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Holy Name Monastery
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St. Francis

Have Faith If You Move the Pebble, God Will Move the Mountain

October 3, 2022 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

When Jesus’ disciples plead for an increase in faith, He offers them two related teachings.  First is the familiar reminder that a teeny touch of faith, smaller even than the black seeds we’ve seen lately in Dragon fruit, will enable us to do wondrous things. This uplifting and inspiring teaching is quickly followed by a caution about knowing one’s place in God’s plan. When God works wonders through us, with our miniscule seed-sized faith, we must be mindful that our participation in God’s plan is God’s grace to us—nothing more, nothing less.

On Tuesday, we will celebrate the feast of St. Francis, so I want to tell you a St. Francis story – maybe only a partial truth.  This is the story of St. Francis and the Sultan Al-Kamil that took place during the Fifth Crusade.  His pilgrimage took Francis across the battle lines in ancient Egypt where he was immediately captured and brought before the Sultan. According to some versions of the story, he challenged the Muslim clerics to a trial by fire.  He proposed that both he and they would preach from the heart of a bonfire. Whoever was not burned alive would be the one who was preaching the true God. The Muslim clerics declined the challenge. Francis then offered to go into the fire by himself, with the proviso that if he was not burned up the Sultan and all his followers would convert to Christianity. The Sultan did not take Francis up on this offer.

Whether or not that story’s true, it is known that Francis preached to the Sultan and his household.  They were so impressed by Francis that the Sultan offered him numerous gifts — which Francis refused — and gave Francis and his companions safe conduct back to the Crusader camp.  When in time the Crusader Kingdoms fell, the Muslim rulers specifically granted permission to Franciscans to tend the Christian holy sites in the Holy Land. In fact, this arrangement persists to this day.  There is a Catholic office called “Custodian of the Holy Land,” and it is always held by a Franciscan.  All this happened because of that one visit between St. Francis and the Sultan.

Jesus says, “If you had faith the size of a mustard seed, you could say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be uprooted and planted in the sea,’ and it would obey you.”  St. Francis acted out of this spirit of courage and faith when he crossed the battle lines into Egypt. He had no idea what would happen to him.  At the very least he had every reason to expect to be taken prisoner.  Afterward, he doubtless thought his mission had failed. But — he had made a connection — a moment of authentic human connection, two people meeting each other face to face — that has had consequences to this very day – over 800 years!

The world is full of people who are divided from us, even opposed to us — because of religion, or nationality, or ethnicity, or political views, or any of a thousand things. God calls us to reach out to these people in a spirit of courage and love, unashamed of our testimony about our Lord and our mission, our way of life.  We may not convince them — we may not bring them around to our point of view. We may not even make peace. The world being what it is, the odds are against it.

In an interview shortly after his election, Pope Francis advised us: “Instead of being just a church that welcomes and receives by keeping the doors open, let us try also to be a church that finds new roads, that is able to step outside itself.”  Sounding like his patron Francis, he says: “We need to proclaim the Gospel on every street corner, preaching the good news of the kingdom and healing…   focusing on the essentials.  We have to find a new balance; otherwise, we will lose the freshness and fragrance of the Gospel.”

The big problems in the world — hunger, war, religious conflict, and so on — often seem to loom too big for us. Maybe they are. But we have to have faith that if we move the pebble, then God will move the mountain.  A Sufi story tells of disciples who were despairing because their leader was about to die.  They asked him, “If you leave us, Master, how will we know what to do?”  The master replied, “I am nothing but a finger pointing at the moon.  Perhaps when I am gone you will see the moon.”

 

~by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

Update on IAN at the monastery.  

We faired very well ..  there is evidence of damage and power outages all around us.

We suffered only downed branches and a couple dumped over plants.

The most serious, but minor in comparison is a fence gate …

 

We welcomed 13 shelter seekers to join us. 

God is good to us!  Prayed you fared as well and clean up is minimal.  

 

 

First Reading  Habakkuk 1:2-3; 2;2-4     
Second Reading  2 Timothy 1:6-8, 13-14
Gospel Reading  Luke 17:5-10
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: God, God will move the Mountain, Have Faith, Have Faith If you move the pebble, Jesus, St. Francis, Sultan Al-Kamil

Daily Noon Prayer for Peace

January 20, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery 1 Comment

Daily Noon Prayer for Peace

Pax Christi Florida invites all members and friends to join in a prayer at noon, from inauguration week through Easter.

We pray for the healing of our nation.

Peace Prayer of St. Francis

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace:
where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy.

O divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console,
to be understood as to understand,
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen.

