Sunday, August 26, 2012

Sunday Sermon

August 26, 2012

The Twelfth Sunday after Trinity


What are we to do? This week's biblical text is "brought to life" as much by the number it bears as by what it says. Read this text of rejection, John 6:66, one more time: "After this many of his disciples turned back and no longer walked with him."

The devastating nature of this message, coupled with the doomsday number it is assigned -- 666, the number of the Antichrist, the Mark of the Beast,  -- has made this text a flash point favorite for those trying to figure out Armageddon mathematics. At the doorstep of December 21st, the end of the Mayan calendar (and the world for those who believe the scare) there is an increased frenzy and fervor over anything smacking of an apocalyptic message or a secret numerological code.

It is time to ask the question: Is all this "Armageddon fever" really bringing us any closer to the presence of the Christ we profess to long for?

Let’s suppose you were driving and you noticed that the odometer on your car had just clicked over to 70,000 miles. The sense of accomplishment in this milestone, however, might be overshadowed by the fact that immediately, the vehicle's "needs maintenance" button on the dash also lights up. Undoubtedly, this was the manufacturer's way of getting the automobile's owner to bring the vehicle in for its regularly scheduled tune-up. But the glaring red beacon on the dash is genuinely disconcerting.

What if you didn't have the money or the time to put the car in the shop for a full day's inspection just then? What if the light coming on really had nothing to do with the odometer count? If the red light were just a programmed-in reminder, you could ignore it. Except for the fact that now that the "needs maintenance" light was already lit, how would you know if something else happened to the engine that really did require immediate attention and repair?

The apocalyptic odometer also comes with a warning light -- a recommendation for "maintenance." As one milestone closes and another begins to unfold, it is only fitting and wise that we examine our culture, our faith and the unique spirit that we are taking with us into the second millennium.

Our "maintenance needed" light also alerts us to the lurking reality of an environmental Armageddon. Ever-present AIDS, Ebola, flesh-eating bacteria, infectious microbes, global warming, ozone depletion, radioactive fallout, air pollution --form only a short list of the plagues that threaten us and the plethora of Armageddon scenarios. Is our end-time anxiety justified?

The majority of us think it is. According to a U.S. News & World Report poll a few years ago, nearly six in 10 Americans believe the world will end or be destroyed, and a third of those think it will happen within a few years or decades. In addition, this same poll found that 44 percent believe the world will face the Apocalypse, with true believers whisked off the planet and called into heaven. Almost half -- 49 percent -- said they believe there will be an antichrist. As the universe's odometer prepares to turn over, the increasing outbreaks of Armageddon anxiety demand that people of faith respond with messages of hope like never before.

But when there are as many doctrines of "last things" as there are people on this planet with opinions, how can we hope to offer any kind of a coherent voice of hope and wholeness to this world?

As stunningly widespread as the polls reveal our apocalyptic anxieties to be, they still reflect that for every naysayer, every doom-and-gloomer, there is another individual who is not so sure. Paradoxically, there is also a great deal of cultural optimism, a conviction that the dawn of a new insight, productivity and peace.

So what is it? Disaster and the end of everything? Or opportunity and a fresh start? Do Christians buy into the doomsday mentality and its accompanying spirit of apathy and inevitability? Or do we see all our problems solved by some new wisdom or insight that will greet us on the other side of the year when we have passed not only December 21
st, but into the new year?

A New Yorker cartoon portrays a scene from hell. "We see several pudgy, furry devils, with their three-pronged forks and pointed tails, driving throngs of hapless human sinners through the licking flames of the Inferno. Sitting on a hot rock observing the scene is a rather reflective gentleman, hand on his chin. He has been down under for some time and knows the scene. Obviously, he has just been quizzed by a rather dazed, innocent looking gentleman, about what it is like farther down into the scorching caverns. As a frowning devil looks over his shoulder at them, the long-term human resident of Hades tells the expectant, hopeful arrival,  "No, it's not going to be okay."

The world is desperate for "It's-going-to-be-okay" assurances. The politically correct thing to do is to say, "It's going to be okay." But it's not going to be okay. And sometimes it's the church's job to say to the culture, "Nope, there's bad news before there's good news: the bad news is, things are not going to be okay. The good news is, things can be okay.

