Web Content Display Web Content Display

 

Web Content Display Web Content Display

 

Web Content Display Web Content Display

Web Content Display Web Content Display

All Shall Be Well

February 1, 2020 – Saturday of the Third Week in Ordinary Time

Some occasions require silence.  Others cannot endure it.

I recently heard of a Trappist monastery that last century observed a very strict silence.  At the beginning of World War II, the abbot made a simple announcement: “The world is at war”.  In 1945, a second announcement was made after several years had passed and tens of millions had died outside the cloister walls: “The war is over.”

I enjoy unplugging for a week at a time, but would probably tap out around a month.  I’d be surprised if even today’s strictest monasteries limit outside news so severely as the one mentioned above.  After all, contemplatives are meant to live in solitude, not isolation.  They provide hospitality for those seeking refuge and embrace the needs of the suffering world in their prayer.  Regardless of how well-informed such monks may be however, their sacred prayer rhythms go uninterrupted. 

I find comfort in the regularity of a monastery.  Even when the world seems upside down, I know that there is not only the abstract constant of births and natural deaths—there are places that I (or you) could go to seek respite to recover whatever energies may be necessary to reengage with whatever outside troubles assault me.

Sometimes it is a challenge to decide what current events to include in this blog and which to pass over in silence.  What we don’t write or say though is as important as what we do. 

Right now, many people are captivated by the helicopter crash that killed Christina Mauser.  Christina was undoubtedly revered by the girls she coached at basketball and by her grieving husband and three children.  For many, she was surely a star.  Yet we don’t mention her, because another passenger who died in that crash was a celebrity known by many more people.  What does it do to a family’s grieving process to have their own tragedy overshadowed by the death of a celebrity who shared the same fate? 

Like Kobe Bryant, Roberto Clemente was also a standout athlete who lived his Catholic faith through humanitarian initiatives and died an untimely death.  Although Clemente is still known today, the number of people familiar with him have diminished with time.  One day he will be largely forgotten—unless, perhaps, he is canonized a saint.  As impossible as it sounds, the same will one day be true of Kobe Bryant, even if it takes a hundred years.  The grief of friends and family members will certainly outlast public interest, and those tears will not depend on the degree of celebrity attained by the departed.

The monks said their prayers throughout the world wars, and in spite of acute tragedies such as terrorist attacks and natural disasters.  This is not mere escapism however, but an attempt to interject the long view of things into our human perspective.  All of our current elations and heartbreaks will one day be memories.  The monastic routine reminds us that beyond our daily occupations, in the long run things will be fine with the help of God no matter how imposing current suffering may appear.

Death comes in many forms.  We may lose our loved ones, our lifestyle, our employment, our reputation, our health, or our very lives.  The economist John Maynard Keynes famously observed that, “[i]n the long run we are all dead.”  The promise of the Gospel though is that deep wounds still heal, seemingly endless tears will cease and dry, and even the dead eventually rise to new life.

In the words of St. Julian of Norwich, “All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.”

---------------------

This week’s “ear candy” suggests that true comfort lies in the ceaseless repetition of that which gives us joy.  The lyrics are simple and wistful, but nonetheless worth pondering.  Meanwhile, the “brain food” reminds us that while living in disconnected bliss may be all right for heaven, people need us engaged as long as we are still here on this earth.

 

Ear Candy: “Heaven” by Talking Heads

Brain Food: “Starving for Justice in ICE Detention” by Sarah Gardiner

 

Come back next Saturday for a new post!

 

 Previous Posts:

 

2020

Jan. 25 – Let Somebody Love You

Jan. 18 – Extraordinary Time

Jan. 11 – L’Chaim!

Jan. 4 – Decisive

2019

Dec. 28 – Can’t Alone

Dec. 21 – Unexpected Gifts

Dec. 14 – No Room

Dec. 7 – End of the World

Nov. 30 – Elective Unpleasantness

Nov. 23 – Always Greater

Nov. 16 – Coloring Book

Nov. 9 – Justice and Mercy

Nov. 2 – Together in Loneliness

Oct. 26 – Gently

Oct. 19 – Flow

Oct. 12 – In This Place

Oct. 5 – Why Understanding

Sep. 28 – Stone to Flesh

Sep. 21 – Let God

Sep. 14 – Passion

Sep. 7 – Hermanos

Aug. 31 – 525,600

Aug. 24 – Pathway

Aug. 17 – Crazy Together

Aug. 10 – To Bridge

Aug. 3 – Stripes

July 27 – Ghost Town

July 20 – Adrift

July 13 – Borders without Borders

July 6 – Little Bit at a Time

June 29 – Holy Dissent

June 22 – Old Kentucky Home

June 15 – Steamer Trunk

June 8 – Squad

June 1 – Legacy

May 25 – Live like You’re Loved

May 18 – Purity of Heart

May 11 – Builders and Creator

May 4 – Value Proposition

Apr. 27 – Vital Signs

Apr. 20 – Let It Be Real

Apr. 13 – Meet Self

Apr. 6 – Let Go of the Best

Mar. 30 – Thirst

Mar. 23 – Back Home

Mar. 16 – Say Goodbye

Mar. 9 – Garden and Desert

Mar. 2 – In Transit

Feb. 23 – Wealth

Feb. 16 – In Place

Feb. 9 – Each and All

Feb. 2 – Not Disneyland

Jan. 26 – Pilgrim People

Jan. 19 – Waking Dream

Jan. 12 – Called and Sent

Jan. 5 – Divine Encounter

2018

Dec. 29 -- Resolution

Dec. 22 – Room for Love?

Dec. 15 – Humbug!

Dec. 8 – Let It Begin with Me

Dec. 1 – Driven by Love

Nov. 24 – What Manner of King

Nov. 17 – Stranger

Nov. 10 – I Need Help to Be Holy

Nov. 3 – Fully Alive

Oct. 27 – Behind the Curtain

Oct. 20 – Questions. Answers?

Oct. 13 – Stumble & Fall

Oct. 6 – Young World

Sep. 29 – Defend Us in Battle

Sep. 22 – The Taste of Water

Sep. 15 – God’s Plan

Sep. 8 – Life Finds a Way