Dennis McDonald and Margaret
and Ed Dilgen led the Upper Room Liturgy for the Sixth Sunday of Easter. The theme focused on Peace, the Peace that Jesus promised to the
men and women gathered together following his resurrection. When we use or hear
the word peace, what do we actually have in mind? How does that meld with the
Peace of which Jesus spoke and promised? How do we live out peace in our
world today?
Community prayer for Peace and Holy
Unity
(We will take turns reciting each line
by passing the mike.)
I will need around me a birch tree, a
maple, a redwood a white pine, a sequoia, a cedar, a palm tree.
I want soil from Nigeria, Palestine,
the Himalayas, Mississippi, Auschwitz, Oklahoma City, Maui, Alcatraz.
I want water from the Mediterranean
Sea, The Baltic, the Ganges River, Glacier Bay, the Sea of Galilee, the Tigris
and Euphrates, the Pacific and the Atlantic, the River Jordan, the Dead Sea,
Lake Bonaparte, Niagara Falls.
I want air from Kathmandu,
Calcutta,Cairo, Nazareth, Athens, the Arctic circle, Mexico City,
Port-au-Prince, Bagdad, Kabul.
I want near me a bison, a wolf, an
eagle, a silverback gorilla, a giraffe, a kitten, a fawn, a black bear, a polar
bear, a golden retriever.
From the waters, I want a humpback
whale, a porpoise, a sea turtle, a manta ray, a flounder, a harp seal.
From the heavens I want a comet, a
rainbow, a lightning bolt, a blue moon, a summer storm, a snowy night, a mauve
and golden sunrise.
I want fire from my morning candle,
the farthest star in the Milky Way, a camp-fire in the Adirondacks, the funeral
pyres in Varanasi, the Buddhist temples in Kyoto.
I want an altar made of rock from
Rajasthan Alexandria, the Acropolis, Canyon de Chelly, the Grand Canyon,
Vermont, Italy, Sedona, Syracuse and Sendai.
I want co-celebrants from an Ethiopian
village, a Harlem tenement, a preschool in Pokhara, a nursing home in Selma, a
prisoner Guantanamo, a Harvard Law class, the Smokey Mountain garbage dump in
Manila, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
I want bread kneaded and pressed by
the hands of millionaires, chambermaids, sherpas, Bolivian tin workers,
emigrants and immigrants from a hundred countries, three Fortune 500 CEO's.
Nine Exxon boar member, 14 Chicago gang members, and seven out of work
shrimpers from the Gulf of Mexico.
I want a pair of Chinese peasants,
Israeli kindergartners, Japanese Bonsai masters, Navajo weavers, Zuni potters,
Tlingit pole makers, and African diamond miners.
Once assembled, we will celebrate the
liturgy that contains them all.
We will sing till the earth wobbles in
her orbit, give praise and thanks till wine runs from the sugar maple.
We will bow in holiness we see in each
other forgiving the past, blessing the present, committing to a future that is
good for everyone.
And this will be our prayer for peace
and holy Unity
a welcome to the dawning of an
Uncommon Era.
By Jan Phillips
First Reading: A
reading from Pacem in Terris, Encyclical from John XXIII
"Yet peace is
but an empty word, if it does not rest upon... an order that is founded on
truth, built upon justice, nurtured and animated by charity, and brought into
effect under the auspices of freedom.
So magnificent, so
exalted is this aim that human resources alone, even though inspired by the
most praiseworthy good will, cannot hope to achieve it. God Herself must come
to our aid with Her heavenly assistance, if human society is to bear the
closest possible resemblance to the kingdom of God.
The
liturgy of these days reechoes the same message: “Jesus, after His resurrection
stood in the midst of His disciples and said: Peace be with you. The disciples
rejoiced when they saw him". It is Christ, therefore, who
brought us peace; Christ who gave it to us: "Peace I leave with you: my
peace I give to you: not as the world gives, do I give it to you."
May Christ inflame
the desires of all to break through the barriers which divide them, to
strengthen the bonds of mutual love, to learn to understand one another, and to
pardon those who have done them wrong. Through Her power and inspiration may
all peoples welcome each other to their hearts as sisters and brothers, and may
the peace they long for ever flower and ever reign among them." (Pacem in Terris, John XXIII 1963:
167-168,171)
These are the
inspired words of John XXIII, and the community affirms them by saying, Amen.
Gospel: A Reading
from the Gospel attributed to John.
On the night before Jesus died, he said to his disciples: Whoever has my commandments and observes them is the one who loves me. And whoever loves me will be loved by my God. I will love that disciple and reveal myself to that one...
All who love me
will follow my teaching. My Loving God will love them, and we will come to
them and make our home with them. The words I have spoken are not my own. They
belong to the One who sent me.
I have spoken them
while still with you; but the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom our Loving
God will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you
of everything I have said to you. “Peace I leave with you. My peace I
give you. I do not give to you as the world gives.
Do not let your
hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. “You heard me say, ‘I am going
away and I am coming back to you. If you loved me, you would be
glad that I am going to God, for God is greater than I. I have told you
now before it happens, so that when it does happen you will believe.
These are the
inspired words from the Gospel attributed to John, and the community affirms
them be saying, Amen.
Homily Reflection by Dennis McDonald
We started our liturgy today with a
prayer provided by Margaret, a prayer for peace and holy unity. As individuals, who read the lines, we stated
“I want”, and it is wants that have been desired over the centuries, wants
longed for since before the time of Jesus. It is a yearning, as the prayer indicates, for
all to be united in love, care, and respect for one another and all of creation
It is human nature to desire peace, to long for a world of non-violence, to hope that all people are treated with
dignity and respect, and that the earth is treasured and cared for.
And yet, we live in a world where
violence persists, as it has since the beginning of time, whether it be the
violence of creation such as volcanoes, hurricanes, wild fires, or human
disregard for the lives of others, and the desire to control the rights and
destinies of others. We all know that
currently, many rights are under attack, many people are under duress, due to
those in power in many countries, striking out in anger, in resentment, in
fear. The earth is in peril due to those
who fail to, or decide not to, recognize the overwhelming evidence of global warming. Those abused and maligned are crying out in
anguish, searching for safe harbor, for compassion, for new life.
In the midst of this stands Jesus,
with a message of love and compassion, with a greeting of “Peace I leave with
you, my peace I give to you, not as the world gives, but as I give it to
you”. As John XXIII says in his
encyclical, Pacem in Terris, this peace that Jesus promised, is not possible
without divine assistance. It is imperative that we reflect on this peace we
are invited to live. It is, as we all
know, not easy to sustain it. It is oh so easy to fall sway to the culture of
violence that surrounds us each day. We
need the constant reaffirmation that the indwelling of the Spirit, in each of
us, can transform us into a person of peace, justice, and compassion. So, where do we stand, and with whom do we
stand in this time of violence? How can we stand against it?
It is important to recall that Jesus
delivered this message to the community of disciples gathered together. His message was at once for each of them, but
also for them as a community committed to following the way prepared by
Jesus. It is within community that we
are nourished with and reminded of the call to peace. It is within community
that we find strength and courage to stand and speak out against injustice. The message of Jesus is a call that “is
founded on truth, built upon justice, nurtured and animated by charity, and
brought into effect under the auspices of freedom”. These words of John XXIII are inspirational
and challenging. The question is, are we up to the challenge?
What did you hear? How do You live out
peace in our world today? Where do you find nourishment to remain committed to
the call? What will it cost you?
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