 

~Article from Pax Christi, Florida which is a regional section of Pax Christi USA

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Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: Daily noon prayer for peace, Easter, Faith, healing of our nation, Hope, inauguration, love, Noon prayer, Pax Christi, Peace, St. Francis

A Little Trivia to Help Focus Prayer

October 6, 2020 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

A LITTLE TRIVIA to HELP FOCUS PRAYER

October 4 is the feast of Saint Francis of Assisi and Saint Faustina whose name is forever linked to the feast of the Divine Mercy.  It is also Fire Fighters Memorial Day and Respect Life Sunday.  In the past month we experienced the Fall Equinox, when the sun slipped over that imaginary line we called the equator and the sun appears to be moving southward.  Also, in the past month, the church celebrated the Fall Ember days – the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday following the feast of the Holy Cross.  Ember Days were placed at the beginning of the traditional four seasons of the year for fasting, abstinence, and prayer to thank God for the gifts of nature and to bless the Fall crops.  They were intended to teach us to exercise moderation in our consumption of the fruits of the fields and to come to the aid of the needy.  Knowing this, we can begin to see the prudence of the liturgical commission in placing the “farmer” parables right now in cycle of readings.

This particular Gospel invites us once again to focus on agriculture – a familiar topic here in Florida.  A little information (trivia?) in hopes it will help you realize the magnitude of a problem and the importance of the farming industry.  In the latest statistics Google could find for me, 2017, Florida ranked first in the U.S. in value of production of cucumbers, grapefruit, tangerines and tangelos, oranges, squash, sugarcane, snap beans, and tomatoes.  The state ranks second in production of bell peppers, strawberries, watermelons, cabbage and sweet corn.  At that time (in 2017), Florida had 47,000 commercial farms and ranches, using a total of 9.5 million acres of land.  Aquaponics and hydroponic farming are both on the rise in Florida with the Google map showing 20 licensed farms across central Florida.  (Readers can go to our website to read about the Benedictine Sisters program coordinated by Sister Miriam Cosgrove.  See www.benedictinesistersoffl.org)

I can see your wheels turning …  “So, what is your point?”  Well, maybe you’ve noticed that this is the third Sunday in a row that Jesus and Matthew have shared parables calling our attention to tilling the earth: the mustard seed, vineyards, lazy workers, late hires, wishy-washy sons, disappointed overseers and generous owners.  We are invited to consider the difference in attitude between tenants and owners; sons and indentured servants; wise waiting for growth and rash action to weed out suspected imperfection.

We, here in fertile, though sometimes drought ridden, Pasco County can help us empathize with the farmers and ranchers in the fire-ravaged areas in California and the far west.  Also, sense the feelings of desolation and devastation of farmers in the mid-West as they stand overwhelmed (once again) and survey their flooded acres and acres of lost crops.  How do the people of India – second largest producer of wheat and rice, the world’s major food staples, recover when their prospect of annual income is washed away by the monsoons and the gushing waters from the dams that were opened upstream, miles away?  And what are the ripple effects in our country and throughout the world?

How is it in the richest country in the world we see food sacristy and insecurity?  Before the pandemic, in the U.S. more than 35 million people, including 10 million children, suffered from food insecurity, meaning they have uncertain access to enough food to support a healthy life.  Since the pandemic began more than 54 million people, including 18 million children, are experiencing food insecurity.  Insufficient income, due to loss of employment and low wages, is a major cause of food insecurity.  “Food deserts” are also a problem …  lack of nearby food markets – and lack of transportation to food stores – especially for persons who are home bound or are not on public bus routes.  Couple that with schools that are closed or families who choose to have virtual classes for their children.

Let’s look at our “back yard” here in Pasco County.  54% (or 42,000) of the children (in Pasco County) are eligible to receive free or reduced meals at school.  Agencies and churches strive to staunch the tide of hunger and “fill tummies”:  Daystar, Meals on Wheels, Pasco Feed, Suncoast, Homeless Ministries, Feeding Tampa Bay, others.  There must be times when these volunteers feel like they are putting a finger in the dike only to watch another crack appear.  Fear and anxiety weigh heavy on many: will their food stamps be cut off, will they lose rent subsidies, “my children – what will they eat tomorrow.”

The problem is HUGE.  What can we do?  More specifically, what can I do?  Some simple things – (maybe they even sound simplistic) –

+ Be grateful for what we have; make do with what is available

+ Be conservative in purchasing; be patient when supplies run out

+ And, yes, pray!  There is a saying, “When all else fails, pray.”  But let’s don’t wait for “all else to fail” – pray for wisdom and discernment; examine where election candidates stand on issues – not just what they are saying, but what is their record, what are their actions telling you?  Don’t be complacent or fail to exercise your right to vote.  Be wise voters.

In Proverbs (4:6-7) we read: “Do not forsake wisdom, and she will protect you; love her, and she will watch over you.  Wisdom is supreme; therefore, get wisdom.  Though it cost all you have, get understanding.”  We just celebrated our Guardian Angels (October 2nd) – call on yours for the gift of wisdom.

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress

 

1st Reading: Isaiah 5:1-2            2nd Reading: Philippians 4:6-9        Gospel: Matthew 21:33-43

 

 

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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Angels, Fall Embers Day, Firefirgters Memorial Day, food pantries, pandemic, Respect Life Sunday, St. Faustina, St. Francis

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