RCIA Blog: Balancing Act

The picture above can be interpreted as the balancing act we each have. The feelings we associate with the heart and the reason we associate with the brain can become precarious. The routine of our lives has us choosing which to follow and which to ignore. This picture is an apt metaphor of how St. Thomas Aquinas described our rational soul.  Per Aquinas, our rational soul has three complex powers. He describes them as intellect (reason, memory, calculation and understanding), the will (act, movement),  and the passions (feelings, desires, emotions).

To Aquinas, the will is synonymous with act, our actions. Our will is not automatic or automated but blessed to be free, as in free will.  There are bodily functions and actions that do not rely on our volition like breathing, heart rate, digestion, etc. Aquinas described these functions as different powers our soul in some ways shared with other living things. The other living things do not share the rational soul, that is, they are not self-aware.  There is a great deal of classical, medieval, and modern thinking about our souls. The model used by Aquinas works well to help us understand the interplay between desire (passions) and reason (intellect). Particularly because they seem to be at odds with one another. St. Paul alludes to this quandary in his letter to the Romans, “I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate” (Rom 7:15). We understand this struggle within each of us as an injury of the Fall.  Our passions (the heart) and our intellect (the brain) are not aligned within us.  They struggle to assert themselves and dominate our will, our actions. The Fall of Adam and Eve left us at odds within ourselves. This is called concupiscence or the predisposition to act contrary to what is good.

We often picture a devil on one shoulder and an angel on the other struggling to get a person to act in one way or another.  The devil and angel image simplify this struggle too much. This image reduces the real struggle as between some perfect good and some terrible bad or evil.  It is more helpful to think of our man on the tightrope. He demonstrates the act of will, that is, his movement toward his goal while balancing competing perceived goods.  His passion for what he desires  draws him forward and what he fears keeps him focused on what to avoid.  At the same time, he learns, analyzes, and concludes rightness by reason. The true struggle is not between choosing what is bad or what is good. The struggle is between what we desire as a good and what we know to be a good. These may not be the same and sometimes they can be very different things. Our passions and our intellect seek what is good and avoid what is bad or evil. This first principle of our nature is written on our hearts by our Creator.  Yet, the desire to do good is sometimes at odds with the desire to feel good or avoid discomfort. “They [the faithful] show that what the law requires is written on their hearts, while their conscience also bears witness, and their conflicting thoughts accuse or perhaps excuse them” (Rom 2:15). Here we have the issue. We  may want to  avoid actions which bring unwelcomed consequences, even though it may be the right action to do. Conversely, we may arrive at a considered opinion for action that lacks compassion, empathy or even mercy. These are powerful and weighty decisions. In a manner of speaking, they can throw you off balance.

Our man on the tightrope demonstrates the balancing act between these two powers within us. While our thoughts and conclusions may be judged right, moral, correct or their opposite, passions cannot. Passions simply are, they offer no considered response. By reason, we may judge our passions as aligned with the good  or not. This is demonstrated by the fact that our man does not merely  stand balancing on the rope. He has a goal, a destination. Each decision he makes, each of his adjustments either aids or inhibits his progress to that destination.  For us, our goal is to be with God and share in the Beatific Vision.

We may say that our intellect informs the will, and our passions direct the will. It is not one or the other, it is both. Just as the tightrope walker most progress forward in act, he must also balance desire and knowledge. The tightrope walker has skill, experience, and knowledge to help him succeed. What do we have to succeed? We are baptized in the Holy Spirit and freed from Original Sin. We are therefore free to do what is right. We contend with concupiscence and so must pray for guidance, inform our conscience with study, and participate in the sacramental life. What will keep us in balance? The regular reception of sacraments of Reconciliation and Holy Eucharist. Our passions are powerful, so is the Holy Spirit, our intellect is fallible, but the grace of God is not.

