Saturday, October 10, 2015

GUNS

PC-October 11-2015
It is estimated that there are about three hundred million guns in the United States.  How in the world do we keep track of three hundred million of anything?  I use to own guns.  I liked the workmanship, the detail and precision.  I enjoyed going out to Red Rock Canyon in the Mojave Desert to shoot at targets.  I never once killed anything, nor did I ever see my guns as a solution to any of my problems.  There are millions of people just like me.  I have never understood hunting except when absolutely necessary for survival.  When I lived in West Virginia a school bus or two per year always seem to be the accidental targets during hunting season.  With gun violence on the rise in the 1960’s and 70’s I got rid of my guns; yes as a statement but mostly because I didn’t need something lethal to have fun.  There were other avenues.  Now, I shoot photographs.
Banning guns won’t work.  Prohibition didn’t work in the 20’s.  The war on drugs hasn’t worked either.  Seems to me we have to go back to the source of the problem; individual choices to shoot or not to shoot.  We are enamored of easy answers to difficult problems.  Bang, bang, problem solved.  Well, no, it isn’t.  The problem has just gotten a lot worse.
So many the shooters have been shown to be mentally challenged.  Okay, lets round them all up and put them far away.  That won’t work either nor is it justified or fair.    We need to  remember that mentally challenged people are more likely to be victims  of violence than perpetrators of violence.  We are constantly trying to erase the symptom but not treating the disease.  We don’t have an epidemic of guns, we have an epidemic of people who use a gun to solve some problem in their lives; low self esteem, I don’t have a girl friend, no one likes me, loners, isolators, folks who are really, really sad, no job, no friends, nowhere to vent my anger or frustration.  The list can go on and on.  In a sense we are all mentally challenged, at times needing help with one issue or another and we find ways to connect, or reconnect when life gets really difficult.
We find help in families, good friends, church communities, social clubs and needed psychiatric counselors and groups like 12-Step programs so we can learn to live on life’s terms.  In a very real sense we all, every single one of us, needs to be prat of the solution rather than continuing the problem.
Clearly we need universal and comprehensive background checks.  More than that, we need universal health care, especially psychiatric health care for the homeless , bullied teenagers, those feeling rejected and abandoned, and all unable to pay for such care.  We need safe places where people can gather and share their angers and frustrations and discover real alternatives to what they are experiencing.  We need to create communities, neighborhoods, cities and a nation where being kind and caring is the prime directive.  We need friendly streets and safe sidewalks.
Whatever the motive the gunman in Roseburg, one thing is clear.  He had a major disconnect with himself and others.  The question is how do we keep people connected with reality, with one another.  How do we provide safe places to share our brokenness and we are all broken.  Most of us feel what it is like not to be able to share a particular secret in our lives; how isolated and alone it makes us feel. Many of us have also felt the incredible feeling of relief when we are able to share something we thought impossible to share - the freedom and lightness.  All of us, can do this, be this for one another.  Showing loving kindness is not rocket science, but as close as our ability to smile, to offer acceptance rather than rejection, love rather than hate.  We need to disarm not the finger from the gun, but disarm the idea in some people’s minds that a gun is the only solution.


Fr. Michael

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Lummi Nation Totem Blessing


THE LUMMI NATION

Members of the Lummi Nation will be blessing a new totem at St. Philip Neri Parish on Monday, August 24 from 5:30pm to 8pm

The Lummi People. are the original inhabitants of Washington's northernmost coast and southern British Columbia. For thousands of years, they worked, struggled and celebrated life on the shores and waters of Puget Sound.

All are welcome to this spirit filled event at 16th and Division in SE Portand.  There is lots of parking and we are on the Number 4 Bus line… Come and join us…

Lummi Nation Totem Blessing

Lummi  Nation

Members of the Lummi Nation will be blessing a new totem at St. Philip Neri Parish on Monday, August 24 from 6pm to 8pm

The Lummi People. are the original inhabitants of Washington's northernmost coast and southern British Columbia. For thousands of years, they worked, struggled and celebrated life on the shores and waters of Puget Sound.

All are welcome to this spirit filled event at 16th and Division in SE Portand.  There is lots of parking and we are on the Number 4 Bus line.

Come and join us…

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Loving-Kindness

W16B-2015-SPN
One of my constant themes is how do we live a spiritual life?  I believe that part of the answer is contained in today’s Gospel.  I know you remember last week’s Gospel where Jesus sends the disciples out two by two to every town and village.  Of course you do.  They went out to do what Jesus was doing.  Jesus empowered them to do what He did.  He trusted them.  He didn’t go with them.
In today’s Gospel we see the disciples returning and relating to Jesus what they taught and did in His name.  Then, Jesus invites them to rest awhile and grab a bite to eat.  Here in lies a good map of what a spiritual life might look like.  We too go out from this place and we return next week to this place, to rest awhile and get a bite to eat.  We do this pattern every day of our lives, we leave our home, go out and come back to rest and get a bite to eat.  So without doing anything else we live the pattern of a spiritual life.
Something more is needed to mix into this pattern, namely our attitude.  Attitude is everything.  Get up and leave the house with a bad attitude and I guarantee you are going to have a bad day, no matter how good it may be.  Getting out of bed with a good attitude and I guarantee you are going to have a good day, no matter how bad it might get.  Attitude is everything.
The First Noble Truth of Buddhism is that suffering is inevitable.  The only way to overcome it is with an attitude of loving-kindness.  It sin’t so much about how much we do or accomplish but rather the attitude we bring to everything we do.  All this means staying focused, staying focused on loving-kindness or if you really want to be Catholic about it to always be full of grace GRACED FILLED — to be graceful in all that we do.
When we say the Hail Mary we are not so much saying anything about Mary, but praying that we might become what we pray, namely to become FULL OF GRACE.  This actually happens in daily life; you run into it every now and then.
(SOCIAL SECURITY STORY)  I heard awful stories about dealing with social security. I was prepared for an uphill fight but ran into the most helpful person ever.  She was focused on her job, took me through the whole process os signing up for social security with complete ease.  She was full of loving-kindness.
It is an attitude of heart, not just a thinking or doing thing.  If we have the attitude the doing will follow.  Pope Francis isn’t teaching us in any heady way but showing us by his actions which are obviously rooted in lovng-kindness  In his latest encyclical he is calling us beyond just not using bottled water or recycling but to have, from the heart an attitude of loving kindness toward Mother Earth, sister squirrel  and brother sun.  I know people who don’t drink bottled water but leave all the lights in the house on. If we convert our hearts and not just our minds and action we will do all we ought to do and more besides — because we will get to a point where we can’t do otherwise.

Pope Francis is initing us to find spirituality everywhere, in care for creation, care for one another.  It is the radical Jesuit call to find God in all things.