Feisty Children

As I write this post, my 4-year-old son is sitting in “time out” because he disobeyed Mom.  From his perspective, I am not being nice.  But from my perspective, this restrictive act (temporarily curtailing his freedom), is slowly setting my son free.  He is learning by cause and effect what is acceptable behavior in relationships so that once he is “full-grown,” he will make good use of all that free will.

Would you agree that Julian’s perspective right now is immature and incomplete?  Would you agree that he can trust me, that I have his best interest at heart?  Would you agree that I want nothing more than his happiness, and that I yearn for a strong, healthy and loving relationship with him when he is an adult (which is a much longer-term situation than how he feels about me tonight)?  Would you agree that what he is experiencing now is less like punishment and more like . . . molding clay (cf. Jer. 19:1-11)? 

Think of yourself as a feisty 4-year-old whose loving parent wants nothing more than your happiness, your freedom, and ultimately, your love.  Think of God patiently waiting for you to grow in maturity and wisdom – loving you, teaching you and nourishing you along the way. These words from the prophet Hosea tell it perfectly – tell of the parent whose “bands of love” are not always recognized as kindness by the sometimes rebellious, always beloved, child:

When Israel was a child, I loved him,
    and out of Egypt I called my son.
The more I called them,
    the more they went from me;
they kept sacrificing to [false gods],
    and offering incense to idols.

Yet it was I who taught Ephraim to walk,
    I took them up in my arms;
    but they did not know that I healed them.
I led them with cords of human kindness,
    with bands of love.
I was to them like those
    who lift infants to their cheeks.
    I bent down to them and fed them (Hosea 11:1-4).

A Verse Worth Memorizing

My Catholic Biblical School class is currently knee-deep in our study of the Pauline letters (that means we’ve only made it through Thessalonians and Corinthians!).  Reading St. Paul plunges us into something that is simultaneously transcendent and down-to-earth, mystical and practical, inspiring and instructive.  This tension – which Paul maintains with every stroke of the pen – deftly delivers something that modern readers find elusive in their own lives:  the integration of “real life” and “the spiritual life.”  Remember, Paul was first and foremost a missionary, secondly a pastor (a shepherd), and only thirdly a theologian.  What Paul wrote, he wrote for a purpose – for real people facing real problems, for Christian communities struggling just like our communities do today.  His theology emerged from “real life.” 

The Second Letter to the Corinthians is one of my favorite Pauline books.  In it we witness Paul’s passion for the Gospel, his love for his people, his zeal, his temper, his sense of humor and his creativity.  The book also provides rich examples of Paul’s theology presented in the context of “real life” situations.  One such example is found in 2 Cor. 1:15-24.  Here Paul is offering a bit of self-defense:  the Corinthian community was apparently miffed with him because he did not visit them as he had planned.  They accused him of vacillating, of being unreliable.  Paul heard about this and wanted to address it.  He wanted to assure them that he changed his mind for a reason, not simply on a whim or because he cared little for the community. 

In this situation, most of us would simply write, “I did not come because ____.”  But it’s almost as though Paul can’t stop thinking about, writing about, teaching about Jesus Christ!  For him, Christ is the foundation of all things, the answer to all things.  And so his explanation of why he did not visit Corinth becomes yet another opportunity to teach about the goodness of God in Christ Jesus:

“Was I vacillating when I wanted to do this?  Do I make my plans according to ordinary human standards, ready to say ‘Yes, yes’ and ‘No, no’ at the same time? As surely as God is faithful, our word to you has not been ‘Yes and No.’ For the Son of God, Jesus Christ, whom we proclaimed among you…was not ‘Yes and No’; but in him it is always ‘Yes.’ For in him every one of God’s promises is a ‘Yes.’ For this reason it is through him that we say the ‘Amen’, to the glory of God” (2 Cor. 1:17-20).

We can see how Paul’s self-defense quickly flows into an account of God’s own faithfulness.  Paul does not vacillate weakly between “yes” and “no” – for he is a follower of Jesus Christ, who does not vacillate; he believes in a God who keeps every promise! 

One verse from this section really struck me as I studied it this year.  It's just like St. Paul to put all the pieces together with a statement like this: 

“In [Jesus Christ] every one of God’s promises is a ‘Yes’” (2 Cor. 1:20a).

Would it be going too far to say that this verse sums up all of Scripture?  It is surely a verse worth memorizing, a verse worth imprinting on our hearts.  As we enter this New Year, may we take comfort in the faithfulness of our God, remembering that in Jesus Christ, every one of God’s promises – to his people, to his Church, to our families, to each one of us – is an emphatic “Yes!”  And following Paul’s example, let us remember how deep we can go, and how profound our knowledge of Christ can be, even in the midst of real life.

