Mersey Leven Catholic Parish
Parish Priest: Fr Mike Delaney
Mob: 0417 279 437
mike.delaney@aohtas.org.au
Priest in Residence: Fr Phil McCormack
Mob: 0437 521 257
pmccormack43@bigpond.com
Deacon in Residence: Rev Steven Smith
Mob: 0411 522 630
steven.smith@aohtas.org.au
Postal Address: PO Box 362, Devonport 7310
Parish Office: 90 Stewart Street, Devonport 7310
(Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 10am - 3pm)
Office Phone: 6424 2783 Fax: 6423 5160
Email: merseyleven@aohtas.org.au
Secretary: Annie Davies
Finance Officer: Anne Fisher
Pastoral Council Chair: Felicity Sly
Mob: 0418 301 573
fsly@internode.on.net
Parish Mass times for the Month: mlcpmasstimes.blogspot.com.au
Weekly Homily Podcast: mikedelaney.podomatic.com
Archdiocesan Website: www.hobart.catholic.org.au for news, information and details of other Parishes.
PLENARY COUNCIL PRAYER
Come, Holy Spirit of Pentecost.
Come, Holy Spirit of the great South Land.
O God, bless and unite all your people in Australia
and guide us on the pilgrim way of the Plenary Council.
Give us the grace to see your face in one another
and to recognise Jesus, our companion on the road.
Give us the courage to tell our stories and to speak boldly of your truth.
Give us ears to listen humbly to each other
and a discerning heart to hear what you are saying.
Lead your Church into a hope-filled future,
that we may live the joy of the Gospel.
Through Jesus Christ our Lord, bread for the journey from age to age.
Amen.
Our Lady Help of Christians, pray for us.
St Mary MacKillop, pray for us.
Come, Holy Spirit of the great South Land.
O God, bless and unite all your people in Australia
and guide us on the pilgrim way of the Plenary Council.
Give us the grace to see your face in one another
and to recognise Jesus, our companion on the road.
Give us the courage to tell our stories and to speak boldly of your truth.
Give us ears to listen humbly to each other
and a discerning heart to hear what you are saying.
Lead your Church into a hope-filled future,
that we may live the joy of the Gospel.
Through Jesus Christ our Lord, bread for the journey from age to age.
Amen.
Our Lady Help of Christians, pray for us.
St Mary MacKillop, pray for us.
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: Arrangements are made by contacting Parish Office. Parents attend a Baptismal Preparation Session organised with a Priest.
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: BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
THE FOLLOWING PUBLIC ACTIVITIES ARE SUSPENDED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
Eucharistic Adoration Devonport, Benediction with Adoration Devonport,
Legion of Mary, Prayer Group.
NO PUBLIC MASSES UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE DUE TO THE COVID-19 (CORONAVIRUS) PANDEMIC
DAILY AND
SUNDAY MASS ONLINE: You
will need to go to the following link and register: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_gHY-gMZ7SZeGMDSJyTDeAQ
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email
containing information about joining the webinar. Please keep this
confirmation email as that will be your entry point for all further Masses or Liturgies.
Sun 24th May 9:00am … The Ascension of the Lord
Mon 25th May No Mass … Our Lady, Help of Christians
Tues 26th May 9:00am ... St Philip Neri
Wed 27th May 9:00am ... St Augustine of Cantebury
Thurs 28th May 9:00am
Fri 29th May 9:00am ... St Paul VI
Sat 30th May 9:00am
Sun 31st May 9:00am ... Pentecost Sunday
If you are looking for Sunday Mass readings or Daily Mass readings,
Universalis has the readings as well
as the various Hours of the Divine Office - https://universalis.com/mass.htm
Your prayers are asked for the sick: Jane Fitzpatrick, Marlene Heazelwood, Brian Pilling, Barry Mulcahy, Mark Aylett, & …
Let us pray for those who have died recently:
Pauline Cooper, Peter Evans, Don Mapley, Judith Xavier, Pauline Burnett, Reg Hinkley, Maria Grazia Dell'Orso, Ted Horton, Ian Ravaillion, Robert Becker, Denis Prior, Ken Bailey, Irene Blachford, Barry Quinn, Peter Phair, Vanessa Beasley, Lorna Watson, Bill Bracken
Let us pray for those whose anniversary occurs about this time: 20th – 26th May:
Phyllis Fraser, Kathleen Hall, Alfred Nichols, Linus Peters, Mariea McCormick, Margaret Bresnehan, Bernard C Marshall, Peter Hutchinson, Margaret Murphy, Harry Maker, Joan O’Brien, Jack Choveaux, Bridget Stone, Lynette Dickson, Shirley Keenan, Dianne McMullen, Joseph Mantuanto, Ida Penraat, George Batten, Mary Hoye, Tracie Cox, Joseph Sallese, Lorraine Keen
May the souls of the faithful departed,
through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen
PREGO REFLECTION ON TODAY’S GOSPEL:
I come to my place of prayer, and I slowly breathe in God’s presence around and deep with in me.
When I am ready, I take up the text and read it carefully a couple of times.
Perhaps I can imagine the scene, and can place myself with the disciples, reunited on the mountain.
With them I have spent three years with Jesus.
I have heard his words, seen his works, and have come to love and follow him.
Then I witnessed his arrest and cruel crucifixion. I have also rejoiced in his resurrection, and for the past 40 days, have learnt so much more from him.
When he appears before me now, how do I feel?
What is my relationship with him?
I respond in any way I can, and speak to him from my heart.
As Jesus speaks, I am aware of his authority; that his words are of huge importance to me and for the future of his mission. He is sending us out to teach and baptise in his name.
Can I rejoice in this … or am I doubting and anxious?
I spend some time absorbing his words and their implication for me.
I receive his promise – ‘I am with you always’.
I allow these words to register in my mind and in my heart.
Perhaps I ask the Lord to strengthen my faith and trust in him.
In what way have I felt Jesus's presence during the pandemic?
I turn to him, and pray for all those still struggling and suffering.
I ask him to be with his Church and with all his people all over the world.
I end my prayer with a slow Our Father ...
Weekly Ramblings
During the week Archbishop Julian made some significant announcements. Firstly, he announced that Fr Michael Tate, approaching his 75th birthday, has presented his letter of resignation as Vicar General. Archbishop Julian wrote: ‘In accepting his letter, I wish to express my personal gratitude for his service as Vicar General since 25 March 2017. He has brought his considerable talents and experience to the role, and has assisted me in fulfilling my responsibility of governance of the Church in Tasmania. I have appreciated his sound advice and guidance on many matters. I wish Fr Tate God’s abundant blessings as he continues his priestly service in the Archdiocese of Hobart. Ad multos annos.’
The Archbishop continued: ‘I am pleased to announce Fr Shammi Perera as the new Vicar General for the Archdiocese of Hobart effective from 1 June 2020. Fr Shammi will continue as Administrator of the Cathedral Parish.’
