Month: November 2008

Fathers, PNCC

November 25 – St. John Chrysostom

Do you feel upset when you drop a plate or a pot, and it smashes into tiny pieces on the ground? Do you feel anxious when a strong wind is blowing, and you can hear the tiles on your roof coming loose? Do you feel worried about the crops in your field when it rains so hard that the ground is flooded? Do you feel frightened at night when you hear a door click or squeak, wondering if robbers have come to steal your goods? To feel those things is quite normal. Yet the challenge of our faith is that we become so indifferent to material possessions that nothing of this kind can concern us. Of course while we remain on this earth, we must have plates on which to serve our food, roofs above our heads to keep us dry, crops growing in the fields to feed us, and some basic pieces of furniture in our homes. But if we work hard day by day to the best of our abilities, we can be sure that God will provide what we need. And if something is broken, lost, or stolen, God will decide if and when to replace it.

Poland - Polish - Polonia, ,

The Cosmopolitan Review – integrating roots and history into life

The Cosmopolitan Review is a new journal from the organizers and alumni of the Poland in the Rockies program. I encourage you to check it out. The following is a quote from the introduction to the first edition:

People tend to unite at times of crisis. We just have to look at the high voter turnout for the last American elections and Barack Obama’s landslide victory for proof. Poles are no exception to this paradigm of uniting during times of crisis, and our history is telling of that.

The idea for the cosmopolitan review came at a time of questioning whether the Poland in the Rockies program would continue existing. Organizers and certain alumni alike wondered whether such immense organizational efforts could be sustained without deeper alumni involvement. Spending 11 days in the Canadian Rockies learning about Polish history, culture and politics is great, but what next? How could we keep the spirit of Poland in the Rockies alive between installments of the program?

As I brainstormed ideas with Irene Tomaszewski, program director of Poland in the Rockies, and Judith Browne, a 2008 alumna, we realized that PitR alumni are actually doing a lot. But since we are spread out all over North America and Europe, it can be challenging to keep up with all of this motion. The idea of a newsletter, which then evolved into a review, was thus born.

From Chicago, Montreal, to Toronto, Edmonton and Halifax, PitR alumni are keeping busy organizing movie screening tours, plays, conferences, as well as radio and television interviews related to things Polish. the cosmopolitan review will not only keep you up-to-date on these events, it will also feature book reviews, news analysis, interviews with academics and commentary from a Polish-American and Polish-Canadian perspective.

What made PitR so special was not only the high caliber of speakers, but also the quality and diversity of students and young professionals attending the program. They are leaders in their respective professional and academic fields of activities, and some of them are introduced in this first issue of the cosmopolitan review: emerging musician Nina Jankowicz from Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania; Halifax-based filmmaker Eric Bednarski; Dominic Roszak from Ottawa, an actor in Canadian politics; South African writer Judith Browne; Jodi Greig, a polonophile studying in Krakow; Justine Jabłońska, editor-in-chief & project manager of som.com, Marek Broniewski, an Albertan currently studying at the London School of Economics; Agnieszka Macoch, a history graduate from Chicago; Patrycja Romanowska, a columnist from Edmonton; and Vincent Chesney, a Philadelphia-based psychologist. Let’s not forget about Antoni and Jan Kowalczewski from Edmonton: without them, CR wouldn’t be online.

These individuals are part of a valuable and growing network of dynamic individuals. Such a network is not an option in a globalized world, but a necessity.

In this first edition, we also have the pleasure of featuring an account by historian Norman Davies, a comment by former foreign correspondent and editor for Newsweek and current director of public policy of the EastWest Institute Andrew Nagorski, and a portion of an interview with Polish-English translator Bill Johnston, all three Poland in the Rockies speakers; as well as an interview with Timothy Snyder, an American professor of history at Yale specializing in Central and Eastern Europe, whom we’d love to have at the program in the future.

As Snyder told me during an interview after a lecture at the College of Europe in Natolin, Warsaw, there is currently a great opportunity for Poland to turn Polish historical scholarship and historical consciousness into European historical consciousness and scholarship. Poland would win a great victory if Polish history could be integrated in European history. I will add: to North American history as well.

So, how are you going to integrate your roots and your history into your mainstream North American and European lives?

