Mersey Leven Catholic Parish
Postal Address: PO Box 362 , Devonport
Parish Office:90 Stewart Street , Devonport 7310
Parish Office:
(Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 10am - 3pm)
Secretary: Annie Davies / Anne Fisher
Pastoral Council Chair: Jenny Garnsey
Pastoral Council Chair: Jenny Garnsey
Parish Mass Times: mlcpmasstimes.blogspot.com.au
Weekly Homily Podcast: mikedelaney.podomatic.com
Parish Magazine: mlcathparishnewsletter.blogspot.com.au
Year of Mercy Blogspot: mlcpyom.blogspot.com.au
Parish Prayer
Heavenly Father,
We thank you for gathering us together and calling us to serve as your disciples.
You have charged us through Your Son, Jesus, with the great mission
of evangelising and witnessing your love to the world.
Send your Holy Spirit to guide us as we discern your will
for the spiritual renewal of our parish.
Give us strength, courage, and clear vision as we use our gifts to serve you.
We entrust our parish family to the care of Mary, our mother,
and ask for her intercession and guidance as we strive to bear witness
to the Gospel and build an amazing parish.
Amen.
Our Parish Sacramental Life
Baptism: Parents are asked to contact the Parish Office to make arrangements for attending a Baptismal Preparation Session and booking a Baptism date.
Reconciliation, Confirmation and Eucharist: Are received following a Family–centred, Parish-based, School-supported Preparation Program.
Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults: prepares adults for reception into the Catholic community.
Marriage: arrangements are made by contacting one of our priests - couples attend a Pre-marriage Program
Anointing of the Sick: please contact one of our priests
Reconciliation: Ulverstone - Fridays (10am - 10:30am)
Devonport - Saturday (5:15pm– 5.45pm)
Penguin - Saturday (5:15pm - 5:45pm)
Care and Concern: If you are aware of anyone who is in need of assistance and has given permission to be contacted by Care and Concern, please phone the Parish Office.
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Weekday Masses 13th - 16th September, 2016
Tuesday: 9:30am
Penguin… St John Chrysostom
Wednesday: 9:30am Latrobe
Thursday: 10:30am Karingal… Our Lady of Sorrows
Friday: 11:00am Mt St Vincent.. Saints Cornelius & Cyprian
Mass Times Next Weekend 17th & 18th September,
2016
Saturday Vigil: 6:00pm Penguin
Devonport
Sunday Mass: 8:30am Port Sorell
9:00am Ulverstone
10:30am
Devonport
11:00am
Sheffield
5:00pm Latrobe
Every
Friday 10am - 12noon, concluding with Stations of the Cross and Angelus
Devonport: Benediction with Adoration - first Friday of
each month.
Legion of Mary: Sacred Heart Church Community Room,
Ulverstone, Wednesdays, 11am
Christian Meditation:
Devonport, Emmaus House - Wednesdays 7pm.
Prayer Group:
Charismatic Renewal
Devonport, Emmaus House - Thursdays 7.00pm
Meetings, with Adoration and Benediction are held each
Second Thursday of the Month in OLOL Church, commencing at 7.00 pm
Ministry Rosters 17th & 18th September, 2016
Readers: Vigil: M Kelly, B Paul, R Baker
10:30am A Hughes, T Barrientos, P Piccolo
Ministers of Communion: Vigil T Muir, M
Davies, M Gerrand,
D Peters, J Heatley
10.30am: B & N Mulcahy, L Hollister, K Hull
Cleaners 16th Sept: P & T Douglas 23rd Sept: K.S.C
Piety Shop 17th Sept: R McBain 18th Sept: P Piccolo
Flowers: M Breen
Ulverstone:
Reader: M & K McKenzie
Ministers of
Communion:
P Steyn, E
Cox, C Singline, C McGrath
Cleaners: M Swain, M
Bryan Flowers: C Mapley Hospitality:
T Good Team
Penguin:
Greeters: J Garnsey Commentator: J Barker Readers: Y Downes, M Murray
Ministers of
Communion: S Ewing,
J Garnsey Liturgy: Sulphur Creek J
Setting Up: S Ewing Care of Church: Y & R Downes
Setting Up: S Ewing Care of Church: Y & R Downes
Latrobe:
Reader: M Chan Ministers of Communion: M Eden, Z Smith
Procession: Parishioner Music: Hermie
Procession: Parishioner Music: Hermie
Port Sorell:
Readers: M Badcock, L Post Ministers of
Communion: E
Holloway Clean/Flow/Prepare: B Lee, A Holloway
Readings this Week: 24th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year C
First Reading: Exodus 32:7-11. 13-14
Second Reading: 1 Timothy 1:12-17
Gospel: Luke 15:1-32
PREGO REFLECTION:
Slowly, I try to become calm as I enter this time of prayer.
I read this very familiar gospel passage.
I pause regularly, allowing its hidden depths to be revealed.
I may like to pray this text imaginatively, as the younger (or elder) son, or even as the father.
Using my imagination, what images speak to me?
I do not try to force anything.
I may be happier simply allowing phrases to touch me.
Perhaps I am coming to prayer with a sense of ‘famine’.
What in life is failing to satisfy me at the moment?
Or maybe I can identify, within me, a spirit of self-righteousness?
Whatever it is, I try to trust in the Father’s love that is sufficient for me.
As my prayer comes to a close, I might gently hold the image of God as an entreating Father who desires both the lost and the proud and who says to me ‘you are ever with me and all I have is yours’.
I end with: Our Father…
I read this very familiar gospel passage.
I pause regularly, allowing its hidden depths to be revealed.
I may like to pray this text imaginatively, as the younger (or elder) son, or even as the father.
Using my imagination, what images speak to me?
I do not try to force anything.
I may be happier simply allowing phrases to touch me.
