Dear Friends,
Jesus, I think, was very clever.
He used the ordinary things of life in such extraordinary ways that you and I can never quite use them in ordinary ways again.
Take bread for example. “Give us this day our daily bread,” Jesus teaches us to pray (Matthew 6.11). Our daily bread is the encouraging word, the news that warring parties in distant lands have laid down their arms, the Eucharist in which we partake, the insight we come to, the touch of love. Our daily bread.
Jesus is himself our daily bread. “I am the bread of life,” he tells us (Jn.6.34-35). “No one who comes to me will ever be hungry.” No one. No one will ever be hungry.
I have a feeling that Jesus threw us a curve with that one. We tend to want to take him literally – but we know better. Hunger exists. Hunger has many faces. Sometimes when we are restless or feel lonely, misguided or very small, we are hungry for something we don’t have in a literal sense. But if we believe that Jesus spoke the truth, then we are indeed being fed all along by our God, but don’t necessarily recognize it. The Bread of Life will feed us. We are sustained by the Bread of Life.
Isaiah’s words are the same as Christ’s promise to us: “The Lord will give you the bread you need” (Isaiah 30.20). To you, to me, to everyone without exception.
Jesus gives himself to us at Eucharist. His Body and Blood take over the perceived bread and wine and He becomes food and drink to nourish us daily and through life. That is what we celebrate on this feast of Corpus Christi – the feast of the Body and Blood of Christ. Moreover, as Pope Leo the Great put it in the fifth century, “Our sharing in the Body and Blood of Christ has no other purpose than to transform us into that which we receive.” Today, we celebrate the feast of our being transformed into Christ if we allow it and welcome it.
We could spend time over the question, “How can this be?” More to the point, let us be glad today that our God is a creative God, who does the unthinkable, the unimaginable so that we may be nourished for the journey and that our own imaginations may lead us to new ways of nourishing others in the Name of God.
“Taste and see the Goodness of the Lord,” we pray.
~Sister Joan Sobala
Friday, June 21, 2019
Sunday, June 16, 2019
Mirroring God
Dear Friends,
One
Easter Sunday, the parents of a parishioner where I served came from my home
town of Lackawanna NY to Mass. They came bearing a wedding picture I had never
seen before. “Did I know anyone in the photo?” they asked. My eyes passed over
the bride and groom, others seated and standing around them, and there- at the
end of the second row, I saw my grandfather, my Dziadzia, as I called him in
Polish. I knew him immediately, even though Dziadzia was 55 years old and
balding when I was born. I never knew this handsome young man with a dignified
air, but I recognized him, just as each of us recognizes people who are not
physically present to us – the voice on the phone, the distinctive laugh, the
long lost cousin, the person in our dreams, the soul-mate we discovered in a
letter or across the Internet or across the room.
Today
is the feast of recognizing the God in whom we live and move and have our
being. We celebrate the Trinity – the fullness of God whom we worship but who
is beyond our grasp – God whom Jesus reveals to Nicodemus in today’s Gospel,
the God who walks with Moses in the first reading – the truth of God, made
evident by the Holy Spirit.
So
often in our lives, we make a tidy package of what we know about God, or
ourselves or other people for that matter. Satisfied, we put that tiny package
on a shelf with a sense of finality. Plop! There it is to gather dust! And we
go about our lives.
“She’s
always been like that,” we say. “He
can’t possibly change.” “You did what?” But the Spirit of
Truth cautions us. Never say “never.”(never say “always”, for that matter.) If there is life, there is newness. Through all the welcomed, tolerated,
unwanted events of life, through our delights and sufferings, endurance and
hope, you and I are being drawn more deeply into the life of God: Creator,
Redeemer, Sanctifier. We are not being invited just to gaze on God. We are
called into the very Heart of God – to be one with God. Throughout our lives,
we are surrounded, sustained and encouraged by a God whose very nature is to
share.
To put
it another way, the Christian doctrine of the Trinity not only teaches us
something about the nature of God, but it tells us who we are. Our lives are
interwoven with the very life of God and when we are at our best, we mirror
God’s life of interdependence and unconditional love.
Today,
let us give ourselves up to the celebration of God who loves us so thoroughly
and well.
