Unknown's avatar

About Ronald Patrick Raab, C.S.C.

Ronald Raab, C.S.C.,serves as religious superior at Holy Cross House, a medical and retirement home for the Congregation of Holy Cross, Notre Dame, Indiana

December 8: Prayer and sketch for the Year of Mercy by Ronald Raab, CSC

"Mother of Mercy" Sketch: Ronald Raab, CSC

“Mother of Mercy”
Sketch: Ronald Raab, CSC

This simple sketch tells the story of the tender work of a mother. Notice the exaggerated, strong shoulder that holds the baby. The strength of the mother is persistent and enduring. Her hand also suggests that she will do anything to hold on to her child, to care for the infant at her breast. Her featureless face opens us to find ourselves and our loved ones in need of such tender care, to place our own version of “mother” into this simple scene. She is the Church. She is Mary, a model of faith and Mother of Mercy. She is every mother. She is every person who lives the corporal and spiritual works of mercy.

 

“Longing for Mercy”  by: Ronald Patrick Raab, CSC

O God and Father of Mercy,

You invite us closer into the life of your Son, Jesus the Christ.

 

Jesus, The Bread of Life, shared food and wisdom with hungry crowds.

Jesus, The Good Shepherd ran after the lost, the leper and the lonely.

Jesus, The Healer, touched the eyes of the blind and the ears of the deaf.

Jesus, The Master, washed the filth from the feet of his disciples.

Jesus, The Prince of Peace, forgave the repentant thief on the cross.

 

Father of Love, do not abandon us.

For our lives are tender from our mistakes and misfortunes.

For our hearts are broken from fragile relationships.

For our questions are many about violence and war.

 

O God of Mercy,

Give us courage to offer compassion.

Show us how to listen patiently to people dissatisfied by sin.

Offer us consolation when we are discouraged by our mortality.

Help us offer water to the thirsty stranger and bread to the homeless family.

Help us hasten to the bedside of the ill child or the aging parent afraid of death.

 

Loving God,

In this Jubilee Year of Mercy,

Allow your Church to reveal the face of Jesus in our uncertain world.

Give us the joy of serving people in need.

Help us live in hope.

Melt away despair, mend our broken lives and give us peace.

And show us the way to our heavenly home.

 

We ask this in the name of Jesus, the Christ who lives and reigns forever and ever.

Amen

 

“Hail, full of grace. The Lord is with you.” Mother of Mercy, pray for us

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Second Sunday of Advent 2015

 

"The Door of Mercy" Painting: Ronald Raab, CSC 2015

“The Door of Mercy”
Painting: Ronald Raab, CSC 2015

(From this Sunday’s bulletin)

Dear People of God,

On this Second Sunday of Advent, we hear in Luke’s gospel (3:1-6) the challenge from John the Baptist to prepare for the Kingdom of God. Ready your hearts, release your grasp on your possessions, open your eyes, stir up your desire, walk the straight and narrow, and unveil your passion for God. The Kingdom is breaking through our narrow ways, our selfish inclinations, and our unsteady approach to love. The Advent season is a profound treasure inviting us into the core of our faith, and to let go of all that does not belong within our hearts, our passions, and our relationships.

On December 8, the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception, we will begin The Year of Mercy. To help us enter into this year, there are cards with Pope Francis’ prayer available in the niches at Sacred Heart, as well as a booklet published by World Library that contains one of my litanies. I hope that you will sit up and take notice of this notion of God’s love and mercy in your own life.

As I reflect on the beginning of The Year of Mercy, there is one important aspect of our lives as believers that I want to reflect upon. I have been a priest for over 32 years, and if there is one thing that I have learned and would like to change, it is this: most people do not feel worthy of God’s love or mercy.

It is never easy to live in the world today, no matter how much money we earn or what we possess. Our lives are complicated by marriages that do not work, or children who may make decisions we do not like. We face the complexities of trauma from our childhoods, and insecurities about our talents and gifts in the world. We face the demands of corporate life, the intense pull of consumerism, and our struggles with how we look to other people. Our lives are often emotionally insecure as we work to make ends meet. We worry during sleepless nights. Our family lives are often conflicted by histories of emotional trauma and past abuse, especially alcohol, that change our family systems.

In the midst of this, I want to invite you into the mercy, forgiveness and love that Jesus has for you. You are worth it, your life matters. God loves you. We listen to John the Baptist to wake up to the love of Jesus’ presence. We listen to our heart’s desire for mercy, for compassion and for love.

