Monday, August 15, 2016

The Resurrection Flowers

This past Easter Sunday I was out taking a walk when I noticed something strange, a little way off the path there were some upside-down black plastic flower containers.  I went over to investigate and was surprised to find these little pots still had flowers in them.  The soil was completely dry and the flowers were beaten up and partially crushed, but they still had some green in so I deemed them worth saving.


I carried them home and popped them into the kitchen sink since the first thing they needed was a nice drink.  To my surprise and horror really some kind of nasty bugs came crawling out of the pots as they filled with water!  I don't know what kind of insects they were, but they were creepy looking and I didn't want them in my house so I hurriedly smashed them all.  After a good soaking, I gingerly carried them to the balcony still paranoid that more bugs would come crawling out.

I figured I should wait a little while to see if they managed to come back to life in full before repotting them.  After only a week and half they were standing up straight, full of color, and even starting to bloom!


It looked like they were going live so it was time to repot them.  I picked up some nice bright happy pots and gave them a new home.


In the next month, they doubled in size and are continuing to live happily to this day.  There was a bump along the way when it reached 108 F or so one day, which is really rare for California, and they got sun scored.  I moved them to the shade and they are coming back quite nicely again.  


Why Resurrection Flowers?


Why have I decided these begonias are resurrection flowers?  Well, I found them on Easter Sunday and they were practically dead and came back to life.  That's the simplest answer.  But, I did think the whole story is rather symbolic of a Christian conversion story.

Here is what the story symbolizes to me:

The flower is like the soul.  This soul was found in dry and withered state.  It was crushed and bruised, by the weight of the world bearing down on it.

The flower could not help itself from the dire situation it found itself in. Without outside help, it would surely die.  A soul can not help itself out of the grip of sin on its own.  A soul must allow God to lift it out of ditch, and set it back on solid ground.  God will never give up on any soul no matter what state He finds it in, but if a soul is unwilling to allow God to help it, it will surely die the eternal death. 

The flower was brought back to life through water and the sun, while a bruised and broken soul is brought back to life through the sacraments particularly Baptism, and contact with the Son.  When the flower was drenched in the life-giving water, harmful insects were expelled out of its container.  When a soul is drenched in the life-giving water of Baptism, harmful sins are expelled from it and the soul is made perfectly clean and new again.

When the flower spent time in the sun, it thrived.  When the soul spends time with the Son it thrives.

Sometimes the heat of the harsh world will cause the flower to wither, just as the soul will sometimes fall back into sin.  But the flower can be renewed when its environment changes and a soul can be renewed when it is cleansed anew by the sacrament of Reconciliation then strives to change its habits and environment so it does not fall into sin again.

The flower makes beautiful blooms when it is alive and healthy, just as a soul can be used by God to make beautiful things such as bringing encouragement, joy, or peace to others when it's is truly alive and healthy.

The question is which flower is your soul like? 

If you don't know where to start click Here for a bunch of awesome resources.  Or feel free to email me at findingfishes@gmail.com


Sunday, August 7, 2016

The Giver - Review [Spoilers]

The 2014 movie The Giver recently showed up on Netflix.  I didn't see it when it came out in theaters because I had read the book when I was in 5th or 6th grade and I remembered it being too depressing because I felt the premonition of what the future was like was too close to reality.  I remember the book also had a very unsatisfactory ending.  

This movie adaptation, however, is wonderful!  I literally watched it two days in a row because I enjoyed it so much!  

As usual, I am most impressed by movies with a strong moral message.  The strongest message I got out of  The Giver was about the dignity and value of human life.  In Jonas' society humans have been reduced to lukewarm puppets.  The don't have any ambitions of their own, they lack creativity and they no longer have any strong emotions good or bad.  Some aspects or their community are good, there is no conflict, no bullying, everyone has a purpose, and everyone is treated equally.  The dark underbelly is: if you don't fit into their perfect little world you are put to death!

