Bible On Call
- New Year's Day Reflection
- Christmas Message
- Scripture Reflection, December 21: Intersecting Plans
- Scripture Reflection, December 14: Called to be Light
- Scripture Reflection, December 7: Prepare the Way of the Lord!
- Scripture Reflection, November 30: Be watchful!
- Scripture Reflection, November 23: Feast of Christ the King
- Scripture Reflection, November 16: God's Economy is not in Recession
- Scripture Reflection, November 9: Called to be Church!
- Scripture Reflection, November 2: Feast of All Souls
- Scripture Reflection, October 26: Back to the Basics
- Scripture Reflection, October 19: Jesus and Joe the Plumber
- Scripture Reflection, October 12, 2008: Invited to God's party
- Scripture Reflection, October 5, 2008: God never gives up!
- Scripture Reflection, September 28, What Would Jesus Do?
- Scripture Reflection, September 21: Your kingdom come!
- Scripture Reflection, September 14: Triumph of the Cross
- Scripture Reflection, September 07: 1+1=3
- Scripture Reflection, August 31: Teamwork with God
- Scripture Reflection, August 24: From 'Rocky' to 'Rock'
- Scripture Reflection, August 17, Tenacious Faith
- Scripture Reflection, August 10, 2008: Take courage!
- Scripture Reflection, August 3: Eyes of Compassion
- Scripture Reflection, July 27: Pearl of Great Price
- Scripture Reflection, July 20: Compassion is Power
- Scripture Reflection, July 13: The Sower and the Seed
- Scripture Reflection, July 6: The Gentle Mastery of Christ
- Scripture Reflection, June 29: Heroes of Faith
- Scripture Reflection, June 22: Be Not Afraid
- Scripture Reflection, June 15: Many Are Called
- Scripture Reflection, June 8: The Much in Meals
- Scripture Reflection, June 1: Extraordinary Generosity
- Scripture Reflection, May 25: Connections Made to Last
- Scripture Reflection, May 18: Holy Trinity Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 11: Pentecost Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 4: The Feast of the Ascension
- Scripture Reflection, April 27: Speaking and Living Our Faith
- Scripture Reflection, April 20: Our Future Heavenly Home
- Scripture Reflection, April 13: Good Shepherd Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, April 6: The Ultimate Servant
- Scripture Reflection, March 30: Inspirational Stories of Faith
- Easter Reflection: Alleluia, He is Risen!
- Good Friday Reflection and Podcast
- Holy Thursday Reflection & Podcast
- Scripture Reflection, March 16: Palm Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, March 9: The Raising of Lazarus
- Scripture Reflection, March 2: Open to Possibilities
- Scripture Reflection, February 24: First Impressions
- Scripture Reflection, February 17: Human AND Divine
- Scripture Reflection, February 10: Appreciating Lent
- Scripture Reflection, February 3: A Dose of Humility for the Super Bowl
- Scripture Reflection: Now Free to Grow in Love
- Scripture Reflection, January 20: Servants of Reconciliation
- Scripture Reflection, January 13: The Baptism of the Lord
- Scripture Reflection, January 6: Beyond Our Expectations
- Advent Reflection, December 23: "God Is with Us"
- Advent Reflection, December 16: “Loved by the Son of God”
- Advent Reflection, December 9: Patient Expectancy
- Scripture Reflection, December 2: A Vision of Peace
- Scripture Reflection, November 25: Christ the King
- Scripture Reflection, November 18: The Meaning of Reverence
- Scripture Reflection, November 11: The Traditionally Printed Word
- Scripture Reflection, November 4: Risk, Hospitality and Justice
- Scripture Reflection, October 28: The Promise of More
- Scripture Reflection, October 21: “I lift up my eyes to the mountains”
- Scripture Reflection, October 14: Words
- Scripture Reflection, October 7: Singing the Same Song
- Scripture Reflection, September 30: Direct Gazes on the Face of Christ
- Scripture Reflection, Sunday, September 23: Love Is Ingenious
- Scripture Reflection, September 16: Finding Home
- Scripture Reflection, September 9: A Perfect Example of Christian Discipleship
- Scripture Reflection, September 2: Humility Does Matter
- Scripture Reflection, August 26: A Faithfully Present Christ
- Scripture Reflection, August 19: The "ordinariness" of Christian Discipleship
- Scripture Reflection, August 12: Bringing Life to Others
- Scripture Reflection, August 5: Growing Rich in the Sight of God
- Scripture Reflection, July 29: Two Essential Attitudes
- Scripture Reflection, July 22: Models of Hospitality
- Scripture Reflection, July 15: The Good Samaritan
- Scripture Reflection, July 8: Christian Understanding of Freedom
- Scripture Reflection, July 1: Our Adventurous Lives
- Scripture Reflection, June 24: Becoming A Light to the Nations
- Scripture Reflection, June 17: Courageous Reconciliation
- Scripture Reflection, June 10: Corpus Christi
- Scripture Reflection, June 3: Trinity Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 27: The Feast of Pentecost
- Scripture Reflection, May 20: The Ascension of Jesus
- Sunday Reflection, May 13
- Scripture Reflection, May 6: Dungy’s Gift to Grieving Parents
- Scripture Reflection, April 29: The Good Shepherd
- Scripture Reflection, April 22: “Do you love me?”
