Bible On Call
- Scripture Reflection, October 12, 2008: Invited to God's party
- Scripture Reflection, October 5, 2008: God never gives up!
- Scripture Reflection, September 28, What Would Jesus Do?
- Scripture Reflection, September 21: Your kingdom come!
- Scripture Reflection, September 14: Triumph of the Cross
- Scripture Reflection, September 07: 1+1=3
- Scripture Reflection, August 31: Teamwork with God
- Scripture Reflection, August 24: From 'Rocky' to 'Rock'
- Scripture Reflection, August 17, Tenacious Faith
- Scripture Reflection, August 10, 2008: Take courage!
- Scripture Reflection, August 3: Eyes of Compassion
- Scripture Reflection, July 27: Pearl of Great Price
- Scripture Reflection, July 20: Compassion is Power
- Scripture Reflection, July 13: The Sower and the Seed
- Scripture Reflection, July 6: The Gentle Mastery of Christ
- Scripture Reflection, June 29: Heroes of Faith
- Scripture Reflection, June 22: Be Not Afraid
- Scripture Reflection, June 15: Many Are Called
- Scripture Reflection, June 8: The Much in Meals
- Scripture Reflection, June 1: Extraordinary Generosity
- Scripture Reflection, May 25: Connections Made to Last
- Scripture Reflection, May 18: Holy Trinity Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 11: Pentecost Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 4: The Feast of the Ascension
- Scripture Reflection, April 27: Speaking and Living Our Faith
- Scripture Reflection, April 20: Our Future Heavenly Home
- Scripture Reflection, April 13: Good Shepherd Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, April 6: The Ultimate Servant
- Scripture Reflection, March 30: Inspirational Stories of Faith
- Easter Reflection: Alleluia, He is Risen!
- Good Friday Reflection and Podcast
- Holy Thursday Reflection & Podcast
- Scripture Reflection, March 16: Palm Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, March 9: The Raising of Lazarus
- Scripture Reflection, March 2: Open to Possibilities
- Scripture Reflection, February 24: First Impressions
- Scripture Reflection, February 17: Human AND Divine
- Scripture Reflection, February 10: Appreciating Lent
- Scripture Reflection, February 3: A Dose of Humility for the Super Bowl
- Scripture Reflection: Now Free to Grow in Love
- Scripture Reflection, January 20: Servants of Reconciliation
- Scripture Reflection, January 13: The Baptism of the Lord
- Scripture Reflection, January 6: Beyond Our Expectations
- Advent Reflection, December 23: "God Is with Us"
- Advent Reflection, December 16: “Loved by the Son of God”
- Advent Reflection, December 9: Patient Expectancy
- Scripture Reflection, December 2: A Vision of Peace
- Scripture Reflection, November 25: Christ the King
- Scripture Reflection, November 18: The Meaning of Reverence
- Scripture Reflection, November 11: The Traditionally Printed Word
- Scripture Reflection, November 4: Risk, Hospitality and Justice
- Scripture Reflection, October 28: The Promise of More
- Scripture Reflection, October 21: “I lift up my eyes to the mountains”
- Scripture Reflection, October 14: Words
- Scripture Reflection, October 7: Singing the Same Song
- Scripture Reflection, September 30: Direct Gazes on the Face of Christ
- Scripture Reflection, Sunday, September 23: Love Is Ingenious
- Scripture Reflection, September 16: Finding Home
- Scripture Reflection, September 9: A Perfect Example of Christian Discipleship
- Scripture Reflection, September 2: Humility Does Matter
- Scripture Reflection, August 26: A Faithfully Present Christ
- Scripture Reflection, August 19: The "ordinariness" of Christian Discipleship
- Scripture Reflection, August 12: Bringing Life to Others
- Scripture Reflection, August 5: Growing Rich in the Sight of God
- Scripture Reflection, July 29: Two Essential Attitudes
- Scripture Reflection, July 22: Models of Hospitality
- Scripture Reflection, July 15: The Good Samaritan
- Scripture Reflection, July 8: Christian Understanding of Freedom
- Scripture Reflection, July 1: Our Adventurous Lives
- Scripture Reflection, June 24: Becoming A Light to the Nations
- Scripture Reflection, June 17: Courageous Reconciliation
- Scripture Reflection, June 10: Corpus Christi
- Scripture Reflection, June 3: Trinity Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 27: The Feast of Pentecost
- Scripture Reflection, May 20: The Ascension of Jesus
- Sunday Reflection, May 13
- Scripture Reflection, May 6: Dungy’s Gift to Grieving Parents
- Scripture Reflection, April 29: The Good Shepherd
- Scripture Reflection, April 22: “Do you love me?”
