“A Vision Thing”

 

Here’s a favorite picture of mine from the Staten Island Ferry. You say it’s a picture of the New York skyline? I say it’s a picture of water that gave birth to the city. True, isn’t it? The water was here first. The city came to be because water brought the world here, making the city a capitol of world trade and drawing millions of human beings to this place

Now look at it. The man who built the new World Trade Center claims it’s the tallest building in the country, challenging the heavens–like Babel.

Be careful, though, about challenging the heavens and forgetting about the earth. Be careful about the waters that brought you where you are. No fish or oysters here to eat now. Little space for the waters to go when they rise. And they will.

Don’t forget– the water was here first. It’s a “vision thing.” That’s what Pope Francis says in “Laudato si”.

This week’s readings from Genesis are good readings for improving our vision. In the weeks before we read from the Letter to the Hebrews, so you might say that from the heavens we’re now reflecting on the earth.  

It’s good to reflect on creation, Genesis reminds us. God looks on what has been made and finds it good. Our account from Genesis today describes the creation of man (“man” here is a term for man and woman). Man is not immediately placed on the bare earth. No, he is placed in a garden where “various trees grow that were delightful to look at and good for food, with the tree of life in the middle of the garden and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. “

Human beings, created by God, are called like God to find creation good. iThe Genesis account singles our the various trees that are delightful to look at and good for food, but all creation, from the sun and the stars to the simplest organisms, is to be looked at with delight.  

We’ll read for two weeks in our lectionary from the Book of Genesis and then we’ll be reading from the Book of Sirach which continues the Genesis message. Learn the Lord’s wisdom from the sands on the seashore, from heaven’s heights and earth’s depths, Sirach teaches.  Like the Book of Genesis, it tells us to learn from the world we live in. 

The scriptures in our lectionary are not assigned arbitrarily. The compilers of our lectionary after Vatican II carefully planned the way our lectionary unfolds.

4 thoughts on ““A Vision Thing”

  1. cenaclemary12's avatarcenaclemary12

    Be well…honey and lemon tea, chicken soup for the soul, ginger root boiling in a pot of water to inhale and stay away from crowds!
    Severe water shortage in South Africa. Only thirteen gallons a day rationed to a family!

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  2. Dan's avatarDan

    Dear Fr. Victor, we have not met you yet, but we feel great affection toward you. We have many Passionist friends in common. There will be time enough to acquaint each other. For now rest and recover. You are in our prayers. A healing Scripture for you:

    Psalm 143:8
    “Let me hear of your steadfast love in the morning, for in you I put my trust. Teach me the way I should go, for to you I lift up my soul”

    Dan & Patty Callahan
    Long Island
    (See you at the Cenacle)

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  3. cenaclemary12's avatarcenaclemary12

    Many talk the talk but make promises hard to keep. Where will the funds come from? God has given us a home on Earth but we have been disrespectful of her resources. May we be able to see how we need to care for our common home.

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