Jesus Folds His Napkin

Here’s something I got via email a few weeks back and found interesting.  I’m assuming its true but I don’t know for sure.  If it’s not true it’s at least a good story.

Why did Jesus fold the linen burial cloth after His resurrection?

The Gospel of John (20:7) tells us that the napkin, which was placed over the face of Jesus, was not just thrown aside like the grave clothes. The Bible takes an entire verse to tell us that the napkin was neatly folded, and was placed separate from the grave clothes. Early Sunday morning, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and found that the stone had been rolled away from the entrance. She ran and found Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved. She said, ‘They have taken the Lord’s body out of the tomb, and I don’t know where they have put him!’ Peter and the other disciple ran to the tomb to see. The other disciple outran Peter and got there first. He stooped and looked in and saw the linen cloth lying there, but he didn’t go in. Then Simon Peter arrived and went inside. He also noticed the linen wrappings lying there, while the cloth that had covered Jesus’ head was folded up and lying to the side.

Was that important? Absolutely!

Is it really significant? Yes!

In order to understand the significance of the folded napkin, you have to understand a little bit about Hebrew tradition of that day. The folded napkin had to do with the Master and Servant, and every Jewish boy knew this tradition.  When the servant set the dinner table for the master, he made sure that it was exactly the way the master wanted it.  The table was furnished perfectly, and then the servant would wait, just out of sight, until the master had finished eating, and the servant would not dare touch that table, until the master was finished.

Now if the master were done eating, he would rise from the table, wipe his fingers, his mouth, and clean his beard, and would wad up that napkin and toss it onto the table. The servant would then know to clear the table. For in those days, the wadded napkin meant, ‘I’m done’.

But if the master got up from the table, and folded his napkin, and laid it beside his plate, the servant would not dare touch the table,because……….

The folded napkin meant, ‘I’m coming back!’

Oprah & the Nuns

So today Oprah Winfrey had the Dominican Sisters of Mary Convent on her show today.  Video

I thought it was great to see the sisters speaking to the secular world and showing their true joy in being brides of Christ.  One of the pressing questions Oprah wanted to get to is what it’s like for the Sisters to take a vow of chastity, no sex ever, how could they function?  It’s a legitimate question and on a topic that is so counter cultural to secular society.  The question got me to thinking as I too once thought the vow of chastity would be impossible.

 After five years of marriage, I’ve learned there is so much more to life than sex.  Before marriage I thought a vow of chastity would be impossible, now I can see the vow as totally reasonable.  Within my own marriage I have vowed to live chastely.  I can totally see how someone with much prayer can easily live life without sex.  These Dominican Sisters obviously had a much deeper union with Christ than I think most married people have with their spouses sexually.

 I applaud Oprah for having the Sisters of Mary on her show today.  Our world is so over-sexed and under loved, not by God, but by one another, that the message the nuns brought was much needed bright light that is rarely seen on TV today.

Bishop Approves Needle Distribution

From CatholicCulture.org there is an article about Bishop Howard Hubbard of Albany, who serves as chairman of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on International Justice and Peace. Bishop Hubbard has approved a proposal by diocesan Catholic Charities to distribute free needles to drug abusers in the hope of preventing the spread of AIDS.

SAY WHAT?

“I understand there will be questions, but this is common sense,” says Sister Maureen Joyce, CEO of Catholic Charities.

Okay folks, in my mind this is just plain wrong. Is this not cooperating with evil? Are they going to hand out condoms next? I think Bishop Hubbard needs to hear from the folks in the pew and from his brother bishops.

Howard J. Hubbard, Bishop of Albany
Tel:  (518) 453-6611
Fax: (518) 453-6795

More Praying, Less Writing

I haven’t written in a while, and really haven’t had the desire too.  I have had more time to pray though and focus on more important things.  There are so many things going on right now I do not have the time to comment on them all.  I honestly lost some hope when it came to the Healthcare bill before Congress back before Christmas.  Ben Nelson from Nebraska caved on abortion for money, a move that did not represent his constituency.  He might as well retire and retire to a state other than Nebraska as he was recently booed out of an Omaha pizza joint last week.

