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April 2018 – Journeying Into Mystery

Reflection for the 5th Sunday of Easter – to bear much fruit

In his homily on April 19th of this year, Pope Francis said that we are not to be “benchwarmers” in the efforts of evangelization. He preached, “A ‘couch potato’ evangelization doesn’t exist. Get up and go! Be always on the move. Go to the place where you must speak the word of God.”

In the readings chosen for today, we hear how on fire St Paul was to preach the Word of God. Paul’s evangelizing got him in trouble with the Hellenists (Greeks) of Jerusalem. For his own safety, the apostles had to whisk Paul out of Jerusalem to the community of Tarsus. In John’s first letter he exhorts his disciples, “Children, let us love not in word or speech but in deed and truth.” In the Gospel, just prior to leaving for the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus uses the image of the vine and the branches to describe his relationship with the apostles. “By this is my Father glorified, that you bear much fruit and become my disciples.”If they are truly his disciples they are to bear much fruit by continuing to spread the Gospel Jesus taught them.

This brings us back to the image that Pope Francis used in his homily. Are we just Catholic Christian “couch potatoes”?  Do we just do “what we think we have to do by obligation” to go to heaven? Instead of being alive and living our mission as disciples of Jesus, bearing much fruit, do we just lethargically remain on the couch, covered in the dust of our own Christian complacency? Pope Francis urges us to rouse ourselves from the sink holes of our spiritual couches, brush off the dust of our complacency and follow the example of St Paul, St John and the other apostles by actively living the Good News of Jesus, not just in the spoken and written word, but in deed.

In the “old days”, many Catholics thought that evangelization was the “job” of the priests and the nuns. As the scriptures and Pope Francis say quite clearly, there is no room for lazy Catholicism. The job of evangelization belongs to all of us who are baptized.

Reflection for the 4th Sunday of Easter, “Good Shepherd” Sunday

Have you ever felt abandoned? I have known many people who have felt abandoned. Abandonment comes in many forms. When a spouse dies, the widow or widower experience not only grief of losing someone they loved, but also the feeling of being left all alone. There is the loneliness of being the sole surviving sibling of a family. There are those going through separation and divorce who experience not only being abandoned by their ex-spouse, but also by many of their family and friends. There are many children, caught in the world of foster homes who feel abandoned and unwanted. There are those children and adolescents who are so cruelly bullied and abandoned by their peers  that they opt to die by suicide.

Abandonment is the curse of a society that glorifies the individual to the point of narcissism. We find that our world of “me first and the heck with everybody else”, condemns many to a life of loneliness and neglect. The readings for today are a much needed comfort for all who feel lonely and abandoned.

In John’s first letter he writes, “See what love the Father has bestowed on us that we may be called the children of God.” Though we may feel unloved and abandoned by all in our life, God loves us as His very own children. The bond of love that God has for us can never be severed.  Paul expresses  this in his letter to the Romans, “What can separate us from the love of God?” Paul answers the question saying that  no matter what may happen to us, absolutely nothing can separate us from the love of God.  Today, Jesus tells us that the love relationship we have with him is as intimate as the relationship he has with the Father.  “I am the good shepherd, and I know mine and mine know me, just as the Father knows me and I know the Father; and I will lay down my life for the sheep.”

Though we may feel abandoned and unloved, Jesus, abandoned and betrayed by those he loved, knows our pain and assures us that his love relationship with us remains for all eternity.

Shameless self-promotion of my music.

On February 15th of this year (2018), I began composing the latest Opus (fancy word for collection) of Psalm Offerings. The overall theological concept behind these compositions was the Paschal Mystery, hence, the subtitle, “The Paschal Mystery Psalm Offerings”. I completed the last of the compositions two weeks ago (see the blogpost for Psalm Offering 9 Opus 9). All of the music has been registered with the U.S. Copyright Office. On Friday, I took a step to get the music into wider distribution through cdbaby.com. You can find it at this address, http://store.cdbaby.com/cd/deaconbobwagnerofs .