The choice is yours. The choice is ours. The genuine biblical witness offers words of comfort and words of judgment with composure. Throughout the Bible, no matter how many particular eschatological (final or end-time) scenarios we may pick out, one message remains clear.

What the Bible does teach is that history is moving somewhere; that the one who brings justice will fulfill God's saving purpose in history.

"The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Messiah, and he will reign forever and ever" (Revelation 11:15).

"Then comes the end, when he hands over the kingdom to God the Father ... so that God may be all in all" (1 Corinthians 15:24, 28).

In this week's gospel text, Jesus is deserted by "many of his disciples" because of his refusal to tell the people what they wanted to hear. His flesh and blood imagery was both too gutsy and too graphic, too fantastic and too unreal for a large portion of his Jewish audience. The great irony of this text is that the very message that reveals how we may personally experience the intimacy of God in our lives is the message that leads us to turn our backs on Jesus -- the one who is the divine gift of life.

For many, the mounting eschatological enthusiasm as December 21
st or any other end-time scenario approaches, has done exactly the same thing. Intoxicated by Satan's triple-six speculations and calculations, heady over the "what ifs" and "whens" that await us in the next day, week or year, we are beguiled by numbers, strategies and predictions. Instead of following Jesus, we follow the "last-times" headlines of world disasters, weather disasters, alien abductions, etc.

We can become so fixated on the Jesus who is to come that we do not see or hear the Jesus who is in the midst. Thus, doom-and-gloomers use the approaching end-times as an excuse to withdraw from this world, abandoning it to the powers of evil. Satan's triple-six gives us the greatest excuse not to know Christ and make Christ known for the times that God has given us. Is it really this number? Is this number really something to fear? Or is it that we simply must have some fascination of what the end will be like, if it even happens in our life-time or the next. I am not making light of the number or the belief in the existence of the Devil; only making the point that if we live our life looking over our shoulder or over the next hill in continuity, we are not really living life as Jesus was teaching.

A bishop was presiding over the Mass in a large cathedral. He sensed that the microphone wasn't working properly, and he was ready to begin the traditional "The Lord be with you," after which the congregation routinely responded, "And also with you."

He tapped the mike several times, but heard nothing. Then, as he thought he was speaking into a dead mike, he said, "There's something wrong with this blasted microphone." And the people responded, "And also with you."

Is there something wrong with us? What's our excuse for failing to be good Catholics and to make Christ alive today, in our family, our church, our community, our country, our world? In the history of the faith, we have never lacked for excuses.

What's our excuse? What will be our excuse in the year 2013? And then what will be our excuse in the year 2014? Will our apocalyptic anxieties cause us to "turn away," as some did in John 6:66?

Or will we remain standing with Peter? Will we continue to confess "Lord, to whom can we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and know that you are the Holy One of God". Will it be that belief and that message that take us into the new day, week or year?

God Love You +
+ The Most Rev. Robert Winzens
Pastor - St. Francis Universal Catholic Church
San Diego, Ca.

Sunday Sermon

8/19/2012

THE ASSUMPTION OF ALL THINGS

The Assumption of Our Lady is a doctrine that can be difficult for modern people to understand, particularly those of us who come from a Protestant background I suppose. But there are aspects of the teaching or its spiritual or mystical interpretation that should be of value to us all.

First some history. It was on November 1, 1950 that the Roman Pope Pius XII declared the doctrine of the bodily assumption of our Lady into heaven to be an "infallible" teaching for his denomination. That's rather late in the day for a new Christian teaching to pop up! It wasn't a new idea however, for the Assumption had been a widely-held tradition in both the Eastern and the Western branches of the Christian Church for well over a thousand years, in one form or another. It actually goes back to the Old Testament for Mary is not the first to have been “assumed” into heaven. First let me quote some Scripture:

  • Genesis 5:24: Enoch walked faithfully with God; then he was no more, because God took him away.
This is explained in
  • Hebrews 11:5: By faith Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death; he could not be found, because God had taken him away. For before he was taken, he was commended as one who pleased God.
  • 2 Kings 2:11-12: As they were walking along and talking together, suddenly a chariot of fire and horses of fire appeared and separated the two of them, and Elijah went up to heaven in a whirlwind. Elisha saw this and cried out, “My father! My father! The chariots and horsemen of Israel!” And Elisha saw him no more.
This is explained in
  • 1 Maccabees 2:58 in the Apocrypha: Elijah, because of his great devotion to the Law, was taken up into heaven
  • 1 Thessalonians 4:17 describing the end of time: After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. [ Presumably, lots of people get Assumed here.]
In Revelation (12:1) one could contrast the story of the “woman” who was clothed with the sun compared with Rev. 6:9 where we see only the souls of the martyrs, their bodies remaining on material plane. If we say the “woman” is Mary then she exists on the material plane (body) also, just as does the sun.