Perhaps I am coming to prayer with a sense of ‘famine’.
What in life is failing to satisfy me at the moment?
Or maybe I can identify, within me, a spirit of self-righteousness?
Whatever it is, I try to trust in the Father’s love that is sufficient for me.
As my prayer comes to a close, I might gently hold the image of God as an entreating Father who desires both the lost and the proud and who says to me ‘you are ever with me and all I have is yours’.
I end with: Our Father…
Readings Next Week: 25th Sunday in
Ordinary Time – Year C
First Reading: Amos 8:4-7
Second Reading: 1 Timothy 2:1-8
Gospel: Luke 16:1-13
Your prayers are asked for the sick:
Frank Post, Elaine Milic, Joan
Singline, Connie Fulton, Andrew Bartlett, Warren Milfull & ...
Let us pray for those who have died recently:
Jack McLaren, Ken Gillard, Mary Adkins, Fred Westerway, Rob
Marsh, Peter Reid, Margaret Sheehan, Nicolle Gillam-Barber, Ernest Pilcher, Tod
Brett, David Rossiter, Henk de Kroon and Noreen Burton.
Let us pray for those whose anniversary occurs about this time: 7th
– 13th September
Ellen Ann Regan, Fransicka Bondy,
Ted McCarthy, John Smith, Joan Scully, Roma Magee, Fabrizio Zolati, Cameron McLaren, Russell Foster,
Joan Williams, Rodney O’Rourke, David Windridge, Silvano Paladin, John Kopplemann, Fausta Farrow, Mervyn
Kiely and John Hill.
May they Rest in Peace
WEEKLY
RAMBLINGS:
As usual I have been reading and getting more ideas and I am in need of a team to slow me down and help me process what needs to happen. But the actual process of having a team is not that simple and it shouldn’t be just the people I am working with (although they are not automatically excluded). An important part of the process of deciding (discerning) who might be part of the team and this will come from time spent in prayer – that is always going to be central to who we are as a Parish – but sometimes it isn’t the first thing we think of when something needs to get done – I start to do things.
This Wednesday (14th) is our next Parish Pastoral Council
Meeting – it starts at 6.30pm. I would like to invite anyone who is able to
come to Our Lady of Lourdes Church from 5pm-6pm to pray before the Blessed
Sacrament for the Meeting and what we are doing. The prayer time will not be
structured and anyone, everyone is welcome to join me in this hour of prayer.
Then on Friday (16th) there is the opportunity to gather at
the Parish House, Devonport from 6.30pm for a bite to eat (Soup, sandwiches and
Pizza) and chat about where we go to next as a follow-up to the gathering at
Ulverstone on the 21st August. As this follows on from the PPC Meeting there
should be some more direction available for what might or might not happen
next.
Finally, it looks like work will start next week on the 1st
stage for parking access to the Alexandra Rd side of the Church at Ulverstone.
This first stage will make it easier for funeral (and if we ever have another!!
wedding) vehicles to park safely away from the road as well as providing a
number of parking spaces for people with disability. Access to the grass area
will also be improved with a wider entrance. Please note that access from
Alexandra Rd will be restricted for the duration of the work.
Please
take care on the roads and in your homes,
ST VINCENT DE PAUL COLLECTION: This weekend in Devonport,
Ulverstone, Port Sorell, Latrobe and Penguin to assist the work of the St
Vincent de Paul Society.
HEALING MASS: Catholic Charismatic Renewal, are
sponsoring a HEALING MASS with Fr Alexander Obiorah at St Mary’s Catholic Church Penguin Thursday
15th September, commencing at 7.00pm (please note earlier
start at 7.00 pm). After Mass, teams will be available for individual prayer. Please
bring a friend and a plate for supper and fellowship in the hall. If you wish
to know more or require transport please contact Celestine Whiteley 6424:2043,
Michael Gaffney 0447 018 068, Zoe Smith 6426:3073 or Tom Knaap 6425:2442.
SICK &
AGED PRIESTS FUND – SUNDAY 18th SEPTEMBER:
The Fund began in January 1948 and was set up to ensure
that all diocesan priests incardinated into the Archdiocese of Hobart would
receive adequate material and financial care when they retire or should a
priest become sick. Each year an annual appeal is launched throughout the
Archdiocese of Hobart, so that the Sick and Aged Priest’s Fund, can continue to
provide material and financial assistance to all sick and retired priests.
Your ongoing care and generosity towards our sick and aged
priests is gratefully appreciated.
CARE AND
CONCERN: “Siloam”
is the new name of a group, which meets under the banner of Care and Concern. “Siloam”
focusses on aspects of grief and loss often experienced following the death of
a loved one. The Siloam image (John 9:7) suggests healing and refreshment. Our
group “Siloam” takes its inspiration from John 9:1-41 – Jesus anointed the
man’s eyes with the clay, saying ‘Go wash in the pool of Siloam’ so he went and
washed and came back seeing.
The next meeting will be Tuesday 13th September
at 2pm, 120 Nicholls Street, Devonport. If you would like to join us
please contact Mary Davies 6424:1183 or
0447 241 182 or Neville Smith 6424:3507.
GRAND
FINAL FOOTY MARGIN TICKETS:
$10.00 tickets are
now selling! The
winner of the $10 tickets will receive $500.00
and the holder of the ticket with the number either side of the winning number $100.00. The $10.00 tickets are only available from
Devonport and Ulverstone Mass Centres or by phoning the Parish Office 6424:2783
or Mary Webb 6425:2781. The weekly $2.00 footy margin tickets will be sold (as
normal) during the finals.
COLUMBAN CALENDARS:
The 2017 Columban Art Calendar is now available from the
Piety Shop's at OLOL Church and Sacred Heart Church for $9.50. When you
purchase the calendar, you are participating in God's Mission and assisting Columbans in meeting
the needs of the poor.
