Thursday, January 24, 2019

Mass Prep Sunday December 2nd 2018



Sunday December 2, 2018   1st Sunday of Advent (Cycle C)

Coming From a Good Background

The tie in between today’s readings: A Proof of the Virgin Birth

     The holidays are here. During this time of year, we make special plans to spend time with the close strangers in our lives that we call family. Whether we want to or not, we will trek out to share food and alcohol with the few people in the world who look like us and with whom we share a close common history. This is not lost on Madison Avenue. You may have noticed the increase in advertising for ancestry companies. For a multitude of reasons, many of us will give up our charge cards and DNA to take them up on their offers. It could be in order to satisfy some sort of curiosity, possibly to verify our own family folklore, or perhaps to build a stronger bond with the person sitting across the mash potatoes from us that we may someday need to ask for a kidney. Strangely enough, genealogy plays an important role in the Christmas story as seen in our reading today in Jeremiah. In fact, the Bible doubles down on it by giving both sides of the family tree through Joseph and Mary. Getting it right is absolutely essential to fulfill prophesy and to leave no mistake that Jesus is the Messiah and heir to David’s throne.



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     Joseph’s line comes directly from David through Solomon (Matt 1). Legally, the Jews looked on Jesus as Joseph’s son (John 6:42). Here’s the catch: Jesus would not have been able inherit the throne if He was a blood descendant of Joseph. Because of the wickedness of Jechonias, God cursed this line and no other descendants could be king (Jeremiah 22:24-30). This is a proof of the virgin birth, since Jesus was the actual Son of God the Father, conceived by the Holy Spirit and only Joseph’s through adoption. Enter Mary. Luke 3 traces her line back to David through another son, Nathan. Unlike Joseph, there was no block on Jesus to claim the throne through Mary’s blood line. The problem here was that in Jewish law, inheritances passed through the sons not the daughters. Mary could not give Jesus the throne unless she was an only child (apparently she was) and married within her tribe, which she did when she married Joseph (Numbers 27:1-8; 36:6-8).  Joseph inherited the right to rule on David’s throne by marriage to Mary and passed it onto Jesus. Jesus is heir by adoption and the seed of the woman. Ironically, if the kings of Judah had remained obedient to God, Joseph could have been ruling in Israel at this time with his queen Mary at his side and Jesus would have been born in a palace instead of a manger. There’s a butterfly effect for you.

     But the pauper prince is a king nonetheless. He rules over a nation as real as any country on the map: the Kingdom of God. Its people are supernaturally born into citizenship through the election of the Father, the sacrifice of the Son, and the power of the Holy Spirit. As we see in today’s Psalm and 1 Thessalonians, the laws of God are taught and written on each of their hearts. Thy will be done, is their motivation. The Great Commission, their life’s work. Jesus is working through His people today with the gospel call to believe in His sacrifice as Messiah for the forgiveness of your sins. You can receive this salvation by faith and be granted citizenship into His kingdom. He offers this to you with the simple invitation of “Come.” Do not delay. Join the ranks of the blessed whose destiny is GLORY! Time is short. He will come back to claim the Earth as His Kingdom and take His place on the Throne of David as noted in today’s reading in Luke 21. Be part of it!

Saturday, December 1, 2018

Mass Prep Sunday November 25th 2018



Sunday November 25, 2018   34th Sunday Ordinary Time (Cycle B)

Jesus is Lord. What Are You Going To Do About It?

The tie in between today’s reading: The reactions to: Thy Will Be Done.

     There is one pervasive theme running throughout all of our readings today: Jesus Christ reigns! In heaven; he rules absolutely. When He commands Gabriel to jump the response is, “How high?”  I suppose if you’re an angel, that’s a legitimate question. On earth, things are a little messier as God allows the drama of this sinful world to play out while He gathers the last of His elect to Himself.  But know this: He will come back to claim His throne as King of kings and Lord of lords. It will be a day of thunderbolts and earthquakes, of rewards and retribution.  The Alpha and the Omega will fulfill the opening statement of the Our Father: Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.  In this present life, we all live in one of three categories in our relationship to Jesus Christ and His second coming. You are either in conflict with it, compliant in it, or committed to it. The question is where do you fit in?