We are stretched thin by our commitments in these days before Christmas. It is easy to settle into believing that mercy is for everyone except yourself. Some questions for reflection:

Have you considered sitting down with a confessor during this Advent season?

How do you view God’s mercy for your life?

How do you respond to John the Baptist’s challenge to direct our lives to Jesus? … What does this cost you? What do you need to let go of? And what do you need to embrace?

What are you looking for in this Advent season?

Have you considered carving out more prayer time in this busy season?

What have you considered for a closer walk with Jesus?

With prayer and remembrance, Fr. Ron

 

On The Margins – Luke: 3:1-6

fr_ron_and_kbvm_readingBWListen to  “On the Margins”. This broadcast comes from Mater Dei Radio 88.3. John the Baptist calls us to a baptism of repentance. We are to prepare a life, a path, a home for Christ in our world. John prepares us for the second coming of Christ. The Second Sunday of Advent, December 6, 2015.

LISTEN NOW: CLICK HERE

Stream live On The Margins on KBVM 88.3FM on Saturdays at 3:45pm and Sundays at 8am.

Ministry and Liturgy Magazine: December 2015 (Last monthly column)

(This is my last monthly column, “Bridge Work,” in Ministry and Liturgy Magazine. I am so grateful for Ada Simpson and Donna Cole for these past ten years.)

On the other side of surrender

I listen to many heartbreaking stories of people who have been sexually abused as children. Most people never heal from their early days of profound hurt. I hear from both men and women that every aspect of their adult lives needs to be negotiated and reexamined in view of the tragedies and crimes that were committed upon them in their youth.

I recently sat with a woman who was given up for adoption because her parents abused her physically and emotionally. She told me that her only child was so disruptive that she seriously wanted to give him away. She pondered abandoning her child as she herself had been abandoned. She reached out to doctors and to me for words of comfort and relief.

Adult women and men, who have experienced betrayal of trust as children, struggle to surrender to life in every matter of relationship, education, work and creativity. To give over oneself to anything in life is not easy when there is little reason to know for sure if that surrender is in a person’s best interest.

This is certainly the case when a person who has been abused in any way tries to pray. I listened recently to a man who has struggled with his sexuality for many years. He cannot trust people to love him because of the negative stereotypes within him that tell him that real love is simply not possible. He finds this obstacle in his life of prayer as well. He is never sure that God will forgive him. He finds it difficult to be generous when the threat of condemnation is always within his heart. He finds surrendering to God nearly impossible because he does not know if love is on the other side of the surrender. He does not know if he will be held in the arms of Jesus’ mercy or the piercing judgment of a vengeful Father. Being vulnerable to rest in God’s love is a lifelong reality for so many people.

I recently spoke with a woman who has struggled with her weight all of her life. Her struggles go back to being abused. She told me that she had just recently joined a gym. She explained that surrendering her body to a male trainer triggered her abuse trauma again. Just the simple act of allowing a man to show her how to exercise opened up for her much emotional pain.

I tell these stories as I pray again with the gospels for the Lenten season. This woman caught in adultery is now being blamed for her life, her sexual sin and her place within the community. There is no account of the man with whom she was involved. She is taken publicly to a circle of condemnation. Jesus ponders the situation and kneels down to write or play in the sand. I cannot help but think he wants to wipe away sin, abusive relationships and our judgments of people from not only the woman but from each one of us as well.

I cannot image how this woman in the circle of judgment could ever surrender to God when all of these men represent religion. I cannot imagine her pain as she stepped into the trap of piercing criticism and ignorant blame. Jesus saves her, he runs after the condemning attitudes of his counterparts. He wants liberation not only for her but also for the men in the circle, as well as for people in every generation. Jesus crouches down and thinks about his role and the beauty of his own surrender to the will of the Father.

The Lenten liturgies challenge us to surrender every aspect of our lives to God. We are called to let go of sin, doubt, shame and the pieces of our past that cast a shadow over our relationships, even with God. This prayerful surrender is not easy for many people. To give away the burdens of pain that weigh us down is never easy no matter who we are or what our childhood patterns have been.

Lent is not just a time to give up candy or not to swear in public, but a radical change in the patterns that hold us down and keep us from love. This surrender is to connect our human stories, even profound abuse and neglect, with the redemptive story and ultimate surrender of Christ’s passion, death and resurrection.

We enter the desert during Lent. We walk with the older brother and the prodigal, younger son. We climb up a mountain to witness Jesus’ transfiguration and we wait for God to be patient with us like the fig tree. We all will eventually bear fruit. We all want to live and heal our past hurts on the other side of our surrender.