MT ST VINCENT AUXILIARY: Members of the Auxiliary would
like to say a HUGE thank you to parishioners who donated to our recent ‘Cake
& Craft Stall’. A total of $1,124.00 was raised on the day.
Thursday Nights - OLOL Hall, Devonport.
Eyes down 7.30pm! Callers for Thursday 15th September
Rod Clark & Alan Luxton
NEWS FROM ACROSS THE ARCHDIOCESE:
for
news, information and details of other Parishes.
CATHOLIC CHARISMATIC RENEWAL STATE CONFERENCE 2016:
is being conducted at the Emmanuel Retreat Centre, 123 Abbott St,
Launceston from 7:30pm Friday 16 September till 1:00pm Sunday 18th September
2016, The theme being “Be merciful as your Father is merciful” (Luke 6:36). Guest
presenters include: Fr Graeme Howard, Fr Mark Freeman VG, and Fr Alexander
Obiorah. Application forms with further details including accommodation and daily attendance costs are included
on Church notice boards. Please contact Celestine Whiteley on 6424 2043, if you
wish to attend so that payments and transport can be organized locally.
FEAST OF ST VINCENT DE PAUL:
All are warmly invited to Festival Mass to celebrate the
Feast of St Vincent de Paul. Mass will be concelebrated by Fr Gerald Quinn and
Fr Terry Yard at St Joseph’s Church Hobart Tuesday 27th September commencing at 7pm. A celebratory
supper will follow Mass. The coming together at our Festival Mass is a
wonderful opportunity to celebrate the Feast of St Vincent de Paul and the
Society’s good works. For catering purposes please RSVP to Ashley Rabe by
Thursday 22nd September via email ashley.rabe@stvinnies.org.au or phone 6234:4244.
JOURNALING PRAYER RETREAT – FR RAY SANCHEZ: will be running a two day live in
retreat at Maryknoll House of Prayer 15th & 16th October. This is the most precious gift you can give
yourself. If you wish to enquire about attending please phone Anne on 0407 704 539
or email: journallingretreat@iinet.net.au
FEEDING OFF LIFE’S SACRED FIRE
An article by Fr Ron Rolheiser OMI. The original article can be found here
See the wise and wicked ones
Who feed upon life’s sacred fire
Who feed upon life’s sacred fire
These are lines from Gordon Lightfoot’s song, Don Quixote, and they highlight an important truth, both the wise and the wicked feed off the same energy. And it’s good energy, sacred energy, divine energy, irrespective of its use. The greedy and the violent feed off the same energy as do the wise and the saints. There’s one source of energy and, even though it can be irresponsibly, selfishly, and horrifically misused, it remains always God’s energy.
Unfortunately, we don’t often think of things that way. Recently I was listening to a very discouraged man who, looking at the selfishness, greed, and violence in our world, blamed it all on the devil. “It must be the anti-Christ,” he said, “How else do you explain all this, so many people breaking basically every commandment. “
He’s right in his assessment that the selfishness, greed, and violence we see in our world today are anti-Christ (though perhaps not the Anti-Christ spoken of in scripture). However he’s wrong about where selfishness, greed, and violence are drawing their energy from. The energy they are drawing upon comes from God, not from the devil. What we see in all the negative things that make up so much of the evening news each day is not evil energy but rather the misuse of sacred energy. Evil deeds are not the result of evil energies but the result of the misuse of sacred energy. Whether you consider the devil a person or a metaphor, either way, he has no other origin than from God. God created the devil, and created him good. His wickedness results from the misuse of that goodness.
All energy comes from God and all energy is good, but it can be wickedly misused. Moreover, it’s ironic that the ones who seem to drink most deeply from the wellsprings of divine energy are, invariably, the best and the worst, the wise and the wicked, saints and sinners. These mainline the fire. The rest of us, living in the gap between saints and sinners, tend to struggle more to actually catch fire, to truly drink deeply from the wellsprings of divine energy. Our struggle isn’t so much in misusing divine energy, but rather in not succumbing to chronic numbness, depression, fatigue, flatness, bitterness, envy, and the kind of discouragement which has us going through life lacking fire and forever protesting that we have a right to be uncreative and unhappy. Great saints and great sinners don’t live lives of “quiet desperation”; they drink deeply sacred energy, become inflamed by that fire, and make that the source for either their extraordinary wisdom or their wild wickedness.
This insight, saints and sinners feed off the same source, isn’t just an interesting irony. It’s an important truth that can help us better understand our relationship to God, to the things of this world, and to ourselves. We must be clear on what’s good and what’s bad, otherwise we end up both misunderstanding ourselves and misunderstanding the energies of our world.
A healthy spirituality needs to be predicated on a proper understanding of God, ourselves, the world, and the energies that drive our world and these are the non-negotiable Christian principles within which we need to understand ourselves, the world, and the use of our energies: First, God is good, God is the source of all energy everywhere, and that energy is good. Second, we are made by God, we are good, and our nature is not evil. Finally, everything in our world has been made by God and it too is good.
So where do sin and evil enter? They enter in when we misuse the good energy that God has given us and they enter in when we relate in bad ways to the good things of creation. Simply put: We are good and creation around us is good, but we can relate to it in the wrong way, precisely through selfishness, greed, or violence. Likewise, our energies are good, including all those energies that underlie our propensity towards pride, greed, lust, envy, anger, and sloth; but we can misuse those energies and draw upon life’s sacred fire in very self-serving, lustful, greedy, and wicked ways.
Sin and evil, therefore, arise out of the misuse of our energies, not out of the energies themselves. So, too, sin and evil arise out of how we relate to certain things in the world, not out of some inherent evil inside of our own persons or inside of the things themselves. The wicked aren’t evil persons drawing energy from the devil. They’re good people, irresponsibly and selfishly misusing sacred energy. The energy itself is still good, despite its misuse.