Second, what about tradition?
  • In 2 Thess. 2:15 Paul instructs us to honor oral (not just written) tradition. Apostolic tradition says Mary was assumed into heaven. As proof of the early tradition regarding Mary--While claiming the bones of the saints was a common practice during early times (In fact, Churches stole the bones of Martyrs from one another.) but Mary’s bones were never claimed. This is because they were not available. Tradition said that Mary was taken up body and soul into heaven.

So Mary is not unique in being assumed into heaven and Tradition supports the idea, but does it matter to us as Christians?

The Liberal Catholic movement has the feast of the Assumption as one of our fairly few observances outside the regular sequence of Sundays. Where do we find this feast? It certainly wouldn't seem necessary to the faith of a Christian. But Origen of Alexandria reminded us that we should then look to the inner, spiritual meaning within the external events, if those physical events are either improbable or don’t seem to warrant the importance given to them, if they are to deserve that importance. That is the purpose of this sermon.

Let's review the standard doctrine: in the Western Catholic Churches it is usually taught that Mary, the mother of Our Lord Jesus, was in body and soul assumed after her death into heavenly glory. Contrast this with the Old Testament where death wasn’t necessary. This doctrine cannot be found in the very early Church, but it is present in some of the Gnostic writings of the 4th Century. It may have been condemned by the majority Church of the time as heresy. That would not be the first last time that a heresy passed into the main stream of the Faith. (Eternal torment/damnation for the "unsaved" is another teaching that doesn’t appear in the New Testament, then started outside the Church, and finally became the majority belief. For the first 500 years of Christianity Universalism, as taught in the Liberal Catholic Movement of which the Universal Catholic Church is a part, was the majority belief but outside influences and apparently the need to frighten the people in order to assert control took control--so we Universalists are probably now a minority position in Christianity. [Universalism is the belief that all will be united with God. As the song says, “There’s no need to be saved, No need to be afraid, Cause when it’s done, God takes everyone.”]

The Assumption of our Holy Lady Mary has long since passed into superstition for many Catholic faithful Indeed, if we concentrate on historical events, that can be real danger. But if we concentrate on the larger view, I think that there is hidden within the bible stories and early Christian traditions, truths that are universal. Therefore, what appears at first to be a miracle or a kind of strange, rather pointless, violation of natural law can, in fact, be a demonstration of something timeless. That is, the story and doctrine of the Assumption are a demonstration, either to the physic senses or in mystic vision, of something much broader than the events of a few individual lives thousand of years ago.

God as Absolute, the God who IS, is always ONE but God in manifestation is dual (while remaining a Trinity). That duality is illustrated by pairs such as spirit and matter force and form, and so on. In fact, every kind of duality we see about us in the created world is somehow traceable to this underlying duality at the heart of the cosmos itself That's pretty standard Christian doctrine. Jesus said, "I, if be lifted up, will draw all men unto Me." [John 12: 32] That is one of the ciphers that opens the door to understanding of the Assumption Problem for us. What is the "Assumption Problem?" The problem is that the standard teaching seems just a warm, fuzzy, superstition.

A second key to the problem is found when we conceive of the Blessed Mother as Mother of Us All. To give away the conclusion of this talk, the doctrine of the Assumption gives us positive assurance that, eventually, we will all be raised—that is assumed—into God's Being to become a self-conscious One with Him or, as St. Paul puts it, to be "made perfect."

Now, back to the dual nature of God. We have a tendency to think of God as male: at the extremes either as a vindictive war lord, or as a forgiving grandfather with a long, white beard, or, in the middle, as a loving Father who wants us to grow into perfection. Even this middle ground is limiting—as is anything that we can say about God. To examine the Assumption we need to approach God from another aspect: God is both male and female.