As liturgists and musicians, we cannot take this Lenten season for granted or think that we just need to get through it. We should bend down with the woman and look over Jesus’ shoulder as he writes in the sand. We must remember that people need these intense days of witness so that surrendering to God will ultimately bring the love of Christ that will set us all free.

 

Bread and Concrete: Ministry and Liturgy Magazine, December 2015

(This is the tenth and last in the series, Bread and Concrete: Where Liturgy and Ministry Meet. I hope you have enjoyed this year-long series in Ministry and Liturgy Magazine. I want to thank Ada Simpson for publishing this work)

The really big book: The Book of the Gospels

“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly.” Col 3

  The large red and gold gospel book sits straight up on the altar before Mass. When people enter our small chapel the lights are dim. A single light shines down above the altar highlighting the place and purpose of the book. The connection to the holy gospel and the altar of sacrifice is obvious in the simple white light. As the Mass time approaches and the full lights are turned on the upright gospel book becomes a centerpiece of the liturgy.

As the gospel acclamation is sung in our simple space, I normally gasp for air. I become anxious about my role to proclaim the gospel. In my heart, I commend the needs of our community to God as we seek to be in communion with the passion, death and resurrection of Christ Jesus. This moment for me is a time to let go of my ego, my own misfortunes and sin as a preacher. I simply ask for the grace to read from the large red book that is the center of our spiritual lives. In this moment I find the deep connections that people long for, even though I may not be able to articulate them on my lips. During this time of drawing our attention to the book, I walk to the altar both with deep hesitation and the compelling belief that my ministry as a preacher is given to me in the absolute poverty of our community.

As I reverence the altar with a bow, I slowly lift up the gospel book with profound love and the inner prayer of my soul so that the community may view this ancient gift. This gesture is not lost on me realizing that later in the same hour I will be standing in that same position holding a simple cup of wine that will become the Blood of Christ. I will hold up before the assembly the small plate of bread that will become the Body of Christ. So in this moment, the written words bound in the red and gold book will become the Word of Christ when I open the pages and proclaim in my voice the stories of salvation in the dying and rising of Christ Jesus.

I approach the small, blond wooden ambo unselfconscious of my actions. If I actually thought for a moment of this immense responsibility, I would not be able to speak or act. I would not be able to have the strength to even put the book down on the stand and open the pages of the ancient text for the designated Sunday. Instead, I commend my voice and actions to God and simply process in love feeling intensely that I need to hear the stories that will also set me free. I need in the worst way to feel part of the mission of the Word that will penetrate the hardness of all of our hearts.

I slowly lower the big book to the ambo under the light that shines now on this place of Christ’s revelation. I adjust the microphone to fit my height and place there even though I know my own voice is what carries the true message. My body has known this routine, this procedure for more than thirty years. My body holds the memory of what to do and my actions become second nature. I do not have to think about how to set up the physical space to ready myself to proclaim the Word. My eyes rest on the congregation. I pause to see every person assembled. I try to fill in the silence after the sung gospel acclamation with purpose. My silence seems to draw people’s attention to the book under this new light. My heart is ready when they are to hear our place again in the grand story.

I clear my throat. Sometimes my voice seems to be an unworthy place for such a story to be told. Sometimes sinus infections and colds cloud the proclamation. Sometimes my voice seems dehydrated from not taking proper care of myself. Sometimes people can hear the fear in my voice when I am not prepared to be standing under the spotlight. I know that my voice will have to do because this is the human instrument that the community has in order to receive the grace in the hidden, written words of love. My voice is the instrument that can potentially bear the grace that can set people free. My voice becomes like the wings of eagles taking the words to peoples’ ears and hearts where people may be transformed from doubt or sin or anxiousness. My voice finds the way beyond the fragility of my own body so that people may find the Word’s fulfillment in their hearing.

I concentrate on the written story by using my left hand to follow each sentence of the page, to keep my place in the text. My eyes straddle the text and the concentration of people’s eyes looking into my direction. My fingers caress the smooth page so that I may remember my duty with meaning and purpose. My entire body remembers my place there, my ministry to bring good news to believers. I desperately want to feel my place at the pulpit at every Eucharist so that I will always remember the meaning of my vocation as a preacher.

