Thanksgiving was a treat here at
4219 Constance. We accepted an
invitation from the Presentation Sisters at Lantern Light Ministries to
celebrate with them, but so did a number of others and it seemed to us that
their house might be a bit crowded with 22 people! So we invited them to celebrate here—we set
up the Blessed Pauline Room and provided liquid refreshments; while the
Presentation Sisters, the Holy Faith nuns, and Cabrini Sisters provided
turkeys, dressings, casseroles, and desserts:
apple pies, ambrosia and Pavlova.
Travis ferried some of the food in the van, others brought their
culinary treats and we luckily got to keep a lot of the leftovers! It was a delicious deal. Our guests included Ryan, a friend of Travis’
and Dave Werthmann who spent a week as our guest—he is a long time friend of
John’s.
Lauren Zanfardino spent
Thanksgiving on Long Island with her family for a wedding and the holiday.
John began December with school
visits to Holy Cross and Pope John Paul II as part of the Discovery Walk
Program. A school visit to Damien
Memorial in Honolulu beginning December 9 never came off; flight
cancellations due to winter storms affected connecting flights out of
Dallas.
Our Christmas lights on the balcony
are complemented now by lights on the kumquat tree in front of the house. Our kumquat is BIG—not like the ones used for
bonsai! It is difficult to recognize our
tree with the description that follows but they are one and the same:
“When
the kumquats are divided into multiple species, the name Fortunella japonica (or Citrus japonica) is retained by this
group. The round kumquat also called Marumi kumquat or Morgani
kumquat, is an evergreen tree, producing edible golden-yellow fruit. The
fruit is small and usually round but can be oval shaped. The peel has a sweet
flavor but the fruit has a sour center. The fruit can be eaten cooked but is
mainly used to make marmalades and jellies. It is grown as an ornamental plant
and can be used in bonsai. The plant symbolizes good luck in China
and other Asian countries, where it is kept as a houseplant and given as a gift
during the Lunar New Year.
Round kumquats are more commonly cultivated than other species due to their
cold tolerance.”
Our neighbor, Glen Lirette, got the lights and installed
them so our kumquat TREE is quite elegant.
OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE:
Today is the Feast of Our Lady of
Guadalupe. The opening prayer at Mass
spoke clearly of the Church’s commitment to work for justice so we might have
peace. This wider context is perhaps
convenient to overlook—if we concentrate only on the miraculous creation and
preservation of the image but neglect the meaning for men and women in poverty
and of color today, living among us, unknown personally to us as our
brothers and sisters, but only as someone we minister to.
O God, Father of mercies,
who placed your people under the singular protection
of your Son's most holy Mother, grant
who placed your people under the singular protection
of your Son's most holy Mother, grant
that all who invoke the Blessed
Virgin of Guadalupe,
may seek with ever more lively faith
the progress of peoples in the ways of justice and of peace.
may seek with ever more lively faith
the progress of peoples in the ways of justice and of peace.
Interesting
that seeking the progress of peoples in the ways of justice and peace can be
passed over so lightly in a city that owes much of its recovery to the sweat
and labor of immigrants from among the very people that Our Lady appeared to!
Timothy
Cardinal Dolan’s reflection in GIVE US THIS DAY was more in keeping with the
vision of Pope Francis in the concern for the poor and in at least an oblique
reference to the sin of racism. He
wrote: “But the apparition truly marked the birth of the Mexican people—a fusion of the Spanish and Indian races and
culture. With her dark skin and Indian
features, the Lady offered an image of divine compassion for a demoralized
people. At the same time, she called the
Church to heed the voice of the poor, to serve as a vehicle for their cultural
and spiritual survival.
As the Advent hymn reminds us:
Wake, awake, for night is flying,
The watchmen on the heights are crying;
Awake, Jerusalem, at last!
BLOG 12.12.13 Our Lady of
Guadalupe
I'm saddened that there is no mention of my potatoes!
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