I wrote a commentary, complete with scriptural references, that has also been registered with the U.S. Copyright Office. The rationale for these Psalm Offerings is explained in this Introduction.

“At some moment in our lives, we will encounter God in what is best described as a “mystical experience.” I have had these moments, some of the most vivid during the birth of my children, in which I could sense the presence of God so distinctly I felt that if I would hold up my hand I would have been able to touch the face of God.

The most powerful mystical experience I have had in my life occurred during the summer of 1981. At the time, I was the music educator for St Wenceslaus Catholic School in New Prague. At the same time, I was the director of liturgical music. This required me to work 7 day weeks. By the time the school year ended in early June, I was experiencing extreme ministerial burnout. The problem was I didn’t know I was severely burnt out. All I knew was that I was incapable of feeling any kind of emotion, except perhaps, fear, because I did not know what was going on with me emotionally. I went to the public library and after some research discovered exactly what I had.

Just as the school year ended, I was immersed in graduate study. A couple of years earlier, I figured that if I was going to be a liturgical musician, I had better know something about what I was doing. I entered the Master of Arts Pastoral Study program at the College of St. Thomas. Because this was offered during the summer months, a whole semester of graduate study was compressed into six weeks with the first term paper (with annotated footnotes) due by the end of the first week. I found it very intense, challenging, gratifying, and wonderful. Classes would begin around 8:30 am/9 am and end sometime around 4 pm. I would get up early and travel the 45-50 minutes up to St. Paul and return home around 5 pm. In the summer of 1981, I was beginning my third summer in the program as I was suffering from this severe burnout.

The route I took from my home to New Prague to the college campus in St. Paul could best be described as many winding roads. The highway and county roads from my home matched the topographic detail of the land, rolling hills and lakes defining the path of the road, with mostly farmsteads, barns, acres of corn, soybeans, alfalfa, and pastures on either side of the road. The intersections with stop signs were far from ordinary, often requiring a right turn and then a left turn to continue the journey east to the freeway.

I remember one summer morning driving up to the campus. It was a bright, sunny day with brilliant blue skies. Overwhelmed and barely functioning because of the burnout, I was praying to God to take the burnout from me.

As I prayed, I suddenly found myself in a very dark and windy void. My body was being blown about in the wind and the only thing that kept me from being blown away into the darkness was a piece of white cloth that my right hand was clutching.

I looked to see what it was I was grasping and found that it was the hem of a white garment. As my eyes followed the path from my hand upward, I found myself staring into the face of the Resurrected Jesus who was dressed in a pure, white alb. Unlike the many crucifixes with a dead Jesus, hands and feet nailed to the wood of the cross, this was the glorified Jesus, alive with his arms and hands stretched out into this dark void. I looked into his eyes and softly said, “Help me!” He smiled at me and silently bent over, his right arm reaching down toward mine. His right hand grasped my right hand at the wrist and he began to pull me up toward him. Unlike the motion when one picks up a child, he didn’t pull me up onto himself, rather, he pulled me up inside of himself. I suddenly looked at my right hand and it was his hand. I realized that my eyes were looking at the world through his eyes. I looked down at his/my feet and I saw all these people hanging onto the hem of our alb, begging for help as they were blown about in this very, dark, windy space. His/my/our hand reached down and began to pull them up into ourself.

The vision suddenly ended and I found myself traveling north on the freeway, close to the city of Lakeville. I had traveled 17 miles on these winding roads, without destroying rows of corn and soybeans. no cows, sheep, or chickens maimed or killed, my car not submerged into the depths of one of the many lakes, and no colliding of my car with other vehicles. How I safely traveled this distance remains a complete mystery to me.  All I knew was that when I emerged from this mystical state, I was completely healed from my burnout. I also knew what I would be doing for the rest of my life. It was after this I began to research what it meant to be a permanent deacon.

