Trees
There’s an enormous honey locust tree in our back yard, way back in the corner and too far away to hurt anyone with the colossal thorns that bristle along its trunk and branches. Owing to it’s shape, it wouldn’t be much of a climbing tree, but the thorns - which can and have punctured mower and tractor tires - seal the deal. Stay away, unless you’re a squirrel. It’s a nice looking tree. The leaves are lacy and small and it turns a lovely yellow in the fall. It also produces long bean-pod looking things as its main fruit. The pods, or at least the goo inside, is said to be edible and are what give the tree its name. I just run them over with the mower and chop them up, but they originally evolved to feed large animals which no longer exist on our continent.
Same as the Osage oranges, which are those knobbly looking green softballs that are all over the place along the greenway this time of the year. I was amazed the first time I saw them and immediately disappointed to learn that they are not edible. They’re not much good for anything, though I read somewhere that if you put the fruit under your bed it will repel spiders. We haven’t tried this yet, so your mileage may vary. Both the honey locust and the Osage orange (also called hedge apple) developed their fruits to be consumed by the megafauna which used to roam our landscape but faded away a long time ago. The fruit would be gobbled up in one place and the seeds passed out somewhere else. Avocados were distributed the same way. Making giant fruit with a single seed in the middle takes a lot of energy, which means the tree was counting on something which would take windfall or ripened fruit elsewhere. Not at all like maples, which cast their seeds on wings every time the wind picks up.
For what it’s worth, I did my part to try to make up for the lost megafauna. I brought home a couple of Osage oranges from the greenway and chucked them into a few spots here and there around the yard. Nothing happened, but I’m not about to attempt their customary pathway. Maybe I’ll try burying them a little next time.
Other tree updates: new Pistache trees are settling in well. The weather has been relatively mild and pretty wet, so I know they’re getting plenty of water. The quince and medlar trees are supposed to ship in late winter, around February. At the longtime request of my wife, we also added a dogwood - ‘Cherokee Brave,’ which is one of the darker pink varieties. It’s likewise doing well out front so we have high hopes for this spring.
There’s nothing in life that’s less real for having been well described. Small-minded critics point out that such-and-such poem, with it’s protracted cadences, in the end says merely that it’s a nice day. But to say it’s a nice day is difficult, and the nice day itself passes on. It’s up to us to conserve the nice day in a wordy, florid memory, sprinkling new flowers and new stars over the fields and skies of the empty, fleeting outer world.
Text 27, The Book of Disquiet
This is a strange little book; little meditations, observations, and rhapsodies on everything under the sun, as written and gathered by Senhor Soares, who may (or may not) be one of the personality/heteronyms closest to Pessoa himself. Soares is an accountant at a small firm whose days are filled a quiet routine that is gilded on all sides by his observations and occasional fantasies. Text 27 continues:
Everything is what we are, and everything will be, for those who come after us in the diversity of time, what we will have intensely imagined - what we, that is, by embodying our imagination, will have actually been. The grand, tarnished panorama of History amounts, as I see it, to a flow of interpretations, a confused consensus of unreliable eyewitness accounts. The novelist is all of us, and we narrate whenever we see, because seeing is complex like everything.
The texts seem to have been something of a lifetime project. Gathered and arranged more or less, you get the feeling that you’re reading a sort of diary or commonplace book, except that the gathered thoughts are his own, and by his I’m still not entirely sure if we mean Soares or Pessoa, and maybe it doesn’t matter since they’re one and the same person. The writer is clearly someone who finds himself in his own head an awful lot, a state probably familiar to a lot of us. Anyway, his observations of daily life are beautiful and bite sized. You can dip in and out at will without losing the thread, because there really isn’t one. Just a big of threads, along with random buttons, shiny rocks, random ticket stubs, a half-chewed pencil, a tiny ceramic dog - everyday treasure of the sort that surrounds us every day.