As Jonas begins receiving the memories of people and cultures before his time he sees people fully living.  He experiences true joy, creativity, beauty, wonder, and love.  He also sees the darker side of humanity, greed, hatred, fear, pain, and death. All of these things are absent from his community.  In order to blot out the worst of humanities traits, they also had to blot out the best.  However, once Jonas understands what death really is, the loss of a unique person who is unrepeatable, he realizes his community did not get rid of the darkness of humanity, they sugar coated it and made it acceptable.  Jonas sees his "father" murder a perfectly healthy innocent baby simply because he was a twin.  The book elaborates more on this, explaining that twins were unacceptable because two people that alike could cause them both to stand out and gain extra attention either positive or negative.  So one twin was always killed after birth.  The book also explained that babies that had some sort of deformity or health problem, mental or physical were also killed.  Their society also killed off the elderly once they got to a certain regardless of their health.  

The memories Jonas saw of people dancing, singing, praying, enjoying nature and extream sports reminded me of the value of each human person.  No two people are alike and each individual is beautiful simply by living.  A newborn baby and a helpless elderly person are both just as valuable as everyone else.  People don't have to do anything for their life to be valuable they are valuable because they are children of God.  Each person's continued existence adds a value of its own to the world.  Jonas society did not recognize this and our own is headed right down that road.  A quick google search reveals that 60 - 90% of woman who's babies are diagnosed with down-syndrome before they are born decide to kill their babies via abortion.  As of 10/2015 5 states have made euthanasia legal.  Euthanasia primarily affects the elderly, the poor, and the terminally ill.  People who begin to see their lives as a burden on their loved ones or who can not afford health care may opt into suicide.  

We are losing the sense of value of each human life.  So often life can become about either trying to fit in with others or competing with others.  But what we are created to do is live fully as ourselves and become the person God created us to be.  There is no need to change just to fit in and there is no need to compete to be better than others.  We are supposed to love others not kill them.  If someone is sick we should love and take care of them not make them feel like a burden.  If an unborn baby is not "perfect" that doesn't mean we should kill them.  That baby still deserves to live.  Some people think if their unborn baby is sick or has some kind of problem that is it is more loving to kill them to spare them any pain they may experience in this world.  Everyone who has ever lived and ever will live will experience some kind of pain in their life, that is part of being alive.  The people in The Giver did not experience pain and they did not experience love either and hence were they truly alive?  That's what the movie wants you to decide.

Saturday, March 5, 2016

God of the Impossible


This past week several of my coworks and friends have been caught up in the recent presidential debates and are fearful about what the future holds.  None of the candidates really stand out as someone who really exemplifies a good moral character with the best interest of the people in mind.  Another good friend sees how similar recent events are to the events described in the book of Revelation, and can't help but wonder how close we are to the end.  It is very easy to become caught up in all of this worry and fear and I found myself awake around 4am the other night wondering about the end of the world and the state of our country. 

This morning however, it dawned on me that God really loves to keep everyone on their toes and achieve impossible things.  Inspired by Fr. Gaitley's book 33 Days to Merciful Love I recalled how just when the world was at it's darkest moment.  When the King of the Universe our Lord Jesus was on the cross dying and all hope of the angle's prophecy to Mary seemed lost. (Luke 1:32-33) "He will be great and will be called Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David; he will rule over the House of Jacob for ever and his reign will have no end." Jesus is risen from the dead, accomplishing His most well known impossible feat ever.  So although the signs of the time may look bleak and there is a lot of uncertainty of the leadership of our country this very well may be the dark before the dawn.  The age of disobedience will come to an end eventually to be replaced by a new age, the age of obedience.

As human beings we overcome impossible odds and achieve impossible things all the time.  We travel at speeds of at least 65mph on a daily basis that was impossible in the days of horse travel.  We can talk to someone on the other side of the world in an instant, again Impossible! Much of our food can be warmed in in 30 seconds or less I doubt you can even start a fire that quick.  We do so many things on daily basis that would have been considered impossible to people in the past, that we would do well to recall that humans are created only in the image of God.  If we are but God's mere reflections how much greater are the impossibilities God Himself can achieve?