The second announcement was that a date for Deacon Steven Smith’s Ordination to the Priesthood had been set – provided that the stages of re-opening post Covid-19 proceed as planned. He will be ordained on 24th July at St Mary’s Cathedral but it will be a strictly by invitation event as limits to the number of people attending are capped. Further details as more information is available.
We received an email yesterday advising that due to the Covid-19 Pandemic there will not be a printed edition of The Swag this winter. Anyone who wants to can assess the edition by clicking the following link:
https://issuu.com/ncp2020/docs/the_swag_-_winter_2020?fr=sNTdiMTEzNzc0ODU
I will continue to keep everyone informed as to how we are progressing in our efforts to getting back to celebrating Mass with a congregation. The response from parishioners after I suggested we needed to proceed slowly here on the NW Coast was very encouraging but we are working to ensure we will be able to celebrate Mass after every effort has been made to ensure all precautions have been put in place. I maybe overcautious but I would prefer to be proved wrong rather than something serious to happen that could have been avoided.
My Tuesday and Thursday email updates and my Wednesday and Friday Ramblings on Facebook and YouTube will continue – see the accompanying email for more details.
Stay safe, stay sane and, if you can, stay at home
ONLINE GIVING: The details for online Planned
Giving are: Bank Commonwealth; Account Name: Mersey Leven; BSB: 067 000; Acc
No: 1031 5724. In the Description area simply add your Name or Envelope Number.
BANK BRANCH DEPOSIT: If you wish to deposit at a Bank Branch the details are slightly different. The Account Name: Catholic Development Fund; BSB: 067 000; Acc No: 1031 5724. In the Description area simply add your Name or Envelope Number.
and calling us to serve as your disciples.
as we use our gifts to serve you.
as we strive to bear witness
Amen.
Our Parish Sacramental Life
Baptism: Arrangements are made by contacting Parish Office. Parents attend a Baptismal Preparation Session organised with a Priest.
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: BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
THE FOLLOWING PUBLIC ACTIVITIES ARE SUSPENDED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
Eucharistic Adoration Devonport, Benediction with Adoration Devonport,
Legion of Mary, Prayer Group.
NO PUBLIC MASSES UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE DUE TO THE COVID-19 (CORONAVIRUS) PANDEMIC
DAILY AND
SUNDAY MASS ONLINE: You
will need to go to the following link and register: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_gHY-gMZ7SZeGMDSJyTDeAQ
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email
containing information about joining the webinar. Please keep this
confirmation email as that will be your entry point for all further Masses or Liturgies.
Mon 25th May No Mass … Our Lady, Help of Christians
Tues 26th May 9:00am ... St Philip Neri
Wed 27th May 9:00am ... St Augustine of Cantebury
Thurs 28th May 9:00am
Fri 29th May 9:00am ... St Paul VI
Sat 30th May 9:00am
Sun 31st May 9:00am ... Pentecost Sunday
If you are looking for Sunday Mass readings or Daily Mass readings,
Universalis has the readings as well
as the various Hours of the Divine Office - https://universalis.com/mass.htm
Your prayers are asked for the sick: Jane Fitzpatrick, Marlene Heazelwood, Brian Pilling, Barry Mulcahy, Mark Aylett, & …
Let us pray for those who have died recently:
Pauline Cooper, Peter Evans, Don Mapley, Judith Xavier, Pauline Burnett, Reg Hinkley, Maria Grazia Dell'Orso, Ted Horton, Ian Ravaillion, Robert Becker, Denis Prior, Ken Bailey, Irene Blachford, Barry Quinn, Peter Phair, Vanessa Beasley, Lorna Watson, Bill Bracken
Let us pray for those whose anniversary occurs about this time: 20th – 26th May:
Phyllis Fraser, Kathleen Hall, Alfred Nichols, Linus Peters, Mariea McCormick, Margaret Bresnehan, Bernard C Marshall, Peter Hutchinson, Margaret Murphy, Harry Maker, Joan O’Brien, Jack Choveaux, Bridget Stone, Lynette Dickson, Shirley Keenan, Dianne McMullen, Joseph Mantuanto, Ida Penraat, George Batten, Mary Hoye, Tracie Cox, Joseph Sallese, Lorraine Keen
May the souls of the faithful departed,
through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen
PREGO REFLECTION ON TODAY’S GOSPEL:
I come to my place of prayer, and I slowly breathe in God’s presence around and deep with in me.
When I am ready, I take up the text and read it carefully a couple of times.
Perhaps I can imagine the scene, and can place myself with the disciples, reunited on the mountain.
With them I have spent three years with Jesus.
I have heard his words, seen his works, and have come to love and follow him.
Then I witnessed his arrest and cruel crucifixion. I have also rejoiced in his resurrection, and for the past 40 days, have learnt so much more from him.
When he appears before me now, how do I feel?
What is my relationship with him?
I respond in any way I can, and speak to him from my heart.
As Jesus speaks, I am aware of his authority; that his words are of huge importance to me and for the future of his mission. He is sending us out to teach and baptise in his name.
Can I rejoice in this … or am I doubting and anxious?
I spend some time absorbing his words and their implication for me.
I receive his promise – ‘I am with you always’.
I allow these words to register in my mind and in my heart.
Perhaps I ask the Lord to strengthen my faith and trust in him.
In what way have I felt Jesus's presence during the pandemic?
I turn to him, and pray for all those still struggling and suffering.
I ask him to be with his Church and with all his people all over the world.
I end my prayer with a slow Our Father ...
When I am ready, I take up the text and read it carefully a couple of times.
Perhaps I can imagine the scene, and can place myself with the disciples, reunited on the mountain.
With them I have spent three years with Jesus.
I have heard his words, seen his works, and have come to love and follow him.
Then I witnessed his arrest and cruel crucifixion. I have also rejoiced in his resurrection, and for the past 40 days, have learnt so much more from him.
When he appears before me now, how do I feel?
What is my relationship with him?
I respond in any way I can, and speak to him from my heart.
As Jesus speaks, I am aware of his authority; that his words are of huge importance to me and for the future of his mission. He is sending us out to teach and baptise in his name.
Can I rejoice in this … or am I doubting and anxious?
I spend some time absorbing his words and their implication for me.
I receive his promise – ‘I am with you always’.
I allow these words to register in my mind and in my heart.
Perhaps I ask the Lord to strengthen my faith and trust in him.
In what way have I felt Jesus's presence during the pandemic?
I turn to him, and pray for all those still struggling and suffering.
I ask him to be with his Church and with all his people all over the world.
I end my prayer with a slow Our Father ...