But while Ben Nelson caved the people of Massachusetts are hopefully about to elect someone who will vote against the Healthcare bill, would it not be sweet justice that the seat previously held by pro-abortion Ted Kennedy could be the one to bring the bill down?  No one wishes death on anyone but Senator Kennedy’s death could end up being the catalyst that finally unravels this pro-death legislation.  I honestly think that this bill could be done and signed if it wasn’t for the abortion issue, thank goodness for the few Pro-Life Democrats that exists.  May they stand firm.

God help us.

Cancelling Christmas

I’ve been traveling and relaxing and watching the snow fall and build up, and up, and up. I traveled home to Nebraska for the Christmas holiday leaving a day early to avoid blizzarding weather. We stopped in Nebraska City for lunch at Runza one of my all time favorite foods. A Runza is a basically a kinda of bread and meat hot pocket with cabbage and spices. It tastes way better than it sounds and I highly suggest you try one if you get the chance.

While at Runza on Christmas Eve for lunch they had a local country station playing in the background during one of the news breaks they started listing all the local church services that were being cancelled due to the weather. Living my whole life in areas that can have inclement weather school and church cancellations are somewhat common place. Much more so today than when I was a kid. When we finally made it to my parents house more church cancellations were rolling across the bottom of the TV screen during my annual viewing of the movie “It’s A Wonderful Life”, my favorite movie.

A curious thing about all the church service cancellations. They were all protestant churches, none where Catholic. Isn’t that an interesting phenomenom? Is it because Catholic Priests live on the parish grounds? That can’t be it as many protestant pastors also live on location at their church. So why is it that Catholic’s don’t cancel their “services” in inclement weather and protestants do?

Well here is my answer, the Catholic Mass isn’t about the congregation whereas a protestant church service is, or at least it’s about the pastor preaching to that congregation. They may be worshiping God, but that can be done from home and without the congregation gathered. Whereas a Catholic Mass isn’t about us, the congreation, it’s about Him, God, and He’ll be there whether we are or not.

Coincidence?

 

Rowan Williams and Animal from the Muppets

Lap Dog Dennis Moore Responds

DennisMooreThe following is the form letter my wife received from “Lap Dog” Dennis Moore who voted for the House Healthcare Bill a few weeks ago. Bold items are my emphasis. [Red items] in brackets are my inserted comments.  For those out side of the KC area Dennis Moore is currently a Washington tool from the 3rd District in the State of Kansas which is where I reside.  Congressman Moore calls himself a “Blue Dog” Democrat although he is really just Nancy Pelosi’s lap dog.  While most Kansans are conservative Denny the lap dog blue dog poser is not.  Denny has failed to respond to my request for him to vote no on the house bill as I told him I would not be voting for him in any election.  Just the sheer size of the bill with all the crap it makes you want to spit and punch a wall, Lord help me.

Dear John 6:54′s Wife:

Thank you for sharing with me your thoughts regarding and your opposition to pending health insurance reform proposals, including a competitive alternative to private health care insurance.[my wife always has a solution, doesn't your?] I appreciate hearing from you.[how about from the other 1000's of people who contacted you asking you to vote no?]

First, let me say that I am opposed to socialized medicine, or a “single payer” system, [Denny may be against this but he not against trying out a public option which will lead to "single payer" system] like that of Canada, New Zealand, and many European countries. I am supportive, however, of keeping private insurance while adding to the mix a competitive public option [and there it is the open door to socialized medicine, see Denny isn't against it]. A public option should be available to those who cannot afford private insurance, who are unemployed, students dropped from their parents’ coverage [time to pay your own way if your done being a student time to be a big boy or girl I know thats hard for many in Johnson County to understand], the uninsured [even those who choose to be uninsured? where did their freedom go?], or those who are not happy with their current private insurance [then they should look for other options or change jobs]. It would simply be another insurance option [kind of like government flood insurance was when that started out, oh wait you mean I can only by flood insurance from the government now?  How'd that happe?]. If you are satisfied with your current insurance, like I am [I bet you are], there would be no reason to purchase the public option. [except my current insurance won't be around in the future with a public option in place unlike Denny's health insurance plan]

I agree that a public health care insurance option based on current Medicare fee-for-service reimbursement rates would not provide a level playing field for private insurance companies. For this reason, I support reforming the fee-for-service reimbursement system by which physicians, hospitals and other health care providers are paid. The fee-for-service system incentivizes physicians to give patients more tests and treatments for which the Medicare reimbursement rate is higher. Instead, we should be incentivizing good outcomes, managed care, and prevention.