Notes on Notes
I wrapped up Notes from Underground while traveling yesterday. It’s not terribly long, and I figured I’d be able to finish it during one of my flights.
One of the things I’ve been using an LLM for (I favor Claude, which I’ve mentioned here before) is to set the table for some books before I start them - historical context, whether or not there are theological themes to be aware of, that sort of thing. I might ask a few more questions, skim the Foreword, and then dive in. This one was no exception, and it was good to go into Notes knowing that it was a reaction piece to Nikolai Chernyshevsky’s What Is to Be Done? which went on to become something of a classic in the Soviet canon. Reading it as an extended meditation which answers “fat chance” to engineered Utopias is profitable for sure.
Then I started the book and instead found myself imagining that I was reading someone’s blog instead and…it felt pretty contemporary. You could probably break each section of part 1 into separate posts, throw them on a Substack, and generate a fair bit of engagement. And the Underground Man’s rant starts to sound sort of coherent towards the end - that if you engineer away human needs and provide everything that is formulated to make us happy, we will almost certainly destroy it, just to feel a sense of agency again.
Then you get to part 2 - the memoir portion - to see just how horrible this ends up looking. The line between Underground Man and the murder in Crime and Punishment is straight, short, and bright. Poor Liza; I hope she eventually finds peace and warmth. Without the transcendent, the world is a bleak, bleak place where the monotony is broken only by the violence required to feel something, anything.
Notes completes the Doestoevsky arc for now. I will probably revisit Crime and Punishment and Karamazov again in the future, perhaps with different translations. As it is, I’m satisfied to leave 19th century Russia behind for a bit.
Currently reading: The Book of Disquiet by Fernando Pessoa 📚
As predicted, lots of putzing around. Hung some blinds. Will be upgrading an old laptop with an SSD to give it some new life and speed. Switched out the green breviary for the blue breviary and moved all the prayer cards, cheat sheets, and bric-a-brac to the new book. The Christmas decorations have come out and there are plans afoot to begin decorating in earnest once some of the working kids get home. We knocked out the first drop of Stranger Things and the latest episode of Plur1bus. This morning’s run was a nice and crispy 32 degrees and there were a few other folks on the greenway, plus the usual deer and squirrels.
Like the deer that years for running streams…
I felt so good after the run that I busted out a variation of one of the prayers from the Liturgy of the Eucharist in thanksgiving:
Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation for through your goodness we have this day on offer. Fruit of your love and gift beyond all reckoning, may it be for us the time of our salvation.
When bits of the liturgy start coming out in weird places, I can’t help but think that’s a good sign. Let those walls between Sunday and the rest of the week dissolve into one glorious act, like a watercolor blending from one color to another.
Glorifiquen al Señor con su vida. Pueden ir en paz.
Amen.
They say that people can be divided into two groups - those who get up early to drink mimosas and those who opt for the local Turkey Trot road race. We’re both around here, so our Thanksgiving started with the Borodash, a reasonable 4-miler that meanders around the downtown area and is the main fundraiser for several local charities. We’ve been doing it for years - my wife has run nearly all of them, starting with the first. As the kids have gotten older, they’ve joined in, and we added matching team shirts a while back just for fun. Some of us run, others walk, or mosey along. Either way, the weather was beautiful. The mimosas afterward were good too.
The rest of the day was final food prep, kid-related chaos and noise, the parade and dog show, some sports that no one really watched closely, and, finally, a whole lot of eating. Topped it off with some of Stranger Things season 5.
Today is mostly just putzing around with some house stuff: getting caught up on laundry and other minor projects. I slapped together some nesting boxes yesterday to replace the ones that are falling apart. My carpentry is terrible, but if the birds will move in, that’s all that matters. We have a lot of bluebirds around here year-round, and I think that our boxes - which stay pretty busy throughout the breeding season - are part of the reason. The other project on my to-do list, probably over Christmas vacation, is a Two-chambered Rocket Box for bats. I have a spot in the very back of the yard, which would be ideal, so it just remains to hit Home Depot and do a little shopping. I also need to figure out exactly how I’ll be mounting it up as high as bats like, but I’m sure we can come up with something. A ladder is not part of the equation. I’m not risking my life for bat habitat.