- Sunday Reflection, April 15: Touch the Wounds
- Sunday Reflection, April 8: Easter Sunday 2007
- Holy Thursday Reflection, April 5: Holy Thursday 2007
- Sunday Reflection, April 1: The Essentials for Christian Discipleship
- Sunday Reflection, March 25: Throw your stones away and parking tickets, too
- Sunday Reflection, March 18: The Welcome Home
- Sunday Reflection, March 11: A Lenten Summons
- Sunday Reflection, March 4: God, the Giver of Abundance
- Sunday Reflection, February 25: No More Peer Pressure
- Sunday Reflection, February 18: Loving Our Enemies?
- Sunday Reflection, February 11: The Beatitudes
- Sunday Reflection, February 4: Extraordinary Encounters
- Sunday Reflection, January 28: Truth Spoken in Love
- Sunday Reflection, January 21: Inspiring News for Life
- Sunday Reflection, January 14: An Abundance of Gifts, Not Threats
- Sunday Reflection, January 7: The Football Fans’ Search for Hope
- Christmas Reflection: The Significance of Stuffed Animals and Jesus
- Advent Reflection, December 17: Life Lessons at a Coffee Bar
- Advent Reflection, December 10: 'Good News' for Rejoicing
- Advent Reflection, December 3: The Gift of Hope
- Sunday Reflection, November 26: “Your Kingdom Come, Your Will Be Done”
- Sunday Reflection, November 19: A Glimpse of God’s Faithfulness
- Sunday Reflection, November 12: Giving the Little That We Have
- Sunday Reflection, November 5: BEING the Great Commandment
- Sunday Reflection, October 29: Courage in Jericho
- Personal Reflection, October 22: Servant Leadership
- Sunday Reflection, October 15: Naming What's Important
- Sunday Reflection, October 8: Our responsibilities are God’s blessings
- Sunday Reflection, October 1: Open to the Spirit
- Sunday Reflection, September 24: Who’s the greatest?
- Sunday Reflection, September 17: Our Treasured Images of Christ
- Sunday Reflection, September 10: “He has done all things well.”
- Sunday Reflection, September 3: Conversion of Heart
- Sunday Reflection, August 27: Our Choice to Follow
- Sunday Reflection, August 20: Unity in a Divided World
- Sunday Reflection, August 13: On the Road of Discipleship
- Sunday Reflection, August 6: "I Know a Man"
- Sunday Reflection, July 30: The Abundance of Fragments
- Sunday Reflection, July 16: Our Mission if we choose to accept
- Sunday Reflection, July 2: The Grace of Desperation?
- Sunday Reflection, June 25: The Calming Presence of Christ
- Sunday Reflection, June 18: Serving Up a Banquet
- Sunday Reflection, June 11: The Trinity, A Communion of Life and Love
- Pentecost Sunday: Tuned Into the Spirit
- Sunday Reflection, May 28: The Presence of the Absent Jesus
- Sunday Reflection, May 21: The Sign of True Friendship
- Scripture Reflection, May 14: The Garrison Keillor STRETCH
- Sunday Reflection, May 7: An Encounter with Jean Vanier
- Easter: Memories that Give Hope, Peace and Love
- Good Friday Reflection: Overwhelmed by John
- Holy Thursday Reflection: Three Days, One Liturgy
- Palm Sunday Reflection: In Gratitude for Good Mentors
- Memorial of Cardinal Bernardin
- The Christian Life
- Praying With the Scriptures
- The Reluctant Prophet
- Bible On Call
Scripture Reflection, May 6: Dungy’s Gift to Grieving Parents
Scripture Readings
Acts 14: 21-27
Psalm 145
Revelation 21: 1-5
John 13: 31-35
This week I was reading an article about a 51-year-old truck driver from Iowa (Rick Reilly, Sports Illustrated, April 30, 2007, p. 86). This over-the-road driver, Mark Lemke, lost his 19-year-old son in a motorcycle accident in 2006. He told the reporter, “The hardest thing for me is, I sit in that truck all day, and all I do is think about him.” Lemke is a former athlete and an avid sports fan. So he was quite surprised when his phone rang last October and the caller said, “This is Tony Dungy. I am just calling to offer my condolences to you and see if there’s anything I can do to help you.” Lemke at first thought the call was a prank, but he soon realized that the caller was in fact Tony Dungy, the head coach of the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League. Dungy was calling because he had heard about this man’s loss. You may remember that Dungy himself experienced the loss of a child at Christmastime in 2005, when his 18-year-old son committed suicide.
