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The ‘Feast of Holy Innocents’ Two Weeks After the Newtown Massacre

Posted in Huffington Post with tags , , , , , , on December 28, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

newtown25n-2-webThis reflection originally appeared on The Huffington Post religion page on 28 December 2012.

Exactly two weeks, to the day, after the tragic slaying of twenty schoolchildren and the six adults who sought to protect them, several Christian communities (Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Lutherans) celebrate the annual “Feast of the Holy Innocents,” a memorial which appears on the liturgical calendar each year on December 28. This feast is also celebrated by the Syrian Christian communities (Syriac Orthodox, Syro-Malankara Catholics, Maronites, and Syro-Malabar Catholics) on the December 27, while the Eastern Orthodox Church celebrates this day on December 29.

The feast day is a solemn and challenging liturgical remembrance that calls to mind the command of King Herod of Judea who, as the tradition has it, was infuriated that the magi from the East did not return to him after visiting the infant Jesus to tell him the newborn’s location, and fearing his power was threatened by the birth of this child, “ordered the massacre of all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity who were two years old and under” (Matt 2:16).

The day is celebrated as a remembrance of martyrs, and is sometimes viewed as the commemoration of the “first martyrs” for these little babies and toddlers lost their lives, some would say, “for Christ.” Yet, this is not at all a satisfactory explanation.

The senseless murder of children can never be justified, even in an attempt simply to make sense of such a tragedy. This is one of the reasons why this annual memorial is so difficult and challenging, made more incomprehensible in light of the massacre at an elementary school in Newtown, CT two weeks earlier.

My own response to requests for understand and meaning of such tragedies is echoed succinctly in a quote by Rev. Kevin O’Neil, C.S.s.R., one of my former ethics professors, in a New York Times column earlier this week:

I will never satisfactorily answer the question “Why?” because no matter what response I give, it will always fall short. What I do know is that an unconditionally loving presence soothes broken hearts, binds up wounds, and renews us in life. This is a gift that we can all give, particularly to the suffering. When this gift is given, God’s love is present and Christmas happens daily.

This notion of God as the answer to the suffering that is so tragic, so senseless, so unbearable might help us to appreciate better why the Feast of the Holy Innocents occurs three days after Christmas. As I wrote here in The Huffington Post earlier this week, Christmas is more than one day — it is an entire liturgical season that begins at Christmas Eve and continues through the Baptism of the Lord, weeks later.

The Feast of the Holy Innocents is a Christmas memorial, a moment to pause amid the ostensible joy and cheer of the season of the birth of the child who is Emmanuel to recall the death of children whose lives were senselessly taken away.

One way to look at this feast day is to consider how, by its placement on the calendar and its proximity to the celebration of the coming of Christ, it is as an opportunity to reflect on the way in which God is not absent from the tragedies of suffering and death in our world. As Christians, we believe that God became human like us and lived among us. Over the course of Jesus’s life, he laughed and cried, he celebrated and mourned, and he understood what it meant to suffer. Crying at the death of a friend and embracing the voiceless, the marginalized, and the poor throughout his earthly life, Jesus Christ knew as well as any of us what it means to suffer and to lose.

But Jesus Christ, the Emmanuel (God-with-us) is also the sign, not just of God’s empathetic experience of suffering and loss in our world, but of the answer and model for response. As Fr. O’Neil also said in that Times column: “One true thing is this: Faith is lived in family and community, and God is experienced in family and community. We need one another to be God’s presence.”

Amid the suffering and loss in our world, it is you and I who, like Jesus Christ before us, offer both the empathetic tears of sincere compassion and the loving embrace and support for neighbor that God calls us to offer. As St. Teresa of Avila famously put it another way:

Christ has no body now on earth but yours, no hands but yours, no feet but yours, yours are the eyes through which Christ’s compassion is to look out to the earth, yours are the feet by which He is to go about doing good and yours are the hands by which He is to bless us now.

It falls to us to be “instruments of God’s peace,” as the famous prayer attributed to St. Francis’s memory reminds us. But being the hands and feet of Christ to those who suffer or are mourning cannot just be limited to our immediate communities.

What happened two weeks ago in Newtown, CT was particularly shocking to a world that considered such locations – an elementary school in an affluent Connecticut town (according to US Census data, the median income is over $100,000 and the poverty rate is under 3.0%) – to be safe and secure. However, the slaughtering of innocent children occurs everyday in neighborhoods and in cities all over the United States. I only have to think of a few of the cities in which I’ve lived in the last ten years (The Bronx, Wilmington, DE, Washington DC, for example) to recall how gun-related violence scars the lives of children and families on a daily basis.

