Weekly Homilies
Fr. Brawn’s Weekly Homilies and Personal Updates
Embracing God’s Will: A Personal Reflection & Christmas Mass Update
Though preachers around the world this Sunday may choose to go in any of several different directions with today's near-Christmas readings, I want to focus on their Marian element; it has deep resonance for our lives.
Change in the Christmas Mass Schedule; Readings for December 22, 2024, 4th Sunday of Advent; Virtual Homily; My Brilliant Sophomores; Christmas in Caracas (and a BIG Thank You to Brentwood!)
Readings for Mass this Sunday
Micah 5:1-4
Psalm 80:2-3, 15-19
Hebrews 10:5-10
Luke 1:39-45
Dear Friends and Family,
We've made a change in the Christmas Mass schedule that I want to make folks aware of: I now have the five PM "family Mass" on Christmas Eve, in addition to the ten PM "midnight" Mass and the nine AM Christmas morning Mass. All three of these Masses are in English. The family Mass at five on Christmas Eve is very popular; I recommend arriving early if you want to be able to sit.
Though preachers around the world this Sunday may choose to go in any of several different directions with today's near-Christmas readings, I want to focus on their Marian element; it has deep resonance for our lives.
The first reading from Micah is one of the several direct prophecies of the Blessed Mother found in the Old Testament. "...when she is to give birth has borne" the prophet writes, then great things will begin to happen for Israel (vs. 2). And not just Israel. Micah continues:
Then the rest of his kindred shall return to the children of Israel. He shall take his place as shepherd by the strength of the Lord, by the majestic name of the Lord, his God; and they shall dwell securely, for now his greatness shall reach to the ends of the earth...(vss. 2-3).
Micah foresees, in the birth of the Messiah, the salvation of the world. "...she who is to give birth" may have seemed a cryptic and shadowy reference to the Jewish people of Micah's time, but we, of course, in retrospect, see the Blessed Mother and her huge role in salvation history clearly delineated in this prophecy.
The Gospel passage is, of course, the Annunciation; Gabriel inviting Mary to become the mother of the Messiah. I actually gave my in-person homily last week on this very passage, the week having been huge with Marian energy in the parish, given both the Immaculate Conception and Our Lady of Guadalupe. I focused in the spoken homily on Mary's "yes" and what that yes entailed. Among other things, it entailed standing at the foot of the Cross, thirty-three years later, but much more proximate to Gabriel's visit, it entailed the Blessed Mother having to deal with Joseph's intention to "divorce her quietly" upon his discovery of her pregnancy (Matthew 1:19).
My point last Sunday and this is that we never know what we are signing up for, when we say "yes" to God. My married siblings and cousins have assured me that the day they took their vows, they essentially took a leap in the dark. Married life has proved to be the fulfillment of many of their hopes and dreams but also an invitation to adventures, some of them stormy and at times perilous, that they never saw coming.
I can draw a parallel with priesthood. When Bishop Vigneron ordained me on May 20, 2006, I imagined I was saying "yes" to fulltime parish ministry for most, if not all, of my years of active service as a priest of Oakland. And that seeming likelihood made me very happy; I had had enough experience of parish ministry, at that point, to know how much I loved it. The thought of a high school chaplaincy never entered my head.
But in fact the O'Dowd assignment was wrapped up in my "yes," in my promise of obedience to Bishop Vigneron and his successors. And a telling aspect of it all is that the assignment to O'Dowd was over two decades in the making, in that the Spirit had been preparing me for it all that time.
My "yes" to priesthood dates to July, 1992, when on a seven-day silent retreat at Christ the King, the Passionist retreat center in Citrus Heights, I was able to recognize and respond to a clear invitation from the Lord to consider life as a priest. Within days of my completing the retreat I found myself with an invitation to minister to teens: Sister Evelyn Schwall, then Director of Faith Formation in the Marysville parish, asked me if I would be willing to assist in teaching one of the Confirmation classes. Two years later I was running the parish Confirmation program and a year after that, because the Marysville teens were asking for me, I became the parish's youth minister.