I had a chance to meet with the pastor at my new assignment the other day. It was very good to see him again, get caught up a little, and hear his various thoughts on the parish, the people, and their pastoral needs. Very much looking forward to getting to know everyone soon. Between now and then, there’s a bit of travel for work, all of Advent, most of Christmastide, and - ha! - ordination itself. Trying not to get too far over my skis in terms of planning or thinking. There’s plenty to do in the present moment, right now. Staying collected. Intentional gratitude. Continual conversion. Work. Prayer.
Books on Deck
I am closing in on the end of The Idiot and used an AI (yes) to generate some suggestions for what to read next and it came up with the following, among others:
- Notes from Underground, which will sort of complete the Dostoevsky arc I’ve been on
- Diary of a Country Priest by Georges Bernanos
- If on a winter night a traveler, Italo Calvino
- Austerlitz, W.G. Sebald
- The Book of Disquiet, Fernando Pessoa
So my year-end reading is pretty much set, alongside whatever book-of-the-now is commanding the podcasters attention and the occasional review of our formation texts.
The Diocese announced our assignments today, so I can publicly share that after ordination, I will be serving at St. William of Montevergine in Shelbyville, starting on January 5. The January start gives us all a few weekends at our home parishes, which will be nice. It’s all very exciting!
I wasn’t familiar with St. William of Montevergine, but I learned that he was a Benedictine, and a hermit to boot. He sounds like my kind of guy.
This is a formation weekend, possibly our last one, so we’ll report tomorrow for more liturgical practica, homiletics, and prayer. Excited to get started, but also a little wistful about this period - formation - coming to a close. Yes, they certainly tell us that formation never actually ends, but this expression of it certainly will.
Y por los que hablan español - por favor, su paciencia. Entiendo casi todo, pero estoy mejorando mi vocabulario teológico. Ya puedo leer (y a veces escribir) en español, entonces puedo asistir en la misa como diácono; pero tambien queiro predicar!
Still kicking the tires on org-mode, but I don’t think it’s for me right now. The main attraction I can see is To-do list/calendar/agenda integration, but we live and die by a shared iOS calendar and it takes a fair amount of idiocy to integrate it into anything outside of the Apple ecosystem, even if I just need read-only access to it for the sake of visibility. At most, I’ll take a look at the Obsidian-like features to see if they’re something I can use, or heck, revisit Obsidian itself. These systems are a bit like shopping for new notebooks. I love the idea of them, but have been fair-to-middling in my long-term adoption of them.
As it is, I have a couple of notebooks I go back to semi-regularly: one for work-related stuff, and another one that serves as a sort of spiritual journal which goes with me on retreats, though I’ve been known to scribble in it occasionally at home. A third notebook has sort of emerged as the place where I keep my homily notes. I may or may not refer to them while I’m speaking, but the act of writing them down with a pen helps me keep the main points in mind. I used a note-taking app on an iPad for a few years and it wasn’t bad, but I still prefer the low-tech/high-reward touch of pen and paper.
I started The Last Invention. About done with the first episode and it’s pretty good so far. Andy Mills was on The Dispatch the other day discussing the series, if you want to listen to a nice overview. It was good to get a reminder of how submerged in the tech landscape I still am, relative to how not submerged everyone else is. At the same time, I tend to be closer to nuts-and-bolts of technology without paying as much attention to the macro-trends which, to my ears, blend a little too easily with marketspeak and investor hype. I mean, one flavor of AI accelerationist seems to think that the goods to be obtained - a world of complete abundance made possible by AGI and a massive robotic workforce - are worth the short-term costs. Maybe they are, but I’m skeptical. Fallen man and all of that. Even if the promise does comes true, then what? Do they believe that everyone alive simply transitions to a sort of eternal retirement of leisure? AGI will usher in an end to disease and suffering? Paradise on Earth, almost within reach?
