Wednesday, September 8, 2021
The Good We Do
Friday, August 20, 2021
Love Your Neighbor as Yourself
In this day and age, most everyone is willing to work together especially when things are going their way. When they don't, there's a growing number of people who become angry and uncooperative; many times even belligerent. I've watched some of the videos from the Williamson County School Board meetings. People getting a bit too cra-cra! Wonder what those people think when they go back and see themselves on YouTube? In the words of Sheldon Cooper, "For shame!"
Nothing wrong with disagreeing; just need to disagree agreeably. That's how we compromise and find solutions to our disagreements. My way or the highway isn't a good managerial or relational strategy.
This morning's gospel reading was from Matthew 22 where the Pharisees tested Jesus on the greatest commandment. His response is what we should always be doing as children of God. "You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and the first commandment. The second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself."
Unfortunately, we don't love God the way we should. And, we definitely don't come close to loving our neighbor as ourself. For many, hating our neighbor is probably more common than loving our neighbor especially if they don't think the way we do. Jesus never said for us to love our neighbor unless our neighbor does not look, act, or think the way we do. Sometimes, I'm as guilty as the next person, but I actually do try to follow the greatest commandment.
Loving God and our neighbor does not mean we are supposed to make everyone happy. Actually, trying to make everyone happy is a recipe for disaster and should not be our goal because it will never work. If our actions and decisions are made out of love, yet some people aren't happy with our actions and decisions, then so be it. We aren't all going to be happy, but we should all get along. Here's a great quote to follow: "Stop trying to make everyone happy. You are not tequila!"
Winston Churchill once said, "Never let a good crisis go to waste." We are approaching 630,000 COVID deaths in this country and 4.4 million world-wide. Don't know about you, but I would categorize this as a crisis. During this crisis, it might be a good time to learn to love God, our neighbor, and ourself.
We should all work together for the common good. Br. Joel McGraw (one of my favorite people on this earth), once told me, "In a disagreement, put on your velvet gloves and kill them with kindness." That was his way of loving his neighbor as himself. Let's be a lot like Jesus and Br. Joel by using this crisis to look for ways to love our neighbor.
I will end with some great advice from St. Teresa of Calcutta: “People are often unreasonable and self-centered. Forgive them anyway. If you are kind, people may accuse you of ulterior motives. Be kind anyway. If you are honest, people may cheat you. Be honest anyway. If you find happiness, people may be jealous. Be happy anyway. The good you do today may be forgotten tomorrow. Do good anyway. Give the world the best you have and it may never be enough. Give your best anyway. For you see, in the end, it is between you and God. It was never between you and them anyway.”God bless you, Didier Aur
Sunday, August 8, 2021
A Sense of Déjà Vu
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Pit and the Pendulum |
For eighteen months, nothing has been easy. And, I get this feeling that a pendulum is swinging right above me as if I am stuck in a horror novel. I'm waiting for the rats to rescue me by chewing through the straps binding me to the table. Maybe those rats are the vaccine. How 'bout that for some symbolism.
During these months, a chasm has developed where we have alienated ourselves by cynicism to the left or right. Sense and sensibility have been kicked to the curb replaced by agitation and irrationality, causing a lack of cooperation with and compassion for our brothers and sisters.
We are at the point where we can no longer rely on politicians and news media for truth. Every fact, statistic, and scrap of evidence placed before us is refuted by the other side as lies. Are truth and integrity no longer virtues?
I see ethics as a combination of truth and integrity. Unfortunately, ethics has been replaced by power and greed. Since ethics disappeared, truth and integrity, like Jolting Joe DiMaggio, have left and gone away. No wonder we have become jaded and cynical. For many, that cynicism has turned into hate. When hate rears it's ugly head, the middle ground quickly erodes, and we become a left or a right.
The latest issues causing this chasm are a face covering and COVID vaccination. How do we overcome these issues? If you ask me and you didn't, the answers are pretty simple.
Step 1: Stop talking and start listening, but listen to the right people.
Step 2: If you received or did not receive the vaccination because of your political affiliation, I just rolled my eyes in disbelief. That determination should be made or have been made by you and your physician, unless your physician is Dr. Vinnie Boombatz. If your doctor says you should take the vaccination, then do it. If not, don't. Doctors are actually scientists who constantly do research in their field. And, they want you to live because they don't make anymore money off of you and your health insurance company if you die. Just sayin'.
Step 3: If you are asked to wear a face covering, please do so. It is an inconvenience but an easy thing to do. Here's the way I look at this issue. I wear a seat belt when driving, bike helmet when riding, and shin pads when playing soccer. I would rather do none of the above, but I do so because they are required, meant for safety, and easy to do.
Step 4: Set a good example for the everyone. When in public (especially indoors), wear a face covering. When you are outdoors, don't. We are in great need of people setting good examples like using a turn signal, holding the door for the next person, and just being a nice person. Everyone going out in public will be wearing some type of face covering for the next few weeks. If the delta variant in this area continues to track like in the UK, we will be out of the mask mandate before we know it.
