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Friday, 33rd Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

Our Saviour abolished death.
And he proclaimed this through the good news.
When we die, I wonder is this our last breath.
Will our body for ever we lose.

I have often doubted that not just the soul but the body is resurrected.
How can a body live in heaven unchanged.
But it is not that body that is resurrected.
It is something totally transformed.

The mighty oak comes from the tiny acorn.
It is genetically entirely created from it but it is entirely different.
The body in heaven will be unrecognisable, to this we are sworn.
Now we only hear see what is around us, then we will know every lovely scent.

Body and soul are only completed.
If they are never forever parted.

Thursday, 33rd Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

St Roque González and Companions

The light shineth in the darkness.
And the darkness may not overcome it.
The history of the Jesuit missions in Paraguay may be a vision of bleakness.
But a lamp though extinguished was lit .

I recall my visit there and the Guarani people.
And I recall the power of the film, The Mission.
All now is peaceful.
But in the eighteenth century the people were under slavery’s submission.

The Jesuits had a choice.
To sacrifice their order or the missions, myself or yourself.
St Roque did find his voice.
And sacrificed himself.

Do we compromise, we must work in the world, the world is thus.
Or do we recognise, no thus we have made the world, I have made it thus.

St Hugh of Lincoln

The Lord said I think thoughts of peace and not of affliction.
You will call upon me and I shall answer you.
Gentle Carthusian, a life of peace and hope was your conviction.
But King and country called you St Hugh.

I recall a family visit to La Grande Chartreuse.
Buried in its Alpine valley, at this commitment we stood in awe.
Into this quiet place comes no bustling news.
Out of this monastery falls a reviving spiritual dew.

St Hugh had to be ordered to leave by his prior.
To Lincoln unwillingly as bishop, he came.
Working with his own hands on his cathedral after the fire.
Ceaselessly travelling and caring for the poor to great acclaim.

He was not afraid to stand up to the King.
We who will never have his courage, only in his praise can we sing.

Monday, 33rd Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

PSALM 1

He is like the tree that is planted beside the flowing waters.
That yields its fruit in due season.
With all nature we delight in our sons and daughters.
Sometimes it is instinct that is true not reason.

I dreamt that I was at a busy yet boring meeting.
Suddenly in my dream I was transported from it on a boat on a shimmering lake.
Now only to the calmness of nature could I give a greeting.
I just was, I did not have to make and I did not have to take.

The tree by the stream has a drink.
It does not move.
It does not think.
It is just there to soothe.

I awoke from my dream, I was back at that meeting.
Arguing.

33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, 2020

A perfect wife, who can find her.
She is beyond the price of pearls.
I am her eternal debtor.
From that first meeting long ago my head swirls.

I know now love is blind.
Forty years later to me she is the most beautiful girl in the room.
With her my heart is entwined.
I love her love beyond any young beauty’s bloom.

That extraordinary beauty struck me first.
Now this deep set goodness keeps us close.
With parting I never lose this thirst.
But it’s her character I love the most.

Truly she cares for the needy and the poor.
This then is my amour.

Saturday, 32nd Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

Since she keeps pestering me I must give this widow what is her just rights.
Or she will persist in coming and worrying me.
Am I too the unjust judge, trying to keep out of her sight.
That’s why this parable always worries me.

But I know it’s about the value of prayer.
Keep asking.
To coldness of heart beware.
Keep persisting.

If the unjust judge can listen.
If even he can eventually act.
Surely God will to our aid hasten.
That may just be naive faith or if may be fact.

So in the long dark empty hours of night.
My cry will to him, I hope, remains in his sight.

Friday, 32nd Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

It has given me great joy to find that your children have been living the life of truth.
As we were commanded by the Father.
Ambition festers in us like a sore tooth.
It binds us to pain with a tether.

Why do we crave power.
We hardly ever achieve it for long.
For even the greatest it is as illusory as seed cast on the rocks by the sower.
It gives no joy, only does us or others wrong.

It is creating things.
That gives us joy even as an amateur.
Poems, pictures, gardens, recipes, it is to these that happiness clings.
We need no skill, we can do just whatever we prefer.

If we are just true to ourselves.
Our lives will be happy although our life and work end up on no bookshelves.

Thursday, 32nd Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

The coming of the kingdom of God does not admit of obstruction.
And there is no one to say look here.
We seek restlessly the origin of creation.
We put trust in one then another elder.

We are lonely in our self centred ego.
But will not death release us and open up new horizons.
When our fortress walls we will bid adieu to our own virago.
We will indeed be someone fir all seasons.

With the death of the ego, the soul will be reborn.
The fall of our castle is a victory.
We can finally to love be sworn.
But this passing on is a mystery.

We stand at the edge of the precipice, afraid to open our wings.
But if we listen, a celestial wind sings.

