Hello Everybody! Peace be with you! Again, I apologize for the hiatus due to a very busy June! So, picking up where we last left off, we continue to reflect on the great gift of the sacraments. We finished last time with confirmation and we begin this time with the sacrament of reconciliation:
In reconciliation, he restores this
resurrection-life to you if you should weaken it or throw it away by personal
sin. His mercy is always there for you. There is no need to fear the impending
tribunal of love so long as you believe in his healing love and mercy and put
all your trust in him. In marriage, he transforms the resurrection-life into
something you live together with a spouse and children. In holy orders, he
makes a man into a minister in the Church of these seven great gifts. And in
the anointing of the sick, he comes to you when you are in a state of serious
illness, seals you again with oil and prayer, and thereby heals you of sin and
fortifies your resurrection-life in the midst of your illness and suffering.
There are many other gifts in the Church. There is Scripture – the book by
which God speaks to you even now. There is prayer – the loving conversation
with God in friendship. There are works of love and mercy to carry out for
others. And there are more – too many to mention here. All of these things
serve to build up and strengthen the resurrection-life within you. These are
the ways that Christ, by his mercy, heals you and prepares you for the glorious
day of judgment.
May God bless you all!
Fr. Isaac Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
Monday, June 17, 2013
Thursday, May 23, 2013
The Apostles Creed - Part 10
Hello all! Please forgive the two-and-a-half week hiatus. I had the privilege of visiting our brothers down in Comayagua, Honduras. I am edified by these brothers and their desire to respond to the challenge of Pope Francis to go out and preach the good news to the poor. I encountered many people who, while poor in the things of this world, are rich in the things of God; namely, humility, long-suffering, generosity and joy! Please remember them in your prayer.
This week we continue reflecting on the following words from the Creed:
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and life everlasting. Amen.
In the Church you will find God’s seven great gifts to you. God has given the Church seven ways by which you can personally interact with the risen Lord Jesus and be filled to overflowing with his resurrection-life. In each one of these seven great gifts, we call them ‘sacraments’, the living and true God, Jesus of Nazareth, reaches out and touches you in some way or another. In baptism, he touches you with oil and water and prayer and by that gesture fills you with an initial influx of his resurrection-life. In the eucharist, he reaches out and feeds you with heavenly food, and this heavenly food nourishes and grows and revitalizes the resurrection life within you. In confirmation, he reaches out and seals you with oil and prayer and by that gesture fortifies the resurrection-life within you and makes you ready to give testimony before the world.
Next week we will continue reflecting on "God's seven great gifts" to us. Until then, God bless you all!
Fr. Isaac Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
The Apostles Creed - Part 9
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church,
the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body,
and life everlasting. Amen.
Love unites us. Love unites people with God and with each
other. But the Holy Spirit is love – the eternal love between the Father and
the Son. And the Holy Spirit is now at work in the world. It stands to reason,
therefore, that the Holy Spirit is now uniting people with God and with each
other. If we look for this unification, where do we find it happening? It is
happening in the Church. The Holy Spirit is uniting men and women of every
nation, race, and tongue in the Church. The international, intercultural,
multimillenial unity of the Church is therefore a sign to you that eternal love
really is at work in the world. In the Church, the same love can go to work in
you and through you. Next week we'll discuss how this happens...
God bless you all,
Fr. Isaac Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
Sunday, April 21, 2013
To eat is to discern
We interrupt our series on the Apostles’ Creed for a brief
reflection. Recently, in the daily mass
readings we have been listening to John 6, Jesus’ bread of life discourse. The basic thrust of Jesus’ teaching is that
faith in Him leads to reception of the Eucharist and reception of the Eucharist
leads to eternal life. Simply put,
believing leads to eating and eating and leads to Life.
In the Eucharist we are a gift from the Father to the Son, a gift Jesus promises to protect and to lead to the Father: “All that the Father gives me will come to me; and him who comes to me I will not cast out. For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of him who sent me; and this is the will of him who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me, but raise it up at the last day” (Jn 6:37-39).