-Sister Joan Sobala
Sunday, June 9, 2019
Come Holy Spirit
Dear Friends,
Each year, in late May or early June, driving along the
country roads and Thruway in Upstate New York, wild phlox can be seen tucked
away at the edges of woods, in dainty clusters or occasionally in generous
swaths. Pink and purple and white, the wild phlox seems to appear out of
nowhere and then it’s gone.
I think of the Holy Spirit when I see these flowers, obscure,
often missed by the unperceptive eye. So often we miss the Holy Spirit in our
personal lives and our lives together.
The Holy Spirit: God - given to us by Christ and His Father, and God
received. The attentiveness and the
allure of God which causes us to burn with the fire of God’s love.
The Irish theologian,
Diarmuid O’Murchu composed a prayer to the Holy Spirit, which I offer here. In
it, O’Murchu gives insight into the breadth and depth and scope
of God the Spirit’s reach in human life. Pray it out loud, if you can. Let your
ears hear it as well as your eyes see it:
Come Holy Spirit, breathe down upon our troubled world,
Come Holy Spirit, breathe down upon our troubled world,
Shake the tired foundations of
our crumbling institutions,
Break the rules that keep you out of all our sacred spaces.
And from the dust and rubble,
gather up the seedlings of a new creation.
Come Holy Spirit , inflame
once more the dying embers
Of our weariness, shake us out
of our complacency,
Whisper our names once more, and
scatter your gifts of grace with wild abandon.
Break open the prisons of our
inner being
And let your raging justice be a
sign of our liberty.
Come Holy Spirit, and lead
us to places we would rather not go;
Expand the horizons of our
limited imaginations.
Awaken in our souls dangerous
dreams for a new tomorrow,
And rekindle in our hearts the
fire of prophetic enthusiasm.
Come Holy Spirit, whose
justice outwits international conspiracy;
Whose light outshines spiritual
bigotry,
Whose peace can overcome the
destructive potential of warfare,
Whose promise invigorates our
every effort
To create a new Heave and a new
Earth,
Now and forever.
-Sister Joan Sobala
Sunday, June 2, 2019
Let God be God
Dear Friends,
In a moment of candor, a precocious seven year old girl
confided to me that she liked the world
very much because it was sooooo interesting, but she wasn’t so sure about
heaven. She thought that heaven was very
dull.” Why so?” I asked. “Because God is
dull,” she shot back. “God never changes, and the same old thing, day after
day, is dull.”
I have no doubt that some of us are like that seven year old
when it comes to God, unsure of God as being lovable and absorbing.
God, in classical theological language, is often portrayed
in bigger than life terms” all-knowing, all-seeing, without beginning or end. Many of us know the biblical phrase
“yesterday, today and tomorrow are all the same with God”(Heb. 3.8) or “a
thousand days with the Lord are as one.”(Ps.90.4)
We can’t wrap our arms around these concepts like we wrap
our arms around a person. These words overwhelm us who travel through life an
inch at a time, sometimes with our horizon only as far as the end of our nose.
Yet, in today’s Gospel.
Jesus prays: “Father, I have revealed your name to them and I will
continue to reveal it…”(John 17.26)
So what are some of the names of God and what are the
characteristics of God that can appeal to us, make us excited, warm and eager
over God? What are some of the embraceable qualities of God?
Our God is a learning
God… God in Jesus, who came to teach us the ways of truth, justice and
integrity, first had to learn what these meant in human terms.
Our God is a laughing God… the 14th Century
mystic Meister Eckhart in a poetic moment says “The whole Trinity laughs and
gives birth to us.” God’s sense of humor is rich and deep. Take a look at
creation!
Our God is the Great Attractor…like fragrant flowers attract
bees and hummingbirds, God attracts us if we allow it. Do we allow ourselves to
be attracted by God?
Our God treasures the useless…Our age and place in the world
are enamored of the useful, the practical and the productive. Our judgments of
value are wrapped up in utility. Sometimes people say they hate that part of
themselves they consider useless. Sometimes, old people describe themselves as
useless- as if that’s bad. But our God values the very being of all that is. It
is enough to be.
We cannot exhaust God, because God’s originality and freshness
keep surprising us. As the playwright Christopher Fry
noted: in our time and place “The enterprise is exploration into God.”
In this week before Pentecost, as we pray a welcome for
God’s Spirit in our world, our church, our lives, let us also pray a welcome
for God as God is, beyond our well-defined categories. Let us let God be God.