We don’t tap into evil energies when we give in to greed, lust, envy, sloth, or anger. No, rather we misuse the good and sacred energy within which we live and move and have our being. The wise and wicked both feed off the same sacred fire.
OFFICE DETOX:
9 SIGNS YOUR CHURCH IS OPERATING
IN A TOXIC STAFF CULTURE
Taken from the weekly blog by Fr Michael White, Pastor at the Church of the Nativity, Baltimore. The original blog can be found here
You can’t build a healthy church without a healthy staff culture. And it starts in the office. Unfortunately, this is one of the most overlooked aspects of parish life, and, as a result, a lot of church staffs pick up toxic habits that can lead the church down very unhealthy paths. Here are nine signs to look out for.
1. Gossip
Gossip actively undermines the foundation of a healthy staff culture, which is trust. Everybody has a weakness for it. Know thyself. What/who do you love dishing or hearing dirt about? Why not try to fix that situation instead? Also, consider this: If someone is sharing gossip with you, chances are they’re also sharing gossip about you.
2, Cliques
People gravitate toward some people more than others. That’s just human nature and not necessarily a bad sign. But ask yourself: Do you always eat lunch with the same people, or routinely leave certain people out of conversations?
3. Lack of vision/lack of unity
Proverbs 19:18 says, “Where there is no vision, the people perish.” A staff will perish as well without a shared vision. They can disagree on strategy, but a team must be unified in the vision.
4. Leadership is never around
This is one of the most abused workplace habits in many parishes. Sure, a lot of church ministry, especially pastoral care, happens outside the office environment, but not all of it.
I knew a pastor who took lots of random time off, and guess what? Employees caught on. When he was out the front door, staff was out the back. Are there clear, consistent expectations when people should be present in the office? It doesn’t have to be the same for everyone, but it should be clear for everyone. And unless an emergency or small children are a factor, the “work from home” mentality is usually a bad idea.
5. Too little or too much time off
Sometimes, just encouraging staff to spend healthy time away from work can alleviate a lot of frustration. Encouraging staff to get away and come back refreshed and renewed will benefit your parish. On the other hand, if people can’t wait to leave each day, if they’re not even showing up, something’s off.
6. No Collaboration
Ask yourself: Do I have a pretty good idea what projects or events people around me are preparing for? When staff members lose sight of what’s happening in someone else’s ministry, it’s usually a sign of what we call, borrowing a phrase from Patrick Lencioni, ministry “silos.” One bad sign is never attending other team member’s events. Simple things you can do: Stop and ask for someone’s opinion or advice on something. Ask them what they’re working on. That kind of thing is contagious.
7. Staff never interacts outside of work hours
Here’s an interesting question: Do staff members ever get together when they aren’t being paid to be together?
8. High staff turnover
Life circumstances change and so do careers, but let’s be frank: If you’ve hired three music directors or youth ministers in the past two years, either something’s driving them away or your hiring the wrong people.
9. Doors are closed and chairs are taken
Physical space is a great way to take the temperature of your office. What’s the message someone’s work space communicates? Drop in, or go away. Whether in your office or at the lunch table, look and see if there’s an extra chair just in case someone comes by. Be aware of little signs that indicate openness, inclusivity, and invitation.
Action and
Contemplation: Week 2
Face to Face Knowing
Moses is the
first person in the Bible who is spoken of as knowing God "face to
face," "who would speak with Yahweh as a man speaks with his
friend" (Exodus 33:11). And yet the Exodus text also demonstrates how
coming to the point of full interface is a gradual process of veiling and
unveiling, just as in all of us. God takes the initiative in this respectful
relationship with Moses, inviting the fleeing murderer (Exodus 2:12-15) into an
amazing intimacy and ongoing conversation, which allows mutual self-disclosure,
the pattern for all love affairs.
Moses
describes this experience as "a blazing bush that does not burn up."
He is caught between running forward to meet the blaze and coming no nearer and
taking off his shoes (Exodus 3:2)--the classic response to mysterium tremendum.
It is common for mystics, from Moses to Bonaventure, Philip Neri, and Pascal,
to describe the experience of God as fire or a furnace or pure light. But
during this early experience, "Moses covered his face, afraid to look back
at God" (Exodus 3:6). He has to be slowly taught how to look back. At
first Moses continues to live like most of us, in his shame. God gradually
convinces Moses of God's respect, which Moses calls "favor," but not
without some serious objections from Moses' side. It is a long fight, but, as
we know, God always wins.
Moses takes
spirituality and social engagement together from the very beginning. As Moses
hides his face from the burning bush, God commissions him to confront the
pharaoh of Egypt and tell him to stop oppressing the enslaved Hebrews. This is
the foundational text for teaching the essential relationship between
spirituality and social engagement, prayer and politics, contemplation and action.
It stands at the beginning of the Judeo-Christian tradition, but the connection
is often forgotten or denied. It is the job of the prophets and Jesus to remake
the connection.
In response
to God's call, Moses quickly comes up with five objections: 1) "Who am
I?" 2) "Who are you?" 3) "What if they do not believe
me?" 4) "I stutter." 5) "Why not send someone else?"
If it were not the classic biblical text, I would assume this exchange to be a
cartoon in the New Yorker! In each case, God stays in the dialogue, answering
Moses respectfully and even intimately, offering a promise of personal Presence
and an ever-sustaining glimpse into who God is--Being Itself, Existence Itself,
a nameless God beyond all names, a formless God previous to all forms, a liberator
God who is utterly liberated. God asserts God's ultimate freedom from human
attempts to capture God in concepts and words by saying, "I am who I
am" (Exodus 3:14). Over the course of his story we see that Moses slowly
absorbs this same daring freedom.