I have written about how the Paschal Mystery of Jesus is constantly present in the lives of his disciples. Every Easter Vigil, in his letter to the Romans, we hear St. Paul write to us that when we were baptized we were baptized into Christ Jesus’ passion and death. He then goes on to tell us that we are also baptized into his Resurrection. The path to the Resurrections in our lives is always through our passions and deaths. The very events that cause us suffering are also the source of our salvation and new life. My burnout, ironically, was the pathway to greater healing, greater self-knowledge, and greater purpose in my life. My burnout led me to an encounter with Jesus so powerful that it continues to alter, direct and influence my life to this very day.

This being said, suffering is not a virtue after which we should seek. Most of us try to avoid suffering for there is no joy in suffering. However, our human condition being what it is, suffering naturally finds us. The question that must ask in the midst of suffering is “What am I to learn from this?” Or, as a former pastor once asked me, “Where is the grace in all of this?” Asking these questions is far better than shaking our fist toward the heavens, cursing God and shouting, “Why me?” When we reflect on the suffering we are or have experienced, and search for the grace or learning we have gained from it, we will find that that suffering has been a catalyst from which we have grown closer to God.

The music in this collection is dedicated to people who have known suffering. However, through their suffering they have also experienced Resurrection. My mother in law, Rosemary, who struggled the last years of her life; my sister Mary Ruth, who endured 25 years of chronic illness; the many children, women and men gunned down viciously in our schools, shopping malls, theaters, and concerts. Then there are the people who I have known who continue to work and struggle through adversity and  experience enough Resurrection, even though it may be a wee bit,  to continue to persevere. Their names are all attached to these piano prayer songs.

As I composed the music, I reflected upon the scripture that was its inspiration. May this music be a doorway into a deeper reflection of your own Paschal Mystery.”

Deacon Bob Wagner OFS

Easter 2018

For my beloved wife, Ruth – Psalm Offering 9 Opus 9

Ruthie

See what love the Father has given us, that we should be called children of God; and that is what we are. The reason the world does not know us is that it did not know him. Beloved, we are God’s children now; what we will be has not yet been revealed. What we do know is this: when he is revealed, we will be like him, for we will see him as he is. (1 John 3:1-2, NRSV)

I first met Ruth on September 3, 1968. When my father’s business transferred my family from Chicago to St. Paul, I was beginning my junior year in high school. The first person who talked to me, welcomed me, and smiled at me to my new high school was Ruth.

Ruth’s high school graduation picture

By the year’s end we began dating (our first date was on May 29, 1969, the movie we saw was Charly, and it rained all evening). We were married on December 27, 1974. I have come to think of Ruth in terms of the word miracle.

It was a miracle that my family moved when we did, and I chose the high school at which Ruth was attending. It was a miracle that I met her that first day. It was a miracle that we began to be very close and started to date. It was a miracle that she fell in love with me (I had fallen in love with her long before the first date). It was a miracle that she married me (even though her dad told her as she walked up the aisle at St Bridget of Sweden Church that she could still get out of marrying me if she wanted to). Each of one of our children is a miracle. Each year of my life with Ruthie is a miracle. If you would ask me who has taught me the most about love, and how to live that love, it is Ruthie. When the author of the first letter of John exhorts his followers to see now greatly God has loved them, I have come to know how greatly I am loved by being in this miraculous relationship with Ruth. She is the incarnation of God’s love for me and I am blessed to be so very aware of it. I have often told her that when I grow up I want to be like her. Each passing day only affirms those words and sentiments of mine. She is the living image of God’s love for me, and this only inspires me to strive to better become that which God is calling me to be.