The slaughtering of holy innocents occurs in so many other places throughout our world, every minute of every day: the children in Afghanistan and Iraq that have suffered the effects of war, oftentimes because of the United States’s interventions; the children of Pakistan, whose lives are shrouded by the fear of silent and lethal drones that fly overheard; the children of Syria, whose world is currently punctuated by a civil war; the children of Uganda, who were forced to be instruments of violence as child soldiers; and the hundreds of other places in our world where the Feast of Holy Innocents reflects the dark reality that so infrequently makes the headlines or the cable-news reports.

This is not to undermine or attempt to mitigate the true suffering and horror of the massacre in Newtown, but rather a call to get us to think about how the meaning of a Christian feast day, macabre though it may appear, might provide us with the opportunity to reevaluate our lives, our laws, and the way we strive to be Christ for others.

Our hearts continue to ache at the thought of young lives taken away, of futures extinguished. Yet, our hope rests in the truth that God is not absent or disinterested in our suffering, our loss, and our mourning. God looks to us to be the instruments of divine peace in this world, the hands and feet, the hearts and voices of the Prince of Peace who invites us to follow Him.

Christmas, the celebration of God-with-us, does indeed continue amid the tragedies of our world, but only insofar as we are able to open our eyes to see the suffering and murder of the holy innocents all over our world, and do something about it.

To view more of Daniel P. Horan, OFM’s Huffington Post articles, visit his author page here.

Photo: Rueters

Christmas Has Only Just Begun!

Posted in Huffington Post, Uncategorized with tags , , , on December 25, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

christmas-nativityThis reflection originally appeared in The Huffington Post on Christmas Eve 2012.

Christmas is much more than a one-day event.

While many people are familiar with the multi-week length of liturgical seasons throughout the Christian calendar — Ordinary Time, Advent and Lent, for example — few realize that Christmas is not just the celebration of the Nativity on Dec. 25 each year. Christmas is a full liturgical season that spans from Christmas Eve through Epiphany and ends, at least in the Roman Catholic Church, on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord (Jan. 13 this year).

During the Christmas Season (sometimes called “Christmastide”) several other important feast days are celebrated, including the Feast of the Holy Innocents (Dec. 28), the Feast of the Holy Family (Dec. 30 this year), the Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord (Jan. 6 this year), and the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord. In some churches, the celebration of the Christmas season can extend to as late as the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord on Feb. 2, which brings the season to a full 40 days! Each of these moments marks an important event in the Christian narrative and in the life of the church.

It is interesting that our consumer culture has seen an opportunity to extend Christmas with an exceptionally early start to the marketing of Christmas-related products, decorations, candy and music. However, this move — “beginning Christmas” as early as October — is both redundant and a reversal of the proper season. Christmas is already long enough, but it requires that we celebrate the patient yet attentive waiting of the Advent Season first.

For those who think Christmas is anticlimactic after the months of shopping, prepping and holiday anxiety, the real good news of Christmas extends beyond the birth of the Savior to include an appropriately joyful and reflective season dedicated to pondering these mysteries.

On Dec. 21, 1962 the renowned German theologian Karl Rahner wrote a guest editorial in the weekly paper, Die Zeit, in which he offered some reflections on the celebration of Christmas and the season that bears its name. After observing that Christmas can oftentimes feel like a disappointment after such cultural buildup, Rahner wrote:

Yet the mystery still permeates our existence and repeatedly forces us to look at it: in the joy that is no longer aware of its cause; in fear, which dissolves our ability to comprehend our existence; in the love that knows itself as unconditional and everlasting; in the question that frightens us with its unconditional nature and boundless vastness.

He continued:

The seemingly superficial and conventional Christmas hoopla is blessed in the end with truth and depth. What looks like a sham in light of all the holiday activity, then, is not the complete truth, for in the background stands the holy and silent truth that God has arrived after all and is celebrating Christmas with us.

As Dec. 25 comes and goes, and the temptation to begin taking down the Christmas decorations quickly arises, consider the possibility of taking this year’s celebration of Christmas as an opportunity for something different.

Whereas in Christmases of the past, the day came and went amid gift giving, caroling and holiday parties, each rushed to be included before December’s end, perhaps this year might be the occasion to slow down and ponder more quietly that which stands in the background of this otherwise hectic time of year; what Rahner calls “the holy and silent truth that God has arrived after all and is celebrating Christmas with us.”