Our current health care system contains a lot of inefficiencies [caused by the government]. I support health care reform legislation that seeks to correct these problems through regulation, modernization, and restructuring the payment systems to providers. Making these changes will save billions of dollars [always discuss but never acted upon, why don't you do this now as a good faith gesture?] (to both patients and the insurance providers, whether public or private), reduce medical errors, and increase the health and well-being of Americans. For example, full implementation of Health Information Technology would give patients a complete electronic file of their medical history, to which they could give their physicians access. This would reduce duplicative testing by multiple physicians because the health record indicates which tests the patient has already had, saving time, money, and hardship in the process. Not having access to a complete medical record often results in the duplication of expensive tests. The Institute of Medicine estimates that one-third of health care spending is wasted on treatments and tests that accomplish nothing. [excuse me? thats called defensive medicine, its done so Dr's don't get pulled in front of payday jury's asking them why they didn't run a test prior to something that unexpectedly went wrong.  If you'd put some tort reform in the bill and sacrafic some of your trial lawyer's campaign contibutions then we truely would reduce the number of unneeded tests being run]

Reform should also include incentives for hospital care management, to reduce readmittance and hospital acquired infections. It should also specifically reform the Medicare Advantage payment system, and home health payment rates, and increase rebates from pharmaceutical manufacturers to make drugs more affordable. Health care reform should also include rigorous incentives to recruit primary care physicians, nurses, and other health care professionals into the workforce, as they are in short-supply now and additional professionals will be desperately needed in order to provide care to an additional 47 million Americans.

As you may know, the House, with my support, approved health care reform legislation on November 7, 2009. H.R. 3962, the Affordable Health Care for America Act, offers both public and private insurance as an option, providing coverage to all Americans regardless of pre-existing conditions, providing coverage for (1) primary care and prevention; (2) prescription drugs; (3) emergency care; and (4) mental health services.

The Affordable Health Care for America Act would provide significant benefits in the Third Congressional District of Kansas: up to 18,800 small businesses could receive tax credits to provide coverage to their employees; 9,700 seniors would avoid the donut hole in Medicare Part D; 1,200 families could escape bankruptcy each year due to unaffordable health care costs; health care providers would receive payment for $55 million in uncompensated care each year; and 47,000 uninsured individuals would gain access to high-quality, affordable health insurance. H.R. 3962 would provide:

o Help for small businesses. Under the legislation, small businesses with 25 employees or less and average wages of less than $40,000 qualify for tax credits of up to 50% of the costs of providing health insurance. In addition, the Blue Dog Coalition, of which I am a member, [no fiscally responsible person would vote for this bill] successfully doubled the small business exemption from the requirement to provide insurance to $500,000, with a phase-in of the penalty for failing to do so to $750,000. There are up to 18,800 small businesses in the district that could qualify for these credits.

o Help for seniors with drug costs in the Part D donut hole. Each year, 9,700 seniors in the district hit the donut hole and are forced to pay their full drug costs, despite having Part D drug coverage. The legislation would provide them with immediate relief, covering the first $500 of donut hole costs in 2010, cutting brand name drug costs in the donut hole by 50%, and completely eliminating the donut hole by 2019.

o Health care and financial security. There were 1,200 health care-related bankruptcies in the district in 2008, caused primarily by the health care costs not covered by insurance. The bill provides health insurance for almost every American citizen and caps annual out-of-pocket costs at $5,000 per year for individuals and $10,000 per year for families, ensuring that no citizen will have to face financial ruin because of high health care costs.