Twenty-three years before I took up the assignment at O'Dowd, in other words, the Spirit called me into teen catechesis and youth ministry. This was, to borrow from Mother Teresa, "the call within the call," though I did not recognize it at the time. I came to understand that my call to serve the young was a lifelong matter, a true vocational call, only with the assignment to O'Dowd. Right up to that point, that is, right up to 2015 and nine years after my ordination, I had assumed that I would become a pastor and finally relinquish teen ministry.
Instead of which, prepared by the Spirit with twenty-three years of experience for it, in 2015 I stepped into the greatest teen assignment of my life. Youth ministry has changed me, changed my life. And it has defined my priesthood.
Doubtful and reluctant as I was to accept the assignment to the high school, now in my tenth year at O'Dowd, I could not be more deeply certain that this was and is God's will for my priesthood. I can see, I can feel, the difference God is making in the lives of our precious teen-agers at Bishop O'Dowd. This is a somewhat rarefied ministry; I am amazed at how the Spirit has moved through my life now, for thirty-two years, in service to the young. I did not see it coming; not in 1992, and not even in 2015. But it was there from the start, in my "yes" to God.
On the subject of teens, we are done for the semester at O'Dowd. This was Finals Week, and though I had no finals, I did have my students' final project to grade, this week. I described the project an e-mail or two back -- write up the Resurrection Narratives as though you were a reporter for the WaPo or the WSJ or ABC News --and I remember saying how much I enjoyed reading what my students would come up with, in these "news reports" of the Resurrection.
The final project is a 100-point assignment (one of only two 100-pointers all semester). Oh my gosh. I was counting up how many 100s I gave, this week, as I was calculating semester grades, and...I smiled. Almost one-third of my students this fall scored a perfect 100 on the final project. That is how detailed, how imaginative, how well-laid-out and illustrated, how deeply reported, the accounts by my young "investigative journalists" were.
It was a genuine delight to read their interviews with Mary Magdalen, with Joanna, with Judas, with Pilate, with Peter and John, with the Roman guards, with Cleopas (who encountered the risen Lord on the road to Emmaus Easter Sunday afternoon). I loved looking at the many paintings and photos (of statues, of places in the Holy Land, etc.) that my sophomores used to brighten up their reports. They made the page layouts eye-catching and attractive, using different fonts, brightly colored borders and so on. I had fun, as I knew I would, grading the final report, this past week. I am proud, of O'Dowd.
With school off my radar I have had time this week for other ministry considerations, including my young men in Venezuela, and their families. Friends in Brentwood (whom I am certain would ask for anonymity here) and I got together for a holiday lunch early in the week and they gave me a very generous donation for Caracas. I have been hearing from my Caraquenos all week as a result: astonished gratitude at what they will now be able to do for their families for Christmas. Even $100 American goes a very long way in impoverished Venezuela.
That obnoxious (but completely accurate) phrase -- "impoverished Venezuela" -- bespeaks more than simple misrule by the "socialist" clique that has a stranglehold on the country. It illuminates countless mortal sins on the part of the gang of criminals that styles itself the Venezuelan government. As I have admitted before, I abandoned hope that this crew might be rooted out anytime this decade, back before this decade started. I abandoned hope for a free and once-again prosperous Venezuela when the 2019 uprising, supported by more than fifty nations around the world in their recognition of Juan Guaido as the rightful leader of the nation, collapsed. TMI if I go on (and believe me, I could go on and on...I will spare you.)
For this e-mail's purposes I will just observe that Brentwood gave Caracas a kiss this week; my hard-working and highly responsible young friends in that beautiful but captive metropolis are having a much merrier Christmas than they and their families would have had, otherwise. THANK YOU, Brentwood!
All right, it is Saturday morning as I am finishing this and I need to get it out. Take good care and God bless.
And Merry Christmas!
Love and joy,
Fr. Brawn
Joyful Reflections on Gaudete Sunday: Advent's Message of Hope
This Sunday's readings extend and deepen the theme of joy evident in last week's Scripture passages. And not surprisingly, as the Third Sunday of Advent is also known as Gaudete Sunday, that is the Sunday of joy. This is the Sunday when the pink candle is lit in the Advent wreath; the Sunday when, if he so desires, the priest may appear in rose-colored vestments. Pink rose, I should say, or even, really, salmon-colored vestments.