ABOUT THE MUSIC: This music is composed in my favorite meter, 5/4 time (5 beats grouped to every measure, a quarter note getting 1 beat). It is not common time like 3/4 , 4/4, or 2/4 time in which most music is composed. What is fun with this meter is where the accented beats (the stronger sounding beats) are placed in the measure. It can be 1,2,3,4,5 or 1,2,3,4,5. In this music, the accents sometimes falls on the second beat (note: the first measure of the song) 1,2,3,4,5.
The music is composed in the key of C major (no sharps or flats in the Key signature). It is in rondo form, namely, A1,A2,B1,A1,A2,C,A1,A2,D,A2,B2,A1,A2,Coda, with melody A (or its variant) being the dominant melody.

Psalm Offering 9 Opus 9 (c) 2018, Deacon Bob Wagner OFS. All rights reserved.

 

Third Sunday of Easter reflection

From time to time, I will watch one of the many “ghost hunter” shows for a laugh. It is a lot like watching adults playing the kids’ game, “Red Light, Green Light, hope to see a ghost tonight.” Stumbling around in the dark with infrared cameras, and all sorts of electronic gadgets, they seek to “document” that ghosts exist. The shows all boil down to someone saying to the empty darkness around them, “If there is someone here give me a sign.”

Today we hear Luke’s version of what happened on Easter Sunday. The two disciples having encountered the Risen Lord on their way to Emmaus, return to the apostles hiding out in the upper room and tell them that Jesus is indeed risen! In dramatic fashion, Jesus suddenly appears in their midst, the apostles reacting like our television ghost hunters fearing they have encountered the ghost of Jesus. They do not have to ask for a “sign”, Jesus immediately bestows to them his peace. He then tells them to touch him and feel his flesh and bones. He eats some fish. What ghost can do this, he asks them.

Do we find ourselves, from time to time, asking for a “sign” from Jesus that he is indeed risen? Do we not wish that we had been in that upper room, touching the real flesh and bones of the Risen Lord, and seeing him eat with us? Every time we gather here on Sunday, we encounter the living flesh and bone of Jesus in the Body of Christ around us. The people we greet, those with whom we exchange a sign of peace are the real Body, flesh and blood of Jesus in our world. We see Jesus eat, as we watch those around us receive Holy Communion. We hear his voice as they sing and respond in prayer. In the eyes of those around us, we see Jesus look at us.

We don’t need infrared cameras, or special electronic gadgets, or digital recorders to document that Jesus is Risen and among us. The Risen Lord is alive and well and present in all those gathered around us every Sunday at Mass.

For Cheryl and Buster – Psalm Offering 8 Opus 9

Cheryl Deister and Buster.

PSALM OFFERING 8 OPUS 9 – For Cheryl Deister and Buster
This Psalm Offering is composed in the form of a Mazurka, a lively Polish dance written in triple meter. I had Psalm 149 in mind as I composed this music.

PSALM 149

Praise the Lord!
Sing to the Lord a new song,
his praise in the assembly of the faithful.
Let Israel be glad in its Maker;
let the children of Zion rejoice in their King.
Let them praise his name with dancing,
making melody to him with tambourine and lyre.
For the Lord takes pleasure in his people;
he adorns the humble with victory.
Let the faithful exult in glory;
let them sing for joy on their couches.
(Psalm 149: 1-5. Coogan, Michael D.; Brettler, Marc Z.; Perkins, Pheme; Newsom, Carol A.. The New Oxford Annotated Bible with Apocrypha: New Revised Standard Version (Page 893). Oxford University Press. Kindle Edition.)

I composed this in memory of my cousin Cheryl Deister. Cheryl died following back surgery early in the year. She worked for most of her life in the Federal government and upon retiring, was employed as an independent contractor on government projects. Single all her life, she took loving care of her parents till they passed away, and was a loving doting aunt to her nieces and nephews. She loved dearly her sister Kathy and brother in law, Frank. The other great love of her life was her standard poodle, Buster. Cheryl was a devoted Washington Redskin and Washington Nationals fan.