This year, especially in light of our all-too-painful awareness of violence and suffering in our world, time set aside to welcome the Prince of Peace is greatly needed.

May the remaining days of Christmas be a time of peace, prayer and joy, that what began on Christmas Eve may carry you through into a new calendar year more aware of the continued presence of the one who is Emmanuel, God-with-us.

Merry Christmas … still!

Photo: Stock

Dating God Podcast #20 — Advent Special Podcast

Posted in Advent, Dating God Podcast with tags , , , , on November 30, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

In this episode of the Dating God Podcast we are joined by Julianne Wallace, a campus minister at St. Bonaventure University and someone who is an advocate for the need to focus our attention on Advent during the liturgical season in a renewed way. She is the author of the article, “A Contemporary Spirituality of Advent and Evening Prayer,” in Pastoral Liturgy. She speaks a little bit about what that article is about and suggests different ways people might celebrate the season of Advent amid the bustle of commercialized holiday blitz. For more on Advent this season and ways to celebrate the liturgical period, check out the article, “Advent Resolutions for a New Church Year,” in The Huffington Post.

Listen to the podcast online (streaming)

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes (iTunes website)

Selections from Julianne Wallace’s “Advent Playlist”

“Jesus, Hope of the World”
Deana Light and Paul Tate

“Jesus Christ the Apple Tree”
from the John Rutter “The Christmas Album” sung by Clare College Choir of Cambridge

“Come, Watch and Wait”
Paul Inwood

“Lo How a Rose E’er Blooming”

“People Look East”
arr. James E. Clemens

“Long is Our Winter”

“In God’s Good Time”
Stephen Dean

“God the Father Sends His Angel”
Brian Bisig

“O Come, O Come Emmanuel”
Bebo Norman, Ed Cash and Allen Levi

“Know that the Lord Is Near”
David Haas

Feast of St. Francis over at Huffington Post

Posted in Franciscan Spirituality, Uncategorized with tags , , , on October 4, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

I was asked to write a little piece for the Huffington Post on the “Prayer of St. Francis” for today’s feast. It is currently being featured as the lead article over at HuffPo Religion. Here is the beginning of the post, you can read the rest over at “Living the ‘Prayer of St. Francis’ with All of Creation.”

There is probably no saint more revered and well known in all of Christian history than St. Francis of Assisi. Today Christians, and many non-Christians alike, celebrate the life and legacy of this medieval Italian man who is known the world over for his exemplary life of holiness and model of peaceable living he leaves to us, nearly 800 years after his death.

Just as he remains a popular figure across many cultures and religious traditions, there is probably no Christian prayer more popular (with perhaps the predictable exception of the “Lord’s Prayer”) than the one that bears the name of this Saint from Assisi: “The 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.

Many people are shocked to learn that the prayer most closely associated with St. Francis was not actually written by him. In fact, the prayer called “The Prayer of St. Francis” is generally believed to be only about 100 years old, a creative and sincere prayer penned by an anonymous French writer. Over time this anonymously drafted prayer became linked with the spirit of the 13th-century friar whose continual striving to follow more closely the Gospel of Jesus Christ led to a renewal in the church at many levels.

Ultimately, I don’t think it matters very much that St. Francis isn’t directly responsible for this prayer because, although St. Francis never actually said or wrote these particular words, he lived the prayer with his whole life…

Read the rest over at the Huffington Post.

Science and Theology Agree: Bill Nye the Science Guy is Correct

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , on August 29, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

There has been quite an internet and media discussion about the YouTube video featuring the well-known children’s television-program host, Bill Nye of “Bill Nye the Science Guy,” in which the science enthusiast tells viewers that teaching children creationism is “inappropriate.” And he is absolutely correct. This is one thing about which both science and Christian theology agree: a literal reading of scripture, that which seemingly grounds views like creationism, is inaccurate and does not reflect an authentic theological interpretation of scripture or tradition.

Those who claim that Christian faith does not allow for a belief in evolution as a scientific theory or explanation for the diversity and complexity of life in this universe has probably never (a) understood the science itself or (b) studied theology in a formal setting. The truth is that the aphoristic response that many theologians, clergy, and members of the faithful give in response to questions about the compatibility of science and religion (as the question is generally put), is that they are not incompatible. One area of study deals with questions of “How” (science) and the other deals with questions of “Why” (theology/religion).