I’m skeptical for a few reasons. The first is practical. The hype-cycle around AI right now feels exactly like the early 90’s, the point at which the commercial Internet really took off and became A Real Thing. Many predictions were made, and a few of them came true, but most - if not all - of those initial market darlings faded away or collapsed once it became clear how those pesky customers would actually start using things. And that cycle was preceded by the first big chip explosion which was led, at the time, by firms like Fairchild Semiconductor. Unless you’re into deep tech, you’ve probably never heard of them, but you’ve certainly of the companies started or run by Fairchild alumni: Intel, among others. I remember walking the tradeshow floor at two of the biggest Internet-related events in the mid-90s and I can only remember two or three of the hundreds of companies in the exhibit space.
Our ability to accurately predict tech trends seems a bit suspect to me. No one at Internet World saw the rise of social media, and no one riding the initial wave of social media saw the directions it would take us or the damage it would inflict on society. About the only prediction I’d confidently make about AI is that it will certainly change things, and those things are likely to be related to porn since that’s the gravity well that all tech seems to orbit.
Secondly, and maybe this is just an artifact of being a slightly grumpy old man in the tech space, tech never seems to work quite as well in practice as it does in the advertisements and investor presentations. Have you tangled with a printer lately? Exactly. Given the inexorable urge to monetize All The Things, the AGI-powered robot in your home is likely to be belting out commercial jingles 24-7 or stocking the fridge with products willing to pay for best placement, unless you’re willing to pay for Robotic Help Platinum, offering a Reduced Advertisement Experience for only 59.99/month. If the urge to innovate is strong, the urge to enshittify has proven to be nearly as strong.
But the reason I’m not feeling the imminent-Eden scenario is that sin is still a thing, and that however hard the AI folks want to believe otherwise, humans will find ways to sin and will keep doing so until the Lord returns to wrap it all up. We will, of course, be focused on this very thing this Sunday. Envy, wrath, lust, acedia…all of it will find a home in whatever place we inhabit, however shiny and new it happens to look.
To be clear - and I say this as someone who uses chatbots pretty regularly for various things - I think the tech is pretty neat and has the potential, even if it doesn’t progress any further than it has today. Like all tools, it has its proper place and we should think prudentially about where it’s used, and by whom, and for what purposes. Any tool can be abused, and serve to do injury to the dignity of the human person; this one is no exception, and carries the additional dangers of being opaque in its operation while simultaneously presenting itself as coldy impartial. I’m thankful for the work that the Holy See has done in this area and recommend the book produced by the AI Working group: Encountering Artificial Intelligence.
Got the other trees into the ground yesterday, as I was hoping to have them planted before a whole pile of rain comes drifting into our area. It was…weirdly warm and today got into the mid-70s. I’m not complaining (much) but I have a feeling that we’ll be paying for it later on in the year.
Remember when you were grousing about the heat? How do you like this, good sir? as we watch the mercury drop even further and our faces hurt from the air.
We have our assignments but are under a strict embargo until they’re announced by our bishop. They’re his prerogative, so he gets to make the announcement which, I think, will be this weekend. Until then, lots of quiet preparation and prayer. I’m teaching OCIA tonight and our subject is The Liturgical Calendar, which is unquestionably the critical hinge point on which the entire creed rests. It will be a barn-burner, I can tell you. There may or may not be levitation; you’ve been warned.
I will, as in years past, start with a small explanation of what liturgy is and isn’t, what it requires and what it most certainly does not require. I also have the opportunity of maybe going down one of my favorite rabbit holes, which is the dating of Christmas and the inevitable questions around who cribbed from who in terms of the winter solstice. If you’d like to know more, take a look at Calculating Christmas by William Tighe or the very excellent The Origins of the Liturgical Year by Thomas Talley, who is Tighe’s main source. It is…exhaustive, and also magnificent.