Throughout Jesus' public life there are so many documented miracles, it can sometimes be difficult to remember that even one miracle would put us in awe if it were to happen in front of us today.  I don't know about you, but I have never witnessed first hand a completely paralyzed man get up and walk, instantly cured.  Today we can artificially help the blind see and the deaf hear by means of technology.  Yet, we are only just now catching up to what Jesus was able to do thousands of years ago with a mere touch or a word, and we are no where near restoring sight or sound without technology.  That would be impossible right?  Wrong, Jesus did it and so did some of his followers.



What other impossible things did Jesus do?  Control the weather (Mark 4:39), defy the laws of nature aka walking on water (Matthew 14:25), defy the laws of math aka feeding over 5000 with only 5 loves and 2 fish (John 6:9-13).  But of course that's not all.  Just to top it all off, Jesus rose from the dead, then sent the Holy Spirit to dwell among us and gave His Church 7 sacraments in which He Himself and the Holy Spirit would continue to achieve impossible things until He comes back again. 

Probably the most impossible sacrament is the Eucharist.  Jesus is actually fully present, body, blood, soul, and divinity in the form of bread and wine.  We know from scripture Jesus can take one substance and turn it into another.  He proves that with His very first miracle changing water into wine.  That alone should have been impossible, but it wasn't.  Then He goes a step farther and takes 5 loaves of bread and 2 fish and multiples that so it's enough to feed 5000 men plus an unknown number of women and children with 12 baskets of left overs.  When God does impossible things He does so with abundance!  Finally He combines these two miracles together, cause you know, they just weren't impossible enough yet!  He wine and bread, as used in the previous two miracles, changes them and into Himself and multiples Himself so that every single little white host that is consecrated contains Himself fully no matter how many times it is divided!  Then He says believe that!  Of course at this point many people in Jesus time and people today say "no" they will not believe that because it is too extreme too impossible and they walk away. (John 6:66 interesting verse number humm?)


We are followers of a God who does Impossible things.  It should not surprise us that God can become bread and wine if he wants to, why not? God can do anything!  God created everything out of nothing.  If I were to say to you, "make me a cake," and you asked me what kind, and I said "I don't care, but you can't use anything to make it with."  I don't think I would be getting my cake anytime soon.  We can not create something out of nothing, but God can.  That's impossible for us, and so we say, "that's impossible."  We can not change our bodies into an inanimate object, and so we say, "that's impossible."  But, what does God say? (Luke 18:27) "What is impossible with man is possible with God."  Therefor the more impossible something seems the more likely it is of God.  The Catholic Church has been teaching the same truth for thousands of years from the time of Jesus until today and have not taught anything about faith or morals that is false despite being run by sometimes corrupt and sinful men. Yup sounds pretty impossible, therefor only God could have safeguarded His truth throughout the generations so it is still the same truth today.  

Perhaps other impossible things come to mind, three shepherd children see the Virgin Mary, or a man is reported to levitate.  Or a child is cured from an incurable disease, or a couple who's marriage was on the brink of divorce suddenly have a stronger relationship than before.  Or maybe you managed to slow down just before that car swung into your lane, or that woman that always scowls at you at work actually smiled and said hello today.  God and His angles and His Saints are very active in this world today, performing impossible things both big and small.  Refuse to believe in coincidences and see impossible things as the miracles they are.  As quoted by Mark Hart "Don't tell God how big your problems or fears are instead tell your fears and problems how big your God is!" And our God will do impossible things.

Saturday, January 30, 2016

Cinderella the Saint? - [Spoilers]


I recently watched the 2015 live action remake of Cinderella.  I wasn't sure if I wanted to watch it due to some negative reviews I heard that said that the movie had a really bad message for young girls.  However, my sister convinced me to give it a shot.

It has been a very long time since I've seen the original 2D animated version, but my sister says this remake follows the original movie very well. I'm going to assume you know what the basic Cinderella story is and jump right into my thoughts.

Overall I thought this new version of Cinderella was fantastic!  I absolutely loved it!  Why?  Because the messages were so good and so strong.  I am a very big fan of movies with a morally sound messages and Cinderella was one of the best I've seen in a long time!  I'll explain this more in a minute.

