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A Cactus, An Abbot and Two Mothers

When my mother passed away just before Christmas of 1995 I brought her Christmas cactus, which she’d had for a number of years, home with me. I cared for it as best I could, because I knew she loved it. Over the years I changed it from room to room, watching it dwindle then pick up, dwindle then pick up. And dwindle. Once, in the early 2000s, I really thought there was no use keeping it anymore. It truly looked dead, despite all my efforts. But a woman at our parish who was a master gardener had coincidently offered to host an evening where we could bring in a plant from home we needed help with, so I thought I’d give it one last try.

When it was my turn, I showed her my poor little Christmas cactus, and she looked totally shocked and appalled. She grabbed it out of my arms and to my horror, started ripping it apart. In less than five minutes it was pretty much in shreds, then she started poking bits of it back into the earth (into which she ground some of her own potting soil), instructed me on how to break off the tips of the leaves when they looked dead and how often to give it vitamins. Vitamins? Oh. Oh, oh.

Well, it picked up again and stayed healthy, but never bloomed. Not once in the fifteen years since my mother died did it bloom. Until this year. Just after Christmas, I noticed it had five little blossoms starting to come out on it. I brought it downstairs to show everyone, telling them it was our little Christmas/New Year’s miracle. Hubby and I watched in amazement as day after day, the blooms became larger and larger, and so very vibrant. It’s difficult to describe the joy, wonder and gratitude this little Christmas cactus has stirred up in me.

And what has all this to do with an abbot and another mother, you may be wondering. Well, shortly before Christmas I received a package in the mail. When I saw it was from Fr. (Abbot) Joseph of Making All Things New (formerly, Word Incarnate) I knew exactly what it must be, and I opened it excitedly without giving any attention to the outer wrappings.

After I had spent some moments looking at the front and back covers, the chapter headings and just leafing through it, enjoying the feel of it in my hands, I noticed the package itself. The manilla envelope had been torn in several places, and it had been inserted into a larger plastic envelope on which Canada Post had stuck a little note, saying they were very sorry that it had been damaged in transit (somewhere between California and Ontario) but that they had taped it up for me and hoped all was well with the contents. Well, the contents were perfect. Mother Mary was inside.

So I’ve been thinking about my cactus and my package, about me and about you; about all of us.  Sometimes, like the cactus, we’re ripped apart, shredded to bits, by the loving, expert, skilful hands of the Master Gardener who knows exactly what we need to thrive.  We may not bloom right away; seemingly infinite patience might be necessary, but a thousand days is as one day to God.  Can you even begin to imagine the joy in heaven when one of us blossoms?  At other times, like the package, it may be the journey that gets us; being thrown and tossed about, passing through a multitude of hands and pieces of technology, being torn apart as we travel towards our ultimate destination.  But I think God is as excited to receive us as I was to get that package in the mail, torn, tattered, taped-up.  I think He blesses our brothers and sisters who have taped us up along the way, but really, He just can’t wait to see what’s inside.

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There will be more on Father Joseph’s new book in upcoming posts here and at Consecrated to Mary.

Be Encouraged

My Sweet, Crushed Angel

(A poem by Hafiz)

You have not danced so badly, my dear,
Trying to hold hands with the Beautiful One.

You have waltzed with great style,
My sweet, crushed angel,
To have ever neared God’s Heart at all.

Our Partner is notoriously difficult to follow,
And even His best musicians are not always easy
To hear.

So what if the music has stopped for a while.

So what
If the price of admission to the Divine
Is out of reach tonight.

So what, my dear,
If you do not have the ante to gamble for Real Love.

The mind and the body are famous
For holding the heart ransom,
But Hafiz knows the Beloved’s eternal habits.

Have patience.

For He will not be able to resist your longing
For long.

You have not danced so badly, my dear,
Trying to kiss the Beautiful One.

You have actually waltzed with tremendous style,
O my sweet,
O my sweet, crushed angel.

[Taken from: I Heard God Laughing. Poems of Hope and Joy. Renderings of Hafiz by Daniel Ladinsky)

Happy Mother's Day, Even If You Think You're Not a Mom

Recently I had the pleasure of reading Johnnette Benkovic’s, “Full of Grace.  Women and the Abundant Life”.  I’ve been meaning to for years, and will certainly be reading it more than once.  It’s one of those books you can return to over and over and always learn something new.

On this Mother’s Day I’d like to share with you two passages, and wish every woman who may be reading this a beautiful day, whether you are spending it with your children or not, whether you are acknowledged by your children or not, whether your spiritually-adopted children know you exist or do not – whatever the case may be.  You are loved, you are precious and you are needed.