Readings for Mass and Virtual Homily, December 15, 2024, Third Sunday of Advent; Semester Wrap at O'Dowd; Christmas in California; Our Lady of Guadalupe at St. Clement
Readings for Mass this Sunday
Zephaniah 3:14-18
Isaiah 12:2-6
Philippians 4:4-7
Luke 3:10-18
Dear Friends and Family,
This Sunday's readings extend and deepen the theme of joy evident in last week's Scripture passages. And not surprisingly, as the Third Sunday of Advent is also known as Gaudete Sunday, that is the Sunday of joy. This is the Sunday when the pink candle is lit in the Advent wreath; the Sunday when, if he so desires, the priest may appear in rose-colored vestments. Pink rose, I should say, or even, really, salmon-colored vestments.
I don't wear same, myself. Not since my first couple of Advents as a priest in Pleasanton where parishioners good-naturedly assured me that "salmon is NOT your color, Father!" Traumatized, I have donned regular Lenten purple every Gaudete Sunday since.
But seriously, and on the subject of Advent's "serious joy," this Sunday is set aside for special consideration of the joys of the season, marking as it does the half-way point (usually, it is beyond the half-way point) of Advent. We are drawing closer to Christmas, closer to the coming of the Light, and for that we celebrate with a special emphasis on joy.
The reading from Zephaniah exhorts Jerusalem (that is, the people of God) to "be glad and exult with all your heart," for the Lord has "removed the judgment against you; he has turned away your enemies" (vss. 14-15 ). In what may be read as a prediction of the Incarnation, the passage asserts the presence of God among the people: "the King of Israel, the Lord, is in your midst; you have no further misfortune to fear" (vs. 15). This last verse suggests that it is the New Jerusalem, that is, the Church, to which the prophet refers. This prophecy is not just for the years when Jesus walked the earth, but is for all succeeding ages. The Eucharistic Lord is indeed in our midst, and will be so until the end of time.
In place of an actual psalm this week, we have a passage from Isaiah which can easily be made to read like a psalm. This passage also refers to God's presence among the people, and predicts the coming era of apostolic evangelization: "among the nations make known his deeds...sing praise to the Lord for his glorious achievement; let this be known throughout all the earth" (vss. 4-5). Joyful proclamation of the "glorious achievement" of God (in the life, death and Resurrection of the God-Man) is a consistent note in the preaching of the apostles. Isaiah foresees the times described in Acts of the Apostles, when the first-century Mediterranean world was electrified by the Good News.
The reading from the Letter to the Philippians resonates with the theme of joy; Paul recommending that we "Rejoice in the Lord always. I shall say it again: rejoice!" (vs. 4). Paul goes on to assure the Philippians that "The Lord is near. Have no anxiety at all...the peace of God that surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus" (vss. 5-6). Exhortations to joy are frequent in the letters of Paul. The Resurrection was, in the first century, a very recent event; more than that, it was an unheard-of event. I think it can be hard for us twenty-first century Christians to really grasp just how astonishing news of the Resurrection was, to first-century believers. It changed the way they thought about life. It filled them with an entirely new hope and the most profound joy.
The preaching of John the Baptist is the subject of today's Gospel passage and while many other things might be said about it, what I want to take note of here is that when the people ask John what they must do to make themselves ready for the Lord, John asks nothing extraordinary of them. He tells those who have extra that they should share with those who are in need. He tells the tax collectors not to cheat anyone. He tells the soldiers not to abuse their position of authority, and to be satisfied with their wages (vss. 10-14).
Basically, John says that the way to "make straight the path of the Lord" is to do our duty. Attend faithfully to those responsibilities which have been entrusted to us. See the good we can do and try to do it. Such efforts are pleasing to God, and are, actually, all that God is asking of us. St. Teresa of Calcutta once said that we can do no great things for God; only small things with great love. This reality, when we reflect on it, might in and of itself be a reason for great joy.
Well, we have finished classes for the autumn semester at the high school. I have no finals next week, as mentioned last e-mail, because my students opted for a final project, which they completed in class this week. I'll be grading that, but otherwise am done with the semester. I am off until January 7. Talk about reasons for joy!
