Faith Under Risk
After the baptism of Raeleigh James a couple of weeks ago, Fr. Tom remarked to me, “Don’t you just love baptisms?” I heartily agreed. Baptisms are among my favorite blessings of being a priest. I love it whether it involves babies, children, adolescents or adults. The oldest person I ever baptized was a guy well into his eighties. It was beautiful, although he was very nervous when I picked him up.
And I love babies. Ever since I was a kid myself, I’ve always delighted in them. That goes from the three little sisters I had growing up through to our latest grandchild, Mabel, but also your babies, starting with Cannon Van Hook and rolling forward. We have a number of them coming this year inside the church and some of you have grandchildren coming elsewhere.
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Responding to Temptation
Years ago I would walk our dog around the block almost every evening. On the other side of our block was a house where they had three Pomeranians. If you don’t know what a Pomeranian is, imagine a 5-to-7-pound dust mop that barks nonstop.
That house had a chain link fence in its back yard. As we’d come into view, those Pomeranians would start barking. That’s understating it. They would come unglued, eyes bulging, all three of them barking as though the very existence of the planet depended on them.
As we’d cross in front of the house, they’d run around to the other side so they could continue their serenade and bark like that well after we’d gone far enough that the next house blocked us from view.
One day I decided to play a trick on them. As we came into view they began their madness. We passed in front of their house and sure enough they ran around to continue the madness. Then I turned and took a few steps back the other way. They immediately ran back to the other side, I turned again and jogged a few steps until the next house blocked us from view.
From then on, I did that every time. And they’d fall for that temptation every time. Isn’t that how temptation works?
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One Way Out.
Have any of you ever been to a corn maze? I instantly liked the idea just for the pun: corn – maize is actually a type of corn. It’s amazing, really. If you ever do go to one, it’s set up like a scavenger hunt and they give you a map. It’s a fun diversion for an afternoon.
But that’s different from the more traditional mazes, whether it’s the ones from ancient times going back to labyrinths or medieval ones with tall hedges or the ones you can do on paper or in a puzzle book. With those there tends to be one goal, one solution, one way in and one way out.
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