Those who are Roman Catholic should read the incredibly important document, “The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church,” by the Pontifical Biblical Commission (1993). Like almost no other Vatican document, the PBC uses some direct and strong language in discussing the fundamentalist view or literal interpretation of scripture:

The fundamentalist approach is dangerous, for it is attractive to people who look to the Bible for ready answers to the problems of life. It can deceive these people, offering them interpretations that are pious but illusory, instead of telling them that the Bible does not necessarily contain an immediate answer to each and every problem. Without saying as much in so many words, fundamentalism actually invites people to a kind of intellectual suicide. It injects into life a false certitude, for it unwittingly confuses the divine substance of the biblical message with what are in fact its human limitations.

To claim that the scientific theory of evolution is untenable for Christians or to challenge the veracity of other dimensions of modern science on the grounds that the Bible and Christian faith prohibit it, is not supported by the church nor by sound theological research.

The late Pope John Paul II famously said, in a 1996 address to the Pontifical Academy of Science, that scientific theories of evolution are not incompatible with Christian faith and theology and, that as rational human persons in the our current age, we need experimental and observational sciences to better understand God’s creation.

Bill Nye is correct. Teaching children creationism, whether expressed as such or couched under the name “intelligent design,” is inappropriate and, as the Pontifical Biblical Commission suggests, is dangerous! Good job, Bill Nye! I knew there was a reason I always liked his program as a kid.

Here’s an interview with Bill Nye on the HuffPo and Here’s the now-famous video:

Photo: Stock

Serious Critiques of the Church, but Schism?

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on July 12, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

A recent Religion News Service article, “Catholic Schism: Diarmaid MacCulloch, Influencial Church Historian, Predicts Major Division in ‘Silence in Christian History,’” briefly reviews MacCulloch’s forthcoming book, Silence in Christian History in terms of one claim he makes about the likelihood of the “Western Latin Church,” also known as the “Roman Catholic Church,” experiencing schism in the not-so-distant future. His concerns are in a sense very legitimate in that the factors he identifies as informing his prediction are seriously contentious. These issues include an all-celibate clergy, the view of historical revisionism on the part of contemporary pontiffs, and the particular social issues that Church leaders have elected to confront in recent decades. Additionally, MacCulloch notes that Church leaders are seemingly disinterested in “listening to European Catholics,” perhaps the same argument can be made about North Americans.

MacCulloch does not claim that conflict is inherently problematic within a religious tradition, actually it is quite the contrary.

“Conflict in religion is inevitable and usually healthy — a religion without conflict is a religion that will die, and I see no sign of this with Christianity,” MacCulloch said. “But the stance of the popes has produced an angry reaction among those who want to see the council continue. No other church in history has ever made all its clergy celibate. It’s a peculiarity of the Western Latin church, and it looks increasingly unrealistic.”

The Vatican’s refusal to allow Roman Catholics to talk about married or female clergy was “not the reaction of a rational body,” MacCulloch said.

Some may disagree with MacCulloch’s interpretation of the Church leaders’ stance on such issues as all-male clergy and universal mandatory clerical celibacy, but the issues raised do in fact divide a number of people, adherents and theologians alike, along ideological lines.

As a scholar of religion and ecclesiastical history, MacCulloch’s views are likely shaded by the central role that academic freedom, open dialogue, and critical engagement of multiple views plays in the advancement of well-grounded positions and leadership decisions. Naturally, from that vantage point, the more autocratic stance of many Church leaders reflects what he would deem as “irrational.”

I see many of the same concerns that MacCulloch is said to discuss in his forthcoming book playing out in divisive and contentious ways in the global Church, particularly here in the United States. However, it is my most sincere hope that further schism or any breaking of relationship might be avoided. We are in constant need of reform, lest we forget our humanity and mistake the Church for an idol. Yet, especially as a Franciscan, reform does not have to be violent, divisive or contentious. We can instead seek peace and reconciliation, forgiveness and dialogue, and advance the ministry with which we have been entrusted. All sides must embrace the humility the evangelical life demands of all Christians.

Photo: Stock

Fr. James Martin, SJ’s #WhatSistersMeanToMe Campaign

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on April 26, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Here is an excerpt from Fr. James Martin’s guest column on the Washington Post’s “On Faith” page. Like so many others, Fr. Martin has been reflecting on his gratitude for women religious in his life and has been encouraging others to do likewise. You can read more inspirational reflections on twitter by following this new hashtag of gratitude. He acknowledges how some very negative critics — who consider themselves Catholics in good standing, including one notoriously vitriolic and oftentimes disrespectful priest who has a rather loyal following online — have attempted to hijack the hashtag of gratitude to harass the LCWR and others in support of the more-than 80% of United States women religious who are affected by the latest news. Read the entire column below to learn more.