Kathy and Cheryl were my Virginia cousins, whom I last visited probably in the 1960’s. Ruth and I had the great pleasure of visiting Kathy, Frank and Cheryl the first week of October, 2017. We were looking so forward to them coming to visit us this summer and were greatly shocked and saddened to hear of Cheryl’s death in January. I would like to think that this Mazurka reflects the joy that Cheryl imparted to those who knew her, and is now part of the great dance she is enjoying in Heaven.

About the music: As stated above, a Mazurka is a fast, lively dance in triple meter. It is marked by accents falling on the weaker beats of triple time, namely, the 2nd and 3rd beat of each measure. One of the great composers of Mazurkas was Frederick Chopin, who composed 69 Mazurkas for piano.

This Mazurka is composed in simple 3 part meter. Melody A, melody B, melody A.

(Psalm Offering 8 Opus 9 (c) 2018, Deacon Bob Wagner OFS. All rights reserved.

Reflection for the 2nd Sunday of Easter

My favorite post-resurrection account is from the Gospel of John, in which Mary Magdalene, weeping, returns to the empty tomb of Jesus, looking for his missing body. Two angels at the tomb ask her why she is weeping. She responds, ““They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him.” As she says this, she turns and seeing a man she assumes is a gardener asks him, “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away.” Unbeknownst to Mary, the gardener is really Jesus. Moved, he then speaks her name, “Mary.” Realizing it is Jesus, she says, “Rabbouni!” Jesus tells her, ““Do not hold on to me, because I have not yet ascended to the Father.” He then tells her to go the apostles and tell them that he is ascending to his Father, “to my God and your God.” Mary quickly returns to the apostles and tells them, “I have seen the Lord!” (NRSV Bible)

The poignancy of this post-resurrection story is beautifully expressed in a poem, entitled, “Mary”, composed by the poet, Elizabeth Rooney.

Mary

The Love I love
Came in the early dawning
Standing as still as light.

How could I ever have dreamed
So sweet a morning
After so dark a night? (from A Widening Light:Poems of the Incarnation, Luci Shaw, editor, (c) 1984, Regent College Publishing)

During this past Holy Week, four members of our faith community, Ralph Weiers, Robert Koppinger, Bernice Lambrecht, and Delores Hoffman passed from this life to the fullness of life, some of them dying during the Easter Triduum, when the Paschal Mystery of Jesus is beautifully and powerfully celebrated in the highest liturgies of the Church year. After years of diminishing health, all four fell into the eternal loving embrace of Jesus. I believe the last few lines of this poem, “How could I ever have dreamed, So sweet a morning After so dark a night?” was on their lips as Jesus lovingly spoke their name. May their grieving families and all of us who grieve similarly take comfort in these same words.

For Lisa Leverson – Psalm Offering 7 Opus 9

This Psalm Offering is a musical expression of Psalm 25.

To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul.
O my God, in you I trust;
do not let me be put to shame;
do not let my enemies exult over me.
Do not let those who wait for you be put to shame;
let them be ashamed who are wantonly treacherous.

Make me to know your ways, O Lord;
teach me your paths.
Lead me in your truth, and teach me,
for you are the God of my salvation;
for you I wait all day long.

Be mindful of your mercy, O Lord,
and of your steadfast love,
for they have been from of old.
Do not remember the sins of my youth
or my transgressions;
according to your steadfast love remember me,
for your goodness’ sake, O Lord!

Good and upright is the Lord;
therefore he instructs sinners in the way.
He leads the humble in what is right,
and teaches the humble his way.
All the paths of the Lord are
steadfast love and faithfulness,
for those who keep his covenant and his decrees.

For your name’s sake, O Lord,
pardon my guilt, for it is great.
Who are they that fear the Lord?
He will teach them the way that they should choose.

They will abide in prosperity,
and their children shall possess the land.
The friendship of the Lord is for those who fear him,
and he makes his covenant known to them.
My eyes are ever toward the Lord,
for he will pluck my feet out of the net.