Weekly Ramblings
During the week Archbishop Julian made some significant announcements. Firstly, he announced that Fr Michael Tate, approaching his 75th birthday, has presented his letter of resignation as Vicar General. Archbishop Julian wrote: ‘In accepting his letter, I wish to express my personal gratitude for his service as Vicar General since 25 March 2017. He has brought his considerable talents and experience to the role, and has assisted me in fulfilling my responsibility of governance of the Church in Tasmania. I have appreciated his sound advice and guidance on many matters. I wish Fr Tate God’s abundant blessings as he continues his priestly service in the Archdiocese of Hobart. Ad multos annos.’The Archbishop continued: ‘I am pleased to announce Fr Shammi Perera as the new Vicar General for the Archdiocese of Hobart effective from 1 June 2020. Fr Shammi will continue as Administrator of the Cathedral Parish.’
The second announcement was that a date for Deacon Steven Smith’s Ordination to the Priesthood had been set – provided that the stages of re-opening post Covid-19 proceed as planned. He will be ordained on 24th July at St Mary’s Cathedral but it will be a strictly by invitation event as limits to the number of people attending are capped. Further details as more information is available.
We received an email yesterday advising that due to the Covid-19 Pandemic there will not be a printed edition of The Swag this winter. Anyone who wants to can assess the edition by clicking the following link:
https://issuu.com/ncp2020/docs/the_swag_-_winter_2020?fr=sNTdiMTEzNzc0ODU
I will continue to keep everyone informed as to how we are progressing in our efforts to getting back to celebrating Mass with a congregation. The response from parishioners after I suggested we needed to proceed slowly here on the NW Coast was very encouraging but we are working to ensure we will be able to celebrate Mass after every effort has been made to ensure all precautions have been put in place. I maybe overcautious but I would prefer to be proved wrong rather than something serious to happen that could have been avoided.
My Tuesday and Thursday email updates and my Wednesday and Friday Ramblings on Facebook and YouTube will continue – see the accompanying email for more details.
Stay safe, stay sane and, if you can, stay at home
ONLINE GIVING: The details for online Planned Giving are: Bank Commonwealth; Account Name: Mersey Leven; BSB: 067 000; Acc No: 1031 5724. In the Description area simply add your Name or Envelope Number.
BANK BRANCH DEPOSIT: If you wish to deposit at a Bank Branch the details are slightly different. The Account Name: Catholic Development Fund; BSB: 067 000; Acc No: 1031 5724. In the Description area simply add your Name or Envelope Number.
The urgency of the pope's 2015 encyclical on Care for Our Common Home -
Robert Mickens, Rome, May 22, 2020.
This article is from the La-Croix International website - you can access the site here but complete full access is via paid subscription
This article is from the La-Croix International website - you can access the site here but complete full access is via paid subscription
"If life's events, with all their bitterness, sometimes risk choking the gift of prayer that is within us, it is enough to contemplate a starry sky, a sunset, a flower... in order to rekindle a spark of thanksgiving."
Pope Francis pronounced those words at his general audience this past Wednesday, which was once again video-streamed from the papal study inside the Apostolic Palace because of the ongoing coronavirus lockdown.
Although people here in Italy are gradually returning to some semblance of life as it was before we were forced to take drastic measures to stop the spread of COVID-19, large gatherings are sill not permitted.
It seemed timely that the pope focused on prayer this day, especially the way he connected it to pondering "the mystery of Creation".
"And behold it was very good"
"The beauty and mystery of Creation create in the human heart the first impulse that evokes prayer," he said, quoting the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
The 87-year-old pope described it this way:The first page of the Bible resembles a great hymn of thanksgiving. The narrative of Creation has a rhythm with refrains, where the goodness and beauty of every living thing is continually emphasized. With his word, God calls to life, and every thing comes into existence. With his word, God separates life from darkness, alternates day and night, interchanges the seasons, opens a palette of colors with the variety of plants and animals. In this overflowing forest that quickly vanquishes the chaos, the last one to appear is man. And this appearance inspires an extreme exultation that amplifies God's satisfaction and joy: "God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good (Gen 1:31). Very good, but also beautiful: the beauty of all creation can be seen!
It was no coincidence that Francis linked prayer to creation. His general audience came as the Vatican's department for integral human development was sponsoring something called "Laudato Si' Week".
The May 16-24 initiative is meant to mark the fifth anniversary of the pope's encyclical of the same name and re-launch its "urgent appeal for a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet".
Our Sister, Mother Earth, now cries to us
The title of the 2015 papal document – which is from the old Umbrian dialect and translates as "Praise be to you" – comes from the Canticle of the Creatures, a work attributed to Saint Francis of Assisi.
"Praise be to you, my Lord, through our Sister, Mother Earth, who sustains and governs us, and who produces various fruit with colored flowers and herbs," says one of the stanzas in the beloved saint's poetic song.
"It reminds us that our common home is like a sister with whom we share our life and a beautiful mother who opens her arms to embrace us," the pope says in his encyclical.
But he notes with a sense of urgency that "this sister now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her".
And he says we have to stop acting "as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will" and reverse the course that is destroying the home of all humanity.
"The urgent challenge to protect our common home includes a concern to bring the whole human family together to seek a sustainable and integral development, for we know that things can change," Francis continues in the introductory pages of this important and prophetic text.
"With every person living on this planet"
"I urgently appeal, then, for a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet. We need a conversation which includes everyone, since the environmental challenge we are undergoing, and its human roots, concern and affect us all," the pope says.
Future generations will likely judge Laudato Si' as one of the most outstanding and – for a Vatican document – most non-dogmatic texts (in the sense of being open and inclusive of others) that a pope has ever written.
He specifically invites "every person living on this planet" – regardless of race, color or creed – to join together in the search for a sustainable way to stop "global environmental deterioration".
"In this encyclical, I would like to enter into dialogue with all people about our common home," Francis writes.
The world is deeply fractured. But the pope has noted that the coronavirus has forced us to finally realize "that we are all in the same boat".
Just like the pandemic, the effect of environmental destruction cannot be contained within certain borders or blocked by setting up checkpoints.
Appealing to the goodwill, solidarity and engagement of all people
We are all in this together.
And it's to Pope Francis' credit and farsightedness that he used the global reach and moral authority of the papacy to help heal the fractures of our world by promoting dialogue and encounter on many different levels and in many areas.
But there is no one issue that should appeal to the goodwill, solidarity and engagement of all people, regardless of their differences, more than caring for our precious earth – our common home.
And, yet, there are even prominent Catholics who are scoffing at this. Among them are cardinals, some who even got their red hats from this pope!
"Obstructionist attitudes, even on the part of believers, can range from denial of the problem to indifference, nonchalant resignation or blind confidence in technical solutions," Francis acknowledges in the encyclical.
But he is undeterred.
"We require a new and universal solidarity," he insists.
Indeed, we do.
If you have not already read Laudato Si', please do so. (You can find it here)
Read it slowly and carefully. Meditate on it. Think long and hard about the points it makes. And let it challenge you, as it surely is aimed to do.