Step 5: Wash your hands, disinfect everything you touch, social distance, stay home if you don't feel good, and keep your germs to yourself. It worked last time. It will work again this time.
Working together is way past due but never too late to start. While working together, maybe we can actually learn to get along again. Wouldn't that be a novel idea and a nice thing to do!
God bless you,
Didier Aur
Sunday, July 25, 2021
When is Han Solo Going to Slow Down the Millennium Falcon?
After experiencing the most exhausting of all years, this summer leading up to the 21-22 school year has been even more exhausting. If anything, time has accelerated, and we only have one more week to prepare for teacher in-service and the new year. Wow!
The workload for the administrative team is heaviest during the summer. Preparing for the new school year takes place in a two-month span; June and July. The to-do list for getting the school ready has been longer and more involved than any of my previous 33 years in education. The long list isn't just for me; it is for the administrative staff, IT, teachers, maintenance, custodians, fall fest, PRE, and Home & School. Everyone has more on their plate than ever before and busting their tails making sure we are ready.
Life is sure going by quickly, and I don't have the energy I once did. Yet, the workload and number of hours spent at St. Ann continue to increase. Because of this, my hobbies have taken a back seat. Haven't spent nearly as much time on the soccer field or on my bicycle as I wish I had. After an extra hard day at work, it is sometimes difficult finding the time and energy for either. My trip to ride the Cowboy Trail in Nebraska never did materialize. Disappointing, but glad I live .2 miles from the Greenline, and able to go for a quick ride now and then.I'm not complaining by any means because I actually enjoy going to work every day. I am thankful to be at St. Ann and work with the most wonderful people. I am thrilled the whole team is on board to make St. Ann the best and continue to build such an incredible culture for our students and families. Our team will walk through fire for each other and the children. For those who might take our school for granted, the grass at St. Ann is a beautiful, lush, deep green.
This year is going to be a mix of pre-COVID and COVID times. It is almost as if we are reinventing education once again. That's why all the extra work. Planning last summer was a monster. We have had to almost completely revise our plans all over again this summer. When we just about have everything figured out, here comes the Delta variant. Yay! This yay is followed with an eye roll, sigh, head shake, and a few expletives. Here we go again.
We successfully and safely made it through last year. We will do it again together this year. Keep calm and persevere.
If St. Ann is not on your prayer list, please add us. If you normally don't pray, please start. If you already pray for St. Ann, thank you.
Dear God, please give us the faith, strength, fortitude, wisdom, humility, and passion needed to continue to move St. Ann forward, and keep our people safe. Bless us all. Amen.
Hey Han Solo, how about you slowing the Millennium Falcon down a bit! Much appreciate you doing that.God bless you,
Didier Aur, Principal
Monday, July 5, 2021
Sunsets to Sunrise
Endings are so difficult for me. I simply do not do well with endings. I never have. Yet, as we all know, endings are inevitable. Too, so many of us often must face endings far more momentous than those of a meal, a song, or a book. Perhaps the ending we face is that of the life of a loved-one, or the dissolution of a relationship, or the stoppage of meaningful work or employment. These sorts of ‘ends’ can be and often are somewhat ‘soul-crushing.’ To be sure, I have faced all these endings in one form or another and am still here writing. Words poured onto a page are often hollow solace for the soul that must mourn the loss that comes with each ending.
What can, what does help in the healing process, then? I might contend that it is certainly not my words, but rather, the Word; that is, the verbum Dei – the very Word of God.
If I were a betting man (and let us be honest, I am), I would bet that Jesus – like most persons – was also not too keen on endings either. Granted, I could certainly be wrong in my conjecture, but Sacred Scripture certainly paints the picture of the God-Man as One who relished in and enjoyed perseverance, overcoming, and fresh starts as opposed to One who passively accepted the inevitability of loss or endings.
I would like to highlight for you, now, but two examples from God’s Word wherein we see Jesus speaking about, if not promising, that finality may not be as final as we suspect… at least on this side of eternity. To be sure, the point of this brief exercise is not to shift focus away from the very real – and palpable – pain of having to face endings in this life. Rather, it is to demonstrate that just when it seems as if though we have reached an end of our own, there, in our brokenness, lostness, and uncertainty, we can encounter the God of Newness and Unlimited Beginnings.
The First Example
Our first example comes from within the context of what theologians and biblical scholars refer to as ‘The Last Supper Discourses’, or the intimate conversations Jesus had with the Twelve Apostles during The Last Supper before his ultimate arrest and Passion. It is in the fourteenth chapter of John’s Gospel wherein Jesus makes a beautiful promise to His Twelve, and by ‘spiritual succession’, to us also.
