Friday, October 28, 2022

God's LOVE is UNCONDITIONAL! ❤️

**An image of the Crucifixion as seen in the central sanctuary window of the chapel at St Joseph's Nursing Home, Catonsville, Maryland. 

These are my thoughts as I gaze upon this beautiful glimpse into the eternal and timeless event of Calvary . . . 

As a person of faith, and a Christian, something about which I’m very certain is that true LOVE is UNCONDITIONAL! ❤️

If you’re not as sure about this as I am, please simply and seriously spend a few moments contemplating Jesus, Our Lord and Savior, as he hung upon the Holy Cross for us . . . 

I believe the message of the Cross clearly demonstrates the unconditional love that God the Father has for each and every person ever conceived and born into this world . . . 

Jesus extended his arms toward us as he embraced the cross, and as he died to save us from sin, from negativity, from toxicity, from darkness, from hatred, from oppression, from codependency, from addictions, from depression, and from all forms of evil.  He did so even though we are not worthy of such great a gift so freely given!!!!

God is Love! 

And God’s love is UNCONDITIONAL!!!

That means . . . 

. . . it’s given with no strings attached!

. . . it’s given with no limits!

. . . it’s given with no predetermined conditions!

. . . it’s given with no restrictions!

. . . it’s given with no tit for tat!

. . . it’s given with no quid pro quo! 

. . . it’s given with no equivocation! 

. . . it’s given with only an unqualified hope for our true love in return (even if we fail to respond faithfully to that desire)!  

With all of this in mind, I desire to recall Jesus’  words: “I give you a new commandment: love one another. Just as I have loved you, you must also love one another” (John 13:34).

I believe central to this message is our human and our faith-based obligation to show to others the same kind of unconditional love the Father has for each one of us. 

It’s as simple as that! 

AMEN

And so I pray . . . 

Dear Lord Jesus, I know that I am a sinner, and I ask for Your forgiveness. I believe You died for my sins and rose from the dead. I turn from my sins and invite You to come into my heart and life. I want to trust and follow You as my Lord and Savior.  Amen.”

Monday, October 17, 2022

Thirty years ago today, October 17, 1992


Thirty years ago today, October 17, 1992, on the Feast of St. Ignatius of Antioch, and as a Conventual Franciscan Friar, I was ordained to the priesthood at St. Casimir Church, in my hometown of Baltimore, Maryland.

Since that day, and for every single Mass I’ve ever celebrated, and for every Sacrament I’ve ever ministered, I believe I’ve done so with devotion, and with as much humility and lack of hubris as I’m capable of having (with all of my shortcomings and weaknesses).  

The reality of the presence of Jesus in the Eucharist is the foundation of my faith, and it forms all of my life’s values, passions, and commitments.  This is especially poignant to me as I reflect upon my sense of obligation as a Franciscan minister to respect, to serve, and to champion the needs of the poor, the marginalized, and those struggling with afflictions, addictions, and life-difficulties of any sort.  

In my life and ministry, I desire to join my prayers, and my sense of purpose, with Mary the blessed mother of Our Lord, who proclaimed: 

"By the strength of God's arm, the proud have been scattered in their conceit, the mighty have been cast down from their thrones, the lowly have been lifted, the hungry have been filled with good things, and the rich have been sent away empty!"  (Luke 1:51-53)

I am always conscious that my Franciscan priesthood is shared, and only finds meaning, within the context of my membership within a community of sinners; along with my sisters and brothers, I know I'm an imperfect person, but I am forever thankful to be one among others who have been redeemed and saved by the Lord Jesus Christ! 

And Jesus said: "As I have done, so you must do!" (John 13:15b)

All of this gives meaning to my life, and it drives and inspires me as a Franciscan minister of God's Word and Sacrament! 

Let's continue to pray for one another!  

St. Francis of Assisi, Pray for us! 

Praise God!  

Friar Timothy Patrick Dore, OFM Conv.

October 17, 2022

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

The Feast of St. Francis of Assisi

As we celebrate the great Saint Francis of Assisi, my spiritual Father, I‘d like to share this reflection I wrote for his Feastday (October 4th):

My Sisters and Brothers:

Every year on October 4th, Franciscans and Christians throughout the world celebrate the Feast of Saint Francis of Assisi.  Of course, this is a very important Feast for me, for my fellow Franciscan Friars, the many communities of Franciscan Sisters, the Secular Franciscan Order, for all who love St. Francis, and for those who have Franciscan hearts who are near and far!  