We must realize that our highest conception of Deity (in manifestation) combines all that is best in all the characteristics attributed to both sexes—though it goes beyond that of course. In Oriental religions this underlying masculinity-femininity behind the manifested world is openly acknowledged. In the Catholic tradition, the feminine aspect has found open recognition mostly in the veneration of the Blessed Lady Mary, although the Holy Spirit has also been described as feminine.

Let us list examples of the masculine and feminine aspects of Creation:
Masculine Feminine
Strength The great “sea” of primal
matter/energy
Wisdom Beauty
Scientific Direction Tenderness
Destroying and Chastising Compassion & Harmony

Remember that we are not saying in a literal sense that God is Strength and is Compassion [God is God!] but rather that manifestation is brought about by the interaction of powers that lie "behind" these qualities that we find in the world around us. As Bp. Wedgwood wrote, “Thus it is said that the energizing force or power of the Logos, the Divine Word, breathed life into the great Sea of Virgin Matter, initiating the whole process of creation of all the worlds. Whenever, at any level (physical spiritual, etc.), there is a perfect co-working between these two aspects of the divine, we have in manifestation an ‘image of eternity.’ At one level, Christ is born in Bethlehem; and at another, the ‘Christ- Child’ is born in our own hearts, and by this we participate in the divine manifestation.”

The supreme, visible, earthly example of this co-working of spirit and matter in Catholic tradition is the symbol of the Mother of Jesus; she is a living icon, as it were, of the union of a human body and soul with the Feminine Aspect of Deity. Her assumption into Heaven opens the mind and soul to the living experience of the perfection of all material forms. From Her arises that wisdom and peace that shall in time possess a glorified material world. For you see, the world is not evil: it is of God and is good.

Christ is the power and force within creation. He descends into matter and ascends by His own volition, by His own force; but Mary represents the negative aspect of the One God, she, having nursed all creation to the point where it is ready to reflect the Creator, is drawn up by the Creator's will. Mary is assumed into heaven, and so it is that at every level that we can imagine, matter is risen and glorified, through perfect co-working with directing Power.

And that's the truth of the Assumption!

In conclusion, let us all remember the words of Mary, and let them sound through every level of creation:

BE IT UNTO ME ACCORDING TO THY WORD

for it is necessary to voluntarily open our hearts to accept the power of the Word. When we fully submit to that power, in the spirit of our Lady, we will be freed from the prison of illusion, and we will understand those words which also sound through every level of creation:

MY SOUL DOTH MAGNIFY THE LORD, AND MY SPIRIT DOTH REJOICE IN GOD MY SAVIOUR

for in us, matter and spirit will have formed their conjunction; our hearts will have come to rest in Him who has made us for Himself, and we ourselves will have made our contribution toward the assumption of all material creation into its true perfection and glory.

And thus, what was pointed to at ancient times and in one region of the world, will become for us a truth shining in our time and at every place through all our lives.


