Monday, December 15, 2014

ENJOY the Season!


 


Dear Friends,
                Joy is not a word in our everyday vocabulary. Sure, we say we enjoy someone or something. But we don’t say “I feel joy in seeing you.” We say  ”I’m happy to see you”.  Are joy and happiness the same? What is joy, anyway? Is it giddy delight? Belly-laughter?  Merry-making on New Year’s Eve?  The mood at tailgate parties? Euphoria over some particular achievement? These are all good for us – but they are not joy.  Joy is not the work of comedians or a spontaneous response to an appealing moment.

                Joy is a God-word . It is the keen awareness of the presence of God or the coming of God in our life-journey. Isaiah 61.10 gives us a way of naming  joy: “I rejoice heartily in the Lord, in my God is the joy of my soul.” Joy is a Christmas word, but not only a Christmas word. It is a learned response that requires time, patience, and a sustained effort.  Ugh! Work! Yes, but surprisingly light-hearted, light-filled work, work in which we become more clearly who we are and we see more clearly who God in Jesus, the Incarnate Word, is for us.

                Joy grows in us over a lifetime. The person who has learned joy gazes at, walks in this splendid and at the same time wrecked-up world and sees God’s imprint on life and nature.

                Our biblical ancestors who people our liturgical readings lived in times like ours –arduous times in which they worked at their right relationships, and made every effort to be faithful to the Lord. Like them, we are culturally enticed to seek outlets in evasion, fantasy, fleeting pleasures, and activities that are superficial or meaningless. We are invited by our times to believe that we are experiencing joy when we experience these things. Possessing the newest car, the newest toy, the world presumes, is equated with joy. But none of these things lead us to the conviction that God is in love with our world, and us.

                Last weekend, in our churches and homes, we lighted the rose-colored candle. It is unique on the Advent wreath, reminding us that God is near, and that in finding God, we find a deep satisfaction in life that is “beyond rubies”, as our British friends would say.

                A few days ago, at a local big box outlet mall, I heard the energetic ringing of the Salvation Army bell. The bell-ringer was a twenty something man who had broken his leg, I know not how. Years ago, he had heard about how another young man had dealt with a similar situation. This young man followed suit.  Rather than sit around and mope, he festooned his crutches with greens, berries and ribbons, and went out to encourage people’s generous giving. You can believe he was collecting a lot of green in his bucket!

                Don’t try to think your way into joy. It’s not a project. Don’t try program it, either. The experience of joy will overtake us if we are open. Be lighthearted and spontaneous at Christmastime. Deep joy and spontaneous fun don’t negate each other. Enjoy the season. Look around you and see for certain that God is in love with the world. We have great cause to rejoice.

~Joan Sobala, SSJ

Be sure to see check out upcoming programs for Fresh Wind in Our Sails CLICK HERE!

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Seeking Salvation in Our Own Desert

Dear Friends,
            It is somehow delicious that, as winter revs up, our first and third readings have to do with desert experiences: the experiences of the captives, coming home from Babylon, and those of John the Baptist, precursor of Jesus, who also went to the desert.
            You and I share in these biblical desert experiences, wherever we live, wherever we work or spend our time. The desert is anyplace where the integrity of our soul is tried, where the fabric of our lives is stretched to tearing, where our world is in mortal battle with the challenge to human values and where tragedy is an unwelcome companion.
            It is within our own modern deserts, that we experience our own salvation, at the same time, accompanying others in the wilderness as they come to recognize and cherish salvation.
The voice of God speaks to us in the wilderness of unknowing what to do next, how to distinguish the devious from the good neighbor and, how to deal with pain, trauma and fear.
           
            In the desert, God says to us:   Stay Alert! The demons are waiting to stop us from doing our part to help build the Reign of God. In the breadth of our lives, we are exposed to moral wrong-doing and weakness, depression, addiction, loneliness and war. We travel through a variety of deserts, places within us and around us, that endanger or frighten us. Yet, as frightening as deserts may be, there is more. Isaiah describes the desert as a place of great beauty, and maybe we have seen that truth for ourselves: sweeps of sand, coiled into enchanting dunes, patterns of rose-tinted hues, concentrations of greens and copper,dry old creek beds ,and when the conditions are just right, the desert in bloom.