     Conflict is simple enough. You have a free will and you will not have Jesus to reign over you.  You’re not alone. It’s a pervasive philosophy throughout the world. You are convinced that the outcomes of your choices will be better if you disregard God. I mean, if God happens to agree with you, so much the better, but it’s not necessary. Your pride places your intellect above the Omnipresent Brain that sees the end from the beginning. This is the very nature of sin and it is dumb. Essentially, heaven would be hell for the person in conflict with the Almighty. What’s left for the God of light to do but to oblige your autonomy by sending you out away from Him and into the darkness to create your own little universe. Consider though, He did everything divinely possible for you to avoid that fate. Be careful what you wish for.


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     The compliant person sees the benefits of a virtuous life.  He believes in the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man.  He is invested in the social gospel of love thy neighbor in order to create peace on earth. Although he is not perfect, he is convinced that if he does good, then he is good. He feels that his participation in church will draw him closer to God and help make the good man that he is even better. His premise is confirmed weekly by his give no offense pastor, that tickles the ears of the congregation in order to keep the collection plate full and ensure his own retirement. He only understands Christ’s sacrifice on the cross in the vaguest of metaphors. He rationalizes sin and makes it trivial. He is comfortably ignorant, which makes him unaware that in his mind he has recreated God in his own image. The real Lord is a stranger to him. So when he meets Jesus face to face he will be greeted by, “I never knew you.” and be turned away.  He was all for the kingdom of God, but didn’t really care about the King.  What he didn’t realize was that the King is the kingdom.
The kingdom of God is in you (Luke 17:21).

     The committed are committed because it’s their new nature. The committed know that heaven is first a state of being and a physical location second. You don’t go to heaven. Heaven comes to you through your relationship with Jesus Christ. Your faith in Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross for the forgiveness of your sins means that you spiritually died with Him on Good Friday and were spiritually made alive with Him when He resurrected on Easter Sunday. You are spiritually born again into citizenship of the kingdom of God. This reality is played out in the physical world as each of the committed live out their new lives modeled after and sustained by their King. When Jesus comes again to reign on the earth, it is only to complete physically what has already been done spiritually. For now, the Kingdom of God is advancing soul by soul and the gates of hell will not prevail against it. We, the committed born again stand as ambassadors of Jesus Christ with the good news that you can also become a citizen in the kingdom of God. Accept by faith the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross for your sins and submit to Him as your King of kings and Lord of Lords. Today! For the kingdom and the power and the glory is God’s now and forever. Be part of it.


Thursday, November 15, 2018

Are We There, Yet?



Sunday November 18, 2018  33rd Sunday Ordinary Time (Cycle B)

Are We There, Yet?

The tie in between today’s readings: Know what’s coming.

     When I was a kid growing up in the Philadelphia suburbs, my parents would take us on weekend trips to Wildwood, New Jersey. On the way, there were road signs to Zaberer’s restaurant “…Just Minutes Away!” it would say. In our own version of, Are We There, Yet, we would try to guess how long it would take to get to Zaberer’s. Winner got first choice on Boardwalk activities that night. We were often wrong. In our gospel today, the Mark 13 fig tree allegory gives us a road sign pointing to Jesus’ second coming.  Many Biblical scholars correlate the fig tree to Israel. They site Hosea 9:10 and other verses as proof. They believe that the establishment of Israel as a nation in 1948 connects with the fig tree putting out its’ leaves…and ushering in the last generation. Now, I don’t know what your thinking is on end of the world prognostications. Personally, I think that it’s a no win situation. In the most likely case, being wrong just makes you look stupid. When someone finally does get it right: who cares? The world is over. It’s time to move on, unless you’re going for heavenly bragging rights, like the kid in the “guess the number of jelly beans in the jar” contest. These road signs do have a purpose, however. They heighten your focus on what’s coming in order for you to put your life in order. Seriously, no matter when Jesus returns the most important thing to realize is that when a person dies, it’s the end of the world for them! God has a job for His people to do while there’s still time.

     We, the Church, should be living with eternity in mind. The unbelieving world will be surprised when Jesus returns like a thief in the night, because they have “bartered for another God” as it says in Psalm 16. Their focus is trained on this earth…the one that is passing away. We have an urgent gospel message to relay. It’s contained in our reading in Hebrews today: Jesus’ one time sacrifice for sin avails forgiveness for the world. He is now seated at the right hand of God, interceding for those people who come to Him for salvation. We are the ambassadors of Christ imploring everyone to be reconciled to God through Jesus. Those who respond will receive everlasting life in heaven. Those who refuse will face the “Great White Throne Judgment” for their sins and there will be no mercy, no grace, and no hope.


