Christmas Celebration

We celebrate in little things
That purify the heart:
The joy that in our families brings
Christ’s blessings to impart.

He came to us in littleness,
A Baby in a crib;
Such power in His gentleness,
For God is never glib–

He speaks in Baby’s still, small voice
And smiles in Mary’s face,
Sees her who for us made her choice
To save the human race.

Mediatrix she becomes,
Stands always by His side;
Has never to our sin succumbed,
For in Him she abides.

Through cross and grave and empty tomb
She follows Father’s Son,
Who lived His life first in her womb
And all our sin undone.

In all the every-after years
We’ll Christmas celebrate,
For He casts out all human fears
As each heart pure He makes.

Expectant Hearts

Our Father’s wisdom here descends
On Holy Spirit’s breath.
His Son begotten will earth mend–
Save us from sin and death.

We eagerly await His birth;
With Mary, Joseph led
To find again our Eden worth–
In Him be raised from dead.

Expectantly our longing hearts
Repent and hope in Him;
From Mary’s womb, our Father’s art
Is seen in Bethlehem.

Come quickly, Lord, that we may be
Of water, Spirit born:
Renewed, adopted, and set free
In You on Christmas morn!

Racism:  What It Is and What It Is Not

    What are we to make of our country’s obsession with “racism”? We are bombarded daily.  It seems to dominate every sphere of public life from politics, to religion, to sports, to education. 

    Race is defined as “a category of humankind that shares certain distinctive physical traits.” There are three major races: Caucasoid, Negroid, and Mongoloid. The most recent United States Census officially recognized five racial categories, listed in order of population numbers:  European American, Black or African American,  Asian American, American Indian/Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander.

   So what is racism? The Oxford Dictionary defines racism as “the unfair treatment of people who belong to a different race.” The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines racism as “a belief that race is a fundamental determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race.”  Can we believe that God created one race superior to another? No, because “God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them” (Gen 1:27).  Can we believe that one race is more sinful than another?  No, that could not be true  “…since all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God”  (Romans 3:23).

    In seeking a common definition for racism and its ramifications, we have found that it is defined from the perspective of whatever group or person is defining it.  Quoting from a sermon by St. Augustine:  “Men are hopeless creatures, and the less they concentrate on their own sins, the more interested they become in the sins of others.  They seek to criticize, not to correct.  Unable to excuse themselves, they are ready to accuse others” (Liturgy of the Hours, Vol. III, Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time).

   According to Fr. Jerry Pokorsky writing in Catholic Culture (2-17-21), a common theme of neo-Marxist critical theory is that “Racism is the oppression of a marginalized group in a society that is based on white supremacy. If you are a white person, then you naturally benefit from white privilege.”  This is the basis for Critical Race Theory (CRT) that is being widely promoted, including in our schools at all levels, beginning in kindergarten. Fr. Pokorsky asks, “How does one repent of one’s whiteness?” He quotes neo-Marxist Black Lives Matter leaders who claim racism “ ‘is everywhere, it’s almost like the air we breathe.’ ”  Many groups and individuals, including some Church leaders, use the word “systemic” to describe racism, meaning that it is ingrained in every aspect of our public and private life. These definitions/descriptions of racism indict every person at every level and aspect of culture for wrongdoing in relation to any person not like ourselves.  In fact, these definitions/descriptions are racist in themselves.

    Fr. Pokorsky says we need “a reasonable, intelligible, comprehensive, non-ideological, and just definition of racism to prevent, literally, the overthrow of Western civilization. At its core, it seems racism might be defined as the hatred of another person because of race. But it is not likely such people hate others because of the color of their skin. They hate people because of patterns of behavior that they associate with the color of their skin.  Consider this provisional working definition of racism. It applies to members of every race and culture: Racism is a state of mind in which a person uses racial characteristics alone to recall, cultivate, and unjustly act upon grievances or fears, real or imagined. By this definition, a sense of superiority may not be the primary motive for racism. Indeed, in the tangled web of human psychology, a sense of inferiority may be a more significant factor.”