And you don't even have to purchase a hard copy. It's free. You can read it on the internet. (You can find it here)
That's not only the first step toward saving a tree, but it is an initiation into a global conversation on how we can better protect our common home.
The World Carried Inside
This article is taken from the Daily Email sent by Fr Richard Rohr OFM from the Center for Action and Contemplation. You can subscribe to receive the email by clicking here
When so much of our world is focused on making us feel like
human “doings” instead of human beings, moving into solitude and silence is
both a gift and a burden. Once we have overcome the external pressure to
perform, we are left with our own interiority.
The trouble—and the opportunity—in solitude is that there is no one
around to blame for our moods and our difficulties. We are stuck with
ourselves. The desert abbas and ammas faced the same dilemma.
In the tradition of Moses and Jesus, the Christians who
entered into the desert found a wild, fierce, unknown place where they
encountered both “demons” and “angels” (Mark 1:13)—their own shadowy selves
which contained both good and evil, gold and lead. My friend, wilderness
theologian, and mystic Belden Lane helps clear away any romanticism we might
associate with desert spirituality:
The desert is, preeminently, a place to die. Anyone
retreating to an Egyptian or Judean monastery, hoping to escape the tensions of
city life, found little comfort among the likes of an [Abba] Anthony or Sabas.
The desert offered no private therapeutic place for solace and rejuvenation.
One was as likely to be carried out feet first as to be restored unchanged to
the life one had left. . . . Amma Syncletica refused to let anyone deceive
herself by imagining that retreat to a desert monastery meant the guarantee of
freedom from the world. The hardest world to leave, she knew, is the one within
the heart. [1]
A story from the Desert Fathers illustrates that even in the
desert there is no escaping our own habitual responses:
A brother was restless in the community and often moved to
anger. So he said: “I will go and live somewhere by myself. And since I shall
be able to talk or listen to no one, I shall be tranquil, and my passionate
anger will cease.” He went out and lived alone in a cave. But one day he filled
his jug with water and put it on the ground. It happened suddenly to fall over.
He filled it again, and again it fell. And this happened a third time. And in a
rage he snatched up the jug and broke it. Returning to his right mind, he knew
that the demon of anger had mocked him, and he said: “Here am I by myself, and
he has beaten me. I will return to the community. Wherever you live, you need
effort and patience and above all God’s help.” And he rose up, and went back.
[2]
I have experienced similar frustration more times than I
care to count. It seems that wherever we go, there we are, warts and all. The
gift and grace of contemplation is in receiving God’s gaze. Love sees our
nakedness, accepts us unconditionally, and empowers us to change.
[1] Belden C. Lane, The Solace of Fierce Landscapes:
Exploring Desert and Mountain Spirituality (Oxford University Press: 1998),
165, 168.
[2] Western Asceticism, ed., trans. Owen Chadwick (The
Westminster Press: 1958), 92.
[3] Lane, The Solace of Fierce Landscapes, 166.
"If life's events, with all their bitterness, sometimes risk choking the gift of prayer that is within us, it is enough to contemplate a starry sky, a sunset, a flower... in order to rekindle a spark of thanksgiving."
Pope Francis pronounced those words at his general audience this past Wednesday, which was once again video-streamed from the papal study inside the Apostolic Palace because of the ongoing coronavirus lockdown.
Although people here in Italy are gradually returning to some semblance of life as it was before we were forced to take drastic measures to stop the spread of COVID-19, large gatherings are sill not permitted.
It seemed timely that the pope focused on prayer this day, especially the way he connected it to pondering "the mystery of Creation".
"And behold it was very good"
"The beauty and mystery of Creation create in the human heart the first impulse that evokes prayer," he said, quoting the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
The 87-year-old pope described it this way:The first page of the Bible resembles a great hymn of thanksgiving. The narrative of Creation has a rhythm with refrains, where the goodness and beauty of every living thing is continually emphasized. With his word, God calls to life, and every thing comes into existence. With his word, God separates life from darkness, alternates day and night, interchanges the seasons, opens a palette of colors with the variety of plants and animals. In this overflowing forest that quickly vanquishes the chaos, the last one to appear is man. And this appearance inspires an extreme exultation that amplifies God's satisfaction and joy: "God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good (Gen 1:31). Very good, but also beautiful: the beauty of all creation can be seen!
It was no coincidence that Francis linked prayer to creation. His general audience came as the Vatican's department for integral human development was sponsoring something called "Laudato Si' Week".
The May 16-24 initiative is meant to mark the fifth anniversary of the pope's encyclical of the same name and re-launch its "urgent appeal for a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet".
Our Sister, Mother Earth, now cries to us
The title of the 2015 papal document – which is from the old Umbrian dialect and translates as "Praise be to you" – comes from the Canticle of the Creatures, a work attributed to Saint Francis of Assisi.
"Praise be to you, my Lord, through our Sister, Mother Earth, who sustains and governs us, and who produces various fruit with colored flowers and herbs," says one of the stanzas in the beloved saint's poetic song.
"It reminds us that our common home is like a sister with whom we share our life and a beautiful mother who opens her arms to embrace us," the pope says in his encyclical.
But he notes with a sense of urgency that "this sister now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her".
And he says we have to stop acting "as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will" and reverse the course that is destroying the home of all humanity.
"The urgent challenge to protect our common home includes a concern to bring the whole human family together to seek a sustainable and integral development, for we know that things can change," Francis continues in the introductory pages of this important and prophetic text.
"With every person living on this planet"
"I urgently appeal, then, for a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet. We need a conversation which includes everyone, since the environmental challenge we are undergoing, and its human roots, concern and affect us all," the pope says.
Future generations will likely judge Laudato Si' as one of the most outstanding and – for a Vatican document – most non-dogmatic texts (in the sense of being open and inclusive of others) that a pope has ever written.
He specifically invites "every person living on this planet" – regardless of race, color or creed – to join together in the search for a sustainable way to stop "global environmental deterioration".
"In this encyclical, I would like to enter into dialogue with all people about our common home," Francis writes.
The world is deeply fractured. But the pope has noted that the coronavirus has forced us to finally realize "that we are all in the same boat".
Just like the pandemic, the effect of environmental destruction cannot be contained within certain borders or blocked by setting up checkpoints.
Appealing to the goodwill, solidarity and engagement of all people
We are all in this together.
And it's to Pope Francis' credit and farsightedness that he used the global reach and moral authority of the papacy to help heal the fractures of our world by promoting dialogue and encounter on many different levels and in many areas.
But there is no one issue that should appeal to the goodwill, solidarity and engagement of all people, regardless of their differences, more than caring for our precious earth – our common home.
And, yet, there are even prominent Catholics who are scoffing at this. Among them are cardinals, some who even got their red hats from this pope!