As long as we’re at the outer limits of nerd, I’m writing this from emacs org-mode. Why? I’m still not entirely sure yet. The organizing tools intrigue me, and I’ve made an embarrassing number of attempts to learn emacs over the years before inevitably returning to vim for editing stuff; org-mode seems like an interesting use-case for which it might be worth learning…all the rest. The jury is still out, I’m afraid. I want to try to get calendar syncing working, at least in read-only mode before I take the big plunge. Writing here and posting directly to the blog is something I was able to do in VSCode too, both functions thanks to Claude who wrote the plugins/scripts/doo-dads to make it possible.
Postscript: class went well. Nobody asked about Christmas, which was fine.
Currently reading: I, Rigoberta Menchu by Rigoberta Menchu 📚
Quite a weekend so far: grandsons over for most of yesterday while their mom was at a shoot, planted a tree, and watched a fair amount of football. The weather was beautiful, and it was a genuine pleasure to be outside pulling weeds and doing some other late-season tasks that I’ve been putting off.
The tree we planted is a Chinese pistache. We spotted a couple in a local parking lot of all places, and the colors are just spectacular - the most brilliant red and orange I’ve ever seen. We pulled over to get some pictures and an ID, and there was a whole parade of people doing the same thing when we left. I have two more to put in and will probably knock that out today. Very satisfying, planting trees. I highly recommend it. Our older grandson, who is four, came over to play in the dirt and watch/help. Whenever he comes over in the future to see it, I hope he remembers the day we planted it.
As for football, we watched the poor Blue Raiders go 1-9 against Western Kentucky and the Bulldogs go gloriously 9-1 against Texas. I haven’t watched a game that much fun in a while. Sorry Longhorns. Maybe next year. Ha, just kidding: maybe never.
Let me gloat a little while. The Alabama loss still stings.
Breakneck is good and moving quickly. I have I, Rigoberta Menchu hitting the front porch today and need to jump into it as soon as I can. I also acquired the Spanish edition of the Roman Missal so I could familiarize myself more with the liturgy generally and the deacon’s parts in particular.
I think I’m done putzing around with the blog’s templates and layout. When all’s said and done, I always return to a lightly tweaked version of Bear, so this is where I’ll stay. For now.
Currently reading: Breakneck by Dan Wang 📚
This is the gist of the reflection-not-a-homily I gave this morning on Luke 17:11-19.
Gift-giving season is upon us, in case you hadn’t noticed. I expect everyone’s email is overflowing with reminders to buy stuff for so-and-so, time is running out, and so on. It can be a little exasperating.
To receive a gift as a gift is to enter into a couple of things.
- The gift itself is something free
- It comes from a giver
- You are the receiver
Receiving the gift binds the giver and the receiver, whether we like it or not. There are times when we don’t like it much at all, being bound to another. At best, these moments are the awareness of a reciprocal obligation. He got me something, and now I have to return the favor. At worst we start trying to triangulate and calculate what the giver is really up to. What does he mean by this? What does he really want.
The proper response to a gift, however, is gratitude and joy. We see throughout the scriptures, and especially in the Psalms, that the one who has been blessed by God, rescued from darkness, or otherwise set right - this person rushes to give thanks and praise to God, just as the Samaritan leper did in today’s reading. Encountering Jesus, he met him as a prophet - the scene invokes very strongly the story of Elisha and Naaman the Syrian. After his healing, on the run, he realizes that this healing came through Jesus, and he returns to render the homage due to a king. The intersection of healing, prophet, and king mark the advent of the Israel’s long-awaited messiah, just as we are waiting today.