Despite the abundant free time the next several weeks, I am not traveling this winter. Last year, as many of you are aware, I went to London and Paris the week between Christmas and New Year's. That is, I went to London and tried to go to Paris. Flooding in the Thames River tunnels on Saturday, December 30, resulted in 41 canceled trains to Europe, including mine. There was no way to fix it. Try getting a seat on a train to Paris for New Year's Eve, the day before New Year's Eve. I spent my first New Year's in London, as a result, which had definite advantages and some very real joy, to revert to today's principal theme.
I had spent several New Year's (no clue how to make that plural!) in Paris before COVID, and had given real thought to being there this winter, but duty called -- in the need for focus at San Gabriel Media, where we are rolling out the first of several marketing strategies this winter, where I am finishing a new book this winter, and where an assembly-line of responsibilities with regard to our You Tube programming awaits my attention this winter.
I am planning to be on sabbatical the entire second half of 2025, and though the time off is, again, largely to serve our efforts at San Gabriel, with seven months free, I will get back to Paris. Back to Casablanca, too. Meanwhile, this winter, I am hanging here in the Bay Area, "taking care of business" as the song says.
Finally, it is Thursday evening, December 12, as I am getting this baby wrapped -- the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Though I was only able to attend the huge Mass and reception this evening, we have been celebrating in the parish all day. Our observation of the feast started with a Rosary at 430 this morning, and has included Mananitas, a Mass at dawn, Masses at eight AM and five PM, and devotions at several points during the day.
I have loved our Guadalupe celebrations here at St. Clement since December, 2015, my first winter here. The celebrations actually start two days before -- with evening Masses on the tenth and the eleventh -- and the church looks almost like a shrine to Our Lady, this week. The flowers alone are breath-taking.
Our new pastor, Father Jesus Hernandez, gave the homily this evening and I was impressed. He weaves deep faith with history, culture and even philosophy, and his preaching style is very relaxed and interactive. Unlike me, Jesus is not in need of the ambo; he steps down from the altar and talks to the people directly, asks them questions, engages in exchanges of faith. He is soft-spoken but direct and his pastoral style is gentle and affirming. I feel deeply blessed personally, to have such a brother here in the house with me, and I am really pleased for the parish, to have such a disciple as our leader. I look forward to working with him for years to come. Just one more reason for Advent's serious joy.
That's all he wrote for this one! Hope your Advent is progressing with grace, with peace, with joy.
Take good care and God bless.
Fr. Brawn
Finding Joy in Advent: A Priest’s Journey Through Faith and Ministry
More than twenty years ago, while I was studying for ordination at St. Patrick's Seminary in Menlo Park, a young priest there, a member of the faculty, once described Advent to us as a season of "serious joy." This same young priest, whose intellectual bona fides were backed up by a couple of advanced degrees from the Roman seminaries, also described Lent as a season of "bright sadness."
Readings for Mass and Virtual Homily, December 8, 2024, Second Sunday of Advent; Crunch Time at O'Dowd; The Gift of Health
Readings for Mass this week
Baruch 5:1-9
Psalm 126:1-6
Philippians 1:4-6, 8-11
Luke 3:1-6
Dear Friends and Family,
More than twenty years ago, while I was studying for ordination at St. Patrick's Seminary in Menlo Park, a young priest there, a member of the faculty, once described Advent to us as a season of "serious joy." This same young priest, whose intellectual bona fides were backed up by a couple of advanced degrees from the Roman seminaries, also described Lent as a season of "bright sadness."
Lenten in my own spirituality, that is, a Passionist at heart, I took note of this second description, at the time, more so than the first. "Bright sadness" was as close as anyone had ever come to describing my experience of Lent. It was not at all that I thought the young priest's description of Advent inadequate; I just paid it little note because honestly, right up into the years that I was at seminary, I paid Advent little notice.
That changed, of course, once I became a priest and entered fully into the liturgical life, so deep. so rich, so substantive, of the Church. I remember my first Advent -- December, 2006 -- in Pleasanton. I remember the special evening liturgies -- especially the Advent Reconciliation Service at which Fr. Dan (Dan Danielson, Pleasanton's legendary pastor for 22 years) had me preach. I remember how ministry-leader friends in the parish sort of held their collective breath, as their brand new associate, Fr. Brawn, the "baby priest" (at 50!) got up to address not just the many hundreds of parishioners there that evening for the Sacrament of Reconciliation, but also to address Fr. Dan and maybe twelve or fourteen of my brother priests, all more experienced than I, who had come to help with hearing confessions that night.
