Kearns Spirituality Center

Kearns Spirituality Center Kearns Spirituality Center is a peaceful place of spiritual nourishment, peace, and rest.

09/14/2025
04/25/2025

Swing into Action: Register Now for Providence Connections' Golf Fore Families!

Join Providence Connections in support of our mission of strengthening families and enriching lives at Quicksilver Golf Club on Monday, June 23rd for a fun-filled day! Enjoy a round of golf, show off your skills in our contests, try your luck with raffles, and help us raise funds to make Providence Connections an even better place for the children and families we serve. Learn more about the event and register your team at onecau.se/_9h2571

Rest in PeacePope Francis Jorge Mario Bergoglio1936-2025  Who served as Holy Father from March of 2013 to April of 2025 ...
04/21/2025

Rest in Peace
Pope Francis
Jorge Mario Bergoglio
1936-2025

Who served as Holy Father from March of 2013 to April of 2025

Eternal Rest grant to him O Lord and may your perpetual light shine upon him

Please join us on Friday, April 25 at Noon for a Special Mass of Remembrance in Magdalen Chapel

01/07/2025

ALL are welcome to our first Social Justice Mass of 2025 on Sunday, January 12, at Kearns Spirituality Center Chapel at 1 PM. Our Scripture Commentator, Sr. Mary Traupman CDP, will reflect on our theme, You Are My Beloved. Our celebrant is Fr. Rege Ryan.

The Mass will also be live streamed: https://video.ibm.com/channel/Q4zW6rUvwPq

12/24/2024

Joseph and Mary are all of us
Christmas Mass at Dawn
(Is 62:11-12; Titus 3:4-7; Luke 2: 15-20)

Every Christmas for the last few years, I’ve enjoyed posting online one of my favorite contemporary works of art, “José y Maria,” by Everett Patterson. It is a modern retelling of the Nativity story, featuring a young man and woman looking for lodgings in our time.

The artist has filled his image with creative nods to the original Nativity story. Maria, clearly pregnant, wears a sweatshirt from “Nazareth High School.” while sitting on a children’s donkey ride. Waiting outside a grocery or liquor store, José and Maria are surrounded by halos made from the circular signs in the window. Also in the window are advertisements for “Weisman” ci******es, “Good News” candy bars and a cleverly placed neon sign for “Starr Beer,” a stand-in for the Star of Bethlehem. Across the street, in front of “Dave’s City Motel” (City of David, in case you missed that) is a “No Vacancy” sign. A notice for the motel’s new manager is missing an “A” so the sign reads “New Manger.”

In the past, I delighted in finding the clues and almost every year spied something new. But there is more to his drawing than that. The deeper meaning is that Joseph and Mary were, like so many people today, struggling and desperate during their journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem, as recorded in the Infancy Narratives in Luke’s Gospel.

Now, there is some question among scholars over whether Joseph was poor. The Gospels tell us that Mary’s husband worked as a "tektōn," which is often rendered as “carpenter,” but could also be translated as a “construction worker,” “handyman,” “builder” or even “day laborer.”

But given the demographics of Nazareth, a poor, backwater town of only 200 to 400 people (“Can anything good come from Nazareth?” asks Nathanael in his famous put-down), we can be fairly sure that Joseph wasn’t rich. Neither was Jesus, another "tektōn." When Jesus first proclaims his identity as the Messiah, the earliest Gospel, Mark, has the crowd in Nazareth saying, “Is this not the carpenter?” Later Gospels seem to soften this, saying, in Matthew, “Is this not the son of the carpenter?” and in Luke, “Is this not the son of Joseph?,” as if distancing Jesus from his profession.

There is also some debate over whether or not Joseph and Mary, as well as Jesus, who would later flee their home out of fear of Herod’s murderous designs on infants in Bethlehem, qualify as refugees or migrants. The classic definition of a refugee comes from the United Nations: “A refugee is someone who has been forced to flee his or her country because of persecution, war, or violence. A refugee has a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.” That certainly seems to describe the Holy Family.

Nonetheless, some people argue that since they are not technically leaving the boundaries of the Roman Empire, they are not really fleeing their “country.” But, as I wrote a few years ago, since they were journeying from Judea to Egypt, it’s hard to imagine Joseph and Mary not feeling that they were leaving their homeland for fear of persecution. This is one reason that so many of the Masses “For Refugees and Exiles” use the story of the “Flight into Egypt” as the Gospel reading.

Even after 2,000 years the Christmas story can, and should, still shock us. Joseph and Mary came from a marginal town. “All archeological evidence from the Roman period,” say the authors of "Excavating Jesus," a book on the archeological finds from Jesus’s time, “point to a simple peasant existence in Nazareth.” These are people living on the edge: on the move, frightened and worried. And when they finally reach their destination, Jesus is born into a dirty, messy, chaotic place—a stable. The Son of God comes to us in the most vulnerable way possible—as an infant, totally reliant on Mary and Joseph. He is then laid in a manger, where farm animals have just had their noses and mouths.