            In the desert, we can be sure we are embraced by God. Comfort my people, God said in Isaiah. God has comforted us in the past and continues to do so. And we, in our turn, pass on that comforting embrace to those we serve.

            When tempted in the desert and in the garden, Jesus needed the strength of God. Temptations were overcome, the goal was achieved and there was joy. Joy happens in life when the desert does not overcome us – when we reach quenching waters and find them, not as mirage, but real and refreshing, offering strength for the journey.


            Isaiah, John and Jesus, Himself, in their desert moments, bid us all: ! Listen! Listen! Listen to God’s voice in your own wilderness, for surely  you will hear the voice you long for.

Monday, December 1, 2014

The Holidays - A Magnifying Glass for Our Lives




Little pitchers have big ears. That’s a picturesque way of describing children. I was one of them. As December rolled on toward the Christmas season and gatherings of family and friends multiplied, I noticed that one or another of my relatives or family friends was a little distracted or hung around the edges of the conversation or just didn’t seem to be into the season. I would hear one adult whisper to another about the disengaged person: holiday blues. They would nod at each other knowingly and be sure to give the person with the holiday blues enough space.

The holidays are a magnifying glass for our wants, needs and losses: We want everyone home for the holidays, more money for gifts, reconciliation with someone. Maybe we want separation from someone or something. We might need a job, better employment, someone special to love us just for ourselves, a real home. And then there are the losses: our own health or that of a loved one, rejection of our talents, the mixed blessing of retirement. Maybe we feel the loss of  self worth when we stay in a relationship that doesn’t bring life. The remembered loss of innocence is a subtle emotion that may grab us at holiday time, the innocence lost when people, indeed the world at large, was not as accepting, loving, honest as we wanted  it to be.

Finally in this short but potent  list, the death of a loved one is particularly poignant at holiday time. Recent death is freshly on our mind, but not surprisingly, the memory of long-ago deaths sometimes come back with force. Maybe we just plain miss these departed people. But we may also be angry because they left us, angry that we are alone. Maybe someone died and we hadn’t forgiven then or them us. The opportunity is gone.

So many of these situations  are beyond our control. The Christmas music plays endlessly, Santa appears on every corner. How do we cope? Some thoughts:


  • Be adult in choosing how to cope and the follow through. Hints for coping are abundant, in lectures, magazines, sermons and in social media. Decide what you need to do, and if you need help, ask for it.

  • Remember that an emotion is an emotion, which we cannot regulate by wishing it away. Recognize what is honest and true. Don’t deny the holiday blues, but don’t let them chew you up.

 
  • Hold fast to the realization that God is present in our experiences of pain/loss/fleeting or entrenched misery.

                I am with you always.(Matthew 28.20)

                Do not let your heart be troubled. Trust in God. Trust in me. (John 14.27)

Even when we are unaware of this truth, our God is with us, above us, behind, us, beneath us, embracing  us, in the person next to us.

                I have called you by your name. You are mine.  (Isaiah 43.1)

How could  God who calls us by name, a God to whom we belong ever leave us to our misery?

“I can’t hear God,” we may complain. But don’t mix up the apparent silence of God with the absence of God. Our God knows our needs, but doesn’t miraculously intervene when the ordinary choices people make or the ordinary course of life takes us where we don’t want to go.

If this sounds familiar, we have only to remember Holy Week, the passion of Jesus on Good Friday and the ecstatic joy of Easter. Christmas, in mysterious ways, is the beginning of Holy Week and Easter. These events in the life of Jesus, our Brother and  Lord , are events in our life as well. We carry them within us. With our God, all the pieces fit together.


  • Finally, accept and enjoy the way life is for you at the moment, and not the way media portrays some other culturally desired way. The food won’t be perfect, the decorations won’t dazzle visitors. Not everyone you want will be at the table. Whose expectations should be important anyway?