by Archbishop Bekken

Monday, August 13, 2012

Sunday Sermon

August 12, 2012 Transfiguration Sunday We could call him, Paparazzi Peter. He's peering at Moses, Elijah and Jesus. This is a career-maker. But there's a problem. No camera. No film. No nothing. Probably not any parchment or coal crayons to write with; assuming the fisherman knew how to write. We can sympathize with Peter's predicament. Let's be frank: Peter would've done us all a big favor if he had been better prepared. We could visit today his shrine built to immortalize the moment if only he had been ready. Imagine your grasp of history without Abraham Zapruder's 26 seconds of film, shot with an 8-millimeter camera on November 22, 1963. We'd be stuck with Oliver Stone's revisionist montage in his film JFK. Or without the grainy footage of Neil Armstrong taking "one small step for man" replete with scratchy audio. It's a good thing that The Who is now available on digitized and remastered compact disks - along with every other LP in your collection - because it is increasingly difficult to locate a working stereo phonograph. And if you own a copy of I Love Lucy classics on Betamax, forget it. Those eight-tracks of Tony Bennett? Worthless, unless you have borrowing privileges at the Museum of Obsolete Machines. The film of JFK, the Apollo 11 footage, the census data stored by the government risk disintegration or being obsolete in a few short years. We can launch photographs of the kids through cyberspace, but we are losing the photographs of our own childhoods, not to mention our ancestors' childhoods, due to humidity, sunlight and general aging. This hurts. It hurts because we have such a hunger to hang on to history. As the parents of Baby Boomers move into retirement communities, their storage closets - left unexplored for decades - have become fascinating excavation sites revealing both the history of their own families' precious moments and the history of home movie cameras: the 8-millimeter camera, the Super 8, the camcorder, the Supercam, the Digital camcorder, the MX Pro Mixer with Fire Wire Technology. I joke, but I am one those with things such as these in storage. These closet digs show that the first generation of parents wielding home movie cameras did a pretty decent job at documenting Christmas morning and birthday parties, graduations and weddings. And clearly today's parents are following in their footsteps by dutifully documenting all the usual life-changing moments of their children as well - those transformative transitions from fetus to newborn, from crawler to walker, from preschooler to kindergartner. But, because film today is less expensive or because they're more self-absorbed than ever, postmodern parents also capture those NOT-so-special moments: little Amber eating French fries, sitting in the wagon, banging on the piano, digging in the dirt, rolling in the leaves, playing with the telephone, wearing a hat, smelling a flower, holding a book, watching TV, singing a song, throwing a ball, kicking a ball, sitting on a ball, dropping a ball.... you get the picture. If you're an average family, you've captured more than 1,800 minutes of videotaped footage and over 3,000 still photographs of your daughter's life. She is only 6 years old. Unfortunately, your daughter may clean out her own closet 40 years from now, only to discover countless faded photographs and a mountain of obsolete cartridges with no working video machine to play them. We're losing history. This, despite the fact that more and more people are documenting more and more information every day. We want to preserve every special moment, and yet ... armed with camcorders in one palm, hermetically sealed scrapbooks in the other arm, and countless files filled with images and personal data in our computers, aren't we in danger of missing something even more monumental? Missing - in our craving to capture it - the God-given moment itself? Peter, of course, had no camcorder, no digital camera, no hand-held micro tape recorder to capture the extraordinary moment he witnessed along with James and John. It was literally a mountaintop experience, an once-in-a-lifetime experience for three ordinary Joes who, as disciples, were still searching for a clue. Peter, understandably, was absolutely awestruck. It was to have been a quiet retreat, a time apart from the crowds, but an extraordinary event was unfolding, a moment in history so sacred that Peter, as Vice President in Charge of Doing Something, had to do something. So he proposed building a booth or kiosk or shrine - whatever - to preserve the moment. We're not told how he was going to do this, whether he had hammer and saw at the ready, or a few fisherman's tools in his belt. Your options are limited when all you've got is a sewing needle. But then Peter was never one to let details get in the way of a dream. A cloud dimmed the moment, however, before Peter could throw anything together. Out of the cloud a voice: "This is my Son, the Beloved; listen to him!" God didn't say: "Get a shot of the three of them over by that cedar tree." Didn't say, "Be sure to capture the moment!" Just, "Listen to him." What a bummer. Like tourists who see Paris through their viewfinders, Peter, who wanted to keep the moment from passing, was in danger of passing the moment. Let's face it: We, too, are easily distracted. Our lives are noisy. Televisions, radios, VCRs, DVDs, quad speakers, telephones, IPads and IPods all blaring out Pandora, construction tools, and computer games fill our world with incessant sound. It isn’t that these types of devises are bad in themselves, just that sometimes they control our lives in that they control our attention. Hard to hear the voice of God these days. Just as cameras can be programmed to print the date on the film in order to remember exactly when an event occurred, Mark's gospel tells us that Jesus took Peter, James and John up to this mountain exactly six days after reminding them that "those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel will save it". It's not a bad idea to ask ourselves, "What are we really losing and what are we really keeping, in the big picture?" What will it profit us to preserve our life's history, if we forget the fundamental reason for remembering? Home movies may jog our memories of family birthday parties and graduations and weddings and so forth, but here's the danger. Focusing on the image, we forget about its meaning. We are losing the sense of the sacred in the mundane. More weddings are ruined by overzealous photographers than by spending more time enjoying the wedding banquet and mingling with the wedding guests. If we can keep the meaning behind the memory, then it is not so bad. So throw away the camcorder and go live. Sacramentalize the mundane. Divinize the moment. Listen for the voice of God. We go through life too busy trying to film the Transfiguration. We look but don't see; we hear but we don't listen. So what? So what if we have acid-free scrapbooks filled with ticket stubs and report cards and pressed corsages, if we have forgotten what made those moments so sacred? God's advice is to listen. Listen to the children, listen to life, listen for the sacred, divine the divine. Take time to smell the roses, as it were. Listen to Jesus. God Love You + + The Most Rev. Robert Winzens Pastor – St. Francis Universal Catholic Church San Diego, Ca.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Sunday Sermon

