Saturday 6 December 2014

Year B - Second Sunday of Advent

Second Sunday of Advent - Year B
Isaiah 40, 1 - 11
Psalm 84
2 Peter 3, 8 - 14
Mark 1, 1 - 6


To go further
Details

- The rabbit is rather pressed and wishes to speed things along. But what things? The word of the bible says "It is for you that He is patient". He is patient to give you all the time to convert. The ball is in our court, in my court. But there we are, I have time for many things, but do I "take" time to convert? Nobody "has" the time, but  to "have" some, one must "take" it, and put it to one side for this task.
- With his nostrils, he breathes (fulmination no doubt) to accelerate  the melting of the ice. He sees solutions to go quicker ; solutions for God "you must do this or that", and solutions which come from himself (heat the ice). So, he passes by the wayside concerning his conversion, which  must happen inside himself. If he knew that it was he who God waited for, he who is concerned by his conversion... maybe he would see things differently? But here, he is so pressed that he uses, at the same time, his nostrils to melt the ice and his mouth to speak... How much do I resemble him?

Questions

- We forget the proverb "He who goes steady goes further". Do I wish to go further ? If so, am I going steady and how ? Enemy number 1 in the world today is the race against time. We do everything to move around more rapidly, we complain if we miss a subway connection, when there is another arriving in 40 seconds, we order online to have products delivered to us in the shortest timescales, even if it is more expensive. What is human in this? What is not human? What of it do I endorse? And the conversion, the fact to put things into question, to change? That will happen after everything else, if we have the time...

Tuesday 25 November 2014

Year B - First Sunday of Advent

First Sunday of Advent - Year B
Isaiah 63, 16...64, 7
Psalm 79
1 Corinthians 1, 3-9
Mark 13, 33-37



To go further
Details

- Two computers. One is in standby mode, the other one is off.
- On the right, the hand of God. It only just touches the mouse and a rabbit erupts, ready (maybe we have noticed that the computer that switches on is the one whose screen is facing God?)
- The rabbit is emerging from the frame. The frame represents what's usual, expected, normal. By coming out of the frame, he's ready for the novelty of God.
- He's "on guard", ready to listen (his ears are extended) and to follow God.

Questions

- The difference between a computer which is off and a computer which is in standby mode resides in the time it takes to start. The one which is off needs time to heat up, to initialise, to execute programmes. The one which is in standby mode is "ready". He only needs a little something to wake up.
- The drawing doesn't mean that God manipulates us as we manipulate a computer with a mouse. It means that you must be in standby mode to be able to welcome God's delicacies which will touch our life everyday and to be able to recognise them. Anyone Christian who goes to church on a Sunday and then puts his faith away in a cupboard for the rest of the week, is he not like a computer which is off?
- Do I want to get ready for Christ's coming on Christmas or will I carry on with my life without questioning it and get to Christmas Eve and say "Is it Christmas already?".
- How will I try to stay in standby mode, particularly during these four weeks?

Wednesday 19 November 2014

Year A - Thirty-Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Thirty-Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time - Year A
Ezekiel 34, 11...17
Psalm 22
1 Corinthians 15, 20-26. 28
Matthew 25, 31-46


To go further
Details

- The character on the left represents Jesus (each time you see a halo with a cross inside, it is Christ. I use this symbol of the representation of Christ, taken from oriental icons.... not, of course, wishing to depreciate their value, but to keep the symbol)
- On the right, it is death (Nooooooo, not possible!).
- The scene is that where Jesus beats death definitively, by His death on the cross (the cross, on the detonator, is that which will make death jump). In short, death can do no more, he is lost.  He plugs up his ears waiting for the moment. Impossible to attack against the Saviour (look well, the scythe is hooked in the wire of the detonator, he can no longer cause ill) "Oh death, where is your victory?" Saint Paul says. 

Questions

- Do I believe that God is stronger than Satanism?
- Do I believe in the definitive victory of Christ on evil, on death?
- Do I believe in a future world, or in this world, in my own life?