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     What will Jesus’ second coming look like? Pandemonium! The sky will fall! The earth will shake! People will futilely cry for the mountains to bury them so that they might be hidden from the all seeing eye of God. The angels, like the wind, will separate saint from sinner. Every knee shall bow and every tongue will confess Jesus as Lord (Romans 14:11). The books will be opened and destinies decided, as it says in our reading in Daniel today. Some will go to everlasting darkness and shame. Those that are in Christ, the children of God, however, will shine like the stars forever in heaven.

     Examine yourself. Where are you now and where do you want to be? The Bible illustrates the consequences of your decision. Are you building your life high and dry on Jesus the Rock or is your real estate down below on the sandy bank? When the levee breaks, mamma it’s too late to move! Have you put your trust in the God of Jacob’s ladder or are you buying a stairway to heaven with your good works? Are you on the broad easy road of the world that goes to destruction or have you picked the narrow path leading to life? The insidious lie is that in the long run, there’s still time to change the road you’re on. God says, “Today is the day of salvation.” Put your trust in the sacrifice of Jesus, the Son of God to take away your sin. Don’t wait! The fig tree is in leaf and the horizon is fast approaching. Whether the second coming is today or whether in death it becomes the end of the world for you. Your face to face with the living God could be…just minutes away!

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Mass Prep Sunday November 11th 2018



Sunday  November 11, 2018    32nd Sunday Ordinary Time (Cycle B)

A Tale of Two Widows

The tie in between today’s readings: Getting a happy ending

     Psalm 146 starts out singing heartfelt praises to the Almighty God for being an abundant helper. It recounts God’s resume of great works: the blind see, the hungry are fed, wrongs are made right, and much more.  Anyone who has prayed for and gotten a miracle shares a bond with the Psalmist for their happy ending. Many of us though, don’t get the answers to our prayers that we want. It seems God is not listening. Why can’t we be like the lucky ones? Is there a magic God formula that we need to follow? Does God play favorites? Let’s explore this question by comparing the two widows in our readings today.

     It hadn’t rained for a long time and everyone was suffering. The Lord had provided for his prophet, Elijah, up until now, but even the brook that was sustaining him dried up. Now, God tells him to go to, of all people: a poor Gentile widow in Zarephath! Here is a key. God tells Elijah that He has commanded her to provide for him. Apparently, she did not get the memo because when he finally gets there, he finds her preparing the last of her rations for her family’s final meal and he wasn’t on the guest list. Elijah has learned by now that God doesn’t send where He doesn’t provide. He confidently assures the widow that if she bakes him some bread first, then God will provide for her and won’t let the supply of flour and oil run out. With nothing to lose in her desperate situation, she complies, a happy ending ensues, and she comes to faith in the God of Israel. She writes a book “Psalm 146 and Me”, makes the rounds on the talk shows, has it turned into a movie, and lives comfortably off the royalties. Alleluia! This is the feel good kind of God story we crave, not only for the widow, but because it gives us hope that one day we too may be a winner in life’s lottery. Now, let’s take a look at widow number two in today’s reading in Mark’s gospel.

     Jesus finishes condemning the Pharisees for, among other things, devouring widow’s houses. Then, He sits down with his disciples and watches the rich Pharisees make an impressive display of their large contributions to the Temple treasury. They astound the people with their apparent generosity and holiness. Then a poor widow, who most likely had her final means of support taken away from her by those self same Pharisees, drops her last two mites into the chest.  Jesus applies God’s heavenly multiplier to her contribution and commends her for giving more than anyone else. What becomes of the destitute widow now that she has laid everything on the altar? We hope that something miraculous happens to her as a reward for her faith and dependence on the Almighty. Most likely though, nobody cares about her, she starves to death, and Psalm 146 seemingly mocks her by the lack of a happy ending.


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     So, why the disparity?  Psalm 146 has two levels of meaning: physical and spiritual. Yes, God does rescue the desperate out of their circumstances. We hear stories about people escaping perils by the help of strangers only to conclude afterwards that they were with angels. You most likely can recall an event in your life and wondered if God was in it.  Jesus was rescued from treacherous situations because His time had not yet come and that’s the point. Miracles aren’t done for miracle’s sake. God intervenes in the physical world in order to promote a heavenly agenda. The passages of Psalm 146 take on more significance in the spiritual sense.* We ought to view them more as salvation metaphors than mere physical deliverances. After all, what lasting good is in the physical? It all ends. Even those amazingly rescued in the Bible eventually died. Christ’s purpose was to die as a sacrifice that could satisfy man’s sin debt to God (Hebrews 9:24-28). So when He asked His Father in heaven to rescue Him from His fate in the Garden of Gethsemane, the answer was “NO!”