Wednesday, 32nd Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

But when the kindness and love of God were revealed.
It was not because he was concerned with any righteous actions, it was for compassion.
It is through mercy that our fate is sealed.
We need only look and we can understand this lesson.

We know that there is something immaterial, reason.
We know that it exists outside of us and time and breath.
Why then can’t I exist unbound by death in any Season.
If it exists outside time why too cannot our soul survive death.

We know that in nature everything dies.
And is constantly in new form reborn.
But our soul survives.
It is free of nature’s churn.

We feel this thing outliving existence.
It is within us as a joyous, hard to touch, yet profound sense.

St Leo the Great

Tuesday, 32nd Week in Ordinary Time

The older men should be reserved, dignified, moderate.
Sound in faith, love, and constancy.
I don’t know, am I always considerate.
Do I parade my views modestly.

The churches are closed again except for private prayer.
But actually with less action, there is more time to reflect.
Sitting alone with my conscience I peel away layer by layer.
And always there is something to detect.

One thing we always accept, every human is utterly unique.
And every human being has a self regarding conscience.
We alone, right or wrong, seek.
Lurking there, at our core, is always some remonstrance.

Always deep inside us is this forcibly reproachful protest.
And so we continue the quest.

Dedication of the Lateran Basilica, 2020

Wherever the water flows all living creatures teeming in it will live.
Fish will be very plentiful for wherever the water goes, it brings health.
The cleansing water from the temple helps us strive.
The pure water gives spiritual wealth.

This water is truly wholesome.
How else when it comes from the sanctuary.
Swept away in its stream, ever changing, no one ever lonesome.
Cleansed by it, crossing the river Styx, we will have no need of a ferry.

The rivers Acheron, Cocylus, Lethe, Philegeton, and Styx all converge in a great marsh.
It is said thus we all arrive in the underworld.
This Greek philosophy is harsh.
But I have a vision of another river in another world.

The waters of our river give joy to God’s city.
All comes right with, to the weak, pity.

32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, 2020

Wisdom is bright and does not grow dim.
By those who love her she is readily seen.
In my dreams I see truth at the world’s rim.
But sight in my dreams is all the more keen.

We are told that we believe that Jesus died and rose again.
And that it will be the same for all who have died in Jesus.
I see this truth as a tiny circle of light at the end of an overgrown lane.
We can only pray that one day this truth will seize us.

Wisdom may indeed be bright.
But will the oil in our prayer lamps last.
The oil needs refilling to maintain its light.
Hope must be in the future, doubt in the past.

Belief for me is a flickering light.
But trying to believe keeps joy bright.

Saturday, 31st Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

I have learnt to manage on whatever I have.
I know how to be poor and I know how to be rich.
Possessions are only a temporary salve.
Like us they all end up in a ditch.

But we don’t want to be poor.
Perhaps not rich but we want to have enough.
Our fear of poverty is a running sore.
We have no intention of sleeping rough.

Fate will be kind.
And fate will be unkind.
But we can develop a peaceful mind.
With the help of the one who is never blind.

I am listening to Latin plainchant from the Abbey.
Calming, mysterium fidei, creating in one’s mind a spiritual abbey.

Friday, 31st Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

Second Lockdown

I rejoiced when I heard them say, let us go to God’s house.
And now our feet are standing within your gates.
The churches are empty save maybe for a lonely mouse.
No place then to meet our mates.

The churches were so cleansed.
The people so socially distant.
Yet the people are evicted.
I don’t think they knew what it meant.

We can still go to God’s house.
It is now in our mind.
Only disturbed by our thoughts, not the tiniest mouse.
Is it really all such a grind.

I will not be disturbed by anyone’s fidgeting.
But of course the mind will wander and I shall keep forgetting.

Thursday, 31st Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

The Passing of a Soul

Rejoice with me.
I have found the sheep that was lost.
These beautiful leaves will all fall from the tree.
All life has in death its cost.

Cherish life yet accept death.
We can accept the law of double effect.
It can be as mistaken to artificially extend life as it is wrong to cause death.
Morphine to kill pain may allow us to die in peace even if a speedier death is the effect.

Everything we see, our whole world is dying.
Even the sun in its seeming permanence is dying.
Some things even in a day are passing.
Almost as soon as we arrive we are leaving.

But I trust palliative care will ease my passing.
And departing will lead to entering.

Wednesday, 31st Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

St Charles Borromeo

It is God for his own loving purpose.
Who puts both the will and action into you.
We all in life are given on eternity one purchase.
We all have a chance to take our place in the only worthwhile queue.

A man born to riches and power.
A cardinal at twenty one.
He chose to climb to the top of the spiritual not material tower.
He left no stone of religious reform undone.

And to his see.
Came English refugees from persecution.
They sought refuge under his loving lea.
Their fate at home bloody execution.

His example shows we can stand aside from worldly ambition.
To make a final and heartfelt rendition.

