Year of Faith – March 2013

Painting by Don Vogl.

Pope Benedict XVI has declared a Year of Faith to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Vatican II. In celebration of this moment of renewal, I have written a retreat for each month beginning October 11, 2012 through November 24, 2013. This three minute audio retreat is meant to focus on some essential aspects of our faith and to invite us into prayer. I hope you will enjoy the audio version as well as the written text during this year. Please join me now for this sixth month of reflection and retreat, “The Holy Word of God”.

“Pray with an open heart and allow God to speak to you from these ancient texts.. Be at peace among the stories of love.

Listen now: [audio http://dl.dropbox.com/u/75239779/Year%20of%20Faith/Year%20of%20Faith%20w-music%20March%202013.mp3]

Stream live on KBVM 88.3FM from October 2012 through November 2013. Music by: Maureen Briare, University of Portland

The Year of Faith Retreat is also available to read and pray throughout the year.

Parish Missions and Retreats for Lent 2013

I will be preaching two parish missions in the next few weeks.

Holy Redeemer Church, Portland, Oregon: The Promise of the Fig Tree: Cultivating our lives of prayer and service

  • Saturday, March 2: Mass 5:00pm
  • Sunday, March 3: Masses 8:00am and 10:00am
  • Sunday March 3: Mission Talk: 7:00pm
  • Monday March 4: Mission Talk: 7:00pm
  • Tuesday March 5: Mission Talk: 7:00pm

Saint John the Evangelist Parish, Viera, Florida: Coming to our senses: Finding our path to prayer, community and service

  • Saturday, March 9: Mass 4:30pm
  • Sunday, March 10: Masses at 7:30am, 9:00am, 11:00am and 4:30pm
  • Monday, March 11: Mission Talk at 9:00am and 7:00pm
  • Tuesday, March 12: Mission Talk at 9:00am and 7:00pm
  • Wednesday, March 13: Mission Talk at 9:00am and 7:00pm

Personal Poverty Retreat:

  • Friday, March 15: There are still a couple of openings. Please email me for registration.

Stories for the Journey: A Lenten Retreat

  • Sunday March 17: Please join us after the 10:00am Mass for the second in the series of stories by members of our community focusing on the Lenten Season. 

On The Margins – Luke: 9: 28b-36

“We are offered a new perspective on Christ Jesus and ourselves. This is a foreshadowing of the resurrection. The apostles were overcome with sleep. They wake up to seeing who Jesus really is, not just a human prophet. They are awakened to the reality that God is with them. This new process of waking up enables them to receive more deeply his love for them. In this Lent, we too are going to be awakened by the discipline.” The Second Sunday of Lent,  Sunday February 24, 2013.”

Listen now: [audio http://dl.dropbox.com/u/75239779/On%20The%20Margins/On%20The%20Margins%20Feb%2024%202013.mp3]

Stream live On The Margins on KBVM 88.3FM on Saturdays at 7am and Sundays at 8am.

The Year of Faith Retreat will be posted every month, from October 2012 through November 2013.

Stories for the Journey: Lenten Retreat. Ron Raab’s story

JB, Ron, Jeremy, Tom from Stories for the Journey: A Lenten Retrea

JB, Ron, Jeremy, Tom from Stories for the Journey: A Lenten Retreat

We gathered after Mass today for our Lenten retreat based on story telling. Jeremy Marks and myself each told stories from our lives that opened up the gospel for members of our community. What a powerful experience of community  building, around the vulnerability of our own lives. This project was the idea of Tom Frieberg from our community. Julie Booth (JB) and Tom will tell stories on Sunday, March 17, 2013. Here is my story from this morning. The photo: JB, Ron, Jeremy and Tom.

Listen now:

[audio http://dl.dropbox.com/u/75239779/On%20The%20Margins/Ron%20Raab%20LIVE%200217.mp3]

On The Margins – Luke 4:1-13

“We are well into our lives in the desert of Lent. Our purpose is to bear witness to our Father in heaven in these Lenten days. Lent is a journey, an entry into a deeper more profound relationship with Christ, with our selves and the community around us. We come to a new appreciation of prayer, learning to fast from the deeds of our lives that wear us down and to give alms so that justice may reign. We are marked with the sign of salvation. The desert is an image of enlightenment, of transformation.” First  Sunday of Lent, February 17, 2013.”