o Financial relief to hospitals and health care providers for uncompensated care. In 2008, health care providers in the district provided $55 million worth of uncompensated care, care that was provided to individuals who lacked insurance coverage and were unable to pay their bills. Under the legislation, these costs of uncompensated care would be virtually eliminated.

o Coverage of the uninsured. There are 87,000 uninsured individuals in the district, 13% of the district’s residents under the age of 65. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that nationwide, 96% of all Americans will have insurance coverage when the bill takes effect. If this benchmark is reached in the district, 47,000 people who currently do not have health insurance will receive coverage.

o No deficit spending. The cost of health care reform under the legislation is fully paid for: half through making the Medicare and Medicaid program more efficient (through the payment reforms and waste reduction previously mentioned) and half through a surtax on the income of the top 0.3% wealthiest individuals. This surtax would affect only 1,320 households in the district. The surtax would not affect 99.61% of taxpayers in the district. According to the CBO, the bill would cut the deficit by over $30 billion over the next decade and would continue to create a budget surplus over the next 20 years.

I am quite certain that H.R. 3962 is not a perfect bill, but it provides a solid foundation for Congress to consider this year. What I do know is that inaction is not acceptable. The current health care system is bleeding us dry – families, businesses and the government alike. We have 47 million uninsured or underinsured American citizens who have no choice but to seek the most expensive health care there is – emergency care – and $1100 of each insured Kansas family’s insurance premium covers that cost. In Kansas in 2007, approximately 278,000 adults and 58,000 children were uninsured (total of 336,000) and that was before the economic downturn. The situation has just gotten worse. We have college kids with chronic diseases who are dropped from their parents’ plan, who can then not get insurance because of their pre-existing condition. We have 26 year old women being diagnosed with breast cancer, [oh but government studies say they don't need to get screened until age 50 now and you want to turn it all over to the government, that 26 year old woman will be dead under the government plan] who just graduated and are looking for employment who find themselves caught with no insurance. In Johnson County , we have a 57 year old man, self-employed, married with 2 small children when he was diagnosed with bladder cancer. He was unable to continue treatment due to being uninsured and unable to afford cost of treatment and medications. The family now has thousands of dollars in medical debt. [but he choose not to insure, where's his freedom of choice?  Plus he still got the treatment, he choose to go into debt to get the treatment, under the government plan the "health" panels would decide if he gets the treatment, not he and his family.  I estimate that 56 sounds a little old and risky, that treatment would go to someone younger] These are our neighbors, our coworkers, and our friends. What if next week, God forbid, you lose your job or insurance coverage?  [this is to my wife who receives her health insurance from me, not "her job", and if I lost my job we would either continue with COBRA or go with a private plan because we have been responsible enough to save for such a situation]

Reform will provide coverage and choice in the free market. If you like what you have – your insurance plan, your doctor, your hospital – you can keep it. [until the insurance plan goes out of business competing against the public option] Would you be upset if your premiums went down? Because that is the likely ["likely" what a great political term no guarantee here] outcome of insuring everyone – it widens the risk pool to include the young and healthy and reduces those expensive emergency room visits by the uninsured because they can now see a doctor before the health problem becomes an emergency. If you don’t like your insurance, reform will allow you to comparison shop among plans [I can do that now and it would be even better if you'd let companies compete across statelines] so you can decide what plan is best for you and your family. [Whats best for my family is to get Denny out of DC] Reform will make more tools available to doctors so that they can provide the best care. Many insurance companies now require that patients try the cheapest treatment option first, even if it’s not shown to be the best option. Reform will put an end to insurance companies rationing care [and put it into the hands of the government], and put the decisions back into the hands of physicians and patients.