- Sunday Reflection, April 15: Touch the Wounds
- Sunday Reflection, April 8: Easter Sunday 2007
- Holy Thursday Reflection, April 5: Holy Thursday 2007
- Sunday Reflection, April 1: The Essentials for Christian Discipleship
- Sunday Reflection, March 25: Throw your stones away and parking tickets, too
- Sunday Reflection, March 18: The Welcome Home
- Sunday Reflection, March 11: A Lenten Summons
- Sunday Reflection, March 4: God, the Giver of Abundance
- Sunday Reflection, February 25: No More Peer Pressure
- Sunday Reflection, February 18: Loving Our Enemies?
- Sunday Reflection, February 11: The Beatitudes
- Sunday Reflection, February 4: Extraordinary Encounters
- Sunday Reflection, January 28: Truth Spoken in Love
- Sunday Reflection, January 21: Inspiring News for Life
- Sunday Reflection, January 14: An Abundance of Gifts, Not Threats
- Sunday Reflection, January 7: The Football Fans’ Search for Hope
- Christmas Reflection: The Significance of Stuffed Animals and Jesus
- Advent Reflection, December 17: Life Lessons at a Coffee Bar
- Advent Reflection, December 10: 'Good News' for Rejoicing
- Advent Reflection, December 3: The Gift of Hope
- Sunday Reflection, November 26: “Your Kingdom Come, Your Will Be Done”
- Sunday Reflection, November 19: A Glimpse of God’s Faithfulness
- Sunday Reflection, November 12: Giving the Little That We Have
- Sunday Reflection, November 5: BEING the Great Commandment
- Sunday Reflection, October 29: Courage in Jericho
- Personal Reflection, October 22: Servant Leadership
- Sunday Reflection, October 15: Naming What's Important
- Sunday Reflection, October 8: Our responsibilities are God’s blessings
- Sunday Reflection, October 1: Open to the Spirit
- Sunday Reflection, September 24: Who’s the greatest?
- Sunday Reflection, September 17: Our Treasured Images of Christ
- Sunday Reflection, September 10: “He has done all things well.”
- Sunday Reflection, September 3: Conversion of Heart
- Sunday Reflection, August 27: Our Choice to Follow
- Sunday Reflection, August 20: Unity in a Divided World
- Sunday Reflection, August 13: On the Road of Discipleship
- Sunday Reflection, August 6: "I Know a Man"
- Sunday Reflection, July 30: The Abundance of Fragments
- Sunday Reflection, July 16: Our Mission if we choose to accept
- Sunday Reflection, July 2: The Grace of Desperation?
- Sunday Reflection, June 25: The Calming Presence of Christ
- Sunday Reflection, June 18: Serving Up a Banquet
- Sunday Reflection, June 11: The Trinity, A Communion of Life and Love
- Pentecost Sunday: Tuned Into the Spirit
- Sunday Reflection, May 28: The Presence of the Absent Jesus
- Sunday Reflection, May 21: The Sign of True Friendship
- Scripture Reflection, May 14: The Garrison Keillor STRETCH
- Sunday Reflection, May 7: An Encounter with Jean Vanier
- Easter: Memories that Give Hope, Peace and Love
- Good Friday Reflection: Overwhelmed by John
- Holy Thursday Reflection: Three Days, One Liturgy
- Palm Sunday Reflection: In Gratitude for Good Mentors
- Memorial of Cardinal Bernardin
- The Christian Life
- Praying With the Scriptures
- The Reluctant Prophet
- Bible On Call
Scripture Reflection, October 14: Words
Scripture Readings:
2 Kings 5: 14-17
Psalm 98
2 Timothy 2: 8-13
Luke 17: 11-19
All of us know from our experience of life just how powerful a word can be. A word can offer life or take life away; it can heal or inflict terrible wounds; it can give someone hope or drive them to despair. As we listen to the ongoing presidential debates among both Democrats and Republicans, we hear a litany of carefully scripted words. These are words designed to score points through sound bites. Sometimes they are words that are negative and accusatory in tone, used as weapons to inflict damage on an opponent. The recent controversies surrounding radio host Dom Imus and New York Knicks coach Isiah Thomas focus in part on words. These two cases involved disparaging words directed toward women. Words are powerful realities; they seem to possess a life and existence of their own.
