Dear Friends,
For Him, it didn’t have to be this way,
Risen Christ that He was.
He could have left His wounds
in the tomb,
staining the stone,
untreasured.
But Jesus’ wounds were the embodiment of
the compassion he bore for everyone.
Jesus’ breath,
halted in death,
was fresh, deep and sweet
on this new Day.
Beyond this day, Jesus wanted His holy wounds
to touch the wounds of people where they suffered
in every time and place, as with the silent virus eroding our world.
Yes, His wounds stir life
in us who are so wounded today.
His wounds,
hands and feet and side, make us,
wounded as we are,
cleary, undeniably
one with Him.
How faultlessly wise of Jesus not to reject His wounds
for they throb with the truth of all
we can trust about Him
in this fearsome time.
Come to think of it: We might not recognize the Risen Christ without them.
~Sister Joan Sobala
Friday, April 17, 2020
Friday, April 10, 2020
Feeling the Power of Easter
Dear Friends,
This year, Easter – Sunday and Season – are inextricable bound together with the coronavirus. Some people say that the Sunday after our nation is free to move about again will be the real Easter this year. We can certainly celebrate it then, but we would miss the power of Easter if we don’t “celebrate” Easter when our nation faces death as it does right now.
Easter tells us that death is not our destiny. God gave no permission for death to hold Jesus as its permanent victim. Rather, death, like an old snake skin, lies discarded at the garden gate.
“Jesus, You live and we live because You live.
Our minds cannot grasp it, so we leave it to our hearts to embrace new life in You.”
Easter is not naive. We don’t close our eyes to the realities around us. The cross always stands in our sanctuary, even though this day, this season, it is draped with the mantle of victory.
Today, though our hearts are heavy with the anguish of many, “we celebrate Easter because we believe there are no God-forsaken places, no God-forgotten promises. Easter is the ultimate intrusion of God into places and situations we deem to be God-forsaken. Jesus lives and we live because of him.” (Lutheran Bishop Mark Harmon)
Clarence Johnson, New Testament scholar and co-founder of Habitat for Humanity writes of Easter: “On the morning of the resurrection, God put life in the present tense, not in the future. Not a hope for the future but a power for the present. Not so much that we shall live someday but that He is risen today. Jesus’ resurrection is not to convince the incredulous nor to reassure the fearful, but to enkindle believers…”
So today, let yourself be enkindled. Go outside and at least in your heart and in your imagination, meet Jesus in the garden. Like Mary Magdalen, you may not recognize Him at first, but He will call you by name. Then, like Mary, you will see Him Risen and Glorious, and your heart will be glad.
Today – outside – feel the pull of the resurrection and let courage stir in you to meet the days ahead.
May God Easter in You Today.
~Sister Joan Sobala
Thursday, April 2, 2020
The Mind of Christ
Ah, God.
Today begins Your week.
Oh, I know that every week is yours,
but this week is yours
in a more distilled way.
You’ll be more on my mind this week
than in an average week.
Help me to drink deeply of Your passion,
let the alleluia stir in my depths,
so that next week
it will rise in me
like the dawn.
Dear Friends,
To learn how to suffer this pandemic time, we must learn how to stand in Jesus’ place – to bear pain, abandonment, cruelty, distance, condemnation. Through all of it, Jesus was faithful and true. May it be so with us.
He trusted and obeyed his Father and broke the power of sin and betrayal. In the great and little tragedies of life, let this mind of Christ be ours as well. May it be so with us.
Love led Jesus through to death to life. His love. His Father’s love. May it be so with us.
That is our last word.
Next week, Jesus has the first word as He Easters over the world.
All week long, let us live into His New Day. Alleluia.
~Sister Joan Sobala
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
To Whom Do We Belong
Dear Friends,
Since the unfolding pandemic began, I have been home – like you, grateful to have a place of safety with people to whom I belong.