As a final note, I would like to mention that there are a number of outlandish claims being made in the media and through the internet claiming that this bill mandates euthanasia for senior citizens, will cover illegal immigrants, will mandate abortion coverage, and will force you into the public option. None of these claims are true. [then why was there a vote on the Stupak admendment? And why did you vote against it? [Denny sees no issue with taxpayer dollars being "commingled" with blood money, they won't mix up, they promise] Please visit my website to view a complete list of “Myths vs. Facts” about the legislation: http://www.moore.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=35§iontree=6,35. [you'll see more Myths than Facts]

Please know that as the health care reform legislation moves forward, I will work with my colleagues in Congress to ensure that it will improve the quality and length of life for Americans [well provided your not a pre-born baby], while making citizens and the nation more financially secure. [Mr. Moore stop lying the only one becoming more financially secure these days is you, your no "Blue Dog" your just a dog]

Thank you again for contacting me. I hope you will continue to keep in touch and please feel free to let me know whenever I may be of assistance.

Very truly yours,
DENNIS MOORE
Member of Congress

Coburn vs. Sotomayor

Senator Coburn, who the New York Times only refers to as Mister in an article released this afternoon, observed that science can now record fetal heartbeats at 14 days post-conception and record fetal brainwaves at 39 days post-conception, yet we have a schizophrenic rule of the law that defines death as the absence of those, but refuses to define life as the presence of those.

Amen Senator Coburn

100 Years Ago Today

Genesis 1:1 In the beginning, when God created the heavens and the earth….

With all the arguments over creationism and evolution in our schools today, even in our Catholic schools, isn’t it interesting that 100 years ago today a lot of the argument was put to rest and dogmatically determined. Have we forgotten the 1900 years of church history prior to Vatican II? I think the points below give all Christians a starting point on how to read The Book of Genesis without view it to be entirely mythical or entirely literal.

On June 30, 1909, the Catholic Pontifical Biblical Commission agreed. It issued a decree interpreting the first chapters of Genesis as history, not myth. With the backing of Pope Pius X, the Commission declared that certain truths must be held no matter what the latest scientific theories claim to the contrary. These unarguable points are:

  • That God created all things at the beginning of time;
  • That man was specially created;
  • That the first woman came from the first man;
  • That all humans are of a single original race;
  • That our first parents lived in a happy state of justice, integrity, and immortality;
  • That God gave them a command to test their obedience;
  • That they disobeyed the divine command at the instigation of the devil who took on the form of a serpent;
  • That our first parents fell from their state of innocence;
  • And that they were promised a future redeemer.

Thank God for the Catholic Church and the Successors of Peter.

Gluttony the Forgotten Deadly Sin

This morning I was thinking about a diet I was considering a few days ago call the “Belly Fat Cure”. It basically is a diet where you cut your sugar intake to less than 15 grams a day and your carbs to less than 90grams. I’m not fat but I’m not skinny, and my ideal weight is probably 15 to 20 lbs less than where my scale currently calls home. This diet claims I can lose 13 lbs in 7 day but on top of that it shows folks who have lost some tread on that dreaded spare tire around the waist.

So I considered this diet until I realized how I usually have about 40 grams of sugar in my normal breakfast. 30 from Pop Tarts and about 10 to 20 depending on how much coffee I drink that day. Even a little Special K breakfast bar has 27 grams of sugar in them. I’m thinking there is no freaking way I can cut back to 15 grams of sugar and thus the “Belly Fat Cure” hits the trash. Then this morning I was thinking what a glutton I am. Just because cutting back to 15 grams of sugar a day is a bit drastic doesn’t mean that I couldn’t cut out some sugar. What if I cut back to 50 grams a day that would still be better than whatever amount I’m sucking back each day now. How gluttonous of me to think just because I’m not willing to do the diet as stated somehow means I shouldn’t try any change in my diet.

This all or none type of thinking affects me quite often especially when looking to make positive changes in my life. Just because I know I can’t get 60 or 30 minutes of prayer in each day now doesn’t mean I shouldn’t or can’t do 5 minutes, and may next week work my way up to 10 or 15 minutes a day. I am so attached to the status quo that the only incremental changes in my life tend to be regresses instead of progress.

So even though I just had my normal 40 grams of sugar for breakfast doesn’t mean I can’t make a change for the better during the rest of the day. And tomorrow its going to be toast and butter with my coffee or maybe even eggs.

Lord help me offer up my vices of my poor diet it to you, let me my feed my body in the same way I should feed my soul.