After I read the gospel, I lift up the big, red book and proclaim again to the assembly what they have just heard, “The Gospel of the Lord.” Before I set the book down again on the ambo, I kiss the pages with not only my lips but also my intentions for this community wrapped in poverty, illness and disease. The words becoming flesh are holy and alive. I remember the kiss of the altar at the beginning of Mass. My lips will speak the praise of God as I preach the connection of our earthly lives to the promise of new life that has just come out of my mouth. I grasp the book for dear life. I hold on and I dare not let go. I put down the book rather relieved; the grace is released from the cage of the pages one more time. Now it is up to God to do the work and my role, as preacher is to point us all into that direction.

I walk down two steps of the dark wooden sanctuary to the grey concrete floor where the people have been standing attentively listening to the story of Jesus. I am now on their level with the purpose of opening up the scriptures so they may deepen their faith and that God may heal their wounds. I am grateful we are now all on the same level, the place of common grace.

I usually begin the homily standing in the center aisle of the congregation. I pause, glance down to the concrete floor. I then look into peoples’ eyes. This silence draws people together. This simple mechanism of allowing the space for people to hear has become quite effective. I sense my deep responsibility on the concrete floor because we are all together. There is no turning back; I have to bring the good news to them in ways in which they will connect. This means I always need to be on the same ground as they are, acknowledging my poverty, being in need of God, love and communion.

People come to Mass in order to listen to these holy words of God. They arrive having listened to other words from other books. College students enter our community learning from books of the business world or the private matters of psychology. They sit in our pews as scientists or engineers or students who want to make a difference by reading volumes of American literature or volumes about global injustice. They want to find their true voices and their authentic gifts here among people praying in poverty.

Some people pray here after paging through magazines of pornography. The text message archives of Saturday night tell certain stories of infidelity and longing. Other people sort through the pages of files from tax attorneys and divorce lawyers. Volumes of paperwork become a daily source of making a living or applying for an identification card for someone who is homeless. Many words and books, papers and files that fill our lives during the course of the week. We try to make sense out of the Word of God on Sunday morning.

Other people have been reading the “Big Book” from Alcoholics Anonymous during the week. They have been trying to absorb the message to admit a higher power greater than them selves. They struggle to live beyond the blindness of denial. They try to do the deeds of recovery, the actions required to live one sober day at a time. They long for a way out of the lies that have brought them to this point. People want to make sense out of their patterns of suffering and their addicted pasts. They gather here in our chapel on Sunday searching for new words and insights, hopes and inspirations from a book that is even bigger than the “Big Book” from AA.

On Wednesday evenings, a group of women gather to ponder the message of the “Big Book.” They gather from wealthy suburbs and from the women’s shelter a block away. Some of the women gather because they are trying to remain Catholic on their road to sobriety while others are hardly aware that the community that maintains the space and welcomes them in is one of faith and service. I do not know firsthand what happens in this meeting for women only. However, I am aware of the horrific physical, emotional and sexual abuse so many women have been through to get to this point of recovery. These women model in secret for me how to turn from words of putdowns, torture, prostitution and abuse to finding new words of holiness in a circle of shared stories and not drinking alcohol. I bring these women to mind when I read the words of hope for us all on Sunday mornings.

We are all formed and challenged by the gospel book that has floated in procession from the altar to the ambo. I begin the homily sorting through the words that people have spoken to me during the week and the call to find our purpose in Christ Jesus. As I take a deep breath, I begin to preach.

I believe now more than ever that gospel stories become communion. The stories are the real presence of Christ Jesus when vocalized, proclaimed, listened to and taken to heart. These stories shed a new light on our own life stories. Our stories connect in the common story of Christ’s resurrection. Communion becomes a life of sharing, of unity and of common hope. Communion is unity with the Risen Savior and our home in the Kingdom of God. This unity begins by how we love and support all who are lost, forgotten and marginalized and being vulnerable enough to share our own life stories.

Most people are looking for a different way to interpret their life journey. My years of experience teach me that many people do not like themselves. They hold within them the uncertainty of their commitments and guilt about past actions or roads not taken. If the Roman Catholic Church could do only one thing in our lives, I pray to God that we could heal the reasons why so many people hate themselves. This would be real evangelization; this would be real faith and freedom for people no matter where they live in our society. This uncertainty opens us to the reality that grace is now, and available today to change our lives and the paths we take in the future. This is a key in my ministry as a preacher. My experiences among people in poverty teach me that Jesus writes secretly in the sand for us all, forgiving past accusations, and he calls us beyond our lives of sin and doubt.