I have no memory at all of what I said that evening. But I do remember the response of my community -- the sense of pride, of joy, of "mission accomplished!," of (frankly) relief, that I had not blown it. People -- I mean, a number of Pleasanton's leaders in ministry -- stood in line, after the service, to thank me for whatever it was that the Spirit said through me. Meanwhile, in addition to preaching on some Advent theme or other, I had that evening at St. Augustine's heard somewhere between twenty and thirty confessions, and I had already discovered -- discovered six months before -- that after celebrating the Mass, hearing confessions was my second favorite priestly responsibility.
I remember the line of my fellow parish ministry leaders waiting to congratulate me, after the service had ended; I remember our breath fogging in the chilly night air; I remember the sense of, at once, both satisfaction of what we had just done and anticipation of what lay directly ahead -- my first Christmas as a priest, there with my wonderful community in Pleasanton. And I had a sense, that evening, of the "serious joy" of Advent.
Today's readings are all about joy. Listen to Baruch, a close associate of Jeremiah (the "prophet of gloom and doom") and whose book follows not just Jeremiah's, but the Book of Lamentations, which expresses the heartbreak of the people, once the dreadful prophecies of Jeremiah have come to pass. Listen to Baruch, encouraging the people in their exile in Babylon.
Jerusalem, take off your robe of mourning and misery; put on forever the splendor of glory from God...For God has commanded that every lofty mountain and the age-old hills be made low, that the valleys be filled to make level ground, that Israel may advance securely in the glory of God...For God is leading Israel in joy, by the light of his glory, with the mercy and justice that are his (vss. 1, 7, 9).
The psalm is a veritable paean to joy -- it describes the wonder and awe of the Jewish people as they returned, against all historical odds, to Jerusalem from their period of exile in Babylon. You know this psalm; it is famous. Among its other stanzas, there is this: "They shall come rejoicing, carrying their sheaves" (vs. 6). The psalm exults in the joy of the liberation of the Jews from Babylon (in 539 BC, after a near half-century in exile there). Listen:
When the Lord restored the captives of Zion, we were like men dreaming. Then our mouths were filled with laughter; our tongues sang for joy. Then it was said among the nations, 'The Lord has done great things for them'" (vss. 1-2).
The second reading describes the author's (likely Paul) love for the community at Philippi and the great joy he takes in thinking of the community and praying for them. It is a bright and -- well, joyful -- set of verses from the letter that we are studying in today's Scriptures. Paul's delight in his community at Philippi makes me smile -- I knew a similar delight in my first community as a priest, in Pleasanton.
And I have known that joy in every assignment since -- Our Lady of Guadalupe in Fremont, Immaculate Heart of Mary in Brentwood, and now, and doubly blessed, Bishop O'Dowd High School and St. Clement, my parish home now, for ten years. I have told my parishioners here in Hayward time and time again that I am empowered to do what I do at the high school because of them, because of their love and enthusiasm and support, because of the way St. Clement rolled out the red carpet for me here in Hayward the summer I arrived. I hope my St. Clement parishioners believe me, when I assure them that my success at the high school is directly reliant on their encouragement and support of me; so help me God, it is true. I love my teens and I love the high school; I would not trade my assignment to Bishop O'Dowd. But I remain, at heart, a parish priest. And St. Clement is my parish.
We come finally to the description from Luke of John the Baptist in the desert -- though quoting Isaiah, Luke echoes the images of Baruch. Prepare the way of the Lord. Make straight his paths. Every valley (of despair, of self-doubt and/or loathing) shall be filled (with a proper sense of one's dignity and ultimate value as the child of a loving God). Every mountain and hill (of pride, of self-centeredness, of self-seeking) shall be made low (that is, the selfish and prideful will have a much-needed reality check that will assist them in getting back on the straight and narrow...) (vss. 4-6; summarized).
These readings invite us to enter into the "serious joy" of Advent; to encounter head-on the astonishing reality, that God so loved the world that God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, the One through Whom all things were made, became for us, and for our salvation, incarnate in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Became a baby, in her arms.
God. A baby. In Mary's arms.