– Frank Miller  

Mass and Liturgical Schedule for Lent and Easter 2023

Ash Wednesday, February 22nd:

  • Masses at 9am, 11:30am, 7pm

  • Prayer Service, 4:00pm

Friday Stations of the Cross (With Music):

  • 2/24, 3/3, 3/10, 3/17, 3/24, 3/31, at 7pm

Adoration:

  • 2/27, 3/20 at 7pm

Confession:

  • Saturdays at 1:00pm (except Holy Saturday April 8th)

  • Monday, March 27th at 7:00pm

  • Or by appointment

HOLY WEEK:

  • Passion Palm Sunday 4/2

    • Saturday, April 1st 5:00pm Mass: Solemn Blessing of Palms

    • Sunday, April 2nd: Masses at 8:00am, 10:00am, 12:00pm

    • Palms distributed at all masses

  • Monday-Wednesday 4/3-4/5

    • Regular 11:30am Mass

  • Holy Thursday 4/6:

    • No morning mass

    • Solemn Mass of the Last Supper, 7:30pm

    • Night Prayer, 11:00pm

  • Good Friday 4/7

    • No mass

    • 8:30am Morning Prayer

    • Service (Passion and Death), 3:00pm

    • Living Stations (Youth), 7:00pm

  • Holy Saturday 4/8

    • No morning mass

    • No Confession

    • 8:30am Morning Prayer

    • 8:00pm Solemn Mass of the Resurrection (Easter Vigil) with Adult Choir

  • Easter Sunday 4/9

    • Masses at 8:00am, 10:00am with Children’s Choir, 12:00pm

Deacon Tom's Homily for Sunday, January 15th

“BEHOLD THE LAMB OF GOD.”  THE people of Jesus’ day were looking for the Lion of God, not the Lamb of God.  They wanted a fierce Messiah who would raise a powerful army to throw the Romans out of Palestine once and for all.  They really wanted Jesus to come down from the cross and be this conquering Messiah, this conquering Lion! But a lamb?!

LET’S REFLECT FOR A FEW moments on what this image of a lamb tells us about ourselves and about God.

WE’RE RAISED TO BE STRONG, SELF-sufficient, and independent.  When we get cancer, for example, we fight back heroically. But, as Christians, deep down we acknowledge: “I am not God in my own life.”  We admit that we do need God’s help in our day-to-day struggles, especially in fighting off the temptations that try to bring us down.  We do need a Shepherd to protect us and guide us.

AND COULD THIS IMAGE OF THE lamb be revealing something to us about God Himself?  When Thomas asks Jesus to show the Apostles His Father, Jesus answers, “Thomas, whoever sees me, sees the Father.”

JESUS, THE GENTLE LAMB, SHOWS us how to love our enemies, how to turn the other cheek. He refuses to call fire down upon the Samaritans, and He forgives the woman caught in adultery. 

COULD IT BE THAT THE ALMIGHTY God, the All-Powerful Creator of heaven and earth who is truly All-loving, All-merciful, All-forgiving, could it be that God, Our Father, Himself is much more like the gentle lamb than the fierce lion?

One of the most touching scenes in scripture occurs in the Book of Revelation when St. John’s vision of the future shows God the Father seated on His throne in heaven, holding a sacred scroll with seven seals.  A mighty angel proclaims in a loud voice: “Who is worthy to open the scroll and break its seals?”

ST. JOHN TELLS US THAT HE WEPT MANY tears because there was no one to read the scroll.” No one to bring about God’s final victory.  But someone does step forward: a lamb, the triumphant Lamb of God, and receives the scroll from the Father’s hand.

ALL OF HEAVEN REJOICES AND sings a new hymn: “Worthy is the Lamb to receive the scroll and to break open its seals, for You were slain.  With Your Blood you purchased for God people from every race and nation.”

THE CONQUERING LAMB!!

EVERY DAY MAY WE FOLLOW THE Lamb of God and, like the two disciples, ask Him: “Lord, where do you live?” And every day Jesus will turn, look at us, and reply, “Come, and see.”

Music Ministry: Singers and Instrumentalists needed!

The Music Ministry is seeking volunteers to help grow and enrich the parish’s musical activities.