Johnnette writes (pg. 12):  In their closing message of the Second Vatican Council, the Council Fathers expressed an urgent plea for women to accept God’s call:

The hour is coming, in fact has come, when the vocation of woman is being acknowledged in its fullness, the hour in which women acquire in the world an influence, an effect and a power never hitherto achieved.  That is why, at this moment when the human race is undergoing so deep a transformation, women impregnated with a spirit of the Gospel can do so much to aid humanity in not falling.

A few pages later (pg. 17) Johnnette continues:

If the preeminent function of our womanly bodies is to bring life…the preeminent function of our womanly soul – our feminine spirit and psyche – must be to bring life as well.  Our entire being is meant to be life-giving, life-producing.  Our call to bring life to others, then, does not stop at the physical level, but only begins there.

By virtue of the gift of our gender, each of us is intended to be “mother”.  Just as our bodies have been created with the capacity to bear physical life, our souls have been especially created by God to bring spiritual life to the world.  Thus, our call to motherhood is in no way diminished or negated by a life of celibacy or an inability to physically bear children.  All women are meant to bring life.

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“…at this moment when the human race is undergoing so deep a transformation…”

We can feel it, can’t we.

One Thing Leads To Another…

When we look up joy in the Catholic Catechism it says see also: Happiness”, and the two combined give us seven entries. As I was reading through them, I reflected once more on how intertwined and inter-related everything is.

One of the entries listed for joy (Paragraph 1829) says:

The fruits of charity are joy, peace, and mercy;

In actuality, the first three of the twelve Fruits of the Holy Spirit are charity, joy and peace, so, if joy and peace are not only Fruits of the Holy Spirit but fruit of the first fruit of charity (which is a Fruit of the Holy Spirit) [ have I lost you yet?] :) we can see how one things builds on another, or leads to another, or blossoms out of another.

One of the entries for happiness (Paragraph 1818) says:

The virtue of hope responds to the aspiration to happiness which God has placed in the heart of every man;

Now, the entry I quoted for joy is actually found under the larger heading of the Theological Virtue of Charity, and the entry I quoted for happiness is actually found under the larger heading of the Theological Virtue of Hope. So while I am not referring in this post specifically to the Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit, we can see that everything is a gift – the theological virtues, the gifts and the fruits – and how we respond to these gifts or nurture the seeds of these gifts will be the telling factor in whether or not our garden grows – whether or not cross-pollination will take place and one blossom will produce another, then another, then another…

To me, pollination is a metaphor for practice, for acting upon the gifts received.  The Holy Spirit distributes virtues, gifts and fruits as He will, but it is our practice that will lead to growth and to His pouring out of more and more as He witnesses our receptivity and actions.  The theological virtues must be practiced; the fruits of the Holy Spirit must be used. 

There are so many practices we can put into place to pollinate our garden, but one that I would like to mention here is the practice of gratitude.  Expressing our gratitude to God every day is a powerful means of bringing joy and other fruits into our lives, despite whatever obstacles and challenges we may be facing physically, financially, emotionally, etc.  If we wake up and give thanks to God every morning and throughout the day, mentally review five things we are grateful for every night before we fall asleep, or list five to ten things every day in a Gratitude Journal, we will see a remarkable flowering take place.

Not too long ago my friend JT sent me a link to this video in which Brother David Steindl-Rast gives a beautiful reflection on gratitude as a spiritual practice and its relationship to joy.  Thank you, JT!  I had not seen this particular video before, but I had been introduced to Brother David a few years ago at the site Gratefulness.org. It’s a wonderful site, and if you take a peek in its left sidebar, you’ll also see a link to something I think many of you may love – the Hours with “angelic company” and beautiful Gregorian chants.

Lenten Joy

The experience of joy throughout Lent is something that has been my reality for a few years now, so I thought it might be worthwhile to explore that theme this year.

In the following video, Father Mike Manning sets the stage for us [the audio in this one is a bit muffled, but not really a problem].

As we can see from Father Manning’s talk, our perception of a thing makes all the difference between a negative or a positive response/reaction.

This Lent, I wish every one of you the deep joy and exhilarating freedom of releasing any attachments in your lives that you feel are holding you back on your path of holiness. I wish you also the profound joy of intimacy with Our Lord as you unite yourself to Him throughout the day in your spiritual communions and your prayertime, and as you accompany Him in His Passion. I wish you the humble delight of emulating our Creator through generosity of spirit, whether in almsgiving or by helping your neighbour in any of a multitude of secret ways.

“Pardon my Lenten smile” too, as Father Manning says.  I just can’t help it.  :)