     We must have faith in God through the trials of life knowing that all things will work together for good. Even though He slay me, yet I will hope in Him (Job 13:15). Let us remember that for every Joseph released from prison, there is an executed John the Baptist. For every David that slays a Goliath, there is a martyred Stephen. For every Isaac spared from a sacrificial knife, there is a Christ with a spear in His side. (Praise God for that!) Jesus triumphed over our greatest adversaries: Sin and Death. In this world we will have tribulations, but we are more than conquerors in Christ (Romans 8:37). It’s the focus on the spiritual that gives us the confidence in this physical world to face the lions…singing. God did not rescue Jesus, so He can now rescue you. Come to Him for salvation and have a real happy ending.

*See Mass Prep for Sunday September 9, 2018





Thursday, November 1, 2018

Mass Prep Sunday November 4th 2018



Sunday November 4th, 2018      31st Sunday Ordinary Time (Cycle B)

Greatest Commandment

The tie in between today’s readings: Do You Love Me?

     Listen, everyone! I am God, the only God, and I command you to totally love Me.  Wow! Who does God think He is? Run. Jump. Stop. Go. Love! Is love just another verb, an action word of duty, like kiss your smelly Aunt Roberta? Don’t I have a free will in this? Can God really order me to have affection for Him or direct it to someone else, like my adversarial neighbor?  If you examine today’s reading in Deuteronomy, which is also echoed in the gospel, the answer is yes. Since love is a command, love therefore, is a commitment, not an emotion to be expressed. It is a total act of my will to do all in my power for another’s benefit. Fickle sentiments ride in the backseat.  Love is purposeful, dependable, and real. But how can I love a God that I cannot see?

     It’s like dating. You can’t love God until you get to know Him. A lot of us have preconceived notions of who God is or what He’s like, with no more validity than a teenage girl dreaming of the perfect guy. This makes God in our image. Lose It! He’s written a book for you to see the kind of personal being that He really is. You’ll discover the genuine love of grace and mercy, of compassion and sacrifice that He’s committed to you; your knight in shining armor. You’ll find a God worth loving. Then, you give your heart. This is our emotional response to God first loving us. It’s the rush of the believer’s new converted life. It’s the willingness to please, to discover more, and to be with God in prayer and meditation because He is precious. Where your treasure is, so will your heart be.  The beautiful thing is the more you think of God, the more you will desire Him. When you give you heart to Jesus, God gives a new heart for Him to you. There is no end to the depth and richness of a life filled with a heartfelt love of God. Pursue it!


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     Dating God with your mind and heart leads to a commitment of your soul. Your eternal soul is your core being: your personality, inner self, and identity. Loving God with your soul involves personal choices in your lifestyle. It’s like being married: the two become one. You desire to live a life of faithfulness and devotion, forsaking all others (obstacles) that get in the way. You want to live obediently, pleasing to Him and under His guidance. Here you find out that instead of struggling to live a life that is sinless, your dedication to God nurtures you into a life where you sin less. No fake religious airs or pious triteness here: you’re the real deal. And that takes strength.

    Loving God with all your strength is transformative. It’s the tough love of God changing you into the image of Jesus. He answers your prayers, but not how you think. He gives: trials to produce patience, broken heartedness for understanding, calamity to cultivate trust, and humiliation to make you great. He breaks you down and gives spiritual gifts to build you up. He wants you to see what He sees, feel what he feels, and be His hands in this world. You can love you neighbor as yourself, from your very soul, because you have the strength of the Lord, the mind of Christ, and a heart for God.

     So why do I want to love God? Is it because if I don’t then He’ll get mad and zap me? Of course not, instead, its’ the fulfillment of life’s purpose. We were made to have a relationship with God.  God’s command for us to love Him drives us in that direction. In fact, if I reject the love of God and choose to live a hedonistic, self centered, transient lifestyle; I am really zapping myself.  What’s it like for you? Do you know about Jesus who loved you first, who bore your sins upon a cross, and constantly lives to make intercessions for you to the Father (Psalm 18, Hebrews 7)? Have you given your heart to God? Do you want to be in His word and in prayer more than binge watch Netflix? Can you commit to Him, become one with Him as if you were married.  Persevere when the going gets tough, for better or for worse. The real question is not “do you love God?”, but more like “are you in love with God?”  If not, then you have some soul searching to do. If so, then you know the relationship is not about you. Look around and pray beyond your nose. Let your light shine out to a world in need…for the love of God.