Think about it.
Rejoice in it. Even, seriously rejoice in it.
I do not know how much joy was involved with it, but "serious" was the word for affairs at the high school this first week back after Thanksgiving. Also, next week, the last week of classes. My students opted for a final project rather than a standard exam, and in so doing brought my class to a close a week early. That is, this coming week, my students will be working on their final project, rather than reviewing for a final exam two weeks hence.
I was totally down with their decision in part because it frees me of having to show up during finals week; in part because it frees me of having to grade eighty final exams (though, of course, I do have the project to grade, but that is much more subjective and enjoyable).
I was also down with this decision on the part of my students because of what the final project is -- they are to approach the Resurrection Narratives as if they were reporters from the WSJ or the WaPo or CNN; they are to take the four Gospel accounts of the Resurrection as their baseline, their primary source material, and then develop the story. Interview witnesses. Describe scenes and developments, such as the encounter with the risen Christ by the two disciples on the road to Emmaus. Detail differences in the accounts and supply rationales for why, let us say, Matthew may have mentioned the earthquake when none of the other Gospel writers did.
You get the idea. This project is typically accompanied by illustrations (that is, the students include paintings, statues, etc. in the course of their reports). Some of the more adventurous include advertisements ("Join the Roman Legion and See the World") and sudoku and crossword puzzles based on first-century Israel realities. It is a blast, seeing what my sophomores come up with each semester, when they choose this project over a final exam. (And yes, most of my classes since COVID, when I started offering the option, have chosen the project over the exam.)
Finally, and on the subject of joy, I am feeling something akin to same this Friday evening that I am getting this homily into shape, in that I have made about a 90% recovery from a nasty winter virus which started sweeping the high school in early November. When we got to Thanksgiving and I had not yet contracted it I counted myself blessed, and given that these things have a "shelf life" of just a few weeks, each season, I dared hope I had dodged the bullet with it.
Uhhh...no. I came down with it Sunday (didn't stop me from having a stellar day, with three Masses here in the parish and an important Zoom meeting; just that I felt that I was coming down with something). It hit full strength Monday and I called in sick at O'Dowd -- missing class due to illness for the first time in my ten years at the high school. Same thing, Tuesday, a day I largely remember as one of viewing my sheets and blankets from a variety of perspectives. I think I was up and out of bed about three hours, mid-day Tuesday, and then again about four, Tuesday evening. Wednesday and Thursday I went in to campus only to teach my classes. That is, two and one-half hours Wednesday afternoon and 75 minutes Thursday morning.
In fact, by Thursday, I was much better. And today, I am, as I say, 90% back to normal and thanking the Lord for the fact. It does give me reason to stop and think, as I really only rarely do, about the gift of health, and about how blessed I have been, in this regard. I spent two nights in the hospital in August, 1957, when, as a 19-month old, I had contracted St. Louis Variety Encephalitis (from a mosquito bite). I have not been in the hospital overnight since.
This is NOT something to be taken for granted. It is something for which to give thanks and praise to God. It is something to be --well -- seriously joyful about. The day will come when my health will fail. In the meantime, that I have been so abundantly blessed in this regard is something for which, truly, I can only in humility accept from God and ask to be made worthy of the blessing. While you give me the power to do so, Lord, help me to be a messenger of your love, your peace, your serious joy.
A (seriously) joyful Advent to all of you!
Much love,
El Padre
Are We in the End Times? A Biblical Perspective on Fear and Faith
Advent readings, as I have said often enough, tend to focus on one or the other of the two comings of Christ; either his coming as a baby in the manger in Bethlehem two thousand years ago or his coming in glory at the end of time. Though the first reading and the psalm both suggest the earthly visitation of the Messiah and his final coming in glory, the emphasis, this Sunday, is on the Second Coming.
Readings for Mass and Virtual Homily for December 1, 2024, First Sunday of Advent; A Restful Week; My Favorite Holiday (and my Favorite Holy Day); December Schedule
Readings for this Sunday
Jeremiah 33:14-16
Psalm 25:4-5, 8-10, 14
1 Thessalonians 3:12-4:2
Luke 21:25-28, 34-36
Dear Friends and Family,
Advent readings, as I have said often enough, tend to focus on one or the other of the two comings of Christ; either his coming as a baby in the manger in Bethlehem two thousand years ago or his coming in glory at the end of time. Though the first reading and the psalm both suggest the earthly visitation of the Messiah and his final coming in glory, the emphasis, this Sunday, is on the Second Coming.