But then, events as seen on various media outlets started me thinking about the question, “To whom do I belong?” The answers to that question seem simple, but they are not, for over the centuries of human life, belonging has happened unbidden, been cultivated, limited, enlarged, denied and sometimes forgotten about.
With you, I wonder to whom do we belong, for how long and how? Are we ever finished belonging or belonging anew? As I write this at the end of March 2020, with the pandemic touching more and more lives, insightful leaders have encouraged us to act on the belief that we belong to everyone. We are in some measure, responsible for one another’s well-being, life or death. Belonging is not earned. It is freely given or it is withheld.
Belonging requires perseverance on our part. We could say: “this belonging that I experience today is not what I thought it would be, so I am going to move on and care only for those whom I choose.”
Belonging sometimes comes as a surprise. We would not initially have thought we belonged to this one or that. Mid-20th century, our Sister Rosalma Hayes was studying in Europe. One day, she came around the corner of a public building in Paris. Toward her came a Sister of Saint Joseph in a similar habit. They did not know each other’s language, but they recognized each other, kissed each other’s brass bound crucifixes worn with the habit, and kept going. France was a homier place to be because of that encounter. It takes courage to belong to anyone, however fleetingly.
Sister Rosalma Hayes
Before this pandemic struck, our Congregation was preparing to celebrate 80 years of serving in Alabama. Eighty years of working with, loving and encouraging the black community to be all they could be. We came to belong to the black community, and they to us. Belonging meant that we came to be part of something greater than ourselves as we lived life beyond the greater Rochester area. That belonging in Selma was put to the test when in 1965, the civil rights march made its way across the Edmund Pettis Bridge. We were prevented from marching by the dictate of the archbishop of Mobile. Instead, with desire, we watched the marchers pass by our convent. They were ultimately attacked on the far side of the bridge. At Good Samaritan Hospital, which we ran on behalf for the black community, our Sisters tended to the great John Lewis and his confreres immediately after the attack. Our belonging to the black community of Selma was sealed in those days.
Sister Barbara Lum at the Good Samaritan Hospital Nursing Home in Selma, AL
Sister Kathleen Navarra and Sister Patricia Flass (not pictured) continue to mission in AL
Whether moved by a humanitarian perspective or by the sheer love of God, you and I – every person – belong to a far greater community than we realize.
Writing in the March 2020 issue of The Atlantic, David Brooks reminds his reader that “for vast stretches of human history people lived in extended families consisting not just of people they were related to but people they chose to cooperate with" (p64). That same unity of cooperation was unique to Jesus and His followers long before our day. Paul expressed it as all of us being members of the Body of Christ. “There are many parts but all one body” (1Cor.12.20).
That’s where we are today: “members of one another” (Marshall Sahlins). We are called to experience the “inner solidarity of souls” (J Pretz – Johansen). The maturity that such connectedness requires comes only with suffering together through destructive times, and not allowing our spirits to be crushed.
That moment is now. This pandemic will either make rise in us a new sense of universal belonging or it will make us fall back into ways that are not of God. In our age, many of our contemporaries and maybe we ourselves have trouble with the reality of God. We may want to deny the truth of God, the faithfulness of God in these devastating times. But pause, drink in God’s Spirit.
Perhaps this is our time’s new admission that we do belong to God. Not a God who commands servitude but a God who honors our capability to embrace one another. It takes courage to belong to anyone, much less God.
So we come to it. Belonging to people. Belonging to God. Work the phones, send e-mails, use social media as a tool for engaging the other. Pray with someone else’s prayer or our own. These days are too precious to waste marking time.
~Sister Joan Sobala
Friday, March 27, 2020
We Are Made for Life, Not for Death
Dear Friends,
Do you remember the comedian Danny Thomas? After his father’s
death, he wrote about that robust, energetic man who had emigrated from Lebanon
with his wife. The Thomas family prospered and raised a large family. When his
father was dying, he called his wife and all his children around him. He raised
himself up in bed, looked at them all lovingly and said, “Damn death!” Those
were his last words.