Preaching connects people’s stories to the miracles of Jesus’ healing and the call to faithful discipleship. Preaching in the aisles of our community is simply an invitation to such a life of love. However, I cannot change people or heal their abuse or give them a new fidelity in relationships. I cannot provide housing for people living outside when I preach. I cannot redirect their negative self-talk about their drug abuse. I cannot move them from their infidelity in marriage and I cannot teach them to pray. I can only offer the invitation that God is working in ways we least expect.

On our concrete floor, I learn a deeper spirituality of preaching. Preaching among people in poverty must convey honesty and integrity. There is no pretending or pious language that will satisfy the soul of an addict or unburden the life of someone surviving generational poverty. I must know people’s stories and struggles and I must receive the love God has for me. My words as a preacher will be flimsy, empty and worthless without this communion of people and love.

All of my advanced degrees, studies and poring through theological textbooks mean nothing if I do not find my words from the Gospel book and the real life texts of people’s concerns. My life here as a preacher must convey that I, too, find my true life deep among the pages of scriptures and that I am willing to change my old ways.

The words that I use come from the heart-wrenching stories of people that touch my life. They teach me to turn to God because I do not know where else to go with their pain. The tragedies of sin, loss, failure and disease increase my silent fidelity so that my words will not be fake or trite when I preach in the center aisle.

I preach to give voice to hidden experiences that people think set them apart in failure or condemnation. My teachers here show me the dark and hidden life of how depression changes people’s perspectives on every aspect of life. These teachers show me what it means to go from doctor to doctor trying to discover a balance of medications that will give some stability to daily life. I hear the struggles of patients when so many healthcare professionals do not have the answers that will heal their conditions either.

I preach to offer such communion when we continue to judge people and set people apart. People with mental and physical disabilities are still blamed for their diseases by so many other people even after so many generations have past since the time of Jesus. People even in our generation are looking for a place to belong and to be relieved of negative judgments and bullying. So often people gather in our pews because the words they experience in daily life keep them from faith, from relying on the fact that the Word of God is flesh for them. So many people who experience abuse believe the abuse is their fault. The same is true for people living with depression or other forms of mental illness. They absorb into their weakened bodies and exhausted minds the blame others put on them. Affirmation, forgiveness and new life are really possible for all people today, for all who listen to the words from the really big book on the ambo.

People come to our parish community searching for physical safety during the week in our hospitality center. This physical safety is very important. People want to belong, to get food and clothing, haircuts and shoes. However, what I realize as I stand on the concrete floor in our worship space is that people are sitting in front of me also searching for emotional safety. People want to be safe for an hour, to pray, to think and to be together. This counters their lives on the violent streets, in shelters or other violent places of bad marriages or being diagnosed with long-term disease. The words from the really big book also convey a place of emotional safety as they are proclaimed during the Eucharist.

One of the more important aspects of preaching among people in poverty is that I too, must rely on the Holy Spirit. I preach in church as other people live daily life, trying to find daily bread, shelter and friends. I seldom know the words that I will use to connect the experience of people in front of me with the words of scripture. I rely on the working of the Spirit as I see people’s expressions and look in to their eyes even at a distance. I am given what I need.

This is certainly not how I was taught to preach from reading many books and articles. This preparation for preaching the Word of God was not how I was taught from the professors of homiletics who lectured me in the classroom. However, here on the concrete floor of our worship space where people pray in raw need, a new reliance on God floods my soul. My words are given to me as I experience the profound reliance on faith from people sitting in the pews. This moment of insight changes my life as a preacher and shows me how to rely more profoundly on God’s grace that floods our chapel after the gospel proclamation.

My homily preparation comes from sitting quietly with the stories from the gospel book as well as listening to the stories of people who struggle to find what they need in life. This is where communion occurs, where insight finds a home in the center aisle and where the scriptures become sacred and forgiving, where the Holy Spirit stirs up consolation and hope for people.

I am keenly aware that the Word of God is pure nourishment and absolute miracle. There are days when I grow weary about any new form of evangelization or reform of the liturgy itself. I admit that new forms sometimes get in the way of grace. We sometimes think as Church leaders that new forms will do the work that we do not want to do for other people. The Word of God from this big book stands on its own. I do not have to push it or pull it or soften it or counter it to make grace appear. This grace from the Word revitalizes no matter what I do or the ministry we offer as a Church.

I remember Holy Thursday morning a few years ago. I was reflecting with a friend that all seemed lost on that particular day. A young man from our community called and was totally trashed from drugs again. His youthful body cannot hold up to drugs, booze, sex addiction and AIDS. Under all the addictions, he wants God more than anything. I keep his desire within in my own heart. He needs something even greater than the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous.