The Gospel passage from Luke is entirely Second Coming in its focus. Jesus' own words describe the momentous events -- cataclysmic and really, unmistakable. When we really are at the end of the world, we will not have to be asking ourselves if we are at the end of the world.
A point I really want to stress here, precisely because so many people in our generation ARE asking if we are at the end of the world, including a fair number of Catholic media influencers. I have worked with some of these people. They are online, with websites, with You Tube channels, with books and videos, with all the usual social media presences, from Facebook to Instagram to Twitter or whatever Elon Musk is calling it now. While some of these folks are relatively balanced and nuanced in their analysis, others lack, to put it kindly, an objective take on the question of whether we are living at the end of time.
The point I want to stress again -- when we really are at the end, we will not need to be asking if we are at the end. Listen to Jesus in today's passage from Luke
There will be signs in the sun, the moon and the stars, and on earth, nations will be in dismay, perplexed by the roaring of the sea and the waves. People will die of fright in anticipation of what is coming upon the world, for the powers of the heavens will be shaken (vss. 25-26).
A couple of observations to help put this into its proper perspective. "Signs in the sun, the moon and the stars" and "the powers of the heavens will be shaken" are phrases that have long been interpreted by qualified and responsible Catholic scholars as a comet or asteroid headed toward earth. Due to our advances in technology, particularly the great orbiting telescopes, we will have advanced notice of this "doomsday rock's" approach. As Jesus predicts, people will die of fright at what is coming...The nations will be in distress at the roaring of the waves...
Scientists tell us that a comet or asteroid striking the earth would be an ELE, that is an Extinction Level Event. Indeed, it is reliably theorized that just such an event occurred sixty-five million years ago, wiping out the dinosaurs. But what we may infer from both Gospel passages such as this and from the mystical tradition of the Church is that this event, cataclysmic as it will prove to be, is NOT the end. It is only one -- one huge -- event that will occur near the end.
Not at it; near it. The Book of Revelation may be prophesying just such an event when it describes "something like a mountain of fire" crashing into the sea. A third of the ships at sea, Revelation tells us, and a third of the sea creatures, will die as a result (Revelation 8:8). As I say, cataclysmic, but not yet the end. The Book of Revelation goes on for chapters, with further predictions about the events which will accompany the end of time, all of which occur AFTER the "mountain of fire" has crashed into the sea.
Jesus' prediction in today's Gospel passage may be directly tied to the image from Revelation. Jesus refers to "the roaring of the sea and the waves." A direct hit by a comet or an asteroid in one of the oceans would produce tsunamis (note the use of the plural, it would be more than one tidal wave) a mile or more high. These waves, rushing ashore at 500 miles per hour, would obliterate everything in their path. The mystical tradition indicates the likelihood of just such an event near, not actually right at, the end of time. The tradition (I am talking here of approved revelations to various saints down through the centuries) suggests that the ocean to be so affected is the Atlantic.
About a decade ago there were, in fact, a large number of predictions of just such a meteor or comet strike, in the north Atlantic, northeast of Puerto Rico. These claims were all over the internet, including a number of Catholic sites. They were nothing short of cataclysmic in their assessment of what lay directly ahead for all humanity. And they were very specific in their aim: The comet would hit the water on September 23, 2015.
I don't know exactly how the owners of these sites were faring, in terms of audience, subscribers and so on, on September 24, 2015. But I do know that hysterical claims that we are "right on the verge" of global catastrophe abound today, including on Catholic websites, as surely as they did in 2015.
For what it is worth, I happen to be persuaded that we have entered the last days, the end times. I have studied this subject since I was in my teens. But the Church's take on the end times is that they last a long time, generations; even centuries. The best advice is to live your life as though you expect to die at ninety, peacefully, at home or maybe in the hospital, surrounded by your family and friends. Because in fact, that is far likelier how you are going to leave this world than is a meteor strike on the Atlantic.