But to learn
foundational freedom in his True Self, God has to assign Moses a specific task:
create freedom for people who don't want it very badly, freedom from an
oppressor who thinks he is totally in control. It is in working for outer
freedom, peace, and justice in the world that we have to discover an even
deeper inner freedom just to survive in the presence of so much death. Most
people become cynical and angry and retreat into various ideological theories
over time. Or they walk away and return to an indulgent liberal worldview--this
happened with much of my own generation in the 1960s.
Again, we
see the inherent connection between action and contemplation, the dialogue
between the outer journey and the inner journey. Contemplation is the connection
to the Source of Love that allows grounded activists to stay engaged for the
long haul without burning out. Moses shows us that this marriage of action and
contemplation is essential and possible.
Reference:
Richard
Rohr, art by Louis Glanzman, Soul Brothers: Men in the Bible Speak to Men Today
(Orbis Books: 2004), 17-19.
Fully Human
Many have
said, and I totally agree, that true religion is not trying to make human
beings spiritual. We're already spiritual beings. Great religion is trying to
make human beings human. That's not a lightweight cliché. In 2012, Pope
Benedict XVI invited then Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, to address
the Roman Synod of Bishops. Williams, too, makes the point that contemplation
is to make us human. Then at the core of human personhood, we discover that
what it means to be human is to also be divine, the same journey I believe
Jesus made on this earth. We also are constituted as persons by the same
relationships that constitute the Three Persons of the Blessed Trinity, the
abiding relationship of unconditional love. In fact, that is what the word
person ("a sounding through") theologically and metaphysically means.
At our core and foundation, we are not just our own, but our identity is
"hidden with Christ in God" (Colossians 3:3), with "our unveiled
faces reflecting the glory of the Lord" (2 Corinthians 3:18).
Williams :
To be fully
human is to be recreated in the image of Christ's humanity; and that humanity
is the perfect human "translation" of the relationship of the eternal
Son to the eternal Father, a relationship of loving and adoring self-giving, a
pouring out of life towards the Other. Thus the humanity we are growing into in
the Spirit, the humanity that we seek to share with the world as the fruit of Christ's
redeeming work, is a contemplative humanity. [1]
Williams
then explains how contemplation prepares us for action:
And we seek
this not because we are in search of some private "religious
experience" that will make us feel secure or holy. We seek it because in
this self-forgetting gazing towards the light of God in Christ we learn how to
look at one another and at the whole of God's creation. . . . [This] allows us
to see created reality for what it truly is in the sight of God--rather than
what it is in terms of how we might use it or dominate it. [2]
Such seeing
with the eyes of God is seeing with the eyes of Love, for "God loves all
that God has made" (Wisdom 11:24). Contemplation teaches us how to see.
When we see that the world is enchanted, we see the revelation of God in each
individual person and creature. Our first job is to see correctly who we are,
and then to act on it. All I can give back to God is what God has given to
me--no more and no less.
The most
courageous thing we will ever do is to bear humbly the full mystery of our own
humanity and divinity--operating as one.
References:
[1]
Archbishop Rowan Williams' Address to the Synod of Bishops,
rowanwilliams.archbishopofcanterbury.org, paragraph 5, emphasis mine.
[2] Ibid.,
paragraph 7, emphasis mine.
The Contemplative Mind Is a Mind Liberated
from Itself
Within
twenty-four hours of Rowan Williams' address to the Roman Synod of Bishops in
2012, I must have had ten emails from all over the world sending me the
following quote and saying, "Richard, you've got to read this!"
Williams' words struck a common chord:
[Contemplation]
is very far from being just one kind of thing that Christians do: it is the key
to prayer, liturgy, art and ethics, the key to the essence of a renewed humanity
that is capable of seeing the world and other subjects in the world with
freedom--freedom from self-oriented, acquisitive habits and the distorted
understanding that comes from them. To put it boldly, contemplation is the only
ultimate answer to the unreal and insane world that our financial systems and
our advertising culture and our chaotic and unexamined emotions encourage us to
inhabit. To learn contemplative practice is to learn what we need so as to live
truthfully and honestly and lovingly. It is a deeply revolutionary matter.
Wow! He
really does put it boldly. Let's try to unpackage what this wise and holy man
is saying in his very gifted way.
First,
contemplation is the key to prayer. Most of us would think that contemplation
is prayer, but Williams goes even deeper: it's a stance that makes prayer
possible. Otherwise prayer is just formulas, repeating clichés that we think
God likes. Contemplation is resting in God. As Paul says, "We do not know
how to pray" (Romans 8:26). I don't think that ever changes. I just turned
73 and I'm still learning, still a beginner. But then Paul says, "God has
come to help us in our weakness and has given us the Spirit who prays in us,
with us, through us" and, I always add, even in spite of us (see Romans
8:26-27).
Contemplation
is the key to a renewed humanity that is capable of seeing the world and other
subjects in the world with freedom. And what is this freedom? Williams says it
very clearly: "freedom from self-orientation." It's the recognition
that life isn't all about me. Until you're free from yourself, you can't be
free in the spiritual sense. You can have political or economic freedom, but if
you are not free from your own ego, from your own centrality inside of your own
thinking, I don't think you're very free at all. In fact, your actions and
behavior will be totally predictable. Everything will revolve around your
security, survival, self-protection, self-validation, self, self, self!
To put it
boldly, contemplation is the only ultimate answer to the unreal and insane
world that our financial systems and our advertising culture and our chaotic
and unexamined emotions encourage us to inhabit. Let's just look at the
emotions issue. I think we all realize--I sure do--that much of the time we're
just jerked around by our passing emotions. So much so, that you don't have
feelings; feelings have you. There is no stable you there to hold and process a
feeling or thought. Contemplation teaches you how to stand guard and not let
your emotions and obsessive thoughts control you. Contemplation and silence nip
the ego and its negatives in the bud by teaching you how to watch and guard
your very thoughts. As Paul says, "Then the peace of God that surpasses
all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus"
(Philippians 4:7).