When we eat
a nice steak, we don’t become the steak, the steak becomes us. But through frequent reception of the
Eucharist—“the living bread” (Jn 6:51), “the flesh” of Jesus given for the life
of the world (Jn 6:51)—we gradually become Jesus. We gradually enter more deeply into His risen life and His relationship with the Father and we gradually adopt the fundamental
disposition of His Sacred Heart: “I have come down from heaven not to do my own will, but the will of him
who sent me…” (Jn 6:38).
This
fundamental disposition of Jesus is the fundamental disposition of
discernment: openness to whatever God wills (see Discerning the Will of God, pp. 31-49). To eat is to discern. To eat is to be drawn by the Father through
His Son, the Good Shepherd (cf. Jn 10).
Receive the Eucharist with confidence and know that you are already on
the Way (cf. Jn 14:6).
God Bless You,
Fr. Isaac Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
The Apostles Creed - Part 8
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.
Jesus will return to earth someday – we know not when. He
told us that he did not come to condemn the world but to save it. So, when he
comes as judge, he will judge us in the tribunal of love and mercy. It is
called the tribunal of love because God will put one question to your life. Did
you love Me back? And His judgment will be nothing other than the
manifestation of the true answer to that question. It is called the tribunal of
mercy because God wants to show mercy to all, that is, to heal us so profoundly
that we do in truth love him back. His mercy is always there for us, he is
eager to show mercy, and he turns away none who ask for his mercy. All who call
upon his mercy receive it in abundance, and so long as they call upon it they
undergo a gradual transformation that prepares their hearts to hear a glorious
verdict in the tribunal of love. Only those who are deliberately skeptical of
his mercy, who harden their hearts against his love, need to fear the tribunal.
How does his mercy, by being believed, prepare our hearts for the glorious
verdict?
To be continued...
For those who are called, religious life is the place or the "state" where we "love Him back." It is the place where we undergo the "gradual transformation that prepares our hearts to hear a glorious
verdict in the tribunal of love."
God bless you all,
Fr. Isaac Mary Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
Monday, April 8, 2013
The Apostles Creed - Part 7
In our reflections on the creed, we now turn to the Ascension of Jesus:
He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand
of the Father.
Jesus is a fountain of resurrection-life. He lives with the
Father and the Holy Spirit in heaven. Jesus is calling you to turn to Him, to
believe in the love he showed for you on his cross, and to believe in the
resurrection-life overflowing from him right now. To all who turn to him, he
gives the power to become children of God, adopted sons and daughters of the
same eternal Father, vessels of the same Spirit of love, men and women who live
in the knowledge of the love of God.
God bless you all!
Fr. Isaac Mary Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
The Apostles Creed - Part 6
Happy Easter! Brothers, discernment involves dying and rising with Jesus so that we can live the new life--the Resurrection-life--that He is calling us to! We continue our meditations on the Apostles Creed by reflecting on this awesome mystery of mysteries...
On the third day he rose again.
Three days after Jesus died for you and for all, your
heavenly Father raised Jesus from the dead. Jesus did not simply resuscitate.
He did not simply get back his old form of life. Rather, your heavenly Father
gave Jesus a new kind of life called resurrection-life. Resurrection life is a
completely new form of human life. It was never lived or experienced by anyone
before Jesus of Nazareth. He was the first to receive it. Pope Benedict XVI
compared the resurrection to an evolutionary leap. Resurrection-life is a human
life, but a human life not only lived without any wounds but filled to overflowing
with the knowledge and the love of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Jesus
wants this life to overflow into you so that you too will be gradually healed
of your wounds and filled to overflowing with the knowledge and love of the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. That is how you will come to know your heavenly
Father for yourself and to experience His love for you – by being filled with
the resurrection-life of Jesus.
Christ is Risen, Indeed He is Risen!
Fr. Isaac Mary Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
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