Monday, April 28, 2014

FOUR POPES- TWO SAINTS




Yesterday Pope Francis  (with Pope Emeritus Benedict present) canonized two pillars of the Catholic Church,  two popes who had an impact that goes beyond our Church and have influenced people around the world.

St. John XXIII
, known as “the Good Pope”  had a great sense of humor.  He was a man so comfortable about himself that he constantly made jokes about his height (which was little), his ears (which were big), and his weight (which was considerable). When he once met a little boy named Angelo, he exclaimed, “That was my name, too!, but then they made me change it!”.

Asked to describe the two new saints, Pope Francis said St. John was "a bit of the 'country priest,' a priest who loves each of the faithful and knows how to care for them; he did this as a bishop and as a nuncio. He was a man of courage... He was a man who let himself be guided by the Lord"  and like our present Holy Father he embraced the poor.

.From his teens when he entered the seminary, he maintained a diary of spiritual reflections that was subsequently published as Journal of a Soul (one of my all time favorite books).  The collection of writings charts his efforts as a young man to "grow in holiness" and continues after his election to the papacy.  It remains widely read to this day.

He initiated the Second Vatican Council from whence came changes that reshaped the face of Catholicism including,  a comprehensively revised liturgy, a stronger emphasis on ecumenism, and a new approach to the world.

Like St. John Paul, his feast day is not celebrated on the date of his death as is usual, but on the  October 11, the first day of the opening of Vatican II.

St. John Paul II
, known as a globetrotter, made 104 trips outside Italy. More than any pope, St.John Paul recognized the emotional and symbolic value of conferring sainthoods as he sought to spread Catholicism around the world. He canonized 482 saints- more than all his predecessors combined. To do this, he streamlined the canonization process, reducing to five years the waiting period after a person’s death before the canonization process can be initiated. Every country this day has a patron, thanks to him.

 St. John Paul II is recognized as helping to end Communist rule in his native Poland and eventually all of Europe. He significantly improved the Catholic Church's relations with Judaism, Islam, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Anglican Communion.

As for St. John Paul, Pope Francis said, "I think of him as 'the great missionary of the church," because he was "a man who proclaimed the Gospel everywhere."  His feast day is to be celebrated  on the anniversary of his papal inauguration, 22 October 1978. 

Divine Mercy Sunday, the day of the canonizations, a celebration instituted worldwide by St. John Paul "showed his intuition that a new "age of mercy" was needed in the church and the world".


Pope Francis embraces Pope Emeritus Benedict before the Mass




Saturday, April 26, 2014

NEW BIRDS





As I had written in a blog before Holy Week, I was off to SE Arizona with two of our Oblates.  Southeast Arizona has some of the top birding spots in the world and on this trip we visited five. The convergence of four distinct bioregions-the Sonoran and Chihuahuan deserts, and the Sierra Madre and the Rocky Mountains-provides a prime mix of habitats for more than 400 species of birds. 

It was a wonderful trip, in which I added 35 birds to my life list. My goal on this trip was 25-30 new species so  I exceeded that goal. There were many highlights but perhaps the most exciting was the spotting of a SLATE THROATED REDSTART in the Chiricahua Mts. (8500+ ft).  This bird has been sighted in the USA only a handful of times, so was immediately reported to the Arizona Birding Assoc. for inclusion in the listing.  A few hours later as we descended the mountain we saw cars, racing to the top, perhaps to get a glimpse of our bird. Seeing reports the next day, it seems our lovely had flown to another area as it has not been seen since.

I flew from Seattle to Tucson where I had a layover awaiting Martha and MaryAnne to fetch me the next day to begin our journey to Madera Canyon- a magnificent area in the mountains only about 1 1/2 hours SE of Tucson.  We were fortunate to hook up with "The Desert Harrier", one of the best guides I have ever had.  He took us on a 4 hour walk though amazing but gentle country. I saw 15 new birds there alone. 

Broad-billed HB  (B. Stripling)

Magnificent HB (C & M Perkins)
At our cabin we were graced with some new hummingbirds (Broad -billed and Magnificent), painted redstarts and many acorn woodpeckers. Being a bit tired from the morning, we toured the area by car, stopping at the base of the Florida Canyon.  I was determined to find some scaled quail, so tried to imitate them by calling (more of a dying scream I am sure).  Soon overhead soared a GREY HAWK (one of the birds we missed in Texas last year). We were sure it was looking for whatever was on its last breath, as it flew low and slow.   
Hooded Oriole (Tom Benson)


Grey Hawk (Kyri)












Not five minutes later, MaryAnne (the non-birder among us) cried: what is that yellow bird in the tree? Behold, another bird missed in Texas, the glorious  HOODED ORIOLE.