"Obstructionist attitudes, even on the part of believers, can range from denial of the problem to indifference, nonchalant resignation or blind confidence in technical solutions," Francis acknowledges in the encyclical.
But he is undeterred.
"We require a new and universal solidarity," he insists.
Indeed, we do.
If you have not already read Laudato Si', please do so. (You can find it here)
Read it slowly and carefully. Meditate on it. Think long and hard about the points it makes. And let it challenge you, as it surely is aimed to do.
And you don't even have to purchase a hard copy. It's free. You can read it on the internet. (You can find it here)
That's not only the first step toward saving a tree, but it is an initiation into a global conversation on how we can better protect our common home.
The World Carried Inside
This article is taken from the Daily Email sent by Fr Richard Rohr OFM from the Center for Action and Contemplation. You can subscribe to receive the email by clicking here
When so much of our world is focused on making us feel like
human “doings” instead of human beings, moving into solitude and silence is
both a gift and a burden. Once we have overcome the external pressure to
perform, we are left with our own interiority.
The trouble—and the opportunity—in solitude is that there is no one
around to blame for our moods and our difficulties. We are stuck with
ourselves. The desert abbas and ammas faced the same dilemma.
In the tradition of Moses and Jesus, the Christians who
entered into the desert found a wild, fierce, unknown place where they
encountered both “demons” and “angels” (Mark 1:13)—their own shadowy selves
which contained both good and evil, gold and lead. My friend, wilderness
theologian, and mystic Belden Lane helps clear away any romanticism we might
associate with desert spirituality:
The desert is, preeminently, a place to die. Anyone
retreating to an Egyptian or Judean monastery, hoping to escape the tensions of
city life, found little comfort among the likes of an [Abba] Anthony or Sabas.
The desert offered no private therapeutic place for solace and rejuvenation.
One was as likely to be carried out feet first as to be restored unchanged to
the life one had left. . . . Amma Syncletica refused to let anyone deceive
herself by imagining that retreat to a desert monastery meant the guarantee of
freedom from the world. The hardest world to leave, she knew, is the one within
the heart. [1]
A story from the Desert Fathers illustrates that even in the
desert there is no escaping our own habitual responses:
A brother was restless in the community and often moved to
anger. So he said: “I will go and live somewhere by myself. And since I shall
be able to talk or listen to no one, I shall be tranquil, and my passionate
anger will cease.” He went out and lived alone in a cave. But one day he filled
his jug with water and put it on the ground. It happened suddenly to fall over.
He filled it again, and again it fell. And this happened a third time. And in a
rage he snatched up the jug and broke it. Returning to his right mind, he knew
that the demon of anger had mocked him, and he said: “Here am I by myself, and
he has beaten me. I will return to the community. Wherever you live, you need
effort and patience and above all God’s help.” And he rose up, and went back.
[2]
I have experienced similar frustration more times than I
care to count. It seems that wherever we go, there we are, warts and all. The
gift and grace of contemplation is in receiving God’s gaze. Love sees our
nakedness, accepts us unconditionally, and empowers us to change.
[1] Belden C. Lane, The Solace of Fierce Landscapes:
Exploring Desert and Mountain Spirituality (Oxford University Press: 1998),
165, 168.
[2] Western Asceticism, ed., trans. Owen Chadwick (The
Westminster Press: 1958), 92.
[3] Lane, The Solace of Fierce Landscapes, 166.
Discernment isn’t an easy thing. Take this dilemma: When we find ourselves in a situation that’s causing us deep interior anguish, do we walk away, assuming that the presence of such pain is an indication that this isn’t the right place for us, that something’s terminally wrong here? Or, like Jesus, do we accept to stay, saying to ourselves, our loved ones, and our God: “What shall I say, save me from this hour?”
At the very moment that Jesus was facing a humiliating death by crucifixion, the Gospel of John hints that he was offered an opportunity to escape. A delegation of Greeks, through the apostle Philip, offer Jesus an invitation to leave with them, to go to a group that would receive him and his message. So Jesus has a choice: Endure anguish, humiliation, and death inside his own community or abandon that community for one that will accept him. What does he do? He asks himself this question: “What shall I say, save me from this hour?”
Although this is phrased as a question, it’s an answer. He is choosing to stay, to face the anguish, humiliation, and pain because he sees it as the precise fidelity he is called to within the very dynamic of the love he is preaching. He came to earth to incarnate and teach what real love is and now, when the cost of that is humiliation and interior anguish, he knows and accepts that this is what’s now being asked of him. The pain is not telling him that he’s doing something wrong, is at the wrong place, or that this community is not worth this suffering. To the contrary: The pain is understood to be calling him to a deeper fidelity at the very heart of his mission and vocation. Until this moment, only words were asked of him, now he is being asked to back them up in reality; he needs to swallow hard to do it.
What shall I say, save me from this hour? Do we have the wisdom and the generosity to say those words when, inside our own commitments, we are challenged to endure searing interior anguish? When Jesus asks himself this question, what he is facing is a near-perfect mirror for situations we will all find ourselves in sometimes. In most every commitment we make, if we are faithful, an hour will come when we are suffering interior anguish (and often times exterior misunderstanding as well) and are faced with a tough decision: Is this pain and misunderstanding (and even my own immaturity as I stand inside it) an indication that I’m in the wrong place, should leave, and find someone or some other community that wants me? Or, inside this interior anguish, exterior misunderstanding, and personal immaturity, am I called to say: What shall I say, save me from this hour? This is what I’m called to! I was born for this!
I think the question is critical because often anguishing pain can shake our commitments and tempt us to walk away from them. Marriages, consecrated religious vocations, commitments to work for justice, commitments to our church communities, and commitments to family and friends, can be abandoned on the belief that nobody is called to live inside such anguish, desolation, and misunderstanding. Indeed, today the presence of pain, desolation, and misunderstanding is generally taken as a sign to abandon a commitment and find someone else or some other group that will affirm us rather than as an indication that now, just now, in this hour, inside this particular pain and misunderstanding, we have a chance to bring a life-giving grace into this commitment.
I have seen people leave marriages, leave family, leave priesthood, leave religious life, leave their church community, leave long-cherished friendships, and leave commitments to work for justice and peace because, at a point, they experienced a lot of pain and misunderstanding. And, in many of those cases, I also saw that it was in fact a good thing. The situation they were in was not life-giving for them or for others. They needed to be saved from that “hour”. In some cases though the opposite was true. They were in excruciating pain, but that pain was an invitation to a deeper, more life-giving place inside their commitment. They left, just when they should have stayed.
Granted, discernment is difficult. It’s not always for lack of generosity that people walk away from a commitment. Some of the most generous and unselfish people I know have left a marriage or the priesthood or religious life or their churches. But I write this because, today, so much trusted psychological and spiritual literature does not sufficiently highlight the challenge to, like Jesus, stand inside excruciating pain and humiliating misunderstanding and instead of walking away to someone or some group that offers us the acceptance and understanding we crave, we instead accept that it is more life-giving to say: What shall I say, save me from this hour?