Listen now: [audio http://dl.dropbox.com/u/75239779/On%20The%20Margins/On%20The%20Margins%20Feb%2017%202013.mp3]

Stream live On The Margins on KBVM 88.3FM on Saturdays at 7am and Sundays at 8am.

The Year of Faith Retreat will be posted every month, from October 2012 through November 2013.

Ash Wednesday February 13, 2013

images-6On this Ash Wednesday, I draw your attention to an article, “Line Dancing” from Ministry and Liturgy magazine from Lent 2010. Also two years ago we produced a version of the Stations of the Cross called, “The Faces of Friday” which is a video series of the fourteen stations. This version of the stations can be used for individual prayer or in a group setting.

Let us pray:

God of the journey, today we process together to be marked with salvation’s sign. We stream to this sacred smudge as we are, dirty or forlorn, ill or imprisoned, dutiful or apologetic. Reach out in a gesture of love and comfort us along the way because what we all have in common is a desire to find our home in you. Bless us and forgive our past mistakes and the sins that haunt us in the night. Give us a new vision of ourselves as believers and as a people who long to be connected by baptismal waters. Release us from shame, from negative self-talk, from our desires to hurt our neighbors and from the confines and patterns of blame. You are love and welcome us next in line with ashes on our foreheads so we may renew our hearts to follow you all our days. Amen

If you are in the area today, I will be presiding at the Eucharist at 12:05pm today.

On The Margins – Luke 5:1-11

“Simon gives in to the call of Jesus. This call is also for us. We may believe that our lives are empty, that we are unloved and worthless. The abundant catch is also for us, in our day and age, in our lives. Our parish community began as an outreach to sailers, their needs form alcoholism and joblessness. This gospel opens to believe that hope, love and purpose are also for us.” Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time.  Sunday February 10, 2013.”

Listen now: [audio http://dl.dropbox.com/u/75239779/On%20The%20Margins/On%20the%20Margins%20Feb%2010%202013.mp3]

Stream live On The Margins on KBVM 88.3FM on Saturdays at 7am and Sundays at 8am.

The Year of Faith Retreat will be posted every month, from October 2012 through November 2013.

Simplicity: Session Five

DSC_0078

I wrote this retreat on simplicity in 2001. These ten sessions are the beginning of a new series here on living a simple life. I hope these sessions open you to the foundations of living a life of simplicity, learning what is essential from the inside out, a process of faith and prayer. The essence of simplicity rests in our deep faith experience of the Paschal Mystery. All things die. New life emerges. This pattern is the element of God’s creating plan. Jesus’ dying and rising reveals the brevity of life. We cannot ultimately possess or control life. Life is a great gift given from our loving Creator. I hope you enjoy this fifth session. You may download the entire series here:

 Simplicity:  Loving, Living, Serving by Ronald Patrick Raab, C.S.C. (Fatima Retreat Center, 2001)

+

Session Five: Learn from your heart

Theme:

  • Jesus asks of us two things before we die, to learn how to receive love and how to give love.
  • Love nurtures the spiritual life and we learn from an integrated experience of life. The heart becomes the center of how we live, why we live and for whom we live.
  • Heart knowledge is the beginning of our reliance on the Holy, an experience of conversion. Human growth and love can not be limited to the mind alone.

Scripture:

  • I shall give you a new heart, and put a new spirit in you; I shall remove the heart of stone from your bodies and give you a heart of flesh instead. Ezekiel: 36
  • And for anyone who is in Christ, there is a new creation. 2 Corinthians
  • He will exult with joy over you, he will renew you by his love. Zephaniah 
  • Teach us to count how few days we have and so gain wisdom of heart. Psalm 90
  • The Lord is close to the brokenhearted.  Psalm 34

Prayer:

How often, O God, I am my own worst enemy. I forge ahead thinking I am in control of everything! I pretend I know what is right, holy and good. And then I find myself against another brick wall! Spirit of God, continue to show me the ways of my self-reliance and reveal to my heart the true course of life. You are the teacher of the heart, the Master of Love and slowly I am beginning to discover the ways of learning something new. In mind, body, heart create in me your image of love. Amen

Response:

  • I must gain simple perspective on my life to _____________________________.
  • Sometimes I can not trust my heart because _____________________________.
  • Those who have formed by heart in the past are __________________________.
  • The times when I make decisions with a balanced perspective, I _____________.
  • God is teaching me to listen to my heart through __________________________.