 After 3 too short days we drove south to Patagonia (birding again at the Patton Place) and then north and south again to the San Pedro River Valley, where we were treated like royalty for 3 days and nights.  Each day we drove into other valleys, and while not as many birds as in the other areas, some were gems: Violet -crowned hummers and Cordilleran flycatchers.

We then drove east to Portal located at 5400 feet elevation in the heart of the Chiricahua Mountains, where we had 5 days with a Road Scholar group. We added to our list the shy NORTHERN PYGMY OWL and the world's lightest owl, the ELF OWL, which weighs in at 1.4 Oz. We saw them nightly outside our lodge (as well as javelinas, sometimes as many as a dozen).

 
Elf Owl (Terry Sohl)
N. Pygmy Owl

 On that high mountain we saw several very colorful warblers:  RED-FACED  and the OLIVE (which looks more like a pumpkin than an olive!).  The BLUE-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD was daily at our deck feeders and later, several flycatchers were added to the list: the DUSKY-CAPPED and the BUFF-BREASTED.

Our last day we spent at the Amado Territory Inn (another treat) and birded Buenas Aires Wildlife Refuge which comprises 118,000 acres of protected grasslands, streams, and cienegas (marshlands or wetlands) for threatened and endangered species. And, with over 300 species sighted, it is, one of Arizona’s premier birding areas. Here we tried to find the rare five-stripped sparrow (spotted that day by someone) but unfortunately we came across a water- filled hole too deep for us to cross in the car so only went a bit further by foot. We  left Arizona just as the temperature was rising (not normal for April) but happy with the many treasure we found in desert and mountains.

Red-faced Warbler
Blue-throated HB (Destombe)
Olive Warbler (James Ownby)


 

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

IMAGES of SPRING- ON AN ISLAND

New born Maud
Mari- Highland calf

A LIGHT EXISTS IN SPRING

by Emily Dickinson

A Light exists in Spring
Not present on the Year
At any other period --
When March is scarcely here
A Color stands abroad
On Solitary Fields
That Science cannot overtake
But Human Nature feels.
It waits upon the Lawn,
It shows the furthest Tree
Upon the furthest Slope you know
It almost speaks to you.
Then as Horizons step
Or Noons report away
Without the Formula of sound
It passes and we stay --
A quality of loss
Affecting our Content
As Trade had suddenly encroached
Upon a Sacrament.

Sparrow
Sunrise

Two deer in the woods-  by Tari

Maud sleeps while Betty romps atop Mom


Barn Swallows






Monday, April 21, 2014

SPRINGTIME



It is I think not by chance that Jesus died in the spring-time of His life and we celebrate that death in spring today.  In the northern hemisphere, spring is when new life returns to the earth after the harshness of winter. It is when nature's cycle of life, death and rebirth is at its most visible.

Most of us look forward to all the things we associate with spring, for they bring hope, light and joy. The spring months start the season of birth as the eternal and silent cycle of life begins to warm the earth with its rapidly increasing length of daylight hours, and as the axis of the earth begins its annual tilt toward the sun.




As we enjoy the days of spring, with the warmer weather, the array of colorful flowers, new lambs and calves, we look beyond the natural, the earthly, and the temporal. We are reminded of the spiritual and eternal. Just as winter has passed, so has Lent, and the death of Christ, followed by His Resurrection, bringing us hope of eternal life. ALLELUIA, ALLELUIA

The Resurrection- OLR Chapel

Sunday, April 20, 2014

RESURRECTION

 Romanian
Armenian
Ethiopian


          HE IS RISEN, AS HE PROMISED!  ALLELUIA, ALLELUIA, ALLELUIA

Dr. Hi Qi  (USA)


Saturday, April 19, 2014

A DAY of DARKNESS

Kostis Parthenis (Greece d. 1967)


This lesser known "Pieta" by Kostis Parthenis is one of my favorites. The artist was born in Alexandria in 1878, only coming to Greece for the frst time in 1903. In 1929 he was appointed as a professor at the ASFA where he taught until 1947. He died in Athens in 1967.

He  was probably the first modern Greek artist to assimilate elements of prehistoric Aegean art in his work.
Hi very muted colors convey loss, sorrow  and hopelessness.  The following work on the otherhand
gives us great hope, reminding us of springtime and leading us  to the Resurrection.


 And another by the British artist Norman Adams, who we mentioned on Palm Sunday.
Christ's Cross & Adam's Tree

Friday, April 18, 2014

THAT FRIDAY WE CALL GOOD

Theyre Lee-Elliott (British-d. 1988)
Graham Sutherland (English- d. 1980)
Francis Souza- India (d. 2002)
de Grazia (USA)
Jacobello Alberegno  (Italian-1390)