    Using Fr. Pakorsky’s working definition, we can distinguish behaviors, decisions, and policies that are and are not racist.  Law enforcement is not racist whether it involves detaining an illegal immigrant at the border, quelling a riot, arresting someone burglarizing a business, or stopping a driver who is endangering the lives of other motorists–regardless of the law breaker’s race or the law enforcer’s race. Exercising our right to free speech is not racist when its intention is to speak the truth and expose wrongdoing, harmful attitudes, and injustices–regardless of the person’s race who is speaking or spoken to. Voter integrity laws requiring a valid ID are not racist.   Behaviors that indicate unreasonable prejudice, disrespect, or disregard for the good of others may be deemed wrong–but they are not inherently racist.  It is a gross error and injustice to label every offensive behavior, decision, and policy as racist.

    On the other hand, there are legitimately racist behaviors, decisions, and policies that we need to recognize, denounce, and correct:  voicing a vicious racial slur is racist; attacking police because they are White or Black is racist; arresting a non-threatening person because of skin color is racist; accusing Whites of being racist because they are White is racist; accusing Blacks of inferiority or cultural violence because they are Black is racist; promoting abortion in low income, predominantly Black neighborhoods is racist. 

    Following the shooting of Michael Brown in 2014, the phrase “stay woke” was used by activists of the Black Lives Matter movement to urge awareness of police abuses, in particular White police against Blacks. This was the beginning of the “woke movement.”  Awareness of abuse is good without regard to the races of those involved. One-sided extremism should be recognized for what it is.

    As Catholic Christians, we must categorically reject the idea being put forth that the first act of sin was the enslavement of Blacks by Whites in the year 1619, for which Whites must perpetually do acts of reparation to Blacks.  In fact, the first act of sin was man’s rebellion against God’s authority. In the book of Genesis we read the story of Eve’s and Adam’s disobedience of God’s command in the Garden of Eden not to eat the fruit of the tree in the midst of the Garden. Tempted by the serpent, Satan, they ate because they wanted to be like God, determining good and evil for themselves (Gen 2:16-3:24). Eve and Adam disobeyed and, therefore, sinned and offended God.  Racism is a sin that is a serious offense against God who created each person in his image with inherent dignity and worth and is a sin against our neighbor. Just as he acted toward our first parents, Satan continues to deceive, confuse, and divide us from God and each other–his primary weapons.

    In an Angelus address in 2001, Pope John Paul II said, “The Second Vatican Council reminds us that ‘We cannot truly pray to God the Father of all if we treat any people in other than brotherly fashion, for all men are created in God’s image…. Therefore, the Church reproves, as foreign to the mind of Christ, any discrimination against people or any persecution of them on the basis of their race, color, social condition or religion’ (Nostra Aetate, 5). To oppose racism we must practice the culture of reciprocal acceptance, recognizing in every man and woman a brother or sister with whom we walk in solidarity and peace. There is need for a vast work of education to the values that exalt the dignity of the human person and safeguard his fundamental rights” (8-26).

      Each of us is called to study and pray for understanding, discernment, wisdom, and courage not to be drawn into a racist mindset ourselves or into the errors of our time regarding racism but, instead, to bring clarity to the issues by witnessing to the truth of Scripture and the teaching of the Church.

Mary, Mother of My Heart


Dear Mary, Mother of my heart,
Come enter me with Father’s Son
That He may to my heart impart
His love for you was first begun
In Garden fair so long ago
As soon as snake lured Eve away
And Father’s love to us He showed
In prophecy of Him, the Way,
For He will knock on my heart’s door
And ask me to invite Him in
So I may human heart adore
Of Him who saves us from our sin,
For human heart from Mary giv’n
Becomes in us the key to heav’n.

ELIJAH’S CHARIOT

Lord, kill in me those prophets false;
I’m on Elijah’s side.
Baal prophets in me contest lost;
They cross that great divide.

Then through their deaths release in me
Your Spirit’s prophet gift,
That with Elisha I may see
Elijah’s chariot lift.

Come, speak through me your prophet’s word,
Through Resurrection known;
Slay Satan with your sure swift sword,
By Spirit’s breath that’s blown.

O, let me speak your charity
For all the world you made;
Your clarity world needs to see
Brought by your Spirit’s blade.

Come, cut us all right to the quick
And show us Natural Law;
Was there before sin made us sick,
As all the prophets saw.