Tuesday, 31st Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

The first said I have bought land, please accept my apologies.
Another said I have bought oxen, please accept my apologies.
Perhaps we should place less hope in technologies.
And more hope in theologies.

We are late for the feast.
We should have gone.
We would not let it rise, the yeast.
Now we are alone.

The poor, the crippled.
The lame.
Will be there happily pickled.
Our chance has gone after it came.

But in this game we are always allowed to try again.
It never will be entirely broken, hope’s chain.

All Souls, 2020

Their going looked like a disaster.
Their leaving us like annihilation.
We should not see death as our master.
This earth is not the only nation.

Covid has ended our services.
We asked the PM to think again.
His answer to assuage our nervousness.
In four weeks we could like a candle again.

I walked disconsolate to the Cathedral.
To find it socially distanced full and the doors shut.
Inside there were too many people.
It was a blow to my gut.

Well anyway our government will allow us to pray.
Let’s hope we can go to mass again before we go grey.

The Feast of All Saints, 2020

And then I heard how many were sealed.
A hundred and forty four thousand out of all the tribes of Israel.
How is this number revealed.
Is this truth visible or spiritual.

I prefer not to take this literally.
Is it just a convenient mathematical number.
Faith should be taken lyrically.
We all will be woken from death’s slumber.

Happy the pure in heart.
They shall see God.
I prefer to believe, we all have aright to play our part.
All of us have a right in his presence to be awed.

We all have the right to seek his face.
We all have the right to grace.

Saturday, 30th Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

Life to me of course is Christ.
But then death would bring me something more.
My soul is enticed.
After this life I see before me an open door.

Should I welcome death, will it come early or late.
I have a one hundred per cent chance of meeting this rendezvous.
Why then fear Covid with a ninety nine per cent survival rate.
My meeting is anyway overdue.

I see the running stream before me.
In its cool waters I could submerge and soothe my fears.
But I will be patient, I will neither advance nor flee.
Fate will decide as well as passing years.

The gate is there but what lies beyond.
I do not know and never will until I cut this life’s bond.

Friday, 30th Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

Praise me the Lord, I will praise.
In the assembly of the upright and in the congregation.
But why would an almighty God want or need praise.
I may love Him but do I require praise from my beagle or an Alsatian.

How do I know He’s there anyway.
I cannot prove it.
Because I feel good because when in His church I stay.
But that could be some natural trick that the mind may permit.

But this I know, I feel His presence.
I cannot know if He really is there.
To feel the presence I just need patience.
All that is required is prayer.

So do not worry about what you can prove.
Enjoy what you feel and feel the joy move.

Thursday, 30th Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

Grow strong in the Lord with the strength of his power.
Put God’s armour on so as to be able to resist the Devil’s tactics.
Can we hell’s power scour.
Is this reality or mere semantics.

Does hell exist as an entity.
Is the devil just within our own mind.
Are we just one identity.
Or do two forces good and bad grapple forever twined.

Is there a devil seeking our scalp.
Or is this just a figment of our own imagination.
Can we only defeat him with God’s help.
Is it possible to draw any deduction.

Only this do I know that evil exists and I am not alone.
It is only with help that I shall atone.

Wednesday, 30th Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

Jesus went out into the hills to pray.
And he spent the whole night in prayer.
But I forget prayer for much of the busy day.
Business is the snare.

Bed like the hills is a lonely place.
We lie in the stillness of the night.
Alone for a moment enveloped in his grace.
In the long patient wait for morning light.

And now to in this quiet country place.
I idly watch the branch swaying outside the cottage window.
The glass being lightly tapped in an autumn trace.
As restful as night’s pillow.

His prayer led him to call the apostles.
But I do not worry that is only in my own mind that I find disciples.

Tuesday, 30th Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

It is like a mustard seed.
It grew and became a tree.
Faith can sometimes feel like a broken reed.
But give it time and it will grow by gentle degree.

A crisis erupting so close.
My mind swirls, I prayed to Newman.
Immediately a sense unbidden of peace arose.
In a frail ship of peace I now was a crewman.

The seed you don’t have to see.
But it is there growing.
One day, like birds sheltering in the great branches of a tree.
Your fears and doubts there to will be resting.

Meanwhile I cannot do this on my own.
Into the quiet pool of prayer I can just cast my stone.

Monday, 30th Week in Ordinary Time, 2020

His leaf also shall not wither.
And whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.
Beautiful autumn golds come hither.
Your leaves may fall now but in spring you will be all the stronger.

Do not concern yourself with winter’s bare bough.
Live now for autumn splendour.
Think not of feeling good but bring attention back to now.
Do not worry if you do it well, do it anyway, you are no offender.

In the long autumn night I attempted to be in the present.
My mind wandered to future worries, family and work.
I had tried and I had failed and lost the calming scent.
But the task I must not shirk.

Every time I try, I fail.
And then with prayer I repeat the call.