serve God.]
The family today is patterned after the Trinity, a community of persons.  The Father loves the Son – and gives Himself to the Son – completely.  The Son loves the Father.  And the third person, the Spirit of Love, gives Himself to the Father and Son.  The persons of the Trinity say to each other: Forget about me, I love you.
[Likewise, within our earthly family, made in the image and likeness of God, the person of the daddy gives himself completely to mommy, and the mommy loves gives herself to the daddy, and from their love a third person, love made flesh, a child, proceeds.  Children, in turn should honor their fathers and mothers.  It is by focusing on the good of the other that we ironically fulfill our own persons.]
This image of the Holy Family and the Holy Trinity as a self-giving communion of persons poured out in love means that we too are called to be saints, to be holy, and we do so in our vocation – our calling to holiness in wounded and fallen and hurtful, broken married family life.  As St. John Paul the Great said, “We are not the sum of our failures and weaknesses, but we are the sum of the Father’s love for us…”
Vatican II called the family the little “domestic church” (LG 11).  (The family is not the universal Church, or the particular Church (a diocese), or the parish church, but it is the domestic church, a church in miniature.)  {ADD: The domestic church is the first school of faith, a school of prayer, the first school of virtue.]  The members of the domestic church are called to be great saints!  This is the second point.  And the more families are broken and wounded, the more they are called to be holy. 
Here are some practical ways to sanctify ordinary family life:  Since we cannot be good without God’s grace and help, we need the Eucharist, the Sacraments, and prayer.  If there is hurt and wound in the family that needs forgiveness, perhaps the Sign of Peace during Mass can be a first step to heal and say, “I’m sorry” or “I forgive you.”  The Sacrament of Reconciliation might help, too, esp. for the New Year.  Maybe our New Year’s resolutions can focus more on the family, [prayer, and sacramental life].
If there are members in our families that have not received the Sacraments, have we invited them?  Have our grandkids received baptism and their First Communion?  Have our teens received Confirmation?  Are our adult children married in the Church with the Sacrament of Matrimony?  Do we know people that need a convalidation of their civil marriages or an annulment?  [IF TIME ALLOWS: For those who are lay leaders at the parish, are our marriages in good standing with the Church?   And are our children receiving religious instruction either in a Catholic school or parish religious education program?  Have we encouraged vocations in our own family?]  Have we considered consecrating the family to the Hearts of Jesus and Mary?  Can you and I be an Apostle to our broken families in the nuclear and extended family today?  What are we doing to build holy Catholic families in the midst of attacks on the family?
Living modern-day examples closer to our time are St. Therese and her own parents, St. Louis and St. Marie-Zelie Martin.  As a family, they attended Mass and helped the elderly and sick.  St. Louis was a watchmaker.  He had strokes and Alzheimer’s.  His wife, Zelie, came from a military family.  She battled breast cancer and lost babies in infancy four times.  St. Zelie wrote, “We live only for them.”  Their daughter, St. Therese, whom we may be more familiar with, was considered one of the greatest saints of modern times, and is also a Doctor of the Church. St. Therese herself not perfect.  She was known to have suffered from separation anxiety and scruples.  She lost her mother at a very young age.  She was very sensitive as a child.  She sometimes fell asleep at prayer.  Her very own limitations and weaknesses did not stop her from becoming holy or a saint.  They were what she used to draw her closer to God; they led her to an unshakable confidence in God’s love for her and in her total offering of herself for the love of God and for others.  St. Therese, together with her parents, Sts. Louis and Zelie Martin, real modern-day examples, give us hope that we, too, can be holy in family life today, and can become great saints!
In closing, we reflected on:
1.)  the Holy Family as the “prototype and example” (FC 86) of all Christian families, especially St. Joseph who gave himself totally to his family;
2.)  And we reflected on practical ways to live out the universal call to holiness in family life today, as real modern day examples: St. Therese and her parents, Sts. Louis and Zelie, became a family of saints.
Dear Holy Family of Nazareth, we love you.  Be with us in our own family life and teach us how to be a holy community of persons in our own family.  F.A.M. – I.L.Y.  Forget about me.  I love you.

17 December 2017

"Rap of 'Ain't No Party Like a Catolic Party' For (Rejoice) Gaudete Sunday" (Homily #111)

Priest-Rapper Fr. Stan Fortuna, CFR


10am

8am

(Begin homily w/rap of 2 lines from Fr. Stan.)