I confess to being perplexed (and, to use a word that rhymes, at times simply vexed) at the hysterical claims put out there by people, Catholic writers, speakers, bloggers, You Tubers, etc., who really ought to know better. It is a vexation I have on occasion mentioned to my spiritual director, in the context of sacramental confession. That is, more than annoyance, the outright anger I feel toward these "influencers" is probably sinful -- sinful even if I am entirely right, in my assessment of their claims. These are no doubt well-intentioned people, however misguided. They deserve compassion and prayer, not anger.
But I feel the need to issue a word of caution with regard to these folks. Because I think a "faith" born of fear and panic is a betrayal of the true faith, which is born of love and gratitude. Because I think a "discipleship" that needs to draw on dread and terror for its sustenance is the opposite of true discipleship, which seeks only to accomplish the loving will of God in the present moment. Heaven knows (literally, Heaven knows) how much our world is in need of such discipleship.
All of us will face a personal "Second Coming," so to speak, at the moment of death and in the particular judgment. A mature Christian faith compels us to so order our lives as to let the love of God pour through us into a world so much in need of that love, and to leave the rest to God. Our job, as disciples, is to love; to love deeply and well. It is not to fear. It is not to sit around endlessly speculating about whether this or that "sign" has now appeared. This kind of thing can become an obsession; it can become a parlor game. When it does, it serves absolutely no useful purpose.
End of sermon.
We are at the start of the season of Advent, Thanksgiving just behind us and the rest of the holidays ahead. I have had a very quiet and restful week here at St. Clement, greatly enjoying my role simply as a priest of the parish. I do love St. Clement's! Talk about reasons for thanksgiving. I wake up here -- now in my tenth year -- every single morning giving thanks and praise to the Lord (and to Mama Mary, whom I credit with bringing me here) for the fact that I am one of the priests at St. Clement.
And as I mentioned in my Thanksgiving homily here in the parish, this is my favorite holiday. Even as a little boy, I loved Thanksgiving the most, among the holidays, more than Christmas, more than Easter. There was one other day each year that I loved with the intensity that I loved Thanksgiving. That day was Good Friday.
Just sayin'. All the good things, all the countless blessings for which we have been giving thanks to God, this past week, are directly attributable to the events of Good Friday. It was then and there and in those circumstances of such affliction and ignominy that the Lord, our God, won for us every blessing that has since been ours to claim.
To me, the two days are inextricable, one from the other. They are necessarily connected. There would be no possibility of Thanksgiving, had the Lord not done for us what he did do for us, on Good Friday. So that here in the waning days of November, and in the midst of much joyous celebration, I have found myself quietly reflective, this otherwise quiet and reflective week, on a day in mid-spring; a Friday in March or April, when our focus tends to be elsewhere, not the joyful focus of Thanksgiving.
But truly, the one day could not be without the other. And for that, for Good Friday and the winning of the war, the salvation of the race, all praise and all thanksgiving, to Jesus Christ our Lord and King.
Take good care. God bless. A serene and joyful Advent season to you.
Fr. Brawn
December Mass Schedule
Saturday, November 30
5 PM (English)
Sunday, December 8
8 AM, 6:30 PM (both English)
CATHOLIC COMMUNITY OF PLEASANTON, Seton Campus
11 AM (English)
Sunday, December 15
8 AM, 11:15 AM (both English)
Saturday, December 21
5 PM (English)
Sunday, December 22
6:30 PM (English)
Christmas Eve
10 PM ("Midnight Mass;" English)
Christmas Day
9 AM (English)
Sunday, December 29
8 AM, 1115 AM (both English)
New Year's Day (Feast of Mary, Mother of God)
9 AM (English)
Daily Masses (all at 8 AM, all English)
Monday, Dec. 2
Friday, Dec. 6
Saturday, Dec. 7
Tuesday, Dec. 10
Friday, Dec. 13
Monday, Dec. 16
Saturday, Dec. 21
Monday, Dec. 23
Tuesday, Dec. 24
Thursday, Dec. 26
Saturday, Dec, 28
Monday, Dec. 30
Friday, Jan. 3
Saturday, Jan. 4
TWO SPECIAL MASSES
Monday, December 9 (Feast of the Immaculate Conception)
5 PM (English)
Monday, December 23, Simbang Gabi Novena Mass
6 AM (English)