The PitR alumni network is yours. So is the cosmopolitan review. Take advantage of it. Expand it beyond the borders of PitR: contributions won’t be limited to its participants.

I believe in education and I believe in the value of programs like Poland in the Rockies. CR is a reflection of that. It was born in times of double crisis: one of identity, one of economics. In face of these crises, let’s unite. Let’s cultivate our network, and take advantage of it…

In my estimation this effort goes far beyond ‘identity politics’ to identity. In a world of competing influences, competing intellectual, political, and religious allegiances, we need programs, journals, and intellectual exploration such as that presented in The Cosmopolitan Review. These efforts ground us. They are a touchstone in a sea of confusion, a touchstone that Bishop Hodur would easily recognize. We are one people as a diamond is one. We are multifaceted as is the diamond. Those facets bring out the brilliance that is within. Those facets are the cultures of the world and particularly those that espouse humanity – the humanity we all long for.

LifeStream

Daily Digest for 2008-11-24

blog (feed #1) 10:56pm November 24 – St. John Chrysostom
twitter (feed #4) 10:56pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: November 24 – St. John Chrysostom http://tinyurl.com/5la6tk
googlereader (feed #5) 9:16am Shared a link on Google Reader.

blog (feed #1) 2:24pm The Cosmopolitan Review – integrating roots and history into life
twitter (feed #4) 2:24pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: The Cosmopolitan Review – integrating roots and history into life http://tinyurl.com/5w85kl
blog (feed #1) 2:39pm November 25 – St. John Chrysostom
twitter (feed #4) 2:39pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: November 25 – St. John Chrysostom http://tinyurl.com/66thyx
Fathers, PNCC

November 24 – St. John Chrysostom

Share what you have, lest you lose what you have. Spend what you possess on the needs of others in order to keep what you possess. Do not cling to what you own, lest it be taken away from you. Do not hoard your treasures, lest they rot and become worthless. Entrust all your wealth to God, because then it is protected against all who want to steal or destroy it. Do you understand what these injunctions mean? Or do they sound like nonsense to you? To the person without faith, they mean nothing. But to the person with faith, they make perfect sense. Faith tells us that God alone can supply the material things on which we depend. He gives some people more than they need, not that they can enjoy great luxury, but to make them stewards of his bounty on behalf of orphans, the sick, and the crippled. If they are bad stewards, keeping this bounty to themselves, they will become poor in spirit, and their hearts will fill with misery. If they are good stewards, they will become rich in spirit, their hearts filling with joy.

Fathers, PNCC

November 23 – St. John Chrysostom from Homilies on Matthew

And everything will help to render that day fearful. Then, “shall be gathered together,” He says, “all nations,” that is, the whole race of men. “And He shall separate them one from another, as the shepherd his sheep.” For now they are not separated, but all mingled together, but the division then shall be made with all exactness. And for a while it is by their place that He divides them, and makes them manifest; afterwards by the names He indicates the dispositions of each, calling the one kids, the other sheep, that He might indicate the unfruitfulness of the one, for no fruit will come from kids; and the great profit from the other, for indeed from sheep great is the profit, as well from the milk, as from the wool, and from the young, of all which things the kid is destitute.

But while the brutes have from nature their unfruitfulness, and fruitfulness, these have it from choice, wherefore some are punished, and the others crowned. And He does not punish them, until He has pleaded with them; wherefore also, when He has put them in their place, He mentions the charges against them. And they speak with meekness, but they have no advantage from it now; and very reasonably, because they passed by a work so much to be desired. For indeed the prophets are everywhere saying this, “I will have mercy and not sacrifice,” and the lawgiver by all means urged them to this, both by words, and by works; and nature herself taught it.

But mark them, how they are destitute not of one or two things only, but of all. For not only did they fail to feed the hungry, or clothe the naked; but not even did they visit the sick, which was an easier thing.