The healing leads to joy, praise, and finally, thanksgiving to God: εὐχαριστῶν is the word Luke uses. To be a eucharistic people is to find in the Lord our joy, born of the gratitude we hold for the gift of His very self - given to us in the sacraments, and especially so in the Eucharist - along with our very existence, and all the good and beautiful things that fill it. This joy and gratitude is something we owe, believe it or not, as a matter of justice. How so?
Justice is what happens when we render to another what is due, and what we owe our creator is basically everything. We can’t give him everything; someone else has already done that for us. What we can render back to God is our gratitude, whether we ‘feel’ good about it or not doesn’t really matter. Recognizing a gift as a gift is an act of the intellect and will, as is our faith in the sacraments.
As we prepare to prepare for this season, let’s make it our intention to see the gifts around us for what they are, and especially so as we approach the altar. We can, and should, habituate ourselves to gratitude and thanksgiving. If we can make it our second nature in this life, it can become our sole nature in the next.
There and back again without incident. Neither of the airports were on The List, which I’m sure helped. Other than a bit of weather-related delay coming into BNA, the flights were as boring as they needed to be. I got caught up on magazine/journals and finished Frankenstein. Somehow I had managed to avoid this throughout high school and college, and it was nice to finally tick the box. I liked it, and agree with scientist daughter that no one (to date) has actually made a decent adaptation for screen. “Now,” she said, “we can all watch the latest version when it streams and share our disappointment.” Sign me up!
We started Pluribus last night and are deeply intrigued. Little bits of The Leftovers, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and house favorite Rhea Seehorn is just too much to resist.
Looking ahead, the cold weather makes its move this week; we’re supposed to see the mid-20s. Other than a sore knee that I got by absolutely eating shit on an uneven sidewalk while running in California, things are pretty good. The big sales meeting went well and it was good to see everyone face-to-face.
Bookwise: continuing The Idiot. Frankenstein was a nice detour. Will probably pick up Breakneck: China’s Quest to Engineer the Future by Dan Wang. PJ Vogt interviewed him for the latest episode of Search Engine and it sounds really, really good. Will probably also revisit some of the theology texts from our first year and work my way forward as a sort of ongoing project.
Next was Nouember, he full grosse and fat,
As fed with lard, and that right well might seem;
For, he had been a fatting hogs of late,
That yet his browes with sweat, did reek and steem
Less than 50 days to go. Am starting to look ahead at the liturgies of the Christmas Octave, wondering which ones I’ll be serving in. We’re scheduling head shots for the assignment announcements and have put in for the number of invitations we need for friends, families, and benefactors. Still no word on the assignments themselves, but I’d expect to hear something in the next week or two. It’s a little crazy-making, but there are plenty of other things going on to keep busy. I have some business travel which will eat up most of next week, and the run-up to the year-end holiday season is about to properly start (to say nothing of the aforementioned liturgical schedule).
For travel reading, I’ve got a backlog of magazines sitting on the iPad and a moderately annotated copy of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, which I have not read yet. It’s annotated because it’s one of my daughters' favorite book of all time, and she’s insisted that I read the original 1818 text, and this copy is hers. For the record, she found the latest movie version underwhelming.
So I’m giving the helix editor a whirl. Usually, I write my blog posts in vscode and then use a vibe-coded plugin to push the post into micro.blog, but I’d need to do some pipe-to-a-shell-script thing to accomplish the same thing. The purple color scheme is nice, and the lightweight vim-like feel also feels sort of comfy. The tutorial (which I have not completed) is also well-done.
Last night at OCIA, a catechist discussed spiritual warfare, on which I have some complicated thoughts.
On the one hand, the Bible and the Catechism are clear: spirits exist, and they are either helpful aids to our salvation or adversaries bent on our destruction. Dismissal is not an option, and I have zero problem whatsoever acknowledging this aspect of our faith to myself or anyone else. There’s no whitewashing or handwaving. We should understand them, their nature, their missions, and so forth.