Turn to me and be gracious to me,
for I am lonely and afflicted.
Relieve the troubles of my heart,
and bring me out of my distress.
Consider my affliction and my trouble,
and forgive all my sins.

Consider how many are my foes,
and with what violent hatred they hate me.
O guard my life, and deliver me;
do not let me be put to shame,
for I take refuge in you.
May integrity and uprightness preserve me,
for I wait for you.

Redeem Israel, O God,
out of all its troubles.
(Coogan, Michael D.; Brettler, Marc Z.; Perkins, Pheme; Newsom, Carol A.. The New Oxford Annotated Bible with Apocrypha: New Revised Standard Version (Page 793). Oxford University Press.)

I dedicate this Psalm Offering to Lisa Leverson. Lisa is the administrative secretary of the parish in which I presently serve. She has the wonderful quality of bringing order and tranquility to the chaos of parish life. I find this somewhat akin to the gospel accounts of Jesus calming the storm at sea. She is a good friend, and a most trusted colleague. It is a comfort to minister with her in this large, merged parish.

ABOUT THE MUSIC: This Palm Offering is composed in the key of G major. It is in simple two part, AB, form. There is a recurring refrain A that alternates with the B melody. The entire form of the song is A,B1,A,B2,A,B1, A Coda.

(Psalm Offering 7 Opus 9, (c) 2018, Deacon Bob Wagner OFS. All rights reserved.

Saint Judas – An Easter Reflection

In a poetry class in college, I studied a poem by the American poet, James Wright. It was entitled “Saint Judas”. The poet found that in reading the New Testament, the death of Judas Iscariot is mentioned in only two accounts, Matthew’s Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles (the Gospels of John, Luke, and Mark, while acknowledging his betrayal of Jesus, never mention his death). The manner of Judas’ death is different in the two accounts. In Matthew’s account, Judas dies by hanging himself. In Act, he falls upon the field, he has bought with the money, suffering disembowelment. In Wright’s poem, Judas, on his way to end his life, encounters hoodlums beating and robbing a man. Shaken by the sight the poem continues …

“Banished from heaven, I found this victim beaten,
Stripped, kneed, and left to cry. Dropping my rope
Aside, I ran, ignored the uniforms;
Then I remembered bread my flesh had eaten,
The kiss that ate my flesh. Flayed without hope,
I held the man for nothing in my arms.”

In this poem, the death of Jesus not only saved the world, but even saved the life and the soul of the one who betrayed him. Judas, no longer ruled and controlled by avarice, finds his life emulating that of the one he betrayed. He has become a man of compassion and love.

On this Easter Sunday, where do we find ourselves? Do we find ourselves with the brave women, Mary Magdalene, Mary, the mother of James, and Salome going to the tomb of Jesus? Do we find ourselves in the person of Peter, crushed by his denial of Jesus? Do we find ourselves numbered with the apostles fearing for their lives cowering in the upper room? Or, do we find ourselves, as in this poem, with Judas Iscariot, who believes his sin has damned him for all time? It matters not with whom we find ourselves. The death, passion and resurrection of Jesus has brought salvation to humanity. All we need to do is believe and embrace Jesus, the One who is the way, the truth, and the life.

Here is the complete poem.

SAINT JUDAS
When I went out to kill myself, I caught
A pack of hoodlums beating up a man.
Running to spare his suffering,
I forgot My name, my number, how my day began,
How soldiers milled around the garden stone
And sang amusing songs; how all that day
Their javelins measured crowds; how I alone
Bargained the proper coins, and slipped away.

Banished from heaven, I found this victim beaten,
Stripped, kneed, and left to cry.
Dropping my rope
Aside, I ran, ignored the uniforms:
Then I remembered bread my flesh had eaten,
The kiss that ate my flesh.
Flayed without hope,
I held the man for nothing in my arms.

Wright, James. Collected Poems (Wesleyan Poetry Series) (p. 86). Wesleyan University Press. Kindle Edition.