And mark how easy are His injunctions. He said not, “I was in prison, and you set me free; I was sick, and you raised me up again;” but, “ye visited me,” and, “ye came unto me.” And neither in hunger is the thing commanded grievous. For no costly table did He seek, but what is needful only, and His necessary food, and He sought in a suppliant’s garb, so that all things were enough to bring punishment on them; the easiness of the request, for it was bread; the pitiable character of Him that requests, for He was poor; the sympathy of nature, for He was a man; the desirableness of the promise, for He promised a kingdom; the fearfulness of the punishment, for He threatened hell. The dignity of the one receiving, for it was God, who was receiving by the poor; the surpassing nature of the honor, that He vouchsafed to condescend so far; His just claim for what they bestowed, for of His own was He receiving. But against all these things covetousness once for all blinded them that were seized by it; and this though so great a threat was set against it.

For further back also He says, that they who receive not such as these shall suffer more grievous things than Sodom; and here He says, “Inasmuch as you did it not unto one of the least of these my brethren, you did it not unto me.” What sayest Thou? they are Your brethren; and how dost Thou call them least. Why, for this reason they are brethren, because they are lowly, because they are poor, because they are outcast. For such does He most invite to brotherhood, the unknown, the contemptible, not meaning by these the monks only, and them that have occupied the mountains, but every believer; though he be a secular person, yet if he be hungry, and famishing, and naked, and a stranger, His will is he should have the benefit of all this care. For baptism renders a man a brother, and the partaking of the divine mysteries. — Homily on Matthew XXV.

LifeStream

Daily Digest for 2008-11-22

blog (feed #1) 2:25am November 22 – St. Aphrahat from Demonstration II: On Love
twitter (feed #4) 2:25am Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: November 22 – St. Aphrahat from Demonstration II: On Love http://tinyurl.com/62tbxb
blog (feed #1) 2:35am Our newest priest
twitter (feed #4) 2:35am Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Our newest priest http://tinyurl.com/5p2bpn
blog (feed #1) 3:40am Solemnity of Christ the King
twitter (feed #4) 3:40am Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Solemnity of Christ the King http://tinyurl.com/6htdus
lastfm (feed #3) 11:11am Scrobbled 4 songs on Last.fm. (Show Details)

googlereader (feed #5) 1:09pm Shared 3 links on Google Reader. (Show Details)

blog (feed #1) 2:01pm November 23 – St. John Chrysostom from Homilies on Matthew
Homilies,

Solemnity of Christ the King

First reading: Ezekiel 34:11-12,15-17
Psalm: Ps 23:1-3,5,6
Epistle: 1 Corinthians 15:20-26,28
Gospel: Matthew 25:31-46

For I was hungry and you gave me food

I have a question. Where does bread come from?

Our answers are certainly correct. Bread comes from Freihoffers, another bakery, Mr. Meyers around the corner, from mom or dad, from the gifts of the earth, from farmers who plant, grow, and harvest the wheat, and rye, and oats, and flax. Perhaps we should consider the miller, the store clerks, the delivery people, an entire litany of people and places that have a hand in the making of bread —“ from seed to our tables.

It is a natural instinct to see things as they are, to digest the evidence that’s in front of us and report on it.

Today we are confronted with truth —“ a truth we discern through the eyes of faith. Our bread comes from God. Our bread comes from the King.

Let’s consider that. We get our bread from the King. More than bread we receive all we need from God. This is best summed up in the words of Psalm 23:

The Lord is my shepherd; there is nothing I shall want.

The King provides bread for us.

God is different than human government, and more so, He is a King that loves, cares for, and looks after His flock. God provides for us, giving us bread beyond the bread that feeds our mortal bodies. Ezekiel saw that in telling us that God will look after and tend us, He will feed us, He will give us rest, He will bring back the lost and the strayed, He will bind up the injured and heal the sick.

What an amazing concept. What an awesome King is our Lord, caring for us, looking after all that we need.

Brothers and sisters,

When we say that God gives us bread that goes beyond our bodily needs we understand that His food is more than what we put on our plates each day, more than the stuff needed for peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. He gives us three essential things: His Kingship, His Word, and our daily bread.

Of course God is responsible for our daily bread. We pray that every time we say the Our Father. His gifts, the skills we have been endowed with, the balance and perfection in nature, all come from the hand of God. He sees to our needs. Jesus showed this in the way He cared for the everyday needs of those around Him. This was exemplified when He fed the multitudes, when He showed compassion for the sorrowful and the sick. Jesus also spoke of the Father’s watchful eye, comparing the creatures and fields under God’s care to the greater love He shows toward us:

Look at the birds of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they?
Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they neither toil nor spin;
yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you?