I wish leaders of the Church could know this addicted man because they would realize that the gospels work in their own time. Our leaders would be a lot more patient with forms and formulas of evangelization or liturgy or religious education or the future of priesthood if they knew more people like him. They would come to know that the really big book, the ancient gospels, take time and patience, that reform is not always easy or instant or clean and tidy.

On that Holy Thursday my friend was crawling out of his skin. However, he teaches the rest of us in parishes all over the country that we really need God to emerge from the depths of the Word, not just once but over and over again in our lives. I really need communion and consolation from the Word and so does my sick friend. On some Holy Thursdays, I know deep within my spirit that all the tools I need to evangelize the lost come from my friendship with people who are completed loaded and even fear dying during the Triduum. The rest of us will be on our knees in prayer during the night on Holy Thursday and into morning daylight.

 

 

First Sunday of Advent 2015

"The Door of Mercy" Painting: Ronald Raab, CSC 2015

“The Door of Mercy”
Painting: Ronald Raab, CSC 2015

Advent is here already. The yearning of the ancient people for a Messiah becomes our story once again. We start the story of Jesus so that longing may transform our hearts, in our time and place, in our generation.  We hear in Luke’s Gospel, “…Beware that your hearts do not become drowsy from carousing and drunkenness and the anxieties of daily life, and that day catch you by surprise like a trap…”

We have had a violent month in our city of Colorado Springs. Two different shootings have roused great fear on our streets. Here is an article from NBC about the shootings on Friday. 

We begin the Year of Mercy on December 8. In this Advent, let us beg God for peace. Let us take the Year of Mercy to heart. Let us be doers of the peace we seek. Let us be slow to judge and quick to pray.

PRAYER OF POPE FRANCIS FOR THE YEAR OF MERCY

Lord Jesus Christ,

you have taught us to be merciful like the heavenly Father,

and have told us that whoever sees you sees Him.

Show us your face and we will be saved.

Your loving gaze freed Zacchaeus and Matthew from being enslaved by money;

the adulteress and Magdalene from seeking happiness only in created things;

made Peter weep after his betrayal,

and assured Paradise to the repentant thief.

Let us hear, as if addressed to each one of us, the words that you spoke to the Samaritan woman:

“If you knew the gift of God!”

 

You are the visible face of the invisible Father,

of the God who manifests his power above all by forgiveness and mercy:

let the Church be your visible face in the world, its Lord risen and glorified.

You willed that your ministers would also be clothed in weakness

in order that they may feel compassion for those in ignorance and error:

let everyone who approaches them feel sought after, loved, and forgiven by God.

 

Send your Spirit and consecrate every one of us with its anointing,

so that the Jubilee of Mercy may be a year of grace from the Lord,

and your Church, with renewed enthusiasm, may bring good news to the poor,

proclaim liberty to captives and the oppressed,

and restore sight to the blind.

 

We ask this of you, Lord Jesus, through the intercession of Mary, Mother of

Mercy; you who live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit for ever and

ever.

Amen.

Last issue of Ministry and Liturgy Magazine, December 2015

After 42 years of publication, Ministry and Liturgy Magazine has come to an end. I am deeply honored to have been part of this pastoral publication for eleven years. The cover of the last issue is an image of the crucifixion that I painted a few months ago. So in this last issue, I have two articles and the cover image. I will post the articles in a few days. I want to thank Ada Simpson and Donna Cole for publishing my articles and affirming my years of ministry.

Last cover of Ministry and Liturgy magazine, Dec 2015

Last cover of Ministry and Liturgy magazine, Dec 2015

Here is the photo of my painting that I submitted:

"Crucifixion" by Ronald Raab, CSC 2015

“Crucifixion” by Ronald Raab, CSC 2015

On The Margins – Luke 21:25-28, 34-36

fr_ron_and_kbvm_readingBWListen to  “On the Margins”. This broadcast comes from Mater Dei Radio 88.3. (I begin my eleventh year hosting On the Margins) This gospel is meant to stir up our longing for God, waiting still for the Prince of Peace. We start over in the story of Jesus as Advent begins, longing for new life, healing and love here on earth. We wait for the power of Jesus in our day.  First Sunday of Advent, November 29, 2015.

LISTEN NOW: CLICK HERE

Stream live On The Margins on KBVM 88.3FM on Saturdays at 3:45pm and Sundays at 8am.