This article is taken from the Blog posted by Fr Michael White, Pastor of the Church of the Nativity, Timoneum, Baltimore. You can find the original blog by clicking here
When the initial quarantine began, we turned to technology to indiscriminately fill the gaps that had been created in our communication. Social media and online Mass broadcasts provided a means to reach multitudes of people at once with a single, all-encompassing message. This technology has borne some incredible fruit at our parish and we will continue to invest in our online “campus.”
But as time has gone on, we have also begun to realize the role of personal communication as a necessary complement to our broad messaging in this time of isolation. This shouldn’t really be news to anyone. Human beings thrive on social contact with others, it’s in our DNA. If doing ministry means communicating a relationship with Jesus to another person, then much will always be dependent on personal interaction.
The downside is that personal contact is expensive – in terms of time, effort, and energy, especially if all that responsibility falls on the pastor. You can avoid burnout in two ways. First, clergy should share this duty with staff or volunteer ministers, if possible. Second, clever use of technology can facilitate these types of personal interactions and make them sustainable. For example, while I could never personally greet everyone who walked in our doors on a weekend, our online greeter ministers can engage with everyone who watches online through a chat box (more on that below).
Our strategy has been to push the boundaries of technology while also going old-school with personal contact. Below, you’ll find a few other things we’ve been doing to keep up personal contact among our members and guests.
Weekend Guests
Personal touches have been a staple of corporate hospitality and even of our own weekend strategy here at Nativity for years. While we can’t meet in person, our strategy has shifted to making the online Mass broadcast as personal as possible. Online ‘chat ministers’ engage viewers in the chat box that accompanies each Mass. Chat ministers greet guests by name and help lead them in worship.
Givers
One strategy for our communication with givers has been tailored to their method of giving. For those with recurring, automatic gifts, we have continued our practice of thanking them for their gift by mail and email. For those who usually give by envelope at Mass, we mailed pre-addressed envelopes for those who might want to continue giving while our campus is closed. By going that extra mile to making giving easier, we communicated to our givers that we are thinking of them. This last strategy has been especially fruitful.
Teens
One of the most unfortunate restrictions of the quarantine was that many of the usual routines of senior year and graduation have been disrupted. What was supposed to be a memorable spring for many has instead been forgettable period of solitude. Our Student Ministry Team came up with a great way to personally recognize graduating seniors. For each student, they made a special care package and are in the process of delivering them to their homes (while social distancing).
Elderly
While many of the elderly members of our parish have reported that they have tuned in and benefited from our online Mass broadcasts, we recognize that not all of them are accustomed to communicating in that way. The elderly are especially important to reach because many of them live alone and will likely stay home from in-person gatherings for longer than everyone else. For all these reasons, I am currently in the process of calling our 80+ parishioners.
Staff
Most all of our staff have been working from home full-time for a couple of months and we’ve started to notice a ‘fatigue’ setting in from the isolation and impersonal nature of work. That’s why, over the course of a couple of weeks, I met by video chat for a personal conversation with each of our staff members. This check-in allowed me to catch up and offer support and encouragement.
If we have learned anything from the COVID-19 crisis, it is that personal communication in ministry remains important and life-giving. The lessons we’re learning about personal contact extend beyond forced quarantine, and we are looking to continue many of these strategies beyond.
Living In A Time Out Of Shape
If you are finding yourself more aware of time than ever at the moment, you are sharing something of the experience of a group of refugees who have been reflecting with Dr Anna Rowlands on the impact of the distortion of time. What does it mean to spend time well, and how might our collective experience of the current restrictions affect the way we impose them on others in future?
Dr Anna Rowlands is St Hilda Associate Professor in Catholic Social Thought and Practice at the University of Durham.
This article is taken from the ThinkingFaith.org website where you can find a wide range of articles by clicking here
Time – and how we spend it – has suddenly become a major topic of social discussion. Recent media chat is full of interesting, earnest, sad, even humorous, exchanges about two themes in particular: what does it mean to spend time well? And what happens to us when those markers of time change suddenly, in a way that is beyond our control?
Droll contributors note that the only differentiating factor that marks a day now is whether it’s time to drink coffee or wine. More earnest voices ask whether you’ve maxed your commitment to learning new skills, found ways to be even more productive and managed to beast yourself with a new-found exercise drive. Meanwhile, the more dystopian remind us that for most people this is not, as Matthew D’Ancona wrote last week, ‘a surreal sabbatical’ but rather a ‘nightmare’ just to be survived. To suggest anything else, D’Ancona writes, is a denial of what this really is. Strikingly, Jonathan Freedland, quoting the Russian former detainee and writer Victor Serge, notes that we live with the unsettling paradox that in a state of lockdown days can feel like they race past and yet the seconds drag.
As we are robbed of the markers of time, so we invent new ones. In resistance to the numbing sameness of our days, whether on the front line or restricted to home, determined that we can still shape and differentiate our reality, we create new public rituals that mark, claim and leave their human imprint on time, like clapping for the NHS. To lose your time markers is somehow inhumane. We have come to learn this in recent weeks, and rightly to resist this deadening hand, too, where we can. That’s what the human spirit does: it reinvents the goods that it knows are vital and finds suddenly threatened.
One of the reasons I am so interested in this new public awareness of time is that I have spent the last few years working on exactly this theme with a group of people who are experts-by-experience in the philosophies of time, but whose voices are rarely heard in public debate. These voices belong to refugees stranded in the most dysfunctional end of the UK asylum process. They know acutely what it is like to lose your everyday markers of time and have to reinvent them.
In a day centre in the East End of London the Jesuit Refugee Service works with, and is partly staffed by, a group of refugees who are living in destitution without the right to work, without public welfare support and with a constant risk of being detained in immigration detention facilities. During fieldwork I conducted over two years with the JRS community, time and its distortion became one of the main experiences that refugees reflected on.
Refugees talked about their sense that enforced idleness, the time it takes for appeals to be processed and the wasting of their skills and talents as they endure a lengthy waiting over years rather than months, creates a sense of ‘degrading in time’, creates a sense that you lack value and slowly erodes those very skills as they lie unused. We live, one interviewee told me, in a society that demands you contribute, but when you are not able to contribute that reduces a sense of self-worth and social value. It unsettles and uproots people in deep and lasting psychological ways.
As is well documented, for those who have been detained the stress of counting their days up against an unknown limit, creates acute mental stress. Not knowing when this will end makes the experience far tougher. We know that those detained fear both stasis, that nothing will change and that they will remain in this place of suffering, and yet they also fear at the same time sudden and catastrophic change. This is a terrible double mental bind that many fail to understand as the long term legacy of detention.
