Dear
Friends,
Today has
many meanings in the various aspects of life we live: we look back on Jesus’
Ascension and look forward to the coming of the Holy Spirit. We also celebrate
Memorial Day. Together, they speak to us of unity and hope. To begin, we look at Jesus. Throughout his
public ministry, Jesus preached his message in word and action. The way he
treated the needy and the powerful, the stories he told, the succinct
one-liners he shared, the Lord’s Prayer all highlighted Jesus’ message. His message
was not a private gift to a select few to be hoarded, but a public message to
be spoken and lived by the whole company of believers and the world as well.
In his
prayer for his disciples in John 17, Jesus had prayed: “I have entrusted to
them the message you, Father, entrusted to me, and they have received it.” John
17.1-11. The message.
People don’t
receive any one message the same way. We all receive a message according to our
capacity to receive it, according to our consciousness, vision and imagination.
Mary
Magdalen for example, received and passed on the message about Christ’s resurrection
in ways different from Peter and Thomas. There are as many nuances to the
message of Jesus as there are people receiving it.
If you saw
the movie Crocodile Dundee, you remember him musing over the battle between the
Australian Aborigines and the settlers from Europe. “Our squabbles,” Dundee
said, “are like those of two fleas on the back of a dog arguing who owns the
dog.”
No one owns
the dog – and in the case of Jesus – no one owns his message. It belonged to
all of Jesus’ contemporary disciples and it belongs to us.
So here we
are – in between the Ascension and Pentecost – potentially a time when we
realize in a fresh way that the prayer of Jesus washes over us and the message
of Jesus urges us forward to help shape with one another a better world, our
eye fixed on the coming reign of God. No one of us owns the message, but each
of us knows the message in a unique way. That’s why it’s so important for us to
speak up and work in ways that arise from our grasp of Jesus’ message. Jesus never
told his followers that discipleship would be easy. There would be suffering if
they tried to make Jesus’ message felt in the world, but he also promised that
this suffering would not overwhelm them.
This year,
Memorial Day falls between Ascension and Pentecost, and we as a nation remember
with tenderness men and women who have given their lives somewhere in the world
that those of us here are home might be free. I can’t help thinking of the
soldiers who lie in Flanders’ Field beneath the poppies, who responded to the
call of the nation to go fight and die. In death, they passed the torch to
others, and the presence of God in Jesus wove through the courageous actions of
the fallen and those who finished the task. Other wars at other times gave us
empty seats at our tables, heroes and veterans. The days of war were
significant for them and for their families. We remember. The stuff of Memorial
Day is made of such memories and such lives.
As Memorial
Day is layered with the anticipation of Pentecost, as we go about our daily
lives from home to work to our volunteer efforts, as we celebrate family and
friends or make decisions about life, as we meet and welcome the refugee and
the stranger, I hope we can join each other all week long in waiting and
prayer. The message of Jesus is within us. Go. Be ready to spread the good news.
Make peace real in our day. Come Holy Spirit!
~ Sister
Joan Sobala
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