My wife and I went to Mass on Memorial Day and our priest told a story in his homily about a man he knew that grew up without parents. The man's name was Matt. Matt led a lonely life and it seemed that everything he did or tried was met with a closed door. He joined the military and eventually was deployed into active service in Afghanistan. On return home to the US while on leave, he seemed bitter and distant to the priest and others who knew him. His demeanor had changed now that he had been exposed to the brutality of war. Upon his return to Afghanistan for another tour of duty, he fought bravely for his country, but this time he was killed by enemy fire and returned home to the US again, but this time he returned in a flag draped coffin. He was given a proper funeral Mass and burial service, and this time he went through an open door, a door which led to heaven. At this point the priest got choked up and everyone could see that he was very moved by this story. The story of a person he knew personally, who had fought and died for his freedom as an American. A person who was not loved by many people on this earth, but was loved tremendously by God. We often don't think of the thousands of people, real people, real human beings, who lost their lives for this country, when we think of Memorial Day. We tend to think of the patriotism and the flags, but we quickly turn to thoughts of summer time, BBQ's and time off from our jobs to be with our families and enjoy a day off. When you think about people who were touched by a soldier who gave his life, it gets personal. We live in a great country because of people like Matt.
Thoughts from Scott
"It is true there is an ebb and flow, but the sea remains the sea.’ You are the sea. Although I experience many ups and downs in my emotions and often feel great shifts and changes in my inner life, you remain the same." Vincent Van Gogh
Monday, May 25, 2026
Thoughts on Memorial Day
My wife and I went to Mass on Memorial Day and our priest told a story in his homily about a man he knew that grew up without parents. The man's name was Matt. Matt led a lonely life and it seemed that everything he did or tried was met with a closed door. He joined the military and eventually was deployed into active service in Afghanistan. On return home to the US while on leave, he seemed bitter and distant to the priest and others who knew him. His demeanor had changed now that he had been exposed to the brutality of war. Upon his return to Afghanistan for another tour of duty, he fought bravely for his country, but this time he was killed by enemy fire and returned home to the US again, but this time he returned in a flag draped coffin. He was given a proper funeral Mass and burial service, and this time he went through an open door, a door which led to heaven. At this point the priest got choked up and everyone could see that he was very moved by this story. The story of a person he knew personally, who had fought and died for his freedom as an American. A person who was not loved by many people on this earth, but was loved tremendously by God. We often don't think of the thousands of people, real people, real human beings, who lost their lives for this country, when we think of Memorial Day. We tend to think of the patriotism and the flags, but we quickly turn to thoughts of summer time, BBQ's and time off from our jobs to be with our families and enjoy a day off. When you think about people who were touched by a soldier who gave his life, it gets personal. We live in a great country because of people like Matt.
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Thoughts on summer
Summer
People who have children in school will most likely agree that what we think of as summer, the time off between when school ends and when it begins, has definitely moved from a Memorial Day to Labor Day time period to a late May to early to mid August time period as schools nation wide have adjusted their schedules over the last 20 years or so. For many folks, once the calendar flips over to August, vacations are over and you are buying back to school supplies and thinking about school starting again. But really, summer is only about half over because it doesn't really end until Sept 21st. So when is summer to you? I guess it really doesn't matter, unless you make calendars. Enjoy the warm weather and time off of work. Slow down and enjoy the enjoyment!
Saturday, May 23, 2026
Thoughts on Pentecost
This Sunday the Church celebrates the Solemnity of Pentecost, a feast that’s often overshadowed by Christmas and Easter. Yet Pentecost is not just an appendix to Easter; it’s the fulfillment of the Paschal Mystery.
Just as Easter celebrates the passion, death, and resurrection of the Incarnate Son of God, so Pentecost, fifty days later, marks the completion of that saving work through the gift of the Holy Spirit. The risen Lord bestows his Spirit upon the Church gathered in the Upper Room around Mary, and upon the Church of every age.
Christ does not abandon his disciples. He does not leave his Body without the Spirit of Truth. Through the Holy Spirit, the Church continues his mission: proclaiming God’s saving truth about the human person and authentic human community, offering the sacraments of salvation, and forming a communion of faith and charity that anticipates the communion of saints in heaven.
The Spirit enables the Church to confess Jesus Christ as Lord. St. Paul reminds us that “no one can say ‘Jesus is Lord’ except by the Holy Spirit.” In ancient Israel, the word “Lord” named God himself. So to say “Jesus is Lord” is to confess that Jesus is truly God, and that God has revealed his face in Christ. Through Pentecost, we come to know that the one God who creates in love is the same God who redeems in Christ, the very truth we profess in the Creed.
Each Sunday, as the Church rises at the Creed to profess the Faith, this mystery is renewed. People of every language and nation proclaim in unison that there is one Faith, one Lord, one Baptism. Thus, the confusion of Babel is healed. What was separated and divided by human pride is reunited and reconciled by the gift of the Holy Spirit.
And so the Church prays with hope in that same Spirit who gathered what was scattered at Babel:
Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of thy faithful, and kindle in them the fire of thy love. Send forth thy Spirit and they shall be created, and thou shalt renew the face of the earth. Amen.
-Fr. Richard Hermes, S.J.
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Thoughts on peace
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Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Thoughts on interuptions
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Sunday, May 17, 2026
More thoughts on the Ascension
Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord |
| Matthew 28:16–20 |
Friends, today is the Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord. After his resurrection, Jesus continued to appear to his disciples for a time—the standard biblical frame of forty days—and then stopped. The Ascension of Jesus signals the definitive end of these postresurrection appearances and the commencement of Jesus’s operation from the properly heavenly sphere. It is crucial to remember, however, that this distantiation by no means amounts to an abandonment, but rather to an even more intense form of intimacy. To move into heaven, or the divine manner of existence, is not to move to another place but to that arena of existence that stands outside of space. Paul Tillich refers to God’s Überräumlichkeit (over-spacedness), and he insists that this transcendence to any particular space implies the capacity to be present to every space. This is what we mean when we say that God is “everywhere.” Therefore, to say that Jesus has “ascended” to that sphere of existence is not to say that he has “gone away.” It is to assert, if I can adopt a military metaphor, that he has journeyed to a higher point of vantage, where he can see the entire field of battle and direct operations more efficaciously. Bishop Robert Barron |
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Thoughts on the Ascension
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