Saturday, August 29, 2009

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

It's just like that out here, Part III


I don't think the Comanche Indians are back in town, so I'm not sure what this is all about. This tepee now sits in front of a Mexican restaurant in Comanche, TX. It appeared late last week.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

It's just like that out here, Part II


I found this big guy on the back porch of the vicarage this morning. He was gone by the time I got home for lunch. I guess those turtles sure can move!

Monday, August 10, 2009

One Lord, One Faith, One Hope.


After church this past Sunday, the family and I went to the convention center in Fort Worth to join the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth in their festive Mass to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the founding of their diocese.

Bishop Kevin Vann graciously invited Bishop Iker and the clergy of the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth to vest and process with their clergy in the celebration. Here we are lined up next to the Knights of Columbus, waiting to process into the arena.

At the offertory, the priests of the (Anglican) Catholic Clerical Union presented Bishop Vann and his diocese with a hand-written icon of St Michael the Archangel on behalf of our diocese. He kindly acknowledged both our presence and our gift at the end of the Mass.

Everyone at the event was very kind. Many of the people there, priests and laity, stopped to say hello and welcome us. Maddy was a big hit too, as always. On our way to the parking lot, she even got a smile and a wave from Daniel Cardinal DiNardo, Archbishop of Galveston-Houston, as he scurried off to catch a plane to old Chicago.

Best wishes to the people of the diocese; thank you for your friendship. May God truly bless you and may God multiply our fellowship and our (yet to be fully realized) bonds of communion. May we grow to be one in the Lord, one in faith, and one in hope.

Thursday, August 06, 2009

The King in all his beauty


O GOD, who on the mount didst reveal to chosen witnesses thine only-begotten Son wonderfully transfigured, in raiment white and glistering; Mercifully grant that we, being delivered from the disquietude of this world, may be permitted to behold the King in his beauty, who with thee, O Father, and thee, O Holy Ghost, liveth and reigneth, one God, world without end. Amen.

St. Luke tells us Jesus was transfigured after Peter’s confession that Jesus is the Christ. Jesus informs them the Son of Man must suffer and die and be raised up again. To follow Jesus means to take up your own cross and go to Jerusalem.

On the mountaintop, God says from the cloud, “Listen to him.” The cost of love is great, but the glory is ever greater. Only by participating in that love can we come to know God. What is the cross, but a sign that God is truly love? To behold the king in all his beauty is to see the glory of God manifested in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.

In the cross of Jesus Christ we can see the glory and the beauty of sacrificial love—a love that does not count the cost, a love that knows no end,a love that is unmistakably beautiful. For some people in this world, to see Jesus in all his glory and to behold the radiant beauty of Jesus’ cross, is too much to bear. Instead of drawing them closer, they feel pushed away.

It was almost too much for Peter, James, and John. They were beside themselves. They became like dead men. “They were afraid as they entered the cloud” of God’s presence. If it had gone on longer, I could see them running back down the mountain, screaming and yelling, never to return. But at the very moment they might have fled at such a sight, at the very moment they encountered the terrible holiness of the living God, there was a voice from the cloud, “This is my beloved Son, listen to him.” And there they saw Jesus again as they had always known him.

When the cloud overshadows you, and you become afraid, open your eyes and behold the king in all his beauty.

It's just like that out here


A typical high noon on the town square in Comanche, TX.