The following Volunteers are needed:

  • Adult Choir: Sopranos and Altos, all voice parts

  • Youth Choir: Children ages 4+

  • Instrumentalists:

    • Percussion

    • Brass

    • Strings

    • Winds

  • ALL are welcome! Singers are not required to have formal training or experience.

To sign up, please contact Music Director Dr. Patricio Molina at patricio.molina@stachurchbloomfield.org.

 

Whether you sing or play, you’re needed at STA!

Call for Winter Clothing and Food Items

The Beyond Cornerstone Service Ministry is collecting winter clothing for all ages. Please contact Joanne Hand or Ministry Leader Alicia at aliciavons@gmail.com if you have items to donate.

To support the ministry’s work with the Missionary Sisters of St Mother Theresa at St Augustine's soup kitchen as a volunteer, please consider attending their next meeting planning meeting Tuesday, January 2 at 7PM in the St. Peter's Room at the Parish Center or contact Alicia. You may also place a donation in an envelope marked SOUP KITCHEN in the collection basket or in the lock box at the parish center. In the memo line, designate that the donation is for the soup kitchen.

In addition, you may make donations of non-perishable food items to our Parish Food Pantry at any time to support local community members in need. These may be dropped off at the parish during open hours in designated areas.

Christmas Pageant 2022

The youth of STA Parish have put on another wonderful Christmas pageant in anticipation of the birth of our Lord!

The children dressed as angels, shepherds, wise men, and Mary and Joseph and sang for the audience while acting out the story of Jesus’ birth.

Our Congratulations to the whole cast, and many thanks to Dr. Molina for organizing this event, another beloved tradition of our parish!

Deacon Tom's Homily for the 4th Sunday of Advent

I FIRST HEARD THE FOLLOWING story when Father Peter Funisti used it in one of his homilies. I think of it frequently; it really helps with the question: why did Jesus become one of us?

ONE WINTER EVENING, DURING A fierce blizzard, a farmer looked out his window at a flock of geese that had been grounded by the sleet and the strong, driving winds. The farmer quickly grabbed his coat, ran to the barn and threw the barn doors wide open. BUT THE HARDER THE FARMER tried to herd the geese into the shelter of the barn, the more the geese scattered. “If only I could become one of them myself,” the farmer thought, “I could lead them into the safety of the barn.”

IN OUR GOSPEL TODAY, THE Word of God, the Eternal Son of the Father, has come among us and is a fetus, growing within the womb of the Virgin Mary. The long-promised “God-with-us” has at last entered time and space, becoming one of us, to lead us all into the safety of heaven, to show us the way.

BUT WE MUST TRUST!

THE VIRGIN MARY SAID “Yes” to God’s Plan of Salvation; this young betrothed girl has agreed to become pregnant by the power of the Holy Spirit. IN THOSE DAYS, BETROTHEL was much closer to our marriage. The couple were actually called each other’s “wife” and “husband.” And, to break off their engagement, a formal decree of divorce would be required.

AT THIS POINT, MARY IS extremely vulnerable. If Joseph decides NOT to go through with their marriage, Mary was liable to being stoned to death as an adulteress. But Mary trusted that God would take care of her.

IN TODAY’S GOSPEL, WE SEE Joseph’s dilemma of whether to marry Mary or not. He finally does believe the angel’s words, and trusts that God will somehow work everything out.

WE NEED TO TRUST THAT God cares for and cherishes each one of us just as much as He does Jesus and Mary and Joseph!

NO MATTER WHAT POINT WE ARE at in our lives: whether we’re still in school, or a young married couple raising children, a single person, or as we approach middle age with the aches and forgetfulness that surely will come, we need to trust in God, and especially during our journey through death.

JESUS CAME TO LEAD US INTO heaven and He shows us that there is indeed resurrection at the end of each of our own journeys, too.

TODAY, WE PRAY: “Lord Jesus, may we each attain to our future destiny which is union with You and the Father and the Holy Spirit in an ecstasy of joy for all eternity. Amen.