-Sister Joan Sobala
Thursday, May 23, 2019
Welcome a Summer Rich in Playfulness
Dear Friends,
On this Memorial Day weekend, we remember with deep
gratitude all who served our nation to prevent the destruction of democracy in
our country and beyond. We remember them and we thank God for their generosity which exceeded
even their strength and their lives.
As Americans, modern, liberated, technologically savvy and
living in a fast-evolving culture, we have a hard time with play unless it’s on
a computer or with a video game. Play, we say is for children – and I agree.
Children who are 3, 10, 20, 40 and 72!
All too early in our lives, we begin to take the business of life too
seriously. Beginning at 4 or so, we are taught read, write, how to study, how
to get along in society, but very little is done to promote and encourage us to
play. I don’t mean organized sports or summer study/enrichment camps. I mean that no one encourages us to
develop a life-long attitude and practice of playfulness, that is doing
the unnecessary and delightful with enthusiasm.
So we end up feeling strange or guilty or even silly when we feel the urge to play, to dance, to sing.
In 2 Samuel
6.14, we hear how David danced “with abandon” before the Ark of the Covenant,
giddy with delight because the Ark of the Covenant was being carried in procession, while his wife
Michal turned away in disgust at such a display. Maybe we are too antiseptic to
play in our new slacks or with our
carefully arranged hair. Maybe we’ll get sweaty.
What is there about play anyway that makes me want to add to
the beatitudes “Blessed are those who play…”
For one thing, play
requires faith in people. We need
to believe that the world will not fall apart if we take time to play. We need
to believe that people want to play with us. We need to trust in the people we
love to temporarily abdicate out sense of adulthood in order to play, and that
the give and take of play is pleasurable.
It’s also true that the
truly, deeply human person is playful. The laughter that bubbles up within
us when we are playing, the sense of being well-glued, the perspective that monumental things may just not be as monumental as we like to believe are
indications that play, in its own way, is life-giving and meaningful.
Finally, a playful
person is a sign of God’s presence. When we stop to think about it, the
creation of the universe was a playful act on God’s part. God was engaged in doing
the unnecessary, and God was certainly enthusiastic and dare I say imaginative
and silly? (Think zebra, giraffe,
porcupine, whale, saguaro cacti…) We do
not change the course of life when we play, but our course through life, with its
playful diversions, can lead us to shout out to the world: “The Lord has done
great things for us. We are glad indeed.” May you have a summer rich in
playfulness.
-Sister Joan Sobala
Thursday, May 16, 2019
The Journey of Missionaries
Dear
Friends,
Each year
during May, a second collection is taken up in our diocese for Diocesan
Missions abroad. May is a fitting time to do that, for May is Easter time. When
Jesus left his disciples after the
Resurrection, He said to them, “Go and make disciple of all nations.” That call
was further conveyed to the whole church by the Second Vatican Council. Our
diocese was particularly mission-minded, with wide-ranging programs which
educated both adults and children that everyone, by virtue of baptism was to be
mission-minded. In addition, while Religious Orders of women and men had been
sending missionaries out for the whole of the twentieth century and before, this
was a new moment. Sisters and priests, used to ministering in our diocese, were
asked to consider being missionaries.
In our
diocese, the Sisters of Saint Joseph were the first to respond, sending five
Sisters to the Diocese of Jatai, Brazil, in August of 1964. Initially, we
worked in education, nursing and parish ministry. Our sisters are still in
Brazil, but spread from north to south, in the interior and in cities, engaged
in new works as needs emerged. The Sisters of Mercy went to Santiago, Chile in
August 1965 and worked in ministries to families. Eventually they too moved
into rural places to do pastoral work among the very poor. The Sisters of Mercy
remain in in Chile today.
Our
auxiliary bishop, Lawrence B. Casey, met the archbishop of La Paz, Bolivia, in
Rome during the Council. A plan was developed to invite our priests to go to La
Paz for service. Fr. Peter Deckman and Father Tom O’Brien went in 1966 to work
at San Jose Obrero, a parish in the northern part of the city. Priests from other dioceses in the USA also
ministered in LaPaz parishes. (The Archbishop was resourceful in getting the
help he needed!) Between 1966 and 1974, when the mission ended, five priests
and a layman from our diocese worked hard to prepare the people to take over
the functioning of the parish, which they do to his day. The original plan was
not that our clergy remain there, but that they be interim – in the service of
the people at a time of specific need.
