Saturday, March 27, 2021

BE RECLAIMED BY EASTER


                                    

Hopefully every adult grows into an awareness of who they really are. Who is the personality that other people know and have to deal with on a daily basis? This is hard work because the hardest person to get to know will always be yourself! 

 

Getting to know yourself is hard work for the individual. The Church getting to know the Church is equally hard work!

 

In the Church we have such a high need of security (we need to have the doctrines of our faith clearly mapped out) but we are weak in listening to what the folks actually know and how they practice their faith. How is all this religion-stuff actually lived out in practice?

 

Almost a century ago serious students of the Scriptures recognized that the very center of our faith is the death and resurrection of Jesus. But in actual fact so much attention and energy was focused on the suffering and death of Jesus that the resurrection was almost an afterthought. On practical terms the resurrection of Jesus did not occupy sufficient energy in the life and prayer of the average believer. We were people of the cross, but only weakly, people of the resurrection. 

 

The Second Vatican Council (ended in 1965) called us to make the death and resurrection of Jesus the center of our faith, our liturgy and our prayer. These are not two unconnected events, but like your physical hand, two sides of the same mystery. They must always be held together.

 

We are working to re-establish Easter as the central, three-day festival our redemption. Like all good celebrations it takes a lot of energy. When parishioners say they are tired at the end of the Easter Vigil, I caution: “If it is meaningful, you will be tired!”

 

We must be recaptured by the resurrection of Jesus. This is the great work of God revealing and sharing the very Son of God with us. The resurrection was an actual historical event (it happened during the night) but it is a revelation that must now happen in the lives of each one of the believers (the present moment). The very person and salvific power of Jesus, Son of God, must now happen in each one of us!

 

We in the West (Catholic and Protestant) have grown up with almost all our focus on the suffering and death of Jesus. We are Christians of the cross.  But we are weakly embraced by the outpouring and revelation of the risen Jesus. The resurrection is all about the Son of God being given to the people (i.e., the disciples). We must now become the living continuation of the mystery of Christ in our time and our place. 

 

This means that we must work hard to make the fifty days of Easter (Easter to Pentecost) as meaningful and as spiritually enriching as Lent has been. This is an entire season to deepen the mystery of the resurrection within the people of the Church. This process will  take another two hundred years but we are on the right tract to creating a balanced understanding and practice of the death and resurrection (the Paschal Mystery) of Jesus Christ. 

 

Have a great Holy Week! We have a lot of work to do!

 

 

Saturday, March 20, 2021

YOUR CHILDREN ARE WATCHING


                          

On the morning that our elderly mother died in the nursing home, one of the staff members who knew our family, came up to me, shared her condolences and then said, “But you were here so often.”

 

I was taken aback by that observation. I said to myself, ‘No, only once a week.’ (I had to drive 150 km. to visit.) If my presence once a week appears to be so often to the staff member, how many of the residents hardly ever see a family member or a visitor?

 

As a family we had time to reflect on this observation. At the same time there was the recent memory of the daughter who did not come back to visit either her aged mother or father when they were in the care home. This woman had other sisters and brothers who were very present during the last years of their parents’ life.  Her absence was noted!

 

In our minds we looked at her adult children (all in their early forties) and concluded: “Remember, your children are watching.” If we were not present when in the last years of our parents’ life, in their diminishment, then we should not expect our children to be present either. Remember, our absence to our own parents set the example for our children to follow when it is our turn to arrive at the nursing home.

 

Sometimes we have to be very firm with these adult children when they say, “But Mom doesn’t  know us anymore.” Honey! This is not about you! It has nothing to do whether or not she recognizes you or can carry on a conversation. This is your mother (or father). Even if they no longer can communicate and need to be fed and diapered, they have not changed. This is still the person who loved you, raised you, struggled with you in the frustrations of moving into adulthood and rejoiced when you reached adulthood. This is your parent!

 

Adult children need some assistance in caring for a parent who suffers from serious diminishment. Adult children must be taught how to handle their mother in her dementia. Do not ask questions, it only confuses and frustrates them because the aged parent cannot give the answer (and they know they cannot give the answer!).  Visit with two people so you can have some conversation and not become frustrated because you cannot talk (people who talk a lot are very frustrated by the inability to their aged mother to enter into conversation). 

 

Real love can be harsh and dreadful. Just holding your mother’s hand (i.e., human touch) for long periods of time can be very boring – but it can be very reassuring to your mother. 

 

Now, all sixty-year olds must ask themselves: What kind of example (i.e. teaching) have I presented to my adult childred? They have been watching, and what are they learning?  How we will be treated in the nursing home (it could easily be the last five years of your life) is being determined right now.

 

Remember, your children are watching!

Saturday, March 13, 2021

AFTER PANDEMIC: WILL WE BE A LITTLE LESS SELFISH?


