Taking a break here.
In case you hadn't noticed.
May your holidays be peaceful and fruitful.
Treasure the every day.
Treasure the every day.
"At the center of our being is a point of nothingness ~ of pure truth ~ a spark ~ like a pure diamond, blazing with the invisible light of heaven ~ The Gate of Heaven is everywhere!" [Thomas Merton]
Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore,Dickens: "It was the best of times. It was the worst of times..."
So do our minutes hasten to their end;
Each changing place with that which goes before,
In sequent toil all forwards do contend.
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time. [TS Eliot: Four Quartets]
Everyone gets challenged in life and you can either spend the rest of your life looking backwards, or you can make a decision to keep going.Wisdom through suffering; that's what the Greeks called it. But not everyone learns wisdom from the suffering.
My favorite place in the world is the Beartooth Plateau. Hardly a year goes by when I don't visit. The wind whistles up there and the air is icy cold when a rock wall shuts off the sun. There is an upland meadow at about 3000 meters that I love especially. If you drive the Chief Joseph Highway and, reaching the pass, look northwest, you will see it: a vast table in the sky.
The tumult of this autumn never reaches that place, just the wind whistling in the little stands of trees that punctuates the grass expanse. One can look south toward the Sunlight Basin from there and see the austere peaks rising...what does it mean to them that we are entering a new age...perhaps a golden age at that?
I am weary, feeling my age multiplied by illness and responsibility, seeing the changes coming, and knowing how much distress they will cause some on the short term. But the Plateau endures and so shall our species; we are contemporaries after all, and all this tumult is so much wind, so many fleeting photons ghosting through the ringing air.
We were in a restaurant having something to eat, and the Baroness was talking about priests, and about the spiritual life and gratitude, and the ten lepers in the Gospel, of whom only one returned to give thanks to Christ for having cured them. She had made what seemed to me to be certainly a good point. But I suddenly noticed that it had struck the two Friars like a bombshell.
Then I realized what was going on. ... I had not grasped before how much this was part of her work: priests and religious had become indirectly, almost as important a mission field as her work in Harlem. ... When the Spirit of God finds a soul in which He can work, He uses that soul for any number of purposes: opens out before its eyes a hundred new directions, multiplying its works and its opportunities for the apostolate, almost beyond belief and certainly far beyond the ordinary strength of a human being.
Here was this woman who had started out to conduct a more or less obscure work helping the poor in Harlem, now placed in such a position that the work which had barely been begun was drawing to her souls from every part of the country, and giving her a sort of unofficial apostolate among the priesthood, the clergy, and the religious Orders.
What was it that she had to offer them, that they did not already possess? One thing: she was full of the love of God; and prayer and sacrifice and total uncompromising poverty had filled her soul with something which, it seemed, these two men had often looked for in vain in the dry and conventional and merely learned retreats that fell to their lot. And I could see that they were drawn to her by the tremendous spiritual vitality of the grace that was in her, a vitality which brought with it a genuine and lasting inspiration, because it put their souls in contact with God as a living reality. And that reality, that contact, is something which we all need: and one of the ways in which it has been decreed that we should arrive at it, is by hearing one another talk about God. Fides ex auditu. And it is no novelty for God to raise up saints who are not priests to preach to those who are priests -- witness the Baroness's namesake, Catherine of Sienna.I might put it differently. He might too. Had he been alive today. Reminds me of St. Francis: "Preach always. If necessary, use words." And that reminds me of another Francis. Who preaches by example. Whose words yesterday match the way he lives: "St. Peter did not have a bank account."
Only those with no imagination, and no grounding in reality, would deny the possibility that they will live forever. It’s possible that many reading these words will never die. Let’s assume, though, that we all have a set number of days to indent the world with our beliefs, to find and create the beauty that only a finite existence allows for, to wrestle with the question of purpose and wrestle with our answers.
...
Most of the time, most people are not crying in public, but everyone is always in need of something that another person can give, be it undivided attention, a kind word or deep empathy. There is no better use of a life than to be attentive to such needs. There are as many ways to do this as there are kinds of loneliness, but all of them require attentiveness, all of them require the hard work of emotional computation and corporeal compassion. All of them require the human processing of the only animal who risks “getting it wrong” and whose dreams provide shelters and vaccines and words to crying strangers.
I love this guy! Wow! His words echo in my heart... "to indent the world with our beliefs, to find and create the beauty that only a finite existence allows for, to wrestle with the question of purpose and wrestle with our answers."We live in a world made up more of story than stuff. We are creatures of memory more than reminders, of love more than likes. Being attentive to the needs of others might not be the point of life, but it is the work of life. It can be messy, and painful, and almost impossibly difficult. But it is not something we give. It is what we get in exchange for having to die.
An anecdote from his former spokesman Guillermo Marcó when Bergoglio was the archbishop of Buenos Aires. On February 21, 2001, Bergoglio was in Rome to be anointed cardinal. As they got ready to leave the house for priests where they were staying, Marcó asked how they should travel to the Vatican.
"Walking, of course," said Bergolgio. Marcó protested that Bergoglio was wearing his red robe. "Don't worry," Bergoglio said. "In Rome you could walk with a banana on your head an nobody would say anything."
When they arrived to the Holy see on foot, the Vatican guard was astounded. "The majority of cardinals arrived with large retinues," Marcó said. "Bergoglio arrived with just myself and a couple of relatives." [The Guardian]
St. Francis was moved when praying by a voice from the altar, which spoke these words: “Go, Francis, and repair my house, which as you see is falling into ruin.”I have posted a reflection on the scriptural underpinnings of these words which St. Francis passed along to us, and which undoubtedly would be well known to this new Pope - who has chosen to follow (and lead us along) the path of his forebear. (You can find it here.)
The benighted man thinks,There's a lot of beauty and wisdom in that psalm, even if it contradicts itself in places.
"God does not care."
Man's deeds are corrupt and loathsome;
no one does good.
The LORD looks down from heaven on mankind
to find a man of understanding
a man mindful of God.
All have turned bad
altogether foul;
there is none who does good,
not even one.
Are they so witless all these evil doers,
who devour my people as they devour food,
and do not invoke the LORD?
There they will be seized with fright,
for God is present in the circle of the righteous.
You may set at naught the counsel of the lowly,
but the LORD is his refuge.
O that the deliverance of Israel might come from Zion!
When the LORD restores the fortunes of His people,
Jacob will exult, Israel will rejoice.