God gives us more than the bread we need for daily life, He gives us the Word – which is necessary for eternal life. By endowing us with His Gospel God provides us with the measuring stick by which we are judge the rightness of our relationship with Him and our neighbor. By giving us His word He gives us the very thing we need to carry out His mandate. We take up that word as bread for our daily lives and as food for our relationships.

In the end God gives us His kingship, but in a most remarkable way. He comes to us as the servant King, the King who is Priest and Sacrifice. God gives us His Son, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

We can have our daily bread – the basics we need to live. We can have God’s word, and live by it, yet even with all that our King had to crush our bondage to sin, to eternal death.

God’s overwhelming love moved Him to intervention in the history of man. He wanted us to know that life was more than the evidence that is in front of us. He wanted us to see and know the eternal, to know Him, so He chose to break down the enmity we create through sin. He sent His Son to show the Father’s love, to overcome sin and to destroy death. In the end we gained a new beginning – Jesus opened the doors to the heavenly kingdom. St. Paul reminds us of this when he says:

Christ has been raised from the dead,
the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.
For since death came through man,
the resurrection of the dead came also through man.
For just as in Adam all die,
so too in Christ shall all be brought to life

Our King provides for all that we need, and best of all He gives us His very presence, His life, and the gift of eternal glory. In turn we honor and praise Him with due worship and adoration.

My friends,

Worship and adoration for the King translates into action. It is key that we see to the needs of our brothers and sisters, who, along with us, are provided for by God. God provides for them through us, and He makes no separation between their dignity and value and our dignity and value. In the simplest terms we are to feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, welcome the stranger, clothe the naked, care for the ill, and visit those in prison. When we do that we recognize the King who gives bread to each of us, who gives His word to all mankind, and Who saves us.

Jesus tells us :

‘Amen, I say to you, whatever you did
for one of the least brothers of mine, you did for me.’

The King is with us and in us. He is the giver and the recipient. May we give Him praise and thanksgiving, may we serve Him in serving the least among us. Amen.

PNCC,

Our newest priest

We pray that the Lord will grant Fr. Egan wisdom, love, and peace as he begins his new service at the Blessed Virgin Mary of Czestochowa Parish in Latham, NY

The work of the priesthood is done on earth, but it is ranked among heavenly ordinances. And this is only right, for no man, no angel, no archangel, no other created power, but the Paraclete Himself ordained this succession, and persuaded men, while still remaining in the flesh to represent the ministry of angels. — St. John Chrysostom, On the Priesthood.

Fathers, PNCC

November 22 – St. Aphrahat from Demonstration II: On Love

Now, beloved, all these things have I written to thee because in what was said before, that is in the former discourse concerning faith, I have shown thee that in faith may be placed the foundation of this covenant in which we are established; and in this second discourse which I have written to thee I have reminded thee that all the law and the prophets depend upon two commandments, those which our Savior spoke, and in these two commandments are included all the law and the prophets. And in the law faith is included, and by faith true love is established, which is from those two commandments, that after a man loves the Lord his God he shall cherish his neighbor as himself.

Now hear, beloved, concerning the love which is produced from those two commandments. For when our Life-giver came He showed the eagerness of love, for He said to His disciples: “This is My commandment that ye love one another.” And again He said to them: “A new commandment I give you, that ye love one another.” And again, when making clear concerning love, thus He warned them: “Love your enemies, and bless him who curses you; pray for those who deal hardly with you and persecute you.” And this again He said to them: “If ye love him who loves you what is your reward? For if thou lovest him who loves thee thus also do the Gentiles, who loves them they love him.” Again our Life-giver said: “If ye do good to him who does good unto you what is your reward? thus also do the publicans and sinners. But ye, because ye are called sons of God who is in heaven, be ye like Him who showeth mercy also upon those who renounce goodness.” Again our Saviour said: “Forgive, and it shall be forgiven you; loose, and ye shall loosed; give, and it shall be given you.” Again He spoke and put fear in us: “Unless ye forgive men who sin against you their sins, neither will the Father forgive you.” For thus He warned and said: “If thy brother shall sin against thee, forgive him; and even if he shall sin against thee seven times in one day, forgive him.