 

 

Canadians can see an end to the pandemic by mid to the end of summer 2021. Predictions are made that there will be a great swirl of spending as people take the money they could have spent on last winter’s holiday and jump on a plane for a holiday. Or maybe we will make a much longer road trip to visit our grandchildren in Calgary and Vancouver. 

 

But could we turn to being less selfish in our lifestyle? In our economic activity? between countries? The upcoming period of coming out of the lockdown will be a time of testing: will we turn towards our fellow human beings or indulge ourselves in our privileged culture?

 

The past year has brought to the fore the weaknesses and the cracks within our society. The area that received the most attention was our long-term care homes for the elderly. It has been highlighted that so many of these homes are understaffed and the care workers poorly paid. But a greater need is the absence of family and supportive friends that should accompany the last years of our seniors. Care homes are very lonely places. Will we just go back to the emotional neglect that we practiced before the shutdowns?

 

What are the thousands of Canadians who suffered unemployment during this season? Many had financial support from the CERB program but how do people fill their days with meaning when they have no work (i.e., no purpose in their lives)? Can we hear the frustrations of the women and men who ask ‘why am I getting out of bed this morning?’

 

This morning (March 12) there was an item in the news that noted that the province of Ontario had experienced a fifty-nine percent increase in overdose deaths during the first eleven months of 2020. Almost every one of these deaths (primarily male) were accidental, caused the drug fentanyl. Each overdose was a human being with serious struggles with their addiction. Each one belongs to a family. Few Canadians pay attention to this serious loss of life. 

 

With all the discussion of the vaccines there is very little discussion about the needs for vaccines in Third World Countries. The first thing on the agenda in the First World is to get all our citizens vaccinated but what about the majority of humanity? Is our sole preoccupation to protect our own citizens a form of national selfishness? 

 

Do we want to return to what we knew before the pandemic or will we move away from being self-centered to become more compassionate and sharing? 

 

After our vaccinations what will the next year tell about ourselves? Selfish or a bit more generous? 

 

 

Saturday, March 6, 2021

TAKING OWNERSHIP OF THE SIN OF INDIFFERENCE


         

Pope Francis speaks on a world stage. He has brought the sin of indifference into our daily consciousness. In fact, he refers the lack of caring for the poor of this world on the part of the rich and powerful, not only as indifference, but it is a ‘armor plated’ indifference. The only place where armor plate is used is to reinforce the vehicles that drive the heads of states as they move from event to event. Armor plate is installed in a vehicle to make a vehicle bullet proof.

 

Could you find a stronger image to define the lack of compassion that is exhibited today towards the poor of this world? 

 

There is a powerful story in the teachings of Jesus that point out indifference (Lk. 16, 19-31). There is a rich man and the poor man, Lazarus, who grovels in destitution at the rich man’s gate. Both die. Lazarus ends up with Abraham; the rich man ends up in Hades (punishment). The rich man did not go to Hades (hell) because he was rich. He ended up in punishment because he did not care about the poor man right at his gate.

 

The rich man was punished by his own indifference!

 

Where is the indifference today?

 

Wherever human beings do not care about the well-being of the neighbor, there is indifference.

 

We have indifference in our families when the other siblings just do not come forward to help in the care of the aged parent. One daughter and her husband look after the aging mother. The other daughter never volunteers to help or says, “I’ll come and look after Mom for a week so that you can take a little holiday.”

 

There is indifference to the sufferings of men and women addicted to drugs and the pain their families endure. The society can read the headlines of the huge number of drug overdoes each year but we just turn the page. There is an indifference of listening to the addicted individuals and their suffering families. 

 

What of the indifference towards the great number of men and women who are unemployed during this covid year? Who supports them in their struggles to make life meaningful when your employment is an essential part to your personal well-being?

 

There is indifference to future generations. What responsibility do we have (the present generation on this earth)  to hand on a sustainable and healthy earth to the fifth, sixth and seventh generations after us? We cannot get into thinking about the well-being of future generations.

 

There is still great indifference towards our care for the earth. How many industries and cities dump their toxic waste products and sewage into our rivers? Do we not have a responsibility to ensure that our rivers flow with clean and healthy water? How do we move out of our indifference towards the earth into a healthy future?

 

Indifference is not a new sin. The label may be new, but the evil is ever so real. But Pope Francis is challenging the world and the church to come to grips with its reality. We are challenged to how we can distance ourselves from the sufferings of others, from the daily grind of the poor of this world. How have our hearts grown hard?

 

Pope Francis is challenging believers, all religious people on the earth and non-believers to take ownership of the indifference to the plight of the poor: our personal indifference and the indifference in our culture and our governments.

 

 

CHRISTMAS WITH MORE DEPTH

  May  you have a very good Christmas.    Each year I am seeking to have more depth and understanding what it means to celebrate the birth d...