Friday, October 26, 2018

Mass Prep Sunday October 28th 2018



Sunday October 28th, 2018  30th Sunday Ordinary Time (Cycle B)

Marco…Polo

The tie in between today’s readings: There’s always hope with God.


     Today’s gospel gives us an insight into a man. His name is Bartimaeus. They call him Blind Bartimaeus so that nobody confuses him with regular Bartimaeus, the productive person in their town. Every morning, he would feel his way along the buildings in town until he reached his spot and sat down with the other beggars along the Jericho road. Maybe someone would have pity on him today and throw him a shekel. Maybe someone could help him get to the market and not rob him so that he could buy some bread and eat tonight. That would be grand. There have been so many hungry nights…too many.  Sitting in the dark, he can hear hush tones around him saying how useless he is. Helpless. Worthless. Pathetic. He has prayed many times that God would put him out of his misery. Each morning he debates whether today he should sit down with the others or… just keep going down the Jericho road out into the desert to die. “But not today,” he argues with himself, “maybe hold on for one more day.” When you’re a blind guy begging on the side of a busy street, you hear a lot of gossip, the same old griping about Roman taxes, and every once in a while, something new. This man named Jesus, who can heal the sick and raise the dead. “I wonder,” he thought many times, “What if Jesus came here?”  That became his thread of hope.

     Today was like any other, no one had given him anything, so far. He swiped away the insects and despaired when he thought of another …then the background drone of the crowd grew louder. What was that? G? Gees. Jesus! An adrenaline bolt shot through him. This is it!

      Blind Bartimaeus shouted out of his darkness into the Judean afternoon, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!”

      The crowd shouted him down, “Shut up!”

     “Shut up?” he thought, “Why would they want to shut me up? Jesus is coming. He can heal me. He must heal me! If not, I’ve got nothing left but death in the desert!”

     He cried out again. The crowd rebuked him even louder. It was becoming a desperate game of Marco-Polo. He could feel the intensity of the throng growing around him. Jesus was getting closer! His last chance:

     “JESUS, SON OF DAVID, HAVE MERCY ON ME!”… (Marco!).

     “Who called to Me?”… (Polo!). The crowd quieted. “Bring him to Me.” 

     Feeling ashamed, the crowd encouraged Bartimaeus to come to Jesus.

     “What shall I do for you?” He asked.

     “Rabboni, that I may see.” Bartimaeus replied.

     “Go. Your faith has made you well.” Jesus said and it was so. The crowd was amazed and gave glory to God.

     Once Blind Bartimaeus followed Jesus out of town shouting praises to God on the Jericho road. It was a different road now.


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     They say that in life a man cannot last a minute without hope. That is why God always offers it. Jeremiah, the weeping prophet, is our Old Testament reading today. He proclaimed to wicked Judah that there was hope to escape the coming destruction from God if they repented.  They refused.  God’s judgment came by Nebuchadnezzar and exile in Babylon.  Yet, even now, in our passage God promises to restore Israel after their time of punishment.  We can take this principle to heart. Our disobedience has consequences. We will reap what we sow. Sin leaves scars.  But, God promises a way of renewal and reconciliation back to Him, if you want it. You are never beyond hope with the Almighty.

     The title of Psalm 126 should be “Pinch Me I Must Be Dreaming” as it picks up on the return of the exiles back to Jerusalem. Now, in their exhilaration, the great task of rebuilding lies ahead of them. There is a new hope that with God’s help, their efforts in faith will be rewarded. I get this from verses 5 and 6, which are used in the hymn, Bringing in the Sheaves. God has things for us to do. It is our adventure with Him in this life. Faith calls us to action. Hope anticipates the outcome. We shall indeed rejoice.

     We hope in God. He meets us where we are. He gives: hope in struggling, hope in trials, hope in repentance and, hope in the future. In all of it, God is there to help us through. As it says in our reading in Hebrews today, we have a great high priest in the Lord Jesus Christ who is infinitely acquainted with our circumstances. No matter what situation you find yourself in, He promised never to leave you or forsake you. The Good Shepherd is seeking the despairing, the desolate, and the hopeless. If that’s you then…Marco!…Polo!