No neat answer will dissolve the holiday blues. But our God brings comfort, if we only allow it.
~Joan Sobala, SSJ

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Giving Thanks

Dear Friends,

In telling and retelling the story of those first Pilgrims who survived a harsh New England winter, we remember how their second year saw a crop raised and a community gaining a foothold. We say that those early settlers learned much from the Native Americans- about corn, squash, turkey and medicine. But there is more.

The Native Americans gave witness to the settlers that giving thanks is essential for life.
On our part of the country, the Iroquois Nation had (and has to this day) a custom called the Thanksgiving Address – an address given to help the gathered  listeners  achieve what the Iroquois called one-mindedness. They argued that, from the basis of that perception, one-mindedness, the human community could work consentually  toward  oneness of life. In this Thanksgiving Address, offered at special times of the year, Mother Earth was blessed, the cycles of the season were  blessed, as the crowd punctuated whatever was held up for thanks with their “yes.” The people were reminded that what the Creator wants is for us to remain peaceful, to protect and nourish creation. Yes!

The Native American worldview impacted the new American society in other ways as well. Jose Barreiro, one-time editor  of the Northeast Indian Quarterly, reported there of “a memory that has been told and retold among the Iroquois Six Nation people…that  in the formative days of the American republic, statesmen from the Indian Confederacy informed prominent colonists, including some of our Founding Fathers, on the Indian concepts of democracy.”
Research show that, indeed, Washington, Franklin and early members of our founding congresses, had Native American friends whose ideas found their way into our Constitution, much to our benefit.
So this Thanksgiving, as we celebrate our national holy day and tend to focus our thanks to God for family, friends, faith and the basics of life, let’s enlarge our own Thanksgiving Day gratitude to include the blessings of liberty, a strong Constitution and the wisdom of our early leaders who recognized the power for good contained in the Native American vision of peacemaking and reverence for life. For those Native Americans of the Iroquois Nation (Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca and Tuscarora) whose lands we walk today here in beautiful  Upstate New York, let’s pray in the words of the Ute People of the West:
                               
I greet the highest in you.
Your goodness walks in front of me.
Your gentleness bids me good day.
Your quietness leads me.
I greet the highest in you.

And while we are at it, let’s use that same prayer as we gather for our Thanksgiving Day meal.

Blessings on your  day!

Monday, November 17, 2014

Be Committed to the Truth of Who We Are

Dear Friends,

Kate and Will are coming across the pond in early December, for visits to New York and Washington. Regrettably, little George will stay home, but his time will come.  Americans are looking forward to having Will and Kate here. We like them as young persons, creating a life and a family together. Moreover, they are royalty, and royalty fascinates people worldwide.

A few years ago, a  study was done of the people of Norway, Belgium and England, countries where royalty are still the symbolic heads of state. It revealed that royalty conveyed to the people of these lands a certain regal pride in themselves. They participate in the aura of their rulers – need them to sense their own dignity.

That participation in royalty shows up liturgically next Sunday, when we celebrate the feast of Christ the King - not an ancient feast, but one established by Pope Pius XI, 1925. At that time, a wave of anti-church sentiment in the world was making Catholics feel less sure of  themselves, less confident of the potential in the Gospel and our own potential to live by it. This feast seemed to help a considerable number of Catholics through a difficult time. We participate in the power for good that is in Christ, as we give, receive, welcome, lift up, bless and encourage goodness in this world.. Over the years, we have had to work at seeing  this feast as valuable for ourselves.

This feast invites us to be committed to the truth of who we are. Jesus, throughout the Gospel is eloquent about the fact that he is who he is, and does not accept the images and aspirations others put on him. He is totally devoted to the reign of God breaking into human life. As individuals and as a community, we are responsible to shape ourselves as believers  creating the world as a place where God’s reign, God’s kingdom can happen.

A second invitation inherent in this feast is to be committed to the truth of who God is. The people of Jesus’ times wanted him to be messiah according to their design. They could not accept him as the companion of the outcast, the stranger, the prostitute, the ungracious and ungrateful. Our times also want to dictate to God what kind of God to be. We want to restrict God’s presence in human life – to locate God in some proper place, exclusively in our tabernacles, churches and holy places. We want God to serve our needs, to play it our way. When the answer to our prayer is no, or our life takes a bumpy turn, we are tempted to push God away. You are not the God I want!