August 5, 2012 The Ninth Sunday after Trinity There is a Kudzu cartoon that shows the preacher reading from the pulpit the Lord's Prayer: "Give us this day our daily .... low-fat, low-cholesterol, salt-free bread ..." The last frame has him saying to himself, "I hate these modern translations." Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Despite such modern translations, despite new diet fads, exercise machines, doctors' warnings and our own resolve, every year we are getting fatter and fatter. The percentage of adults who qualify as "overweight" (20 pounds over the established guidelines) has been steadily climbing for the last several decades --and now weighs in at over 30 percent. Even more revealing about our culture and lifestyles is the number of children under 12 who now qualify as overweight. Doctors and sociologists blame junk food, the rise of "sedentary sports" (watching television, playing video games, sitting at the computer), and lack of both parental supervision. We're so very good at rationalizing our lazy behavior and explaining away our caloric intake that most overweight adults don't have any idea just how much and how badly they are eating. But, it is not all about being overweight. Most doctors and psychologists who study eating disorders -- both overeating and under eating -- agree that people tend to use food as a way to control other uncontrollable factors in their lives. Feeling unloved and rejected? You might not be able to have a good relationship, but you can have a good steak! Feeling life is careening at an out-of-control speed around you? You might not be able to stop the world, but you can stop eating and slow your physical body down. We eat to forget, to remember, to feel comforted, to feel stuffed, to be sociable, and to be empowered. But we also eat to survive. No matter how smoothly sophisticated, technologically advanced, intellectually gifted or artistically inclined we may or may not be, all human beings -- all living creatures -- must eat to survive. We must take in nourishment of the right kind in order to keep our bodies healthy, functioning and able to maintain life. It's the same for our souls. Perhaps that's why; of all the images and metaphors Jesus uses to speak of himself, his mission and his sacrifice, the two most universally accessible and meaningful still remain Bread and Water. Today, just as they did 2,000 years ago, Jesus as the Bread of Life and as Living Water suggests to our hungry, thirsty bodies and souls that in the bread and water he provides is the basic sustenance necessary for life. Bread and Water. Far from being prison fare this is the universal "soul food" of the Christian. What overweight Americans are looking for in their Big Mac burgers, Cold Stone sundaes and Pizza Hut stuffed-crusts is simply found and easily digested in the Bread of Life and Living Water of Jesus Christ. The only diet that can feed our starving spirits and fill our empty insides is "the food that endures for eternal life". "I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty" (John 6:35). It's both easy and hard to get. The Samaritan woman at the well, who is tired of drawing water every day (John 4:15), almost didn't get it. Today's crowds who follow Jesus to the other side of the Sea of Tiberias in order to receive more free food have trouble understanding how different the sustaining elements Jesus offered them were from ordinary bread and water. After the crowd compares Jesus' gift of bread with Moses' manna-in-the-wilderness, Jesus does two things. He corrects their faulty memory -- it was God, not Moses, who provided the manna -- and he distinguishes God's "true bread from heaven" from anything that might hold butter and jam. Pre-feminist folklore preached that "the way to a man's heart is through his stomach." Jesus appropriated this wisdom for men and women and took it one step further. The metaphor of Jesus, the Bread of Life, is a metaphor that meets hungering humans where we think we are empty -- in our stomachs -- but then points us to where our real emptiness lies --in our souls. Jesus' image goes through our stomachs to get to our souls. One thing that makes bread such a good medium and metaphor to convey the image of soul-sustaining nourishment is the life-giving process it goes through to become a fragrant loaf. Except for a few special unleavened varieties, what really makes bread for most of us is yeast. A tiny one-celled organism that grows and metabolizes its own food with great speed, yeast organisms "work" in the dough, slightly fermenting and releasing gases so that the bread begins to rise. This natural process is common in many foods -- yeast organisms often get into and ferment many things we didn't plan on. Ever find yourself spitting out a big swig of too-old orange juice? The taste that tingled on your tongue was produced by yeast. Yeast is everywhere. Indeed, part of the challenge of Passover preparations is to