I am also a big fan of fairy tale movies and while they usually have some good parts they also tend to have bad parts.  For example, Snow White and the Huntsman that came out in 2012 had some great moments, Snow White even prayed at one point which I thought was amazing for a modern movie.  However, the entire movie was ruined for me when Snow White killed her step mother.  If the step mother had been a symbol for sin and pure evil, such as many figures in the Old Testament I probably would have found this acceptable.  However, they actually made me sympathize with the Queen when they showed moments from her past which influenced her to become "evil."  After that I could not buy the idea the Snow White was somehow still pure and innocent after she killed the Queen.  She looked like a ruthless murderer to me. So that entire movie was ruined.


I was quite worried that something similar would occur in Cinderella.  However, I was pleasantly surprised when Cinderella actually forgave her step mother and step sisters despite how cruelly they treated her.  Her ability to forgive proved that her demeanor and personality throughout the entire film was genuine.  Had she cursed her step mother instead, or worse killed her, the entire movie would have lost it's creditably.

The Messages in Cinderella

Core Message

The most obvious message in Cinderella was the advice her mother gave her before she died.  It was advice she lived by.  "Have courage and be kind."



Cinderella did an amazing job and lived by this seemingly simple advice.  I say seemingly simple because courage and kindness have a huge amount of underlying implications when diving into and striving after them.

First of all, Courage, today we may think of courage simply as being brave when facing something that frightens us.  Such as mustering up the "courage" to squash a spider, or finally saying hello to someone we find attractive.  We sometimes think of these small things as courage, and in a sense they do take courage, but what we find in Cinderella is a type of courage that goes beyond overcoming our minor fears.

Cinderella's mother died early in the movie when she is a child.  She did not become gloomy, or depressed, instead she took to heart her mother's advice and tried to live in such a way that would make her mother proud.  Later her father died as well and she is left with her step mother and sisters who constantly teased her and treated her like a slave rather than a sister.  The basic needs of food, clothing, shelter, and love are withheld from her when left alone with her step family.  She is denied proper meals, she didn't receive a new one like her sisters, she is sent to sleep in the drafty attic and resorted to sleeping by the fire place in the kitchen instead, and she lived with three woman who demand much love, but gave none in return.  She faced all of this without a complaint and made due with her situation the best she could all the while she maintained poise and a hopeful attitude.  Her behavior went beyond courage and into the cardinal virtue of fortitude!  Fortitude gives us the strength to face obstacles in this life such as poverty and loss of loved ones, both of which is depicted in the movie.  Fortitude is the virtue that enables martyrs to choose death rather than deny their faith. To find our more about fortitude visit this page.


Secondly Kindness. I have been reading the book "The Hidden Power of Kindness" by Lawrence G. Lovasik and have been learning that kindness is not simply being friendly or likable, but encompasses a whole list of virtues such as avoiding envy, jealousy and gossip and instead recognizing that we do not have the full picture about another person's situation so we would do well to give them the benefit of the doubt and see their actions and behaviors in the best light possible.  Seeing their potential for good rather than focusing on their flaws.

Cinderella practiced this kindness throughout the movie.  She shared what little food she had with those even more impoverished than herself, the mice in the attic. She quietly performed all of the chores and duties the step family assigned her without complaint and did them the best she could. It would have been far easier for her to demand respect since she was the lawful owner of the house.  Or she could have done the tasks with a vengeful or spiteful spirit and purposely done them poorly so that the meals she made were burnt or under-cooked, and the laundry ended up with holes or wrinkles.  But, Cinderella remained kind,  a put her step families needs above her own.  After all she recognized that even though she had lost her mother and father, her step sisters had lost two fathers in a very short period of time and they had moved away from their own home to her farm which was not as nice as the home they had left, in their opinion.  This is a lot for anyone to go through and likely caused them all a good deal of stress and anxiety.