But what is it about this saint that is so inspiring? 

As I ask myself this question, my thoughts and memories always and immediately take me to a small and very ancient chapel called San Rufino d’Arce that’s located in the Umbrian Valley just outside of St. Francis’ hometown of Assisi, Italy.  I had the chance to visit that chapel and to celebrate Mass there while on a Franciscan Pilgrimage, and during my first visit to Assisi in the summer of 2006.  For me, the Mass in that chapel was a very powerful and amazingly Spirit-filled experience!  From the grounds surrounding the chapel, these days the site of a Franciscan convent, one can gaze upon the medieval city of Assisi that’s located adjacent to the valley and on the nearby mountainside.  The view is stunningly spectacular!  I can’t fully describe how joyfully overcome I was with spiritual and Franciscan emotion when I visited that place!

San Rufino d’Arce is believed to have been one of many chapels in the valley that long-ago served the locals, but that also gave shelter to a large population of people who suffered with the terrible disease of leprosy.  San Rufino d’Arce and another nearby chapel called Santa Maria Maddalena (also known as San Lazzaro d’Arce) were chapels associated with a very large “leper colony” that existed in the area at the time of St. Francis.  Not long after his conversion to the Gospel way of life, St. Francis and his early followers settled in that area and they devoted themselves to ministry and care of those most unfortunate people. And soon thereafter the saint became known to others as “Il Poverello,” or “the little poor man.”  There are other “more famous” Franciscan sites near San Rufino d’Arce as well, such as the primitive Franciscan settlement (now sanctuary) of Rivo Torto, and the chapel of Santa Maria degli Angeli, known as “the Porziuncula,” or “the Little Portion.”  And because all these places, and what happened at them, were significant in the earliest days and formation of the Franciscan Order, they hold very special significance for all Franciscans.

St. Francis and his spiritual companions believed their response to the Gospel meant they were called to imitate Jesus in every way possible.  This compelled them to be in places like the Umbrian Valley and San Rufino d’Arce as they ministered there and served people with leprosy who were thought of as sinners or who were despised, neglected, or marginalized.  It was commonly believed those afflicted with leprosy had been “punished by God” and their disease an “obvious sign of their sinfulness.”  Those people were completely ostracized, and although they could see the town of Assisi from where they eked out their existences in the valley, they were never permitted to “return home” and to their former ways of lives; they were reduced to utter poverty and thought to be “as good as dead.”  As followers of the example of Jesus in the Gospels, St. Francis and his companions believed they were duty-bound to serve those people who were “most in need.”  I believe this calling was also very deeply grounded in their understanding and response to the great gift of the Eucharist.  At the Last Supper Jesus instituted the Eucharist, that’s to say he gave this Sacrament to his followers.  In the same setting, Jesus also humbled himself as he knelt before the Apostles and he washed their feet, they who no doubt were very unworthy of such a gesture, and he said to them “as I have done, so you must do” (see John 13:15).

To be sure, St. Francis and his companions attended the Mass regularly, and certainly alongside “the poorest of the poor” at San Rufino d’Arce, at Santa Maria Maddalena, and at the Porziuncula. There’s no doubt they passionately praised God as they received Holy Communion, but their fervent response to it, and their sense of obligation to its reality, was in fact to go out from those Eucharistic celebrations and to put their faith into enthusiastic action by “doing what Jesus had done,” and by serving “the least of their sisters and brothers” (often, and literally by “washing their feet”).  This is the reason why my first visit to San Rufino d’Arce and the Mass we celebrated there so incredibly inspired me!

St. Francis: What a perfect model to follow in the Christian life!  That’s why my fellow Franciscans and I celebrate this Feast so joyfully.  My friends, as we celebrate “the little poor man of Assisi,” may we be inspired to follow his example by serving and caring for the “modern day lepers” who may come our way!  Let’s put our Eucharistic faith into action by the way we live our lives out there, beyond the church doors, and in this most complicated world in which we live!  May we too strive to imitate Jesus and serve those who are most in need!   Happy Feast Day!

Praise God!  Friar Timothy