Last week, on the day when the Vatican released the results of its investigation of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which represents 80 percent of women’s religious orders in this country, I received emails from several Catholic sisters. All described themselves as saddened, stunned or demoralized by the Vatican document, which severely criticized the LWCR in a number of areas.

Catholic sisters are my heroes. They have been my teachers, spiritual directors, mentors, bosses and friends. I can barely begin to describe the admiration I have for these women, many of them now in their 70s and 80s, and for what that they have done for God, for the church, for what Catholics call the “people of God,” and for me.

When I was a young Jesuit working in Nairobi, Kenya, for example, two elderly Maryknoll sisters patiently listened to my worries about living in the developing world, shared some of their own experiences of years in ministry in remote villages, and encouraged me to “push on,” as they say in East Africa. When my father was dying of cancer ten years ago, one Religious of Jesus and Mary sister took a four-hour train ride to visit him in the hospital for an hour, stayed overnight at a nearby convent, and the next morning took the train home, for another four-hour journey. When I thanked her, she thanked me for the “honor” of letting her come. And during a difficult spiritual crisis, one Sister of St. Joseph helped me to find God in the midst of my doubts, and was even able to get me to smile. “God did all the work,” she said, when I thanked her, “not me.”

In the wake of the Vatican document, my sister friends, some nearing the end of their lives, seemed to need a word of gratitude. The very least I could do was to show some support in a small way–on Twitter. (Of course I had written about my admiration for them before, but it seemed that it was a particularly good time for praise.) Besides, gratitude is always in season…

To Read more, go to: “What Sisters Mean to Me.”

For an earlier story from the Huffington Post on the same topic, go to: “Rev. James Martin…

Photo: University of San Francisco

Rate Your Priest Website: Good or Bad Idea?

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , on August 4, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

I’m curious to hear what people think about the new German website, Hirten Barometer (trans “Shepherd Barometer”). This website is getting a lot of attention, with articles on HuffPo and elsewhere presenting both the good and bad sides of such a project. The general consensus, if one can be determined, seems to lean in the direction that this is a positive move. Offering “honest,” if anonymous, feedback to clergy is a good thing. On that point I agree. However, what seems to be lost in the discussion is what is lost in similar sites like ratemyprofessor.com, namely, the feedback that priests or professors (or professor priests) would find most helpful. Such feedback might focus on a priest’s preaching, perhaps the single most important aspect of the weekly encounter the parishioners have with the priest. I’m not entirely sure how youth ministry or elder ministry compare across the board, but the German founders of the site must have found it important enough to include among those factors ranked. One thing is for sure, many, many priests could really use some honest feedback.

HuffPo describes the site as “a German site that allows its users to actually rate church officials, based on a number of different criteria. The basic assessment includes categories such as worship, credibility, “Finger on the Pulse,” youth work, and senior work.” The descriptive article continues:

The site launched in April and now includes 25,000 parishes and some 8,000 priests, according to Reuters.

According to TIME, the rating system actually changes the color of the sheep associated with each priest. Good priests get white sheep and more poorly rated priests are assigned sheep with black wool.

The true aim of the site is for a bit more honesty and the hope of bringing better priests the attention they deserve. Like other ratings sites (notably RateMyProfessor.com), the site’s founders hope to draw attention to the spiritual leaders who really grab the attention of their clergy, much like finding a professor who truly reaches his students.

“Pastoral work should be qualitative,” Andreas Hahn, one of the founders told Reuters, adding that they hoped “to stimulate dialogue to improve pastoral work.”

I actually think the potential for such a site is great, while also acknowledging the Internet’s temptation to so many to hide behind the veil of anonymity in order to be caustic and rude. How one balances such potential with risk is perhaps what will make or break such a site. One thing that one finds at ratemyprofessor.com and does not appear (outside the subject ‘comments’ section, at least) is a category like the professorial “Hotness” ranking. Perhaps the Germans don’t have a phrase that compares to the English “Vater ‘Was eine Verschwendung.’” Oh well, maybe that’s a good thing.

Photo: Stock

Christians Ought To Be Pacifists

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , on December 28, 2010 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

This reflection is now available in Daniel P. Horan, OFM’s book Franciscan Spirituality for the 21st Century: Selected Reflections from the Dating God Blog and Other Essays, Volume One (Koinonia Press, 2013).

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