Meditation on Suffering

From Workshop "The Agony in the Garden as a Model of Human Suffering"

At this weekend’s Faith & Evangelization Congress (Archdiocese of Hartford), I reflected with participants on Jesus’ agony in the Garden of Gethsemane.  We considered what makes this story so unique:  it is a time of intense reflection between the ministry and death of Jesus; it is a period of mental and emotional struggle before the physical trial of the Cross; and it is a place where Jesus wrestles within himself, surrenders to the will of the Father, and is ultimately strengthened to move forward.  We looked closely at the parallel accounts in Matthew 26:36-46, Mark 14:32-42 and Luke 22:40-46 and closed our session with a meditation on suffering.  Some participants asked if this last part of the presentation could be made available, and I’m happy to share it here.  Though the meditation begins by asking the question of why we suffer, I suppose it really more closely addresses the question, What does it mean? 

I’d like to offer a brief meditation to wrap up our thoughts on suffering and what we have learned from Jesus’ Agony in the Garden.  Even though we have talked about how we can learn from and take comfort in this Gospel account of Jesus’ mental and emotional turmoil, we are still left with the perennial human question:  Why do we suffer?  I am not about to unlock the mysteries of the universe, but this is a topic worth revisiting, because rarely a day goes by that we do not suffer in at least some small way, and some days (some weeks, some months, some years), we suffer very much. 

So why do we suffer?  I don’t believe that God inflicts suffering upon us, but it is a fact that he allows it.  We can easily see that the way God cares for us is not by protecting us from all bad things.  But a great lesson of the Cross of course is that God brings great good out of the inevitable suffering of human life.  And because we are a resurrection people who have faith in one who beat back even death itself, who conquered sin once and for all, and who showed us a way to live – we have a perspective on suffering that can offer comfort, hope and meaning.

First, think of suffering not only as an event or as something that happens to you but as a place.  Suffering brings us to a crossroads.  It offers us a difficult choice between two paths.  On both paths, we suffer – there is simply no avoiding that.  But one path is a road that leads right back into ourselves.  When we choose this path, we are alone.  We fret, we become bitter, we stagnate, we go nowhere.  We just get stuck.  The other path before us is the one that turns us outward – in our suffering, we embrace people and relationships.  We open ourselves to God.  We choose to have faith in one who is with us when we suffer.  When we allow suffering to open us up this way, despite our pain, we are free.  We go places.  We may even flourish.  This is why St. Paul wrote, “When I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Cor. 12:10).  Because when we already feel strong, when we already are strong, we have no need of God or his transforming presence.  You may recall an itinerant preacher of the 1st century who wisely said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician” (Lk. 5:31).  When I am weak, then I am strong – Why?  Because now it is no longer I that live, but Christ lives in me (Gal. 2:20).  When we are weak, it is then that the “power of Christ” dwells in us (1 Cor. 12:9). 

Of course we know that suffering changes us.  We all know that we are pruned and shaped by the aches and pains of this life.  It does hurt, but if we allow it, we can be transformed.  No human being escapes the pruning shears of suffering, not even the Christ.  His pruning – the pruning of the Master we follow and imitate – brought forth new life and redefined suffering forever.

Friends, we are a part of this “re-definition” of suffering.  The one who suffered in the Garden and died on the Cross invites us near, very near.  So near that we can smell the dirt of the Garden, so near that the nails pierce our hands too.  He never promised we would not suffer.  He simply said, “Follow me.”  He invites us to follow, he invites us close so that we can be like him, so we can be one with him, so we may say with St. Paul:  “I have been crucified with Christ; it is now no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me.  And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself up for me” (Gal. 2:19-20).

When we suffer, Christ is near.  And the surrender of Christ is perhaps the greatest lesson of all – about suffering and how to make peace with it, about love and how to give and receive it, about God and how much he loves us.  Your wrestling matches in your Gardens of Gethsemane, your journeys to Golgotha, the nails in your own hands and feet, the swords that pierce your heart – you have a share in this great lesson, in this great truth, in this awesome surrender of Christ. 

It may seem that surrender would weaken us, make us vulnerable.  But in actuality it strengthens us for anything that may come our way.  We have not “given up.”  We have “surrendered.”  There is a big difference.  Our surrender is not a frustrated throwing up of our hands.  That is not the Christ we see in the Garden.  No, our surrender is deliberate, it is an intentional “giving over” of ourselves and our own will to God because we trust him – we trust him with our bodies, with our minds, and with our futures.  Our surrender is to finally and decidedly speak the words:  Not my will but yours be done.

For when we finally take up our crosses as he told us to – every single day as he told us to – we find in this surrender a way of profound peace.  In our surrender we have finally trusted our God – not to take our pain away, but to be present there with us; not to explain our pain away, but to make of it a time for giving and receiving love; not to ignore our pain, but to help us make of it a place where we can lie with Christ in the dirt of the Garden or hang with him upon the Cross.  It is Jesus who taught us that unless a grain of wheat falls down to the earth and dies, it remains just a seed.  But if it dies, it bears much fruit (Jn. 12:24).  What better place to fall down to the earth and die with Jesus, to be a seed trampled and buried, than in the Garden of Gethsemane?  This is where we are meant to be, for he also said:  “Where I am, there will my servant be also” (Jn. 12:26). 