The author of this story, Rick Reilly, goes on to report that since the death of his son Tony Dungy has taken it upon himself to reach out to many parents who have suffered the loss of a child. Since that initial telephone conversation, he and the Iowa truck driver have apparently struck up a friendship and have stayed in touch through calls and emails. Dungy invited Lemke to the 2007 Super Bowl in Miami. Lemke found a load that needed hauling to Florida and one that needed to come back to Iowa, and he drove down and attended the Super Bowl as the guest of the head coach of the Colts. Lemke commented: “I’m awfully grateful to him. He helped me keep my faith, He taught me that he and I – we’re not alone.” Rick Reilly concludes his story with these words: “Tony Dungy stands as a reminder to every parent who’s grieving right now that there is a way through the pain. And that way is through each other.”
It seems clear that Tony Dungy has turned the heartbreaking tragedy of the loss of his son into a learning experience. This experience has taught him to reach out to others in compassion, even to other people whom he has never met. In Christian terms, it appears that Tony Dungy has learned better how to love through this ordeal. Perhaps we can remember situations or events in our own lives which were very difficult but through which we have been trained in what it means to love. We have endured ordeals through which we have been gifted with a deepened and refined ability to care for others, especially for those in great need.
In the Gospel for this Sunday, we hear familiar words of Jesus, words spoken in his final conversation with his disciples before his betrayal and death. Jesus gives his disciples a commandment that he calls "new," the command to love one another as he has loved them. Followers of Jesus will be identified by a unique willingness to love, a love inspired by the love Jesus had for his own. I think that all of us know how vague the word “love” can be. It is used for just about anything in our society. But Jesus puts flesh on those words by his own life, through his compassionate ministry to others and his tenacious fidelity to his disciples. Right before these words in the Gospel of John, Jesus has taught his disciples about the meaning of love by washing their feet. And his new commandment of love is spoken to them immediately after Judas has left the room to set about his action of betrayal. These are words that are spoken on the threshold of his passion, his own moment of darkness and trial. Jesus educated, he trained his disciples in the meaning of the commandment he gave them. He trained them in what it means to love one another by his own gift of himself for them.
In the month of May, we Catholics make special memory of another parent who lost her child in death – Mary, the mother of Jesus and our own mother. We honor her for her faith and her courageous willingness to fulfill the will of God in her life in good times and bad times. I believe that sometimes our image of Mary is illumined so brightly with heavenly light that we forget that she was a young Jewish woman who had to negotiate all of the challenges of working families in first century Galilee. I suspect that her hands were rough from everyday, hard work and her face was weathered from the hot, near eastern sun and because of her deep concern about the destiny of Jesus, her son. Through all of that, Mary learned what it meant to love from through her response to God’s word and by becoming the most faithful disciple of her own son. Her expertise in loving became apparent as she stood beneath the cross of Jesus and, after the resurrection, joined his disciples in their new life of faith and their proclamation of the good news of Easter. Mary, too, trains us in how to love.
Jesus’ command that we love one another as he has loved us stands before us as an abiding challenge. You and I are painfully aware of the ways in which we fall short in living out this command. We struggle to shake our old habits of selfishness, impatience, and prejudice. But the risen Christ continues to train us in how to love, just as he educated his disciples in the meaning of this new commandment. If we are open to his presence in our lives, we realize that Christ acts in our lives through people and events in order to expand our capacity to give of ourselves to others. Sometimes this “training in love” comes to us through people and situations that bring us great delight and fulfillment, as in the goodness of friends who love us faithfully. But Christ even brings good out of the evil we experience by educating us in how better to love through the painful events of our lives, as in Tony Dungy’s tragic experience of the loss of a teenage son. Even in terrible moments like that, Christ continues to demonstrate his faithful love for us and patiently shows us how to care for one another.
Rick Reilly suggests that Tony Dungy has shown grieving parents that there is a way through the pain, and that way is through each other. Jesus told his disciples that the way people would know they were his disciples was if they truly loved one another. As we come to the table of the Lord this Sunday, we make memory of Christ’s salvific self-gift in his passion. Christ, crucified and risen, has shown us how to love. May we allow him to teach us each day what it means to live his new commandment of love.