Somehow I think those words sum up the rage, the grief, the
helplessness that we have all felt when we have lost someone close to us, or
when we realize our own time is limited on this earth…or in this rare moment
when a pandemic threatens to invade our lives in an invisible way.
Death is cruel. It is terrifying. It goes counter to
everything we cherish.
It is too bad that our churches are now closed for public
worship, for today, we are gifted with the story of Jesus and his friend
Lazarus. Today we understand that Jesus knows only too well the pain of losing
someone close to him. Troubled in spirit, moved by deeper emotions, Jesus wept.
Some Scripture scholars believe that the words “He was deeply
troubled in spirit” would be better translated “he was angry.” Jesus was angry
as we have been angry when life is disrupted and we are helpless. For all
intents and purposes Jesus would have agreed with Danny Thomas’ father; “Damn
Death!” Jesus was not philosophical about death, nor does God expect us to be
stoical, unmoved in the face of death – anyone’s death.
So why do we read this lengthy gospel two weeks before
Easter? Because followers of Christ like us believe that, in Jesus, God has
indeed damned death.
In his Passion, Jesus did not bypass the terrors of death.
He met death head on. Jesus was not willing to give death the last word. We
hear that conviction in today’s gospel when Jesus says to Martha “I am the
resurrection and the Life. Whoever believes in me, even though he dies will
live” (John 11.25). In other words, we are made for life, not for death. We are
made for God, the living God, the God of life. Death is the antithesis of
everything Jesus represents, of everything He is. He is life.
This is why Easter is the critical, central feast of our
Faith. This is why we prepare ourselves for it during Lent – any Lent – but
this one, with its remarkable face-to-face encounter with death. This is why we
read this gospel today.
It helps us focus on our belief that one day, Jesus will say
to all of us as he said standing before the tomb in Bethany so long ago:
“Lazarus! Martha! Mary! And all
of you, my beloved friends: Come out! Into the Light!
Untie them and let them go free.”
~Sister Joan
Sobala
Wednesday, March 18, 2020
Calling Upon Faith To Help Us Through the Darkness
Dear Friends,
One of the things Jesus says about Himself , quoting Isaiah
in Luke’s gospel, is that “he was sent to bring new sight to the blind.” It’s
no wonder then that all four Gospels tell stories of how Jesus cured blindness.
John’s story of the man born blind and his encounter with Jesus is much more
detailed. It is a rich source of illumination about life for it deals not only
with spiritual insight and the triumph of light over darkness, but also the struggle
in life against the power of human darkness.
Caught up as we are in the Coronavirus pandemic, we may become distracted from other
important aspects of life and be
inclined to shed the daily food that sustains us spiritually – the
Gospel, prayer, the recognition of God’s abiding and tender presence, our concern for and service of others. We might find ourselves stuck in the
darkness. Plato, centuries before Christ, reminded us that “we can easily
forgive a child who is afraid of the dark. The real tragedy in life is when
adults are afraid of the light.”
In this time of potential panic, let us not be afraid of the
light. Instead, let us call upon faith to help sustain us through the
threatening darkness of world-wide illness.
Three thoughts about the journey out of darkness seem
important for us to consider:
It’s a very long
journey from blindness to sight to insight. Most often, we carry our blindness
alone, accommodate to it until Jesus stands before us, touches us and urges us
to take the next steps if we want to see. Left alone, we stay blind. Sharing
what we experience may be very helpful.
We come to insight
only when others challenge what our sight means. In today’s Gospel, the
Pharisees jeer and deride, threaten the man born blind with rejection. They try
to make him back down from the truth of his experience. But his truth, his
determination is greater than their pressure.