There’s a Franciscan priest named Fr. Stan Fortuna, CFR, who is also a rapper.  In one of his songs, Fr. Stan raps, “There ain’t no party like a Catholic partay!” (2x w/beat, head bob & hand motions) “cuz a Catolic partay don’t stop.”



His point is that we the Church, the Body of Christ, know how to celebrate life from beginning to end.  We celebrate with feast days, holy days, baptisms, weddings, funerals, Simbang Gabi’s, Posadas, the Communion of Saints who are constantly rejoicing, and of course we celebrate at Sunday Mass.



We just don’t know how to stop partying and celebrating and rejoicing!!  (RCIA candidates and kids completing RCIA/RCIC, this is what’s gonna happen to you as a new Catholic.  You’re gonna be partied-out.)  😊



That’s why Father and I are wearing rose, instead of violet.  Rose is the festive color of rejoicing for the 3rd Sunday of Advent.  The idea is that during the 4 weeks of preparation for Christmas, with all the watching and preparing and anticipation of Christmas, our hearts just overflow with rejoicing at what is coming soon.  (There’s excitement in the air.)



In the First Reading today, it is written in the book of the Prophet Isaiah, “I rejoice heartily in the Lord, in my God is the joy of my soul…” [emphasize w/love]



And then, interestingly, in a very rare moment during Mass, our response is taken not from the Psalms, but from the Gospel of Luke: “My soul rejoices in my God.” 



This leads us to the first of 2 main reasons for our rejoicing this Gaudete Sunday: (1) The first reason is the First Coming of Christ.  (2) And the second reason is the Second Coming of Christ.



In the First Coming of Christ 2,000 years ago, these words “My soul rejoices…” were of our Blessed Mother, Mama Mary, when she visited Elizabeth while both of them were pregnant.  This is the Canticle or Song or Magnificat of Mary.  Mary cannot contain her rejoicing being pregnant with the Savior of the world.  Vatican II called the Church an “icon of Mary,” so we too rejoice in God Our Savior.  [*Correction: Mary is an “icon of the Church” (GS).]



Then, in today’s Gospel, the very same unborn John the Baptizer who leapt in Elizabeth’s womb for joy is the same John the Baptizer who today cannot contain his rejoicing.  He prepares the way for the Jesus as an adult.  John says with fire in his heart, “I am the voice of the one crying out in the desert, ‘Make straight the way for the Lord. … There is one who is coming after me who will baptize with the Holy Spirit.”  (The mountains of our pride will be made low, and our low humble valleys of life lifted up.)



And in the 2nd Reading from St. Paul’s Letter to the Thessalonians, Paul writes, “Rejoice always.  Pray without ceasing.  In all circumstances give thanks…”



So all the readings – the First Reading, the Response, the Second Reading, and the Gospel – point us to Gaudete Sunday.



Now, having looked at the reason for our joy, let us enter more deeply into the mystery of Rejoicing Sunday by comparing Gaudete Sunday with its opposite: gloomy darkness.



You might say that it’s all fine and good to rejoice, but in my life right now there is not much reason to rejoice about.  You say, “My family is falling apart.  Or I’m suffering from illness, or I lost my job and we can’t pay bills, or my adult kids and grandkids don’t talk to me, or I’m afraid I can’t handle another pregnancy, or I’m struggling with sin I can’t break out of, or my spouse of many decades or friend died and I’m sad and lonely and depressed this holiday.  Why should I rejoice?  The message is lost on me.”



But here’s why we should still rejoice during this darkness.  Just like your personal darkness, at the First Coming of Jesus 2,000 years ago, the whole, entire world was also in a great darkness.  It was in sin and falling apart.  All of humanity was in Satan’s power, and nobody could go to Heaven when they died.  But when Jesus – the Santo Niño – was born, he brought that ray of hope as the Newborn Savior.



So even with all the evil and sadness and loneliness in the world, Baby Jesus the Emmanuel is going to be born in the world!  And this – this – is what brings joy to our darkness. 



And that gives us cause to rejoice!  Because the darkness and sin are not forever.  There is light at the end of the tunnel.  Your darkness has not overcome the Light.  And Baby Jesus is the Light of the World.