I had the
privilege of traveling some five thousand miles through Brazil visiting our
Sister’s missions. Three brief anecdotes put a human face on their activities.
In Goiania, a city of over a million, recent arrivals from the interior were
given a small plot of land and some money to build a house. They were relegated
to the red clay hills on the edges of the city. All they could afford to build
initially were “half houses”. (Think of a house that had a central roof line.
Now cut that house in half.) When the people had saved enough money to build a
church in their midst, the Benedictines were commissioned to create a tabernacle.
As the artists listened to the people, the shape of the tabernacle became
clear. The tabernacle was created in the shape of a half house. On it were the
words, “God lives here.”
Two of us traveled by bus for 18 hours to get
to our Sisters who lived and worked in the Amazon region. The bus was no
Trailways! Two drivers were on board. So were people, their chickens and
bundles of what not. I held a sleeping girl on my lap fir six hours. When we
needed to cross a river, one driver got out and guided the other over two beams
that spanned the river.
Later in the
trip, near the equator, one of our Sisters took us on a long jeep trip to an
area where indigenous people lived. We were going to the funeral of chief who
had been assassinated by thugs, who, people believed, were hired by greedy
landowners who wanted the indigenous people’s land. At the funeral, the wife of
the slain chief stood in the midst of the people. In a strong voice, she
proclaimed. “Today, we are not here to bury my husband. No. We plant him, and
from his life and death, we draw strength to go forward to be strong and firm
in our quest for justice.”
It is
mistaken to believe that as missionaries our Sisters and priests went to Latin
America to bring faith to the people. The faith was already there. We were,
instead, to accompany them on their journey as they discerned their hopes,
needs and desires for life.
It was and
is a journey worth our taking.
Friday, May 10, 2019
The Motherhood of All Nurturers
Long before there was Mother’s Day, there were mothers,
every day of the year, year in and year out.
Every now and again, newspapers feature a photo of four generations of women. The handing over of life one to another in love.
The now deceased Fr. Emmett Halloran’s mother died birthing
him. Eventually, Emmett’s dad gave him a new mother when he married a second
time. I wonder, though, if the memory of his mother dying in birthing him was a
seed of Emmett’s priestly vocation – a different way of handing over life one
to another.
Our society talks about birth mothers, natural mothers,
foster and stepmothers, single mothers, the women and men who have never given
birth but who nurture individual life and groups of people. Jean Vanier died
earlier this month. He is the founder of the L’Arche community movement, where
ordinary people live with the disabled in community. The motherhood of Jean
Vanier and his life-sustaining network. .
What we celebrate today is the motherhood of all nurturers:
the motherhood of many, including the motherhood of Mary and the motherhood of
God. There hasn’t been a time in Christian history that people have not been
stirred to honor Mary, Theotokos, as she is called in Greek, the Mother of God. And when, on the cross, Jesus gave Mary to John, Jesus gave Mary to all of us
as mother.
Some groups in Christian history have made her equal to God,
but she is not. Mary is, however, the first disciple of Jesus, our friend,
companion and the model of how to say yes to God and be faithful to that
yes.
And then there is the motherhood of God. The medieval theologians
St. Anselm and St. Hildegard of Bingen, and the too-short-lived Pope John Paul
I wrote and spoke of Jesus our Mother and God our Mother.
In the Gospel, Jesus refers to Himself as a mother hen,
gathering her brood (Mt. 23.37, Lk. 13.34). And in the Book of Revelation (Rev.
21.4) God is a comforting Mother, wiping away the tears from every eye, as we
recall our own mothers doing.
The mothering qualities we treasure – steadfast love,
generosity, openheartedness – are first of all found in God.
So on this Mother’s Day, when we think of Christ’s message of
abundant love, as we speak the names of all the mothers we have known, let’s
commit ourselves to that same kind of love – love that is active, strong,
inclusive and unending.
To borrow from Pope Francis, “A world without mothers would
be inhuman, because mothers always know how to give witness, even in the worst
of times to tenderness, dedication and moral strength.”
~Sister Joan Sobala
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