Holding fast to the truth of his experience, the man born
blind prefigures Jesus – who from his capture in the Garden of Gethsemane to
His death on the cross is challenged by the powerful who also jeer and deride
Him .They try to derail Jesus from embracing the deep meaning of what he is
doing.
Just as the man born
blind was instructed to wash his eyes, we too have been washed at the
instruction of Jesus. We call our washing
Baptism – a once- in-a-
lifetime event which we draw upon all our lives. In Baptism, we receive the
promise, the invitation and the grace to be one with the Risen Christ. But
there is no automatic guarantee that we will live in the light. Living out the
promise, the invitation and the grace is our work. That’s one reason to keep
Lent carefully, especially in this stressful year.
Are we afraid of the light? If not, then we are not afraid to
experience Christ coming through
self-giving, suffering and death to
radiant light to walk with us at this fearful time. It is in His light that we will see where we
are, and how to make our way through the days ahead.
~Sister Joan Sobala
Thursday, March 12, 2020
More to St Patrick's Day Than Meets the Eye

Dear Friends,
There’s more to St. Patrick’s Day than meets the eye. It’s
the tip of a rich form of Christianity that began with Patrick in the 5th
century, grew with Brigid, Abbess of Kildaire, also in the 5th century and took off across the Irish Sea with
Columba, a 6th century monk from northern Ireland, who landed on the small island of
Iona in the Inner Hebrides. There in 563, Columba founded Iona Monastery. Long
before Columba’s arrival, Iona had been considered a holy place, where Vikings,
the Irish and Scots had buried their kings. It was considered to be a thin place, that is a place where the membrane between
heaven and earth was so thin that someone standing there could easily touch
heaven.
Columba’s monastery flourished. The monks farmed, taught
local people and worked on illustrated copies of the Scriptures, preserving
them in this isolated place while the continent of Europe seemed to be shrouded
in forgetful darkness. The famous Book of
Kells, enshrined at Trinity College,
Dublin, is actually an illuminated manuscript labored over by the monks of
Iona, beginning 800.
By the middle of the 7th century, a Roman style
of structuring the Church was being promoted in the Isles. This Roman style consisted of dioceses with bishops, priests, deacons and
parishes. The Celtic style implied that local communities were clustered around
monasteries, where people prayed, studied and were kept safe from marauders. In
664, with the Abbess Hilda presiding over the Synod of Whitby, King Oswy of Northumbria chose the
Roman style of structuring church. While the
Abbey of Iona resisted the Roman
mission well into the latter part of the 9th Century, the formally
structured Celtic mission was ended in 1203. People in Ireland and Scotland
nonetheless continued the Celtic prayers, songs
and theology on their own. Since
1900, Celtic Christianity has experienced a revival which many of our peers
find helpful for prayer and spiritual growth. It is not antithetical to other
expressions of Christianity. Rather, it is a way of listening to God and acting
out of the inner beckoning of God.
Good and holy things,
like Celtic Spirituality, have a way of reappearing and appealing to people who
revive them for the good of all. I am skipping a lot of history but want to
tell you that, today, the Abbey of Iona is flourishing, as part of the Church of
Scotland with strong ecumenical ties. Celtic spirituality flourishes today
through the music of John Bell, the writings of John Phillip Newell and John
Donohue. Celtic Christianity as seen
through their music, prayer and writings emphasizes God at the heart of
Creation and the goodness of all life. There is a profound Trinitarian motif running through Celtic
Spirituality, as we see in this ancient prayer:
“The Sacred Three/ My fortress be/ Encircling me/ Come and be/ ‘round my
hearth and home.”
John Donohue revived the ancient term ,”anam cara”, the name
given to a person who acted as a spiritual guide, companion and teacher –
someone who was the truest mirror to reflect our soul.
According to the spiritual vision of the ancient Celts,
Jesus is the secret Anam Cara (the soul friend) of every person, What a wonderful way to pray. Jesus, Soul Friend. Jesus , Anam
Cara.
~Sister Joan Sobala
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