It’s the obsession with the warfare metaphors that makes me a little uncomfortable, because it seems a bit too easy to go down a few different (and in my estimation, wrong) pathways. First, the battle is over. It was over, definitively and eternally, on Easter morning. The idea that, somehow, we’re in a pitched battle on the ground with armies of demons and whatnot elevates the adversary to an entirely unmerited position. We don’t need to be on a constant battle footing because they have no power except what we willingly give them, which brings me to my second point.
The battle, if someone wants to retain the word, is principally interior: the movements of our passions, thoughts, and will are where the attention needs to be focused. This is where temptation happens, and this is where we can lean on the ordinary means of sanctification - prayer and the sacraments, chief among them - to obtain the graces we need to defeat it. This means a lot of sitting quietly, honest introspection, prayerful trips to the confessional, and maybe spiritual direction. If you want to see what spiritual battle looks like, you can’t do much better than St. Anthony the Great, when he was attacked in the tombs:
He lay watching, however, with unshaken soul, groaning from bodily anguish; but his mind was clear, and as in mockery he said, If there had been any power in you, it would have sufficed had one of you come, but since the Lord hath made you weak, you attempt to terrify me by numbers: and a proof of your weakness is that you take the shapes of brute beasts.' And again with boldness he said, If you are able, and have received power against me, delay not to attack; but if you are unable, why trouble me in vain? For faith in our Lord is a seal and a wall of safety to us.' So after many attempts, they gnashed their teeth upon him, because they were mocking themselves rather than him.
Anthony’s confidence lay in the victorious Christ and in the words of scripture, not in any effort or merit of his own. Mocking dismissal is his response, because it’s all they deserve. The battle is won in a place of stillness and quietude - hesychia - obtained from the struggle to release the self from its sinful attachment to passing things. It’s fought with pretty ordinary methods: prayer, fasting, or other askesis, and almsgiving. These aren’t as hot-and-sexy, though, as the constant proliferation of military iconography in our culture tends to encourage, but they surely (to me) seem more in keeping with the example of our Lord.
A Christian anthropology views the human being as the imago dei, damaged and susceptible to concupiscence, but also reconciled with God and given the means to be restored to its rightful telos. Though this struggle takes place in the context of the community (for that is precisely what we are made for), it is undertaken by the individual and it is kenotic, rather than assertive, in nature.
Our formation weekend was cancelled, so the Trinity homilies will need to wait…until the actual Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity, when maybe we’ll get a chance to dust them off and use them. We learned that we’ll likely be in our home parishes for the Christmas octave, and that we should “probably be prepared to preach,” so we’ve got that to look forward to. I’ve also been penciled in for a house blessing, too.
Spent the weekend moving our oldest daughter and her family into their new house, which was a lot of fun. Many hands and all that. Getting someone from an apartment to a house is busy, but not a tremendous amount of stuff. Moving from a house to another house is another story and they’ll be on their own for that one. The grandchildren and cats have more space to run and everyone can spread out a little. Everyone’s over the moon, them most of all (as you’d expect).
Bit of travel next week for work, which is fine. I have plenty to read en route and it will be nice to see lots of people in person instead of via Teams and Zoom.
Definitely looking and feeling like Fall. The leaves are changing in earnest and the temps are steadily falling. Still plenty of bugs out and about. There’s been a bit of frost in the morning, but no hard freeze as of yet. The flowers are basically done, except for some scattered asters here and there and a few mistflowers. Right now it’s gray and overcast too, so the vibe is nearly perfect. I wish things were a tad less busy for a minute or two, but here we are.
For our next formation weekend (which is actually just Saturday), we’ll be preaching for…The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity. I am reliably informed that this is one the least-favorite days on which to deliver a homily. Fortunately for me, I saw the email about this when I was on retreat so I made some use of the monastery library and pulled a dozen or so sermon collections off the shelf to look some inspiration.
As it turns out, most - if not all - of the homilies I read covered the ground I was already considering, which is:
We really can’t get our heads around this, and it’s no use trying to make it easy. Here’s what we know, and here’s what to do with that knowledge…
In any case it’s nice to know that some of the pressure is off.
