Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.

Deliverance|"Be vigilant at all times and pray that you may have the strength … to stand before the Son of Man." (Luke: 21:36)|Daniel asked for help. What did the dream mean? Who were the four beasts? Why did the last horned beast destroy the others? One horn had eyes and a mouth. This hor...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schuler, Jeanne
Other Authors: Schuler, Jeanne A.
Language:English
Published: University Ministry, Creighton University. 2021
Subjects:
3-5
Ice
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134590
id ftcreightonuniv:oai:dspace2.creighton.edu:10504/134590
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Creighton University: Creighton Digital Repository (CDR)
op_collection_id ftcreightonuniv
language English
topic Revelation 22:1-7
Psalms 95:1-2
3-5
6-7ab
Luke 21:34-36
spellingShingle Revelation 22:1-7
Psalms 95:1-2
3-5
6-7ab
Luke 21:34-36
Schuler, Jeanne
Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.
topic_facet Revelation 22:1-7
Psalms 95:1-2
3-5
6-7ab
Luke 21:34-36
description Deliverance|"Be vigilant at all times and pray that you may have the strength … to stand before the Son of Man." (Luke: 21:36)|Daniel asked for help. What did the dream mean? Who were the four beasts? Why did the last horned beast destroy the others? One horn had eyes and a mouth. This horn made war against the holy ones "and was victorious until the Ancient One arrived; judgment was pronounced in favor of the holy ones of the Most High."|Daniel was taken into exile in Babylon. The Book of Daniel was written centuries later during the persecution of the Jewish people by King Antiochus IV (167 -164 BC). The Jewish people of that day had no trouble interpreting Daniel's dream. For three years, Antiochus "looted the treasury, profaned the Temple, violated the Sabbath, destroyed the Holy Books, forbad circumcision, and introduced the cult of Zeus." The community sank into despair as Antiochus set out to make good Greeks of them. As in the boarding schools where Native American children were separated from family and language, Jewish culture was under attack. To outlaw one's ancestors, laws, and customs brings trauma and death. The revolt of the Maccabees put an end to the mad designs of Antiochus. Native American boarding schools operated until the final decades of the last century.|Today ends the liturgical year. Tomorrow, Advent begins. Recent liturgical readings are apocryphal: dark days lie ahead. Prepare for wars and destruction. Don't let your heart grow drowsy. Open your eyes. Come back. Now is the time to cry out to our God.|Data about climate change brings an apocalyptic mood. The ice pack is melting. Ancient glaciers weaken and collapse. Seas are rising. Acidic oceans kill coral reefs. The permafrost is thawing. Mass extinctions are underway. Droughts and wildfires devastate farmland and forests. Nations go to war over fresh water. Faced with starvation, families migrate. Without vigorous global action, 50 million climate migrants are predicted by 2050. The drumbeat of dangers keeps sounding.|In Laudato Si Pope Francis calls the earth our shared home. This gift from God obliges us to care for all creatures. No one has enough wealth or military might to survive the crisis facing the planet on their own. We are in this together for sure. Luke warns us not to be absorbed by daily anxieties. Fear is useless. Let us listen and act.|In Saving Us, climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe finds apocalyptic moods numbing. Heaps of dismal data do not move us to act. She urges us to have conversations. Listen to what our neighbors care about. A planetary upheaval affects every aspect of our lives. Look for solutions that bring us together.|"Whoever we are, we are human. And as humans, we have the power to connect with one another across many of the broad, deep lines scored across our societies and psyches … We have to start with respect, and with something we both agree on: bonding over a value we truly share, and then making the connection between that value and a changing climate … Rather than trying to change who someone is, it can become clear that the person you are talking to is already the perfect person to care about and act on climate change. (229)
author2 Schuler, Jeanne A.
author Schuler, Jeanne
author_facet Schuler, Jeanne
author_sort Schuler, Jeanne
title Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.
title_short Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.
title_full Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.
title_fullStr Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.
title_full_unstemmed Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.
title_sort reflection for saturday, november 27, 2021: 34th week of ordinary time.
publisher University Ministry, Creighton University.
