A homily for the Nineteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time, August 13, 2023
1 Kgs 19:9a, 11-13a, Rom 9:1-5, Mt 14:22-33
A few years after my college graduation, I visited a friend and her husband in Casper, Wyoming, where they worked for an oil company — she as a geologist and he as a chemist.
It was my first trip West, high in the Rockies and far different from anything I’d ever experienced as a Jersey Shore kid.
The first evening, Sue and John took me to hear the local symphony, and after the performance, as we walked back to their car, I noticed two things: The stars were close enough that I could pull one from the sky, and the light from the streetlamps didn’t seem to reach all the way to the ground.
Yes, it was that dark.