Ask yourself
when feeling hurt or agitated, "What part of me is feeling this?" The
part of you that's feeling offended or agitated is what Thomas Merton would
call your false self. This false self is almost entirely a creation of your own
changing mind, and therefore finally an illusion. My novice master called it a
cobweb. He would hold out his hand and pretend to blow it away.
References:
[1]
Archbishop Rowan Williams' Address to the Synod of Bishops, rowanwilliams.archbishopofcanterbury.org,
paragraph 8.
Consciousness and Contemplation
Today's
meditation is longer than usual, but I want you to have all of this together in
one place. Many people think of their consciousness as the same as their brain.
It's really not. Scientists still struggle to define consciousness and where it
arises. The early Alexandrian and Desert mothers and fathers of the church knew
consciousness was not the same as the thinking mind. They used the Greek word
nous to describe consciousness as what we would see as a combination of Spirit,
God, and mind all at once. Consciousness is something shared/participated in
and not a secretion of your private brain. American philosopher Emerson called
this awareness the "Over-Soul." Thomas Aquinas called it connatural
intelligence. It is true to my nature, but true to a larger nature at the same
time. Duns Scotus called it intuitive cognition, which he distinguished from
rational cognition.
The English
word "consciousness" comes from the Latin root conscire: to be aware
with. Through contemplation we plug into a consciousness that is larger than
the brain. It comes through a wholehearted surrender to what is, a surrender
that encompasses all and eliminates none of the present moment. Only then will
we know that we're seeing reality through eyes larger than our own, which is
why it is always a very humble and receptive knowing.
The level of
knowing that we experience from connection with consciousness or nous is
entirely different than the argumentative, dualistic world that we live in.
It's a kind of quiet, compassionate, non-opinionated certitude, unlike the
arrogant certitude our culture celebrates. Even though we may not be able to
verbalize it, we know things calmly and deeply, as truth. We don't know what it
is we know, but what we do know is that we are somehow okay; in fact, it is all
okay in its foundations and direction. God is the great I AM in which
everything--including me--has its being. My I am is a sharing in the one great
I AM. To sin is simply to live out of any I am not.
At times in
contemplative prayer, we connect with consciousness. We think that we grow
little by little in consciousness. And in some ways this is true. We grow in
our ability to tap into consciousness. But this consciousness is freely
available, even and especially to children. It requires no training or special
talent. We can be conscious right now, even though it takes practice to remain
inside this knowing.
Deep
consciousness knows the true value of a thing, it knows intuitively what is
real and what's unreal, what is eternal and what is passing, what matters and
what doesn't matter at all. This kind of consciousness allows us to see the
archetypal truth within the particular, for example the pattern of Christ's
death and resurrection within each death and birth. At a loved one's deathbed
we can be present to their dying, our dying, all dying--and to the reality of
life changing forms in each death. If we can stay within this kind of
consciousness, I can promise we'll receive compassion and empathy for the
world.
In the big
consciousness, we know things by participation with them, which is love. As
I've said before, we cannot know God in a cerebral way, but only by loving God
through a different kind of knowing. Mature spirituality teaches us how to
enter into the reality of that which we are encountering. And it gets even
better than that. Eventually you get the courage to say, I am a little part of
that which I am seeking. In this moment, the idea of God as transcendent shifts
to the realization that God is imminent. That's why the mystics can shout with
total conviction and excitement: My deepest me is God! God is no longer just
out there, but equally in here. Until that transference takes place and you
know that it is God in me loving God--God in me worshipping God, resting in
God, enjoying God--the whole point of the incarnation has not been achieved,
and we remain in religion instead of actual faith experience or faith
encounter.
References:
Adapted from
Richard Rohr, with Lawrence Freeman, Transforming the World through
Contemplative Prayer (CAC: 2013), disc 3 (CD, MP3 download); and
Everything
Belongs: The Gift of Contemplative Prayer (The Crossroad Publishing Company:
1999), 90, 91.
Love in Action
The way to
arrive and remain within "the force field of the Holy Spirit", which
is one way of describing consciousness--is both very simple and very hard:
you've got to remain in love, with a foundational yes to every moment. You
can't risk walking around with a negative, resentful, gossipy, critical mind,
because then you won't be in the force field. You will not be a usable
instrument. That's why Jesus commanded us to love. It's that urgent. It's that
crucial.
That love,
as contemplatives learn, can begin in the mind or can be inhibited by the mind.
You may have heard this quote--sometimes attributed to Eleanor Roosevelt:
Watch your
thoughts; they become words.
Watch your
words; they become actions.
Watch your
habits; they become character.
Watch your
character; it becomes your destiny.
Contemplation
nips negativity, hatred, and violence in the bud. It begins by retraining your
initial thoughts, because if you let the mind operate in a paranoid, angry, and
resentful way, you aren't going to get very far. You're not going to see
clearly. At the same time, if you spend your time only in contemplation without
moving toward positive engagement, you end up with what many call spiritual
constipation. I am afraid it is quite common.
Jack
Jezreel, founder of JustFaith--an organization that prepares people to answer
the life- and world-changing call of the Gospel--explains the necessary
consequences of contemplation in CAC's journal Oneing:
[Much] of what
passes for spirituality and spiritual practice--prayer days, meditation,
retreats, spiritual direction, contemplation, ritual, and study--is primarily
informed by an exclusive attention to the self and perhaps family
relationships, suggesting that much of what we call spirituality is actually
some mixture of psychology and private devotion, made sacred by the use of
religious imagery. My argument is not that it's worthless, but that it's
woefully incomplete. I am concerned that it provides a very limited experience
of what Jesus is so passionate about, namely the "Reign of God" (the
most repeated phrase in the four Gospels). As I understand the Reign of God, it
includes the grace-driven, love-driven transformation of the self and the
world. What's more, it recognizes that the transformation of the self and the
world are directly connected to each other. . . .