Yet, those I interviewed were clear that they, like we are now, find ways to resist the flattening and deadening of time. This is crucial to survival and wellbeing. ‘Being able to spend your time well really matters’, I was told. Spending time well means creating spaces that overcome isolation and where experience can be shared, and stories told. Interviewees told me that they had valued being able to volunteer to help others in need, to learn new skills and keep alive the ones they have. Crucial was the ability to feel that they had expertise that could help others on the same road. It will surprise no one who has survived the asylum system that so many people have volunteered so quickly in this crisis.
My hope is that the current situation and our own relative shrinking of freedom, often but not always with forms of privilege still attached, will give us a small insight into both the harm that such restrictions cause, even in the most resilient of people and situations, and would make us cautious in the extreme to now ever knowingly inflict such powers on others without extreme cause.
And we might possibly look with new admiration at those who find ways to survive such pain and use it as the basis for a life lived well for themselves, with and for others. This is the risk and the task of all human living and loving, and we find wisdom on this theme in the most hidden and difficult of places.
We might also remember that it is precisely these communities, already wise in the challenges of negotiating disordered time, who face some of the greatest challenges in shielding themselves from this virus. Here the option to socially distance, that creates such strain for many of us, remains a social privilege that even though challenging, many cannot take for granted.
Dr Rowlands’ full report, ‘For our welfare and not for our harm’, can be downloaded here: https://www.jrsuk.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/For-our-welfare-and-not-for-our-harm_Dr-Anna-RowlandsJRS-UK.pdf
Discernment isn’t an easy thing. Take this dilemma: When we find ourselves in a situation that’s causing us deep interior anguish, do we walk away, assuming that the presence of such pain is an indication that this isn’t the right place for us, that something’s terminally wrong here? Or, like Jesus, do we accept to stay, saying to ourselves, our loved ones, and our God: “What shall I say, save me from this hour?”
At the very moment that Jesus was facing a humiliating death by crucifixion, the Gospel of John hints that he was offered an opportunity to escape. A delegation of Greeks, through the apostle Philip, offer Jesus an invitation to leave with them, to go to a group that would receive him and his message. So Jesus has a choice: Endure anguish, humiliation, and death inside his own community or abandon that community for one that will accept him. What does he do? He asks himself this question: “What shall I say, save me from this hour?”
Although this is phrased as a question, it’s an answer. He is choosing to stay, to face the anguish, humiliation, and pain because he sees it as the precise fidelity he is called to within the very dynamic of the love he is preaching. He came to earth to incarnate and teach what real love is and now, when the cost of that is humiliation and interior anguish, he knows and accepts that this is what’s now being asked of him. The pain is not telling him that he’s doing something wrong, is at the wrong place, or that this community is not worth this suffering. To the contrary: The pain is understood to be calling him to a deeper fidelity at the very heart of his mission and vocation. Until this moment, only words were asked of him, now he is being asked to back them up in reality; he needs to swallow hard to do it.
What shall I say, save me from this hour? Do we have the wisdom and the generosity to say those words when, inside our own commitments, we are challenged to endure searing interior anguish? When Jesus asks himself this question, what he is facing is a near-perfect mirror for situations we will all find ourselves in sometimes. In most every commitment we make, if we are faithful, an hour will come when we are suffering interior anguish (and often times exterior misunderstanding as well) and are faced with a tough decision: Is this pain and misunderstanding (and even my own immaturity as I stand inside it) an indication that I’m in the wrong place, should leave, and find someone or some other community that wants me? Or, inside this interior anguish, exterior misunderstanding, and personal immaturity, am I called to say: What shall I say, save me from this hour? This is what I’m called to! I was born for this!
I think the question is critical because often anguishing pain can shake our commitments and tempt us to walk away from them. Marriages, consecrated religious vocations, commitments to work for justice, commitments to our church communities, and commitments to family and friends, can be abandoned on the belief that nobody is called to live inside such anguish, desolation, and misunderstanding. Indeed, today the presence of pain, desolation, and misunderstanding is generally taken as a sign to abandon a commitment and find someone else or some other group that will affirm us rather than as an indication that now, just now, in this hour, inside this particular pain and misunderstanding, we have a chance to bring a life-giving grace into this commitment.
I have seen people leave marriages, leave family, leave priesthood, leave religious life, leave their church community, leave long-cherished friendships, and leave commitments to work for justice and peace because, at a point, they experienced a lot of pain and misunderstanding. And, in many of those cases, I also saw that it was in fact a good thing. The situation they were in was not life-giving for them or for others. They needed to be saved from that “hour”. In some cases though the opposite was true. They were in excruciating pain, but that pain was an invitation to a deeper, more life-giving place inside their commitment. They left, just when they should have stayed.
Granted, discernment is difficult. It’s not always for lack of generosity that people walk away from a commitment. Some of the most generous and unselfish people I know have left a marriage or the priesthood or religious life or their churches. But I write this because, today, so much trusted psychological and spiritual literature does not sufficiently highlight the challenge to, like Jesus, stand inside excruciating pain and humiliating misunderstanding and instead of walking away to someone or some group that offers us the acceptance and understanding we crave, we instead accept that it is more life-giving to say: What shall I say, save me from this hour?
This article is taken from the Blog posted by Fr Michael White, Pastor of the Church of the Nativity, Timoneum, Baltimore. You can find the original blog by clicking here
When the initial quarantine began, we turned to technology to indiscriminately fill the gaps that had been created in our communication. Social media and online Mass broadcasts provided a means to reach multitudes of people at once with a single, all-encompassing message. This technology has borne some incredible fruit at our parish and we will continue to invest in our online “campus.”
But as time has gone on, we have also begun to realize the role of personal communication as a necessary complement to our broad messaging in this time of isolation. This shouldn’t really be news to anyone. Human beings thrive on social contact with others, it’s in our DNA. If doing ministry means communicating a relationship with Jesus to another person, then much will always be dependent on personal interaction.
The downside is that personal contact is expensive – in terms of time, effort, and energy, especially if all that responsibility falls on the pastor. You can avoid burnout in two ways. First, clergy should share this duty with staff or volunteer ministers, if possible. Second, clever use of technology can facilitate these types of personal interactions and make them sustainable. For example, while I could never personally greet everyone who walked in our doors on a weekend, our online greeter ministers can engage with everyone who watches online through a chat box (more on that below).
Our strategy has been to push the boundaries of technology while also going old-school with personal contact. Below, you’ll find a few other things we’ve been doing to keep up personal contact among our members and guests.
Weekend Guests
Personal touches have been a staple of corporate hospitality and even of our own weekend strategy here at Nativity for years. While we can’t meet in person, our strategy has shifted to making the online Mass broadcast as personal as possible. Online ‘chat ministers’ engage viewers in the chat box that accompanies each Mass. Chat ministers greet guests by name and help lead them in worship.