Our second homily on the weekend will be short-prep-time sort of thing, topic TBD. We’ll find out when we get there. As for the rest of the process, my final evaluation went well and we had a follow-on meeting to discuss the ins and outs of the assignment process. The main part of this was to give us a chance to discuss anything that they needed to be aware of beforehand - unfixable personality conflicts, insurmountable scheduling, and so on. We met with the vicar general and head of deacon personnel and they were both very gracious and attentive. I still have no idea where I’ll be sent, but I know now that I’m to consider the assignment “stable,” which is to say “we’re not sending you to X for a year before bringing you back to Y. We need for you to invest in the community, keep your eyes off the calendar, and bloom where you’re planted.”
Sounds good to me. I won’t be able to fully relax my brain on this until the question is answered, since it will deeply affect our lives from that point on, but it shouldn’t be much longer before they let us know. Until then: ora et labora.
Speaking of, the monks prayed the most beautiful confiteor as part of their Compline. The temptation has been strong to print it out and stick it in my breviary:
I confess to God Almighty,
To blessed Mary ever Virgin,
To blessed Michael the Archangel,
To blessed John the Baptist,
To the holy Apostles Peter and Paul,
To our blessed Father Benedict,
To all the Saints,
And to you,
Brethren,
That I have sinned exceedingly in thought, word, and deed:
By my fault,
By my own fault,
By my own most grievous fault.
Therefore I ask blessed Mary every Virgin,
Blessed Michael the Archangel,
Blessed John the Baptist,
The holy Apostles Peter and Paul,
our blessed Father Benedict,
All the Saints,
And you, brethren,
To pray for me to the Lord our God.
Lots going on, but not much to write about. Work is very busy and things continue to arc towards December 20th with an ecclesiastically deliberate pace. Started Dostoevsky’s The Idiot and am enjoying it. Picked up another one (The Emerging Diaconate) while I was on retreat, but haven’t started it yet. Francis de Sales in bits and pieces.
Things are definitely cooling off slowly outside, though I’m looking at a yard that needs mowing again and lots of weeds vigorously growing where they ought not be. The only vegetation I want to think about right now is the kind that takes place on the couch with bourbon.
Next week, I will be taking my canonical retreat before ordination - five days at a Benedictine monastery down the road a bit. Things look like they’re going to be nice and busy at work up until the very last minute, which, y’know, sort of tracks. Other than knowing that I’ll be out-of-pocket and off-the-grid for a little while, I haven’t given it much thought. I’ll take a few books with me, but don’t have anything planned otherwise.
Our monthly meetings are reduced to a single Saturday now. We spend a couple of hours delivering and writing homilies or stepping through various liturgical things. Last weekend, we learned a bit about serving mass when the bishop is presiding. Our director of deacon personnel was there, and he showed us a cheat sheet for when to get him the mitre and crozier, and I need to ping him to see if he’ll send it out to the rest of us. In the meantime, I see that they’ve published the banns for our petitions, which means that the people of God get three weeks to register their feelings regarding our ordinations. I hope they’ve staffed up the call center.
Our OCIA is busting at the seams. Over 70 at this point in both the English and Spanish sections. We’re honestly out of physical space to hold everyone. This sounds like the opposite of a problem, and it is in a way. People continue to show up week after week, with I heard this was where OCIA is, and we show them where to sit and get them onto the sign-up sheet. I wish we could just split them into separate evenings or something, but it’s not my call, and I’ll likely be gone by January anyway.
Cooling off slowly outside. It’s starting to look and feel a little more fall-ish, but the grass has gotten tall again, and I’ll need to cut it again soon. Still working through de Sales, MacIntyre, and PKD. I just noticed that the latest season of Slow Horses has dropped and am very stoked. Otherwise, it’s old British detective shows for us via Britbox: Lewis and Happy Valley right now.