Isn't it
instructive that the spiritual formation of the original disciples happens with
Jesus on the road? In effect, the disciples learn by doing. They grow into an
understanding of this God of love, this God of compassion, this God who loves
justice, this God who makes all things new, by participating as active
observers and agents of compassion, justice, and newness. And, yes,
necessarily, they pause with Jesus to reflect, ask questions (sometimes stupid
questions), and pray. But the spiritual adventure described in the four Gospels
does not happen in the sanctuary; it happens on the road, in the company of
beggars, prostitutes, and lepers. [1]
References:
[1] Jack
Jezreel, "To Love without Exception," "Perfection," Oneing,
Vol. 4 No. 1 (CAC: 2016), 51-52.
Both: Praying and Doing
I think one
major reason why only a minority of people work for peace and justice is that
most of us have tragically ingested the postmodern Apocalypse Now, Armageddon,
"Late Great Planet Earth" view of history. This focus has taken away
all cosmic hope from what was supposed to be our Omega Point and final goal,
the Risen Christ. When the whole thing is hopeless, it is almost impossible to
think that anything we do really matters anyway. It is very hard to make
individuals happy and hopeful people. Such recent thinking might end up being
the greatest heresy of our age. It has largely created cynical, aimless, and
futile lifestyles, even among people who are otherwise good, nice, and sincere.
Today, I'd
like you to hear from Shane Claiborne, a hopeful young man who has put action
and contemplation together in ways that have borne lasting fruit. Shane is a
founding partner of The Simple Way, a faith community in inner-city
Philadelphia that has helped to birth and connect radical faith communities
around the world. These "new monastic" communities seek to follow
Jesus, to rediscover the spirit of the early Church, and to incarnate the
"Kingdom of God." When you're with mature social activists like
Shane, you can feel this grounded belief in the truth of the Gospel--it's not
his truth, but God's truth; it's not his kingdom that he is trying to promote,
but God's kingdom.
At a CAC
conference on Emerging Christianity a few years ago, Shane read the story of
Lazarus and the rich man (see Luke 16:19-31). Then he said:
I think this
parable shows us we have a pattern in our culture that teaches us to insulate
ourselves from suffering, to build up gates and walls and border fences that
separate us from those who are suffering right outside of our comfort. But we
come to find out that not only are we locking the suffering out, but we're
locking ourselves in--to a life that's incredibly lonely. Those patterns rob us
of life and community.
St. John
Chrysostom pointed out that Lazarus is the only person named in the parables of
Jesus. His name means "the one that God heard and rescued." The rich
man is not given a name. He cries out to Father Abraham, so it sounds like he
was a religious man, but he had locked the poor out of his life. I think the
invitation is to rewrite the end of the story. We have an invitation to tear
down the walls, to bust through the fences, and to get to know the names and
the faces of those who are suffering outside of our comfort.
That
happened for me in Philadelphia in 1995. I was going to college in the suburbs.
We heard the story of a group of homeless families who were waiting for
housing. They moved into a cathedral that had been closed in a poor
neighborhood. The Catholic archdiocese gave them an eviction notice that said,
"If you're not out within 48 hours, you could be arrested for trespassing
on church property."
When we read
that in the newspaper, my friends and I began praying, "God, why don't you
do something?" We felt God saying, "I did do something. I made you!
Now get out there!"
We began to
see that we've got to pray for this situation but we've also got to do
something. . . . We got involved in that struggle, and fifteen years later that
struggle is still changing and transforming us. Many of those families got
housing, and a group of us from the college ended up moving into the
neighborhood. That made all the difference, because as we began to live there,
it wasn't like we were choosing activism, but activism was choosing us. [1]
Reference:
[1] Shane
Claiborne, When Action Meets Contemplation (CAC: 2010), MP3 download.
Biblical models for leadership
An article by Fr Nicholas King sj on the ThinkingFaith.org website. You can access the original article here
Wherever you look these days, politics seems to have mislaid its comfortable predictabilities. A majority of Britons (though I have actually met very few who admit to it) has voted for the United Kingdom to leave the European Union; and no-one seems to know what to do about it, or how things will look once we have done it. There is tangible disarray in all the British political parties and (I write this deep in the silly season; doubtless by the time the party political conferences come round, the emperor will have cobbled some clothes together) it is far from clear what their future will be, after some repellent back-stabbing on all sides. Many seasoned observers predict the end of the two-party system, and it is possible that they are right. Those who lift their gaze across the Atlantic find themselves alarmed by the forthcoming Presidential election, for a number of reasons. In several other countries there is a clamour of accusations of corruption against the governing party. The presidents of France and Germany appear to have mislaid their ordinarily deft touch with their electors. All over the world, there is a growing sense of ‘them’ and ‘us’, and electors seem ready to adopt their only possible revenge, either by taking the ballot box seriously, or by refusing to vote on the grounds that ‘it only encourages them’. Even the Church seems to be experiencing a certain distance between ‘those in the pew’ and ‘those in charge’, which it ought not to ignore.