Cinderella's kindness in this situation, that was obviously quite difficult for her, reminded me of St. Monica.  Some years ago I read the book "The Life of St. Monica" by F. A. Forbes.  This book described the way Monica was forced to leave her own family through an arranged marriage to a pagan man.  She lived with her husband, his mother, the household staff, and eventually their three children.  Her mother-in-law did not like her and as a result neither did the household staff.  In order to gain favor with their mistress the staff would make us stories about Monica and all of her "faults."  On top of that her new husband was known for his explosive temper.  Monica however, faced all of this quietly, doing her best to perform her duties well, and not complaining.  Her wonderful, truly feminine, countenance disarmed her husband's attacks and he never raised a hand to her.  After many years of prayers and living virtuously in this difficult situation, she won over her mother-in-law, and her husband, who both converted to her Catholic faith and their hearts were transformed.  Her eldest son had grown into an out of line man with vices of his own, but Monica won him over as well and he, St. Augustine, became one of the most influential and famous Saints of the Catholic Church.  Seeing Cinderella's similarity to Monica showed me that those who had said this new Cinderella had a bad message for young girls was not true.  If girls today live by Cinderella's example in this movie they could become Saints themselves someday, which of course is what we all should be striving to become.

Other Messages

But what about the old fashioned and obviously silly message this movie portrays, that of a woman being whisked away from a bad situation by a handsome prince who saves the day by falling in love with her?  Surly this is not a good message for young girls, in this day and age, when woman are taught they don't need men to "save" them from their problems, they can do it themselves, of if not by themselves, then at least with the help of another woman. (Frozen I'm looking at you.) They don't need saved by a man that is deeming to a woman.

This modern idea couldn't be farther from the truth and it is the harmful idea not the other way around.

First let's look at the book of Tobit in the Bible. This story features Tobiah, Tobit's son, and a girl names Sarah.  Sarah is possessed by a demon, although she doesn't know that.  She has been married seven times, but the demon has killed each of her husbands on their wedding night.  She is in despair over this thinking that she is cursed and so she prays that God would end her life.  God hears her prayer and sends the angel, Raphael to help.  Raphael doesn't go directly to Sarah, but instead brings Tobiah to her.  He gives Tobiah a cure that will drive the demon away from her.  Tobiah falls in love with Sarah and marries her, on their wedding night he prays and uses the cure made of fish to drive away the demon.  Raphael then chases down the demon and binds him so he can not attack someone else. Tobiah and Sarah have a great party and as far was we can tell live happily ever after.

This story takes place in 721 BC it features a woman being saved from her problems by a man.  Or does it? From Sarah's point of view she has found a husband who doesn't up and die the first time they are alone together, this is her dream come true.  To her it may seem that a man has saved her, but in fact God sent the Angel who sent the man.  In Cinderella her problems are solved when the prince saves her.  Or did God send the deer that drew the prince and her together and then sent the Angel (aka Fairy God Mother) who enabled her to attend the ball?  Disney of course is highly unlikely to acknowledge this, but we are free to interpret the movie however we want and if I had children this is how I would explain what happened in the movie.  Why?  Because truly God is the one saves us all, from our sin and our problems, but he often allows others to participate in the saving.

But using the story Tobit still indicates that this is an old fashioned idea.  I prefer to call it a timeless truth rather than old fashioned.  A timeless truth is something that does not change with time because it was ordained by God.  This truth was worked into the vary fabric of how a woman was created and this truth is, that a woman longs to be saved by a man.  Not just any man, the God-man, the perfect man, Jesus Christ Himself.  Woman are created as the reflection of God's Church, the Church he founded and loved so much he died for.  Thus woman desire from a very early age to be loved so perfectly by their lover that he would die for her.  A child of course does not know she is the reflection of the Church and that Jesus died for her, but she senses her royal bloodline as a child of God, and dresses as the princess she is and dreams of a prince to wisk her away to a castle in the sky aka Heaven.