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Eulogy for Sara Cocco


Eulogy for Sara Cocco
October 26, 2016
Our Lady of Perpetual Help


     My mother had a difficult childhood that she only spoke about on rare occasions, but God had a plan.  He brought a teenager over from Italy who had nothing.  They fell in love, got married, and struggled to raise a family.  My father would always be trying to better our situation, which at times required mom to sign papers, putting the little we had up as collateral.  She always did this with complete trust in him.   God blessed this and things finally began to turn around for us about the time I was entering High School.  Dad always credited his success to Mom’s support.

     This new chapter in their lives allowed Mom’s generosity to emerge: from the presents that she would distribute to us from their many travels, to birthdays, Christmas, and even Halloween.  She loved Halloween.  It was required that the grandchildren be brought to the house for tricks and treats and that the family picture be taken in costume for next year’s calendar.  Mom had an “open bowl” policy when it came to candy so everyone who came to the door could pick out whatever and almost as much as they wanted.  This meant that she would have to buy a pretty good amount of candy...much more than my father thought reasonable.  So she would kind of squirrel away bags around the house and they would magically appear Halloween night.  A few weeks ago, Mom used my Father’s trip to New York as her opportunity to buy a hoard of chocolate for this year.  She left strict orders that Dad was not to know. So, in her memory my sisters, Linda and Lisa set up some of the candy in front of the church as Mom’s last trick or treat and as a tribute to her we ask that you take some on the way out.

     Mom loved the many places that they travelled to all over the world, but her real home away from home was only a few miles away.  It was Strawbridge’s.  Mom loved to shop the clearance racks and after season sales.  I remember about the time my wife, Donna and I were married Mom started the Dickens’s Village collection of porcelain houses for all of us. Beautiful pieces, we’d put them up around the house at Christmas…absolutely gorgeous.  Every year after Christmas, she bought out all the pieces she could at a discount, then we would get a phone call:

“Hello…it’s me…your mother…Listen. I just got back from Strawbridge’s and I got each of you kids the City Hall and the Victoria Station for the Dickens’s Village.  Now, they only had 3 wig shops left so I got you an apothecary because you’re a Pharmacist, but because it was cheaper than the wig shops, I bought you some extra townspeople, so you’re actually making out a little better on the deal.  When can you come over and get them?”  

After a while, the Dickens’s Village series ended and she wanted to start us on another collection, but by this time each of us had an attic full of Dickens. We told her it was enough.

     But that was all right because the grandchildren were here!  She especially liked buying for the girls. 

“Hello…it’s me…your mother…Listen, I just got back from Strawbridge’s and I bought Victoria some summer clothes.  They’re size 6s…don’t worry, she’ll grow into them. When can you come over to pick them up?”

Everyone at Strawbridge’s loved Mom. One lady who worked there would come into the Pharmacy and tell me what a wonderful person Mom was.  It even got to the point that if nobody had seen her for a week she would come in and ask if everything was ok. “Sure,” I would say, "Mom’s away on another trip.”

     Then, the sad day came that Strawbridge’s closed. All of Mom’s friends retired or found new jobs. Mom missed Strawbridge’s, but not to worry. Only three blocks up the street… was a Macy’s!

“Hello…it’s me…your mother…listen, I just got back from Macy’s. I found this gorgeous prom dress for Victoria…90% off. I know she’s only eleven…don’t worry, she’ll grow into it. When can you come over?”

     I, too, was on Mom’s “to buy for” list ever since she learned that I liked collecting Star Trek.   Every year she had an order of Christmas ornaments for me.  A few weeks ago she called.

“Hello…it’s me…your mother…listen, I’ve got your Star Trek 50th year ornament. When can you come over?” 

I told her I could make it Friday and we talked about our granddaughter and her great granddaughter, Ava’s Baptism coming up and how excited she was to see her.

     Then, a day later, she fell.  A series of tragic events ensued which have now brought us all here together today.  As we leave and try to live on with the hole that has been left in our lives with her passing, let us comfort each other and not forget what our faith teaches; we have a Savior and He says to us, “There is a better world that waits for us. This is not the end. I am the Resurrection and the Life. I’ve won the victory. I have overcome the world and I will wipe every tear from your eyes because Death is dead!”

      One day, I will go and meet Jesus and He’ll say to me,”I’ve sent for someone to show you around heaven.” Then, I’ll turn to see a beautiful angel with a loving smile. She’ll come closer to me, reach out her hand and say,

“Hello…It’s me…your mother.”