What is the answer? With some hesitation, I should like to admit to having written a recent book that may assist our thinking on leadership.[i] It aims to see what the bible can say to us about leadership in our present crisis. The book originated in a widespread feeling of discomfort about how leadership was being exercised in the Catholic Church and a desire to see how the topic is handled in Scripture, both Old and New Testaments. The book was taking shape and the early chapters had been written when the cardinals took me by surprise and elected a pope with a very different leadership style. Nor is it a matter of just one man; it seems clear that the Spirit is inviting the Church to exercise authority in a notably different way from now on. Bearing in mind that the new pope had, like all Jesuits, made the full Spiritual Exercises twice in his life, I shaped the book in the light of the structure of the Exercises that St Ignatius Loyola left for us, starting with the ‘First Principle and Foundation’, which reminds us that we are created to ‘praise, reverence and serve God our Lord’. The First Week, in which we confront ourselves as forgiven sinners, is followed by week two, the life of Christ, in the course of which we are to make the choice of the manner of life to which we are being called. After that, the Third Week is devoted to Jesus’s suffering and death, and is intended as a way of confirming the decision, once we see how uncomfortable the consequences can be of choosing otherwise. Then St Ignatius takes us into the Fourth Week, given over to praying the Resurrection. This should take us joyfully out of retreat and back into our world and to the vocation to which the Lord has called us.
That, as I say, is the shape of the book. What does it say about leadership that might be of help today?
The short answer is that in the book it becomes evident that the only people in the bible who get authority right every time are God and Jesus. And how does that happen? The clue is in the title of the book, which advertises God’s helplessness. This is a title with which several readers find themselves uncomfortable, but it describes the situation into which God has voluntarily gone in creating human beings. That is to say that because the name of the game is ‘love’, and because love cannot be programmed, God has created us as free beings, and therefore simply does not know what we are going to do next.
We can already see God’s helplessness in the second chapter of the bible, when the Almighty waits to see what the first human (for whom God is trying to find a companion) is going to call the various other beings whom God has created. That becomes even clearer in chapter 3, when the woman gives in to the serpent’s blandishments and eats the fruit, enticing her husband to do the same. For then things go wrong, and they realise that they are naked, so must hide from the God who is heard walking in the garden in the cool of the evening. When God comes calling for them (helpless, you see), they have to hide, because they realise what they have done. Under those circumstances they have to leave the garden into which they have been placed, but there is a verse, not often noticed in that chapter, which says that ‘the Lord God made leather garments for the man and his wife, with which he clothed them’ (Genesis 3:21). Here is our clue: the God of the Old Testament is not the tyrant that we too readily assume, but a servant, trying to make things better for us.
The book then continues, more or less in biblical order, to show how the scriptural texts reveal our human lust for power and our refusal to serve. There is the tale of Moses’ leadership (and the six excuses that he made to avoid accepting the post); there are the difficulties that Joshua experienced as Moses’ successor. Then we are invited to listen to the tales of the Judges, some of which are pretty hairy. And we are therefore not all that surprised when the people of Israel demand a king to rule over them ‘just like the other nations’. But God overrules the prophet Samuel’s hesitations and (here’s the point) remains unfailingly faithful despite our greed for a different political system. The story unfolds with regal disaster after monarchical disaster, the fall of the Northern Kingdom in 720BC, and the destruction and capture of the Holy City (a much greater disaster) a century and a half later, when the Temple is destroyed, the monarchy apparently brought to an end, and the leading citizens all taken off to Babylon. And so on: you can read this portion for yourself, and the book makes the suggestion that this is the ‘First Week’ of the Exercises, the moment of recognising that sin is a power in the world.
Then Jesus comes into the world, God’s last word on the matter, the final testimony of God’s fidelity. We are invited to respond to his call, and to walk by his side as he seeks to build the kingdom. We applaud as some agree to become disciples, though we also notice, nervously, how readily they get it wrong, and even make attempts to gain authority over the rest. But we listen to Jesus teaching about how to do authority, and we watch the way he exercises it. Above all, he faces death with a serene countenance, and there is the challenge to us: can we do the same as we respond to his call (here, of course, we are in the Third Week of the Exercises)? Finally, God vindicates Jesus, and he is raised from the dead on that first Easter Sunday, and that gives us the Fourth Week of the Exercises, the mood in which we should emerge from retreat.
It does not stop there, however, for Jesus in the Acts of the Apostles remains present to the disciples, and teaches them how to carry on with their mission. If they get it right, they should be imitating God’s helplessness and Jesus’s refusal to make a grab for power. Sadly, however, that is often beyond them; but if we (the Church) were to get it right, the world would be a better place, and were politicians also to follow suit they would be a good deal more admired than is at present the case.
Am I arguing therefore that there is a window here for the Church, one that we should seize at all costs and come back to dominating the lives of all? That would be precisely to miss the point. It is a disaster when the Church gets too wealthy and too powerful; and it is a failure to follow Jesus (tempting though it undoubtedly is to think ‘my intentions are good; it does not matter if I get a bit of power and a bit of money’). In recent weeks I have viewed the bare remains of monasteries and religious houses in the North and Midlands of England that did wonderful work but finally lost the plot and became too rich, too powerful – and had to be destroyed.
From now on, I am arguing in this book, no one – in politics, or in the Church, or in your local gardening club – should aspire to leadership unless they are prepared to serve and to assert that God alone is in charge and, if necessary, to die for the cause. We have been brought to a new place by the present disarray in world politics, and there is an opportunity. But it is not an opportunity to seek power. It is the chance to serve.
There is one further reflection here. Britain now has, for the second time, a woman prime minister, and the First Minister of Scotland is a woman, as of course is the monarch. Elsewhere there are other women in leadership: in Germany and conceivably, come November, in the United States of America. Is it entirely fanciful, in the light of this development, to hope for a more mature approach to politics than the macho male style that has had its day? It seems possible to argue that women, for example, have more sense than men about resorting to war.
Whether or not that is the case, the time has certainly come to put an end to the discourse of hatred and impoliteness that marked the debates about our recent referendum; and an end also to the unblushing repetition of untruths that were likewise a feature of those discussions (for not everything that was said on either side could possibly be true).
Whatever happens, political (and ecclesial) leadership can only hereinafter be exercised by turning our attention to this helpless God; and here the Church may have something to offer.
Nicholas King SJ is Formation Delegate for the Jesuits in Britain and teaches at Heythrop College, University of London.
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