This week, Let’s stretch ourselves toward this coming feast. It offers us an opportunity to renew our commitment to God’s truth and our own, and to celebrate our own dignity with Christ as our Sovereign.
Please join in a Fresh Wind  program on Wed., Nov. 19, 7 to 8.30 pm. at the SSJ Motherhouse
Psychiatrist Dr. Jack McIntyre will be our featured speaker, offering insight to our use of

The Internet: Its Gifts and Pitfalls.

Monday, November 10, 2014

An Exercise on Faith - Try it!



Dear friends,

The following exercise may seem simple and inconsequential. Try it anyway. See what it says about you.

With what adjectives would you describe the Christian life as you live it? Is it languid, intense, engaging, unengaged, robust, restful, reliable in times of need, repetitious?

Recently, I came across this sentence which brought me up short and made me stop to think:
Christian life is defined by verbs of movement.

Digging into the Scriptures, we find that this is so. Jesus and His disciples said these things and did these things.  Here’s a sampling of biblical verbs of movement that help define our lives as believers. Others words of movement can be destructive, e.g. betray, destroy, desert, deny. 

This week, see how these words of positive movement  are present in your own life. Use them as a measure of the energy of faith in your life. Add to them.  How do they square with the adjectives you used to describe your own life as a Christian at the beginning of this exercise.
                ask                         seek                      find                        go                           come                     come back
                turn                       return                   reconcile             release                 repent                  walk                                      heal                       bring                     listen                    move                    become                               bless
                give                       give up                 receive                 gather                   love                       lift
                know                     believe                                work                      awake                   stop                       share
                leave                     anoint                   respect                 look                       look up                 visit
                watch                    accept                   open                     close                     enter                     send
                feed                      touch                   

In a recent translation of the Lord’s Prayer from the Aramaic, one line is rendered

Free us from what holds us back.


  • As we consider these biblical verbs of positive movement, which one’s do we recognize as    part of our  lives already?
  • What holds us back from exercising all of them?
  • Which ones name actions in our lives that are second nature to us?
  • Which ones have we never considered part of our Christian experience?
  • Which ones will help us live through the holidays with their challenges?


If you want to have an unusual conversation with a loved one/friend/colleague, do this exercise with them.

Enjoy!

Monday, November 3, 2014

Divine Perspective


Dear Friends,
The content of the last two week’s blogs have centered on heavy experiences in today’s world. With the turn into November, we pause to put our lives and our world in a divine perspective. We lift our eyes, still our minds and hold God close. Here are some short pieces to help us focus.

This is from Catherine of Siena:  You { O God} are a fire burning and never consumed.
                                 You are a light, ever shining and never fading.
                                 You are goodness, beyond all goodness
                                 beauty, beyond all beauty
                                 wisdom, beyond all wisdom
                                 You are the food that satisfies all hunger.

Source unknown:                           

Be daring. Be silent. Be still. Alone.
                            Empty before your God.
                            Say nothing. Ask nothing. Be silent. Be still.
                            Let your God look upon you.
                            That is all.
                            God knows.
                            God understands.
                            God loves you with an enormous love.
                            God only wants to look upon you with love.
                            Quiet.
                             Be still.
                             Be.
                              Let your God love you.

Today, play with God.
Let God be your lover, companion and friend.
God is the partner of our every enterprise.
God is the loveable lover of all that is human.
God: creator, redeemer, healer, inspirator, beckoner,
                                      humbly wants us now and forever.
Be one with God,
And if you think you can’t, ask.
Raise up your arms to be lifted up as children seek a confidently loved adult to raise them up.
It is the nature of God to lift up .

                                                                ******************************
Mark your calendar for Wednesday, November 19, when psychiatrist Dr. John McIntyre walks us through The Gifts and Pitfalls of the Internet , how they find their ways into our lives for better or worse. What do we do to be “ in charge” of our internet use?