create completely unleavened bread (matzo) for the celebration. Part of the pre-festival celebration involves a ritual "search" through the house with a feather, to seek out and sweep away any yeast that may remain inside and could contaminate the matzo. Jesus, the Bread of Life, is energized in each one of us by divine yeast -- by the Spirit of the living God, who sent Christ to be among us, to be for us, to be in us. To benefit fully from this Bread of Life, we must keep our lives, our spirits, "yeasty" -- vital and ever growing. What can you do to create "yeast" in your soul? Here's one suggestion. Try using "y-e-a-s-t" as an acronym for your spiritual attitude. Y "Yes." Are you saying "yes" to nourishing possibilities the Bread of Life is offering you? You've heard of the "placebo" effect. It's when your body thinks it's getting something helpful and healing, and so generates a helpful and healing response throughout your system. But scientists are now talking equally about the flip side of the "placebo" effect. They're calling it the "nocebo" effect. It's when your inability to think "yes," your negative mood and outlook, your worried fixation on worst-case scenarios, can keep the "nocebo" effect working in your physiology. Because of the "Seven First Words of the Christian"-- "I can do all things through Christ" -- a yeasty spirit thinks "YES." E "Energize." Why is it that the Energizer Bunny that keeps going and going is always going somewhere else the night the lights go out and you dig out your flashlight?! Unlike batteries, however, a properly maintained yeast colony can keep going and going and going. Ever make sourdough bread using "sourdough starter"? "Starter" is really a combination of yeast cultures, water and flour. You dip out what you need for the day's biscuits, bread or pancakes, give the rest of the starter a stir, "feed" it more flour and water, and tuck it back in your frig. In pioneer days, women treasured their "starter" and nurtured it along for years. Sometimes one starter was passed on from mother to daughter to granddaughter. That's perpetual energy. And that is what the Bread of Life can bring to your own spirit. A "Access." In order to be continually fed by the Bread of Life, we must keep in constant touch with the source of life's true energy supply. Living out of the stored power of the Spirit enables us to be fed by Christ's gift any time we need it. We can access this always available power reserve in various ways. For some of us, direct intercessory prayer brings us the closest to God's Spirit and God's love. For others, music opens the soul and sets it resonating with the Spirit. For many, creating and/or contemplating works of art, form within us the prayers that enable us to reach out and grab the gift of life. Stanly Kunitz once called "art" the "chalice into which we pour transcendence". S "Search." Today's crowds thought they were seeking the Bread of Life. All they were really looking for was a free lunch. Jesus' words to them, his corrections and counsel, were intended to make the hungering crowd search their spirits for their true motives and desires. Likewise, when we feel filled-up with power or contentment’s we should search our own spirits to make certain we are feasting on what God provides, not on what our own egos or selfish desires have cooked up. Many of you often hear me say something in regard to the necessity of attending church. I usually say something to the effect that all of us have to go to a grocery store or restaurant to have food for our physical wellbeing if we expect to live. So true this is. Jesus is making it adamantly clear this very thought. Sure, as some people say, I do not need to go to church to find God. Problem is, like with our eating habits, we don’t seek out the healthier ways of feeding our spiritual souls. We need to come to church and listen to her ministers and even those fellow Catholics around us to have a healthy balanced diet of the Holy Spirit. We have to be open to different points of view than just our own. Just we cannot live on bread and water along in a physical sense; we must not live just on our views of God and miss out on all that He has to offer and is trying to communicate to us. T "Trust." If we are filling up on the Bread of Life, we should be able to trust in the Spirit's presence and power in our lives. It is that trust that allows us to take what appears to others as "risks." Trusting in the Spirit lets us "go for it" when conventional wisdom or cautious hedging would advise us to sit on the sidelines. When our spirits are resting in trust, they can do anything. For we know no matter where we go, no matter what difficulties we may encounter, a constant food supply is always at hand, always guaranteed. Only Jesus can satisfy the hungry heart. Only Jesus has the Words of Eternal Life. God Love You + + The Most Rev. Robert Winzens Pastor – St. Francis Universal Catholic Church San Diego, Ca.