The power of the word is very evident in our Scripture readings for this Sunday. The leper Naaman is given an authoritative word by the prophet Elisha, who tells him to plunge into the Jordan. At first, Naaman is quite disappointed with this command. He has journeyed to Israel in order to find the “man of God”, and he expects a more extraordinary way to cure his dreaded illness. His own country of Aram has mightier rivers than the puny Jordan. But eventually Naaman obeys the word of Elisha and, by heeding that word, discovers healing and a whole new life.
The Second Letter to Timothy is written in the tradition of Paul the apostle as a word of encouragement to his co-worker. This letter depicts Paul as a man whose entire life was impelled by the word of God. Paul was seized by this word of the gospel – a word that he tells us cannot be chained. He has preached the good news of Jesus Christ faithfully, even though it has meant tremendous hardship for him. Paul knows that this word of God is a word of life, a word of God’s saving love that must be preached.
In the Gospel story of the ten lepers, these people whose bodies have been ravaged by this disease stand a distance from Jesus. They dare not get too close to him but simply raise their voices in pleading. Jesus responds by giving a word of command: “Go show yourselves to the priests.” The word of Jesus brings new life to the victims of this terrible affliction. And the one who returns – the detested Samaritan – utters a powerful word of his own. He speaks a simple word of gratitude – a “thank you.” Through his word of thanks and praise to God, this Samaritan expresses the faith that is in his heart and which means salvation for him. His words of praise and thanksgiving make all the difference.
The word of God continues to be spoken to us, to you and to me in this day and time. It is offered to us in a special way through the Scriptures. That is why we take time to listen with care and reflect upon the Scriptures every time we celebrate the Eucharist. I think that all of us know, too, that God speaks his word to us in other ways as well, often right in the midst of everyday life. We just need to be attentive to it. God often speaks his word to us through one another.
Some time ago, I officiated at a wedding in New York. During the liturgy, I could not help but notice a couple who seemed to be in their early 60’s. The husband was clearly disabled in some way and had to be closely attended to by his wife. It was very difficult for him to come up to communion, but he made it with her help. At the reception, I discovered that this couple was the aunt and uncle of the bride, and I found myself sitting at the same table with them, along with some other couples. A relative told me that this gentleman had been suffering from Parkinson’s Disease for about four years. He had once been a tall, strapping fellow, a member of the NYC police department. But now he could hardly speak, his walking was limited, and his muscular control was very sporadic.
Throughout the reception, I could not help but notice the tenderness of his wife in relating to him. She spoke to him calmly and with a sense of reassurance. She helped him with his food and wiped his face with a napkin. There was a DJ at the reception, playing music at about 5000 decibels! At one point he played a song that everyone wanted to dance to, even the “older” generation. I soon found myself sitting at the table with just this couple. His wife told me that in bygone years her husband would have been the first one out on the dance floor and the last to leave. As the song played on, I noticed how she simply stood beside his chair at the table, smiling at her husband, holding his hand and moving it up and down to the beat of the music, as if they were still dancing with each other. Even though he could no longer make it out to the dance floor, they were still dancing together.
As a priest, the experience of this couple was a word of God to me. It was an eloquent word spoken in the midst of a rather noisy wedding reception. It was a word about fidelity, about being true to your promises in good times and in bad. It was a word about grace, about loving kindness and tender mercy. It was a word about God’s call – vocation. In witnessing this woman’s tender, exquisite care for her ailing husband, I was moved to reflect on what it meant to be faithful to my own vocation as a Passionist priest.
We speak words to one another. And these words are powerful, aren’t they? I believe that our Scriptures for this Sunday invite us reflect not only on our ability to listen to God’s word spoken to us, but also to think about the kinds of words we speak to one another, especially to those who are closest to us. Are they words that bring life to others? Are they words that reflect the presence of God to others, that enable them to be more aware of their dignity as God’s sons and daughters? This does not mean that our words always need to be “sweet” or “nice.” Sometimes we need to speak a word of challenge to those we love. We need to speak the truth in love. But this truth must be spoken in such a way that the other person knows that we love them.
Some of our most powerful words are spoken not in audible language but through simple deeds. The woman at the wedding spoke volumes to me through her tender care for her husband. The Scriptures for this Sunday challenge us to ask ourselves: What are we saying to one another through the ways in which we treat one another in the course of everyday life?
As we gather around the table of the Lord this weekend, we are like the once-leprous Samaritan. We come to this table in a spirit of praise and thanksgiving. We are grateful because God’s final word to us is Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh. Christ is God’s tender, exquisite word of love and of life spoken to each one of us. As we receive the Eucharist, may we go forth from the table to proclaim his word to others in our speech and by our lives.