Now birth again that Law you gave
By your Creator’s Word;
In that New Birth your world you save
through Jesus Christ, our Lord.

Give all baptized your prophet gift
That with Elijah we
May chariot ride to heaven, lift
All Eden there to thee.

AROMA SWEET

Lord, burn in us your own incense,
And breathe o’er all the earth
Aroma of your recompense
Through our Messiah’s birth.

May your aroma cover earth
As we, your censer, swing.
Come, burn our hearts on heaven’s hearth,
From chariot we sing. 

For we all take Elijah’s side,
Our false gods doomed to fail;
With him to heaven, we now ride,
Forsaken all our baals.

From chariot your incense pours,
That chariot called Church.
You’re healing all our Lazarus sores;
We throw away earth’s crutch,

Join Abraham and Lazarus
By heaven’s cooling stream.
The same aroma comes to us
That we knew in earth’s dream.

All earth now is your incense pot,
We all breathe heaven’s air;
No longer are creation’s blot–
All rise to heaven fair.

Our sins and Satan both now choke
On our aroma sweet;
Aroma is salvation’s cloak,
As round your throne we meet.

ANGER AND THE CROSS

This willful anger in my heart now tears
The hearts of others who for me so care;
But heart of mine is captured by that snare
Of Satan who lured me into his lair. 
To enter lair was my free choice to make
At first, but now that habit deep within,
Beyond my power by my choice to break,
For I am now a slave to that vile sin.
My being held together by that hate-
Infected heart, which Cross alone can clean,
Make new again; I hope it’s not too late
To call on Him to me from anger wean. 
Come, Jesus, nurse me on your one True Vine;
Make my heart clean by your true Blood-Red Wine

YOUR FATHERHOOD

Lord, take me in your Fatherhood
That I may father be,
A husband to my own wife good,
Raise children all for Thee.

Please, let my work outside the home
Serve those who dwell within.
At work I’m same to all who come,
At home I’m many men:

A lover to my lovely wife,
A hero to my child,
A wise man holding key to life,
A daddy, gentle, mild,

A champion in little things,
Courageous facing fear;
A man whose voice with truth will ring,
Forgiving all those near,

A tiger with a tender heart,
A lion never tame,
A man who must play many parts,
But father all the same.

A husband, father is the one
You’ve formed me so to be
Through grace that’s given through your Son,
That I may live for Thee. 

SPIRIT POUR

Lord, open heaven, please come tear
That curtain, Spirit pour;
Send Noah’s Dove to all us here,
As Father we adore.

Come, make us one with your One Son;
We’re baptized in His Blood.
That Blood with Spirit’s waters one;
We’re plunged beneath that flood.

Wash all of us o’re this good earth
With all Your Spirit’s gifts;
May earth now know your joy, new birth,
As sin from Eden lifts.

We cling to you, your passion share,
You die on Cross within.
On our old bodies your marks bare;
they make us free from sin.

We lay with you in your dark grave,
Now wrapped in swaddling clothes.
We rise with you, from our sin saved–
We bloom like Sharon’s Rose. 

Now, grafted into your True Vine,
Your Body here below.
Through us to earth flows Blood-Red Wine–
Now all salvation know. 

Then like Elijah we all ride
On chariot we’re driv’n,
With Mary, meet at Jesus’ side,
Ride Spirit’s Ark to heav’n.

PRAISE IN MANY TONGUES

We praise you, Lord, in many tongues
But all in Jesus’ name;
You climb down Jacob’s ladder’s rungs:
To all of us you came.

A special word to each one speaks,
Strikes deep within each chest,
And strengthens every heart that’s weak
To bring forth all God’s best.

Your image once defiled by Eve
Passed down through human race,
Through Mary’s “yes” we, too, receive
Begotten’s sinless face.

For in each face we all now see
Our Savior looking back–
A person for eternity
And each will nothing lack.

Each person an unequaled branch
Sprouts from Christ’s living Vine,
Wound all together in His Church–
All drink His Bloody Wine.

And when we wake from Jacob’s dream,
God’s angels still are there,
For we have crossed that Jordan stream,
And we breathe heaven’s air.