Monday 10 November 2014

Year A - Thirty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Thirty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time - Year A
Proverbs 31, 10...31
Psalm 127
1 Thessalonians 5, 1-6
Matthew 25, 14-30


To go further
Details

- Not a lot. The gold bar here is the grace of the baptism ; I have become Christian by grace of the death and the resurrection of Christ. That is what brings value to that which is received.
- There are 8 little clouds of dust (like the 8 Beatitudes). In burying the gold bar, we also bury at great depths the whole message that Christ proclaimed on the mountain.

Questions

- Do I contribute as much enthusiasm and energy to try to hide the fact that I am Christian, rather than to simply say it? If yes, why?
- Am I afraid to have to change something in my life if I say clearly that I am Christian?
- An ingot in the night does not shine any brighter than a heap of coal. What could shine brighter in you? To shine to guide others?

Monday 27 October 2014

Year A - All the Faithful Departed

All the Faithful Departed - Year A
Wisdom 2, 23 ; 3,1 - 6.9
Psalm 4
Romans 6, 3 - 9
John 5, 24 - 29


To go further
Details

- The grey rabbit thinks of his friend, deceased, and past. He is not looking to the future (the eternal life where he will find him). He looks at the ground, not the sky.
- In the sky, very close to me, his friend is there, visibly happy. He tries to make a sign but it is impossible to communicate with him because the grey rabbit does not look in the right place. His ears are turned in the right direction, but his eyes, without hope, take over.

Questions

- It has already happened to me to meet some young people (and not only young ones) who have refused to go into a church because it reminds them of a funeral. Is the church a place of death? It is true that there are representations of death (crucifixes) pretty much everywhere... and not all that much which represents the resurrection.
So, I speak to believers; friends, YOU are the representation of the risen Christ in your church, and if you are not, you MUST BECOME IT. If nobody represents the risen Christ, if Jesus arisen is not visible in our living rocks who are we, where and how will the non-believers discover it?
- Another question: How should I consider death? Do I dig into the question? Do I avoid it? How should I understand these two affirmations "I believe in the resurrection of the body and the life of the world to come"? Where will I find the answers? Who should I ask? Why?

This 2nd November, I can remember those who have died and who will form the welcome committee when it will be my turn to pass through the door to the eternal life.

Year A - Thirty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time

Thirty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time
Malachi 1, 14 - 2, 2 ... 10
Psalm 130
1 Tessalonians 2, 7 - 9. 13
Matthew 23, 1 - 12


To go further

Details

- The angle of view is situated more or less at ground level. It is the human condition. Humility comes from "humus". He wishes to lift himself, uses an object. When I wish to lift myself, I also use either an object which I value, or a quality (which was given to me, don't forget) or somebody on my path, whom I profit from. And when this object or this person is no longer there, PLAF!
- Second point, the gym is EMPTY.  All my prowess to lift me up serves only myself and does not benefit anyone else.
- Third point, it is not a coincidence if the rabbit hits the bar. A bar which is in the eye and which blinds him.
- Last point, the rabbit at the bottom, it is my conscience. My conscience which knows that which is good, but often, I do not listen, I put myself in the corner. Shame on me.

Questions

No need for questions. The explanation at the top is more than enough.

Monday 20 October 2014

Year A - Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time - Year A
Exodus 22, 20 - 26
Psalm 17
1 Tessalonians 1, 5 - 10
Matthew 22, 34 - 40


To go further

Details

- There is the parable in the Gospel of Matthew (Mt 18,28) where he who has lent throws himself upon he who owes him, to strangle him. Here, we see a hand which is used to strangle and another which is ready to hit.
- The rabbit on the left has the "knowledge" (he knows the ten commandments), the one on the right expects a model, a witness, not someone who is judgemental.

Questions

This cartoon also illustrates a saying of Jesus concerning the Pharisees. "Do as I say, not as I do" It is easy to say that the most important commandment is to love. Yet, in what I do, do I show this? Do I live it? Am I a living   "Living Word"?