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134590
long_lat ENVELOPE(12.539,12.539,66.081,66.081)
ENVELOPE(-64.167,-64.167,-65.183,-65.183)
ENVELOPE(-94.855,-94.855,56.296,56.296)
ENVELOPE(140.020,140.020,-66.661,-66.661)
geographic Babylon
Circumcision
Luke
Zeus
geographic_facet Babylon
Circumcision
Luke
Zeus
genre Ice
permafrost
genre_facet Ice
permafrost
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134503
http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134599
http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134598
Lectionary Number: 508
http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134590
op_rights These reflections may not be sold or used commercially without permission. Personal or parish use is permitted.
University Ministry, Creighton University.
_version_ 1766028279612964864
spelling ftcreightonuniv:oai:dspace2.creighton.edu:10504/134590 2023-05-15T16:37:59+02:00 Reflection for Saturday, November 27, 2021: 34th Week of Ordinary Time. Daily Reflections (Meditations) on the Scriptures from the Roman Catholic Lectionary. Schuler, Jeanne Schuler, Jeanne A. 2021-11-27 http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134590 en_US eng University Ministry, Creighton University. Omaha, Nebraska, United States http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134503 http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134599 http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134598 Lectionary Number: 508 http://hdl.handle.net/10504/134590 These reflections may not be sold or used commercially without permission. Personal or parish use is permitted. University Ministry, Creighton University. Revelation 22:1-7 Psalms 95:1-2 3-5 6-7ab Luke 21:34-36 2021 ftcreightonuniv 2022-04-16T22:29:24Z Deliverance|"Be vigilant at all times and pray that you may have the strength … to stand before the Son of Man." (Luke: 21:36)|Daniel asked for help. What did the dream mean? Who were the four beasts? Why did the last horned beast destroy the others? One horn had eyes and a mouth. This horn made war against the holy ones "and was victorious until the Ancient One arrived; judgment was pronounced in favor of the holy ones of the Most High."|Daniel was taken into exile in Babylon. The Book of Daniel was written centuries later during the persecution of the Jewish people by King Antiochus IV (167 -164 BC). The Jewish people of that day had no trouble interpreting Daniel's dream. For three years, Antiochus "looted the treasury, profaned the Temple, violated the Sabbath, destroyed the Holy Books, forbad circumcision, and introduced the cult of Zeus." The community sank into despair as Antiochus set out to make good Greeks of them. As in the boarding schools where Native American children were separated from family and language, Jewish culture was under attack. To outlaw one's ancestors, laws, and customs brings trauma and death. The revolt of the Maccabees put an end to the mad designs of Antiochus. Native American boarding schools operated until the final decades of the last century.|Today ends the liturgical year. Tomorrow, Advent begins. Recent liturgical readings are apocryphal: dark days lie ahead. Prepare for wars and destruction. Don't let your heart grow drowsy. Open your eyes. Come back. Now is the time to cry out to our God.|Data about climate change brings an apocalyptic mood. The ice pack is melting. Ancient glaciers weaken and collapse. Seas are rising. Acidic oceans kill coral reefs. The permafrost is thawing. Mass extinctions are underway. Droughts and wildfires devastate farmland and forests. Nations go to war over fresh water. Faced with starvation, families migrate. Without vigorous global action, 50 million climate migrants are predicted by 2050. The drumbeat of dangers keeps sounding.|In Laudato Si Pope Francis calls the earth our shared home. This gift from God obliges us to care for all creatures. No one has enough wealth or military might to survive the crisis facing the planet on their own. We are in this together for sure. Luke warns us not to be absorbed by daily anxieties. Fear is useless. Let us listen and act.|In Saving Us, climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe finds apocalyptic moods numbing. Heaps of dismal data do not move us to act. She urges us to have conversations. Listen to what our neighbors care about. A planetary upheaval affects every aspect of our lives. Look for solutions that bring us together.|"Whoever we are, we are human. And as humans, we have the power to connect with one another across many of the broad, deep lines scored across our societies and psyches … We have to start with respect, and with something we both agree on: bonding over a value we truly share, and then making the connection between that value and a changing climate … Rather than trying to change who someone is, it can become clear that the person you are talking to is already the perfect person to care about and act on climate change. (229) Other/Unknown Material Ice permafrost Creighton University: Creighton Digital Repository (CDR) Babylon ENVELOPE(12.539,12.539,66.081,66.081) Circumcision ENVELOPE(-64.167,-64.167,-65.183,-65.183) Luke ENVELOPE(-94.855,-94.855,56.296,56.296) Zeus ENVELOPE(140.020,140.020,-66.661,-66.661)