And it’s not some mediocre happy holidays slogan that gives us joy.  Jesus is the reason for the season!  All the shopping won’t give us joy without He Who is Joy itself.  As the Knight of Columbus encourage us, “Keep Christ in Christmas!”



And this leads to the second reason for our rejoicing and final main point.  The First Coming of Jesus is connected with the Second Coming of Jesus at the end of the world OR the end of our lives.  [Omit: Did you notice that during the 4 weeks of Advent, the priest at the beginning of the Liturgy of the Eucharist makes this connection of the First Coming of Jesus with the Second Coming of Jesus in his prayer before the Father?]



Not only does Jesus’ First Coming in the past give us reason to rejoice.  We rejoice as the Bride of Christ because we look forward in the future to the glorious Second Coming.  After the Our Father at Mass, the priest also prays, “…as we await the blessed hope and the coming of our Savior, Jesus Christ…”    (And then the people respond w/“For the kingdom, the power and the glory are yours now and forever.”)



Here, we await Jesus’ return with blessed hope.  We rejoice that the Bridegroom is going to take us, his Bride, home to Heaven with Him one day, to be happy forever.  There will be no more sadness, separation, and suffering!!!



At the First Coming, Jesus was a defenseless baby, unknown and obscure, born in a smelly, humiliating place because nobody would give shelter to a pregnant Jewish woman, in the quiet of the night.  And also powerful sinful men wanted to kill this innocent Baby.  (If time allows, mention vision of St. Faustina of Baby Jesus defending himself.)



At the Second Coming, it will not be so.  We rejoice that Jesus will come in power and glory and honor and all the world will stand before God for Judgement Day.  So prepare!  There can be no real celebration without reconciliation to God and neighbor.  Yes, Judgment Day at the Second Coming of Christ is a terrible day, but for us Christians who love Jesus, we rejoice when all injustice will be made right you his Elect glorified and crowned, like the Assumption and Coronation.  So we should stand sinless before our Divine Spouse, without the spot of corrupt teaching or the winkle of sin, just like the Immaculate Conception.  The Church today cries out in the wilderness like John the Baptist: Make straight the way for the Lord.  Rejoice!  Maranatha!  Come Lord Jesus!



Yes, dear brothers and sisters, there “ain’t no party like a Catolic party.”  Our rejoicing celebration is like no other.  Fr. Stan actually concludes his rap song for Jesus, there “ain’t no party like a Catolic party… cuz a Catolic party don’t stop.”



Let our party, our rejoicing, our Gaudete Sunday never stop.  Rejoice always.  Prepare the way for the Baby Messiah in your hearts.  Let us rejoices now in the few days that remain of Advent, so that we will someday forever rejoice in the life of the world to come.  Amen.

3rd Sunday of Advent
St. Catherine's Church, Vallejo, CA, USA
Dec. 17, 2017

16 December 2017

"Prepare Your Children For Heaven" (Homily #110 for Infant Baptism)





Today, I reminded parents and godparents that if we want the very best for our children, then we need to hand on faith in God to them at an early age.

We need to prepare them for Heaven, and this starts with baptism.

I was privileged to baptize 2 baby boys today:

- Mateo Kian (godmother was Christina Visita Visitacion, SPSV 2004, who helped with readings)
- Gianni Kyrie (7-y.o. family friend named Devon helped hold a book for me)

Since ordination, I have been honored to baptize 73 into the Catholic Church.  May Our Lady guide and protect them!




09 December 2017

Priest's Words in Confession About Diaconate Remained in My Heart

Lately, I have focused much on investing in raising my family in the Faith as best as I can.  As a husband and father, I have failed many times.  The Sacrament of Reconciliation and Penance brings me back up.

Today, the priest in Confession reminded me specifically of my vocation in the diaconate.  I have not heard words to me like this about the diaconate from a priest during Confession in a while. 

I web blog it here to remind me in the future.  I do not want to forget during times of persecution or tribulation. 

Father said something along the lines of the following:

From all eternity, God called you to not just baptism and Confirmation but also to the diaconate.

He said more, but that is the substance of what he said to me.

I blog this at the end of the night, as my family lay asleep.  There was something that deeply moved me about what he said (combined even with how he said it).  It stuck with me all day! 

With the priest's words in the Sacrament of Confession, I received interior strength being in the diaconate.  I do not want to fail Jesus the Servant, after whom my soul has been indelibly marked.

I am grateful.