Men on the other hand are the reflection of Jesus himself and can only truly become a man when he is willing to put all of his own needs and desires in second place and be willing to valiantly die for his bride like a true man of victory and honor.  These truths are worked into the very beings of men and woman and of course they vary in degree and intensity from one person to the next and can even be obscured entirely by the influences of the world, but there is no denying that in general the majority of woman have a strong desire to be loved and men in general have a strong desire to destroy anything that would wish to harm the one they love; just as Jesus destroyed sin and death. This is why from 721 to 2015 we can find stories throughout all of history of men saving woman and woman being saved by men.  It is not weak for a woman to be on the receiving end, the one being saved, it is her natural and rightful place because when a woman receives she takes what she receives and creates new life!  Only a woman can bring new life into the world both physically and spiritually.  Woman take the love they receive from God and from man and spread it around to everyone they come into contact with.  Or at least that's what they should be doing.  This is the rightful mission of woman, to receive all that God would give her and share it with everyone so that all may be blessed and come to know God themselves.  This is not weak, this is strong, it takes a strong person to freely give what they have received, rather than fearfully hoard it or cling to it so that it sours and become pain and bitterness rather than the love and joy it was meant to be.

This brings me to the last message in Cinderella that I want to point out.  Cinderella shows us that true beauty come from within.

At one point Cinderella watched her step sisters fight over their new ball gowns and argue about which one of them will win the prince's heart.  Cinderella pity's them, recognizing that their petty behavior and jealousy spoiled their beautiful exteriors.  It is the state of the inner soul that adds to or detracts from outward beauty, and the girls lack of kindness and love made their physical appearance seem ugly.



Cinderella, although she was given a lovely dress, wins the prince's heart by her kind demeanor and joyful personality.  One of the sweetest moments in the movie is when the prince takes her to his secret garden.  While in other films this would be the moment when the couple decides is a good idea to degrade their own self worth and give into their temptations, in Cinderella this was the moment when Cinderella's innocence and self control shines through and the princes honorable manners enable them both to enjoy the beautiful moment in purity and love without taking advantage of each other.  This is so rare in today's films that I was pleasantly surprised and awed that such a new movie would feature two such lovely moment like this.

Cinderella's purity is far more attractive to the prince than all of the other girls who flung themselves at him hoping that their physical appearance, wealth, status, and boisterous behavior will snag his attention.  But men are not attracted to woman who flaunt themselves, after all if they flaunt themselves to one then how many others have they done the same to?  Men recognize their own unique self worth and that they deserve to be loved not by what they can do for a woman, but because of who they are.  Some boys will "play around" with the girls that cling to any man like a cat, but it's the pure dove that only has eyes for him that will win his heart.  After all, only she is a worthy bride worth dying for. 

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Divine Mercy Hit & Runs


We are a little over a month in to the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy.  How can we help make this an extraordinary year?  

In Fr. Michael Gaitley's book "You Did It to Me." He talks about all kinds or practical ways we can put the Spiritual and Corporal works of Mercy into action in our modern lives.  This is great read for the Year of Mercy.  He has one suggestion that I would like to highlight, "Divine Mercy Hit & Runs."

Fr.'s suggestion is to purchase a box of a 1000 wallet sized Divine Mercy prayer cards.  Then pass them out to strangers we encounter on a daily basis such as cashiers, bank tellers, waiters & waitresses.  The cards can be purchased from his website: divinemercyart.org (Here is the direct link: https://secure.marianweb.net/divinemercyart.org/product.php?PC=DCOMCC5E&DID=130&PID=65110032&CLID=372&CATNAME=PRINT-CARD+COMBOS) 1000 cards only cost $14.95 with no shipping fee! 

I purchased a box of these cards awhile back.  I'm going to admit to you that I did not have the nerve to hand them out to strangers as Fr. suggested.  I'll blame this on being an introvert! Instead I've been putting them into the bills I mail out!  My sister told me she bought a box and has been putting them into magazines and books on store shelves.  She had a great idea of targeting popular books that are known for their blatant sinful content.  She also suggested leaving them on the table at a restaurant along with the tip.  

During this Year of Mercy I think it would be extraordinary if we Catholics could make this a nation wide phenomenon!  Divine Mercy cards showing up in the most unexpected places by the thousands or even hundred thousands all over the country.  This could be a visible symbol of the way God's Mercy is raining down on us during this Extraordinary Year!  If you like this idea, please let your Catholic friends and family know as well.  If every Catholic gave/placed one card then 1.2 billion cards would go out!  What a great way to tell the world God still loves us.