These days many people can identify with Joseph and Mary. A few weeks ago, I was speaking with a business executive who said that working in his company was a man who had fled from anti-LGBTQ persecution in his home country. A priest-friend recently told me that he estimated that some 60 percent of his parishioners were undocumented migrants. Both of these groups, along with many others, in different places and for different reasons, feel hunted.

Yet God is with them, on their side, as God was with Joseph and Mary. And God would enter their lives, enter our lives, in the most profound way possible: as Jesus. For the rest of his earthly life, the Son of God would always take the side of those who were marginalized, forgotten, hunted, persecuted, abandoned.

My prayer for all those people at Christmas is that they know that Jesus came into the world among this hunted family, took the side of the marginalized and is with you. He is Emmanuel, God with us. He is God with you.

(This is the Outreach Gospel reflection for Christmas. Image: José y Maria," by Everett Patterson: http://www.everettpatterson.com/)

Some great advice!
12/21/2024

Some great advice!

07/14/2024

From. Reflection for today from
Give Us This Day…

Within the Word

Isaiah: Do Right before Rite

There’s an old joke that says you can change anything in a church that you want, but just don’t try to change the color of the carpet. Embedded in this joke is the simple idea that people of faith can often lose sight of the “forest through the trees.” We are constantly tempted to focus on the wrong things.
In Isaiah chapter 1 (Monday’s first reading), the people focus on the wrong things. This text begins with a reference to S***m and Gomorrah. These cities, razed by God in Genesis chapter 19, remind the reader of God’s power and God’s willingness to lay waste to those who do not “listen to the teaching of our God” (v. 10). Isaiah, of course, is not really talking about S***m and Gomorrah. As the first lines of Isaiah make clear, God directs the prophetic laser on “Judah and Jerusalem” (v. 1). S***m and Gomorrah provide a frightening model of how God will treat Jerusalem if they don’t “cease doing evil” and “learn to do good” (v. 16).
What, exactly, are the people doing so wrong that God would hang a threat like S***m over their heads? The people have focused on the wrong things. Numerous sacrifices, including rams, calves, lambs, and goats, have no meaning to God. Even worse, God finds such things “worthless,” “loathsome,” filled with “wickedness,” and so burdensome that they place on God a heavy load (v. 14).
But, isn’t worship a good thing? Isn’t that how humans are supposed to respond to God? In a vacuum, yes. Yet, the Scriptures remind us that God cares even more about justice, redressing wrongs, listening to the orphan, and defending the widow (v. 17).
Fussing with incense and counting their sheep, the people have lost sight of what matters most. Unless provision is first made for the most vulnerable, then all the worship in the world means nothing. Perfect songs, the best incense, and valuable sacrifices are nothing but an evil burden on God (v. 14) if you don’t first build a just society. A perfect rite might not be right.
Isaiah’s challenge, and the way it echoes throughout the Jewish and Christian traditions, remains as salient today as it was in the eighth century BCE. The Church is often more famous for its art and architecture than for its efforts at justice, solidarity, and mercy. How much money does your parish spend on liturgy as compared to charity? How much time and energy do some of us spend worrying about who receives the Eucharist, rather than whether the poor are fed? Do we talk more about financial sacrifice to build new buildings instead of sacrifice to help migrants, the elderly, or the unborn?
Pope Francis has repeatedly called attention to the problem of misguided action, asserting that a mission of mercy and justice often faces rigidity as its main obstacle. Too many rules can become a “form of servitude” for the religion (Evangelii Gaudium 43). The message of Isaiah calls us to stop looking at the carpet and instead start working, with God’s love and grace, to build a world that enshrines the most vulnerable at the center. We must do right so God will accept our rites.
—Micah D. Kiel

Micah D. Kiel is professor of theology at St. Ambrose University, Davenport, Iowa. He is the author of Apocalyptic Ecology, Reading the Bible in the Age of Francis, and the forthcoming Be Transformed: A Scriptural Journey toward a More Just World.

06/15/2024

Art | Nikolai Astrup

06/13/2024

Dear friends: I was deeply honored to meet with Pope Francis for an hour-long conversation today at Casa Santa Marta. With his permission to share this, the Holy Father said he has known many good, holy and celibate seminarians and priests with homosexual tendencies. Once again, he confirmed my ministry with LGBTQ people and showed his openness and love for the LGBTQ community. It was also a great joy to receive his blessing on the 25th anniversary of my ordination to the priesthood.

A great read when we are contemplating resilience and trust
05/31/2024

A great read when we are contemplating resilience and trust

Sr. Begoña Costillo narrates her encounter with a woman and her children, who live in a small wooden room on the roof of a building. In the midst of precariousness, she discovers the divine presence and resilience of a mother who relies on God to overcome adversity.

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