On The Margins – Luke 4:21-30

“No prophet is accepted in his day and native place. Jesus develops his authority among the people. He is the word-made-flesh. We all know how difficult it is to challenge people or change people we love. People in recovery teach me that people can change, yet families of people in recovery do not always change.” Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time.  Sunday February, 2013.”

Listen now: [audio http://dl.dropbox.com/u/75239779/On%20The%20Margins/On%20The%20Margins%20Feb%203%202013.mp3]

Stream live On The Margins on KBVM 88.3FM on Saturdays at 7am and Sundays at 8am.

The Year of Faith Retreat will be posted every month, from October 2012 through November 2013.

Bending Down with the Word of God

Originally published by Ministry & Liturgy Magazine, February 2013
– PDF version –

This article begins a 10-part series on Catholic preaching for deacons, lay preachers and priests. The series will focus on preaching among people surviving poverty. I look forward to your comments on these articles.
 

 

I prepare for the Triduum by sitting on the ground. I want to make sure that I do not miss anything. I make this physical gesture because that is where the scriptures and the liturgy seem to take me during Holy Week. I hit the ground because my preaching depends on me finding my authentic belief in the power of God to raise us all up.

Before Palm Sunday, I bend my knee to God according to Philippians to prepare for my homily. I am very conscious that people seldom see the priest get on his knees in prayer during the Eucharist of Ordinary Time. This is a place, a gesture for my personal prayer where the Word of God washes over me. Bending down alone to read the passion narrative brings me to the bodily pain of Christ Jesus and to the people who suffer alone. Here I recognize my powerlessness to really change or heal or mend anything.

As I prepare for Holy Thursday, I know I am not alone on the floor. The disciples responded to Jesus’ request and his gesture to bend down and wash their feet. I am confronted with all the ways I have yet to bend low and see people’s needs in front me. On the floor is a better position to encounter my Savior who invites me to extend my nakedness, my feet and my soul. I will encounter the feet of people who have the courage to extend them in public, but it is their faces that I will see more clearly.

The Good Friday liturgy begins with the priest on the floor. I have to be on the floor in my own prayer in order to feel the public posture of giving my all to God. I cannot give what I do not have. Prostration does not mean anything unless I feel the powerlessness well beforehand. The floor connects me to people who sleep on the sidewalk outside. The floor reminds me that I do not have answers for others’ problems or power to wield. The floor becomes a sacred space in which I am reminded that Jesus walked along a dusty path on the way to the cross. The floor, the ground reminds me that I will one day be dust.

If I do not spend time in prayer and reflection on the ground, I will never be able to peer into the empty tomb. My proclamations of new life will be stilted and softened by my own stubbornness and lack of faith. I want to run to the tomb on Easter morning. Easter will compel me off the floor as I peer in again to find Christ’s garment. I want to announce that healing will happen among our relationships and that freedom from physical and psychological pain is possible. I will get up and search and run and explore my own life in service and in ministry.

The preacher has much work to do during Triduum. The work must be centered on God. The homilies for the Triduum reflect our belief or unbelief. Our preaching will reveal our anger and our rage in life. People will notice our unhappiness, our tiredness and our unbelief. The homilies of Holy Week are an open window to the soul of the ordained. People will see everything, even the things we want to hide during the rest of the year.

Preaching during Holy Week must not be flimsy, sarcastic or full of jokes. We should not use stories that are not our own. The Christ Story must reveal the grace of people in the pews. Homilies must open up grace especially for people who feel that grace has eluded them. For people striving to find work, raise rowdy children or who have recently buried a parent, the grace of the ground of Jesus’ path must open up to them a new love. People must find themselves in the story of the Crucified; they must see their faces in the face of the Beloved who journeyed far deeper into suffering, into death itself.

The preacher must make the genuine connections of our faith in Holy Week. This is the week of all weeks for we who preach to really believe our spoken words and the written words of the gospel. This week there must be no silliness or props or cutting out homilies from a published book or pandering to the wealthy to raise money. People gather for the sacred week to find the deep and profound meaning of their lives.

People will know immediately if we have spent time in prayer on the floor. The deaf will feel the new conviction. The blind will understand with their ears. Those without a home will rest comfortably in the belief of the preacher. The mentally ill will find the rich calm of faith from the soft spoken words of a preacher who stands up from the floor and preaches the Easter message of love.