I close with a final thought.  St. Paul said quite simply:  If we die with him, we will rise with him (Rom. 6:8).  We do not just suffer for the sake of suffering.  We are never left to wait endlessly in a Garden or to hang forever on a Cross.  No, we will rise up from prayer in the Garden, we will be brought down from the Cross.  There is a glory to come – a sharing in the glory of Christ.  Now we have only a foretaste of that glory, when we suffer with him, when we surrender with him, when we place ourselves in the loving hands of God with him.  Yes, we could choose other Masters that might be easier to follow.  But as disciples we would find no greater love and no greater peace; we would hear no richer promises.  So let us join him in the Garden – in the dirt if we must – but always remembering that in our agony we are not alone – we are never alone – we will bear fruit and we will be raised – we who have surrendered with Christ.  

Agonia Prayer

Lord Jesus Christ, in the pages of Scripture, I read the story of your suffering.  It is a story that begins with the rebellion of humankind and plays out over the pages and over the centuries, from the Garden of Eden to the Garden of Gethsemane, from the long road out of Eden to the burdened path to Golgotha.  In the world around me, and in my own life, I see your suffering continue.  Though I find strength within myself and comfort in the support of others, there are times when my self-reliance becomes hollow; there are times when I am alone.  In those times of true agony, I enter the Garden.  I throw myself to the ground before you.  There is nothing left to hide.  There is nothing left to cling to.  I only see the cup before me and the agonia within me.  In my struggle, bring me to a place of peace and surrender:  not my will but yours be done.  Strengthen me to rise from this earth.  Remain with me in this Garden of struggle and surrender, and I will drink this cup:  Into your hands, Lord, I commit my spirit!  Amen.

Enjoying the Good News!

Sometimes when using a psalm in a prayer service, I turn to an old friend:  The Good News Bible.  Although my husband and I had very different upbringings, we both read our Good News Bibles as children, and in some deep part of us, those funny line drawings and those straightforward messages took root.

The Good News Translation (GNT) never claimed to be the most accurate or the most beautiful English language translation of the Word of God.  It isn’t for academic use or for our formal liturgies.  But for giving us a fresh look at familiar passages, or for introducing us to Scripture, it certainly has its place!

This is why I sometimes turn to the Good News Translation for re-introducing the Psalms, or for moving people out of “I know this one” and into a new experience of an old prayer.  Take Psalm 139 for example, a beloved psalm about the nearness of God.  The psalmist is saying:  “Even if I wanted to get away from you, God, I couldn’t!”  The words of this psalm in a translation such as the NRSV are just beautiful:  “If I take the wings of the morning and settle at the farthest limits of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me fast.”  But so are the words of the GNT, stated a bit less poetically perhaps, but with satisfying simplicity:  “If I flew away beyond the east or lived in the farthest place in the west, you would be there to lead me, you would be there to help me” (Ps. 139:9-10).  Both translations have something special to say, and I like them both.

Another example from the same psalm:  Which do you think best expresses the intimacy we had with God before we can remember?  “Your eyes beheld my unformed substance” (NRSV) or “You saw me before I was born” (GNT; Ps. 139:16)?  I cast a hearty vote for the GNT on this one!  You saw me before I was born?!  I love it!

Click here for a side-by-side comparison of Psalm 139 in the NRSV and the GNT.  I hope you will enjoy praying them both.

Note:  If you don’t have a copy of the Good News Bible, you can always look up psalms or verses at biblegateway.com (though you would be missing out on the illustrations!).  You should always check a translation such as the RSV/NRSV or the NABRE for accuracy, but don’t hesitate to pray with the simple words of the GNT.

When Jesus Asks a Question

Have you ever noticed that Jesus asked a lot of questions?  It is one of the ways he taught and preached (“Is there anyone among you who, if your child asks for bread, will give him a stone?” Mt. 7:9).  Questions are also a hallmark of Jesus’ encounters with individuals (“Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these?” Jn. 21:15).  In fact, the Gospels record more than one hundred questions asked by Jesus!  (See Msgr. Charles Pope’s compilation of “100 Questions Jesus Asked and You Must Answer.”)

Questions have an effect on us that answers do not.  They draw us in.  They create space for a natural process of reflection and learning rather than a quick and easy leap to pat answers.  They invest us in our own answers, or in our own search for answers.  The answers we come to on our own ultimately mean more to us than the answers someone else provides (consider, for example, the classic question:  “Who do you say that I am?”).  Jesus did not need to be educated in the Socratic Method to know this.  He only needed to understand human nature.

There are times and circumstances in life when one or another of Jesus’ questions will pierce us to the heart.  On Saturday at Mass, I was struck by a question Jesus asks in the Sermon on the Plain:  “Why do you call me ‘Lord, Lord’ and do not do what I tell you?” (Lk. 6:46).  We could certainly ask ourselves that one on a daily basis.

Here are a few more of Jesus’ questions to ponder.  Each one can be an occasion for prayer, an opportunity for self-reflection, or just an honest moment between yourself and the One who is asking: 

 Why are you afraid? (Mt. 8:26)

 What do you want me to do for you? (Mt. 20:32)

 Do you believe that I can do this? (Mt. 9:28)

 If I am telling you the truth, why do you not believe me? (Jn. 8:46)

 Have I been with you for so long and still you do not know me? (Jn. 14:9)