Jesus says, “I will not leave you orphans; I will come to you. In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me, because I live and you will live. On that day you will realize that I am in my Father and you are in me and I in you” (John 14:18-20).
Jesus’ promise not to leave His Twelve (and all of us) as orphans illustrates, clearly, His refusal to abandon those He loves and has taught in the ways of love. Moreover, the reference wherein He says, “I will come to you”, is an allusion to the sending forth of the Holy Spirit. In the ‘eternal silences’ of the Trinity, God dwells forever as an inexhaustible fount of newness which overflows from the continual exchange of love between the three Persons – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Apart from His promise to come to us Himself in the Person of the Holy Spirit, Jesus also directly promises us life, but there is even more still.
The promise of life Jesus gives is qualified by what He says after this, namely, “On that day you will realize that I am in my Father and you are in me and I in you.” This deep interconnectedness between the Father and the Son is also held out to us as possibility should we choose to accept it. Think about what Jesus says: “…I am in my Father and you are in me and I in you.” Thus, if Jesus is in His Father (God, the Creator) and we are in Jesus, then through, with, and in Jesus, we have our access to the Father and all that the Father is, namely, a Trinity of inexhaustible love, mercy, newness, forgiveness, hope, tenderness, and compassion.
The Second Example
Our second example also comes from John’s Gospel and is only about two chapters later than the first. In John’s sixteenth chapter, we see Jesus again speaking to His Apostles. But, this time, something is different about Jesus’ words. There is an unexpected, if not startling, tone to them… at least on the face of things. But it is never ‘the surface’ of the matter with Jesus. The content of His words are always meant for spiritual, emotional, and mental ‘digestion’. That is, we must really ponder what He means. Some context, here, would prove helpful so let us look at the entirety of the passage which serves as this second example.
“A little while and you will no longer see me, and again a little while later and you will see me.” So some of his disciples said to one another, “What does this mean that he is saying to us, ‘A little while and you will not see me, and again a little while and you will see me,’ and ‘Because I am going to the Father’?” So they said, “What is this ‘little while’ [of which he speaks]? We do not know what he means.” Jesus knew that they wanted to ask him, so he said to them, “Are you discussing with one another what I said, ‘A little while and you will not see me, and again a little while and you will see me’? Amen, amen, I say to you, you will weep and mourn, while the world rejoices; you will grieve, but your grief will become joy. When a woman is in labor, she is in anguish because her hour has arrived; but when she has given birth to a child, she no longer remembers the pain because of her joy that a child has been born into the world. So you also are now in anguish. But I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy away from you. (John 16:16-22)
Here is, before our very eyes, an instance wherein Jesus foretells of His own impending death. But we mustn’t stop there. What does the Lord say? “A little while and you will no longer see me…” Certainly, here, He is talking about His betrayal, arrest, passion, crucifixion, and death. There was, after all, some time (though briefly) that Jesus had to spend in the tomb. However, read on. What does the Lord say? “…And again a little while later and you will see me.” Here, He is talking about His having conquered over the gates of hell, sin, and death as well as His own resurrection!
This is, for us believers (or it should be, anyway), an absolute earthquake! We should be shaken and moved, but not with sadness, fear, or trepidation, but instead with joy unspeakable. Very God of Very God knows He must suffer and die, but He has no plans of remaining in the realm of death. He has plans to conquer, to overcome, to emerge victorious from the grave!
Personally, I love the last verse of this particular section and example. In the twenty-second verse, Jesus says, “So also now you are in anguish. But I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy away from you.” While these words may have been veiled in mystery for the Apostles, we all have the advantage of hindsight. The Apostles also later would come to understand these words spoken by their Master and Our Lord.
Moreover, His words, here, have a triple meaning. On the one hand, certainly, Jesus is referring to His need to die (“You will no longer see me”) and to His resurrection (“A little while later and you will see me”), but He is also referring to His ascension (“You will no longer see me”) and the descent of the Holy Spirit (“A little while later and you will see me”) as well as His own coming again in glory at the end of time (or what theologians refer to as ‘the parousia’).
In all the cases cited above, Jesus expresses intentions to return to us, His beloved children!
So, what, then are we to make of all of this? My own words could not summarize the impact of what these scriptural examples mean to those of us who are persons of faith. I will, for my part, say merely this: Jesus is not one for endings. He is the God of beginnings.
Saint Clement of Rome perhaps said it best when he penned these now infamous words, namely, that “The Lord has turned all of our sunsets into sunrise.”
To the God of Beginnings, then, let us pray:
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Last Supper by Nando Martins |
Tuesday, May 25, 2021
We Did It!
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Class of 2021 |
Wednesday, May 19, 2021
I Chose You!
As the final week of this very unique (don't ever want to use the word unprecedented again) school year quickly approaches, I want to share with you an email I sent to the wonderful people who make up our St. Ann staff. Let's finish the 2020-21 school year strong!
Dear St. Ann Educators,