Givers
One strategy for our communication with givers has been tailored to their method of giving. For those with recurring, automatic gifts, we have continued our practice of thanking them for their gift by mail and email. For those who usually give by envelope at Mass, we mailed pre-addressed envelopes for those who might want to continue giving while our campus is closed. By going that extra mile to making giving easier, we communicated to our givers that we are thinking of them. This last strategy has been especially fruitful.
Teens
One of the most unfortunate restrictions of the quarantine was that many of the usual routines of senior year and graduation have been disrupted. What was supposed to be a memorable spring for many has instead been forgettable period of solitude. Our Student Ministry Team came up with a great way to personally recognize graduating seniors. For each student, they made a special care package and are in the process of delivering them to their homes (while social distancing).
Elderly
While many of the elderly members of our parish have reported that they have tuned in and benefited from our online Mass broadcasts, we recognize that not all of them are accustomed to communicating in that way. The elderly are especially important to reach because many of them live alone and will likely stay home from in-person gatherings for longer than everyone else. For all these reasons, I am currently in the process of calling our 80+ parishioners.
Staff
Most all of our staff have been working from home full-time for a couple of months and we’ve started to notice a ‘fatigue’ setting in from the isolation and impersonal nature of work. That’s why, over the course of a couple of weeks, I met by video chat for a personal conversation with each of our staff members. This check-in allowed me to catch up and offer support and encouragement.
If we have learned anything from the COVID-19 crisis, it is that personal communication in ministry remains important and life-giving. The lessons we’re learning about personal contact extend beyond forced quarantine, and we are looking to continue many of these strategies beyond.
If you are finding yourself more aware of time than ever at the moment, you are sharing something of the experience of a group of refugees who have been reflecting with Dr Anna Rowlands on the impact of the distortion of time. What does it mean to spend time well, and how might our collective experience of the current restrictions affect the way we impose them on others in future?
Dr Anna Rowlands is St Hilda Associate Professor in Catholic Social Thought and Practice at the University of Durham.
This article is taken from the ThinkingFaith.org website where you can find a wide range of articles by clicking here
Time – and how we spend it – has suddenly become a major topic of social discussion. Recent media chat is full of interesting, earnest, sad, even humorous, exchanges about two themes in particular: what does it mean to spend time well? And what happens to us when those markers of time change suddenly, in a way that is beyond our control?
Droll contributors note that the only differentiating factor that marks a day now is whether it’s time to drink coffee or wine. More earnest voices ask whether you’ve maxed your commitment to learning new skills, found ways to be even more productive and managed to beast yourself with a new-found exercise drive. Meanwhile, the more dystopian remind us that for most people this is not, as Matthew D’Ancona wrote last week, ‘a surreal sabbatical’ but rather a ‘nightmare’ just to be survived. To suggest anything else, D’Ancona writes, is a denial of what this really is. Strikingly, Jonathan Freedland, quoting the Russian former detainee and writer Victor Serge, notes that we live with the unsettling paradox that in a state of lockdown days can feel like they race past and yet the seconds drag.
As we are robbed of the markers of time, so we invent new ones. In resistance to the numbing sameness of our days, whether on the front line or restricted to home, determined that we can still shape and differentiate our reality, we create new public rituals that mark, claim and leave their human imprint on time, like clapping for the NHS. To lose your time markers is somehow inhumane. We have come to learn this in recent weeks, and rightly to resist this deadening hand, too, where we can. That’s what the human spirit does: it reinvents the goods that it knows are vital and finds suddenly threatened.
One of the reasons I am so interested in this new public awareness of time is that I have spent the last few years working on exactly this theme with a group of people who are experts-by-experience in the philosophies of time, but whose voices are rarely heard in public debate. These voices belong to refugees stranded in the most dysfunctional end of the UK asylum process. They know acutely what it is like to lose your everyday markers of time and have to reinvent them.
In a day centre in the East End of London the Jesuit Refugee Service works with, and is partly staffed by, a group of refugees who are living in destitution without the right to work, without public welfare support and with a constant risk of being detained in immigration detention facilities. During fieldwork I conducted over two years with the JRS community, time and its distortion became one of the main experiences that refugees reflected on.
Refugees talked about their sense that enforced idleness, the time it takes for appeals to be processed and the wasting of their skills and talents as they endure a lengthy waiting over years rather than months, creates a sense of ‘degrading in time’, creates a sense that you lack value and slowly erodes those very skills as they lie unused. We live, one interviewee told me, in a society that demands you contribute, but when you are not able to contribute that reduces a sense of self-worth and social value. It unsettles and uproots people in deep and lasting psychological ways.
As is well documented, for those who have been detained the stress of counting their days up against an unknown limit, creates acute mental stress. Not knowing when this will end makes the experience far tougher. We know that those detained fear both stasis, that nothing will change and that they will remain in this place of suffering, and yet they also fear at the same time sudden and catastrophic change. This is a terrible double mental bind that many fail to understand as the long term legacy of detention.
Yet, those I interviewed were clear that they, like we are now, find ways to resist the flattening and deadening of time. This is crucial to survival and wellbeing. ‘Being able to spend your time well really matters’, I was told. Spending time well means creating spaces that overcome isolation and where experience can be shared, and stories told. Interviewees told me that they had valued being able to volunteer to help others in need, to learn new skills and keep alive the ones they have. Crucial was the ability to feel that they had expertise that could help others on the same road. It will surprise no one who has survived the asylum system that so many people have volunteered so quickly in this crisis.
My hope is that the current situation and our own relative shrinking of freedom, often but not always with forms of privilege still attached, will give us a small insight into both the harm that such restrictions cause, even in the most resilient of people and situations, and would make us cautious in the extreme to now ever knowingly inflict such powers on others without extreme cause.
And we might possibly look with new admiration at those who find ways to survive such pain and use it as the basis for a life lived well for themselves, with and for others. This is the risk and the task of all human living and loving, and we find wisdom on this theme in the most hidden and difficult of places.
We might also remember that it is precisely these communities, already wise in the challenges of negotiating disordered time, who face some of the greatest challenges in shielding themselves from this virus. Here the option to socially distance, that creates such strain for many of us, remains a social privilege that even though challenging, many cannot take for granted.
Dr Rowlands’ full report, ‘For our welfare and not for our harm’, can be downloaded here: https://www.jrsuk.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/For-our-welfare-and-not-for-our-harm_Dr-Anna-RowlandsJRS-UK.pdf
But as time has gone on, we have also begun to realize the role of personal communication as a necessary complement to our broad messaging in this time of isolation. This shouldn’t really be news to anyone. Human beings thrive on social contact with others, it’s in our DNA. If doing ministry means communicating a relationship with Jesus to another person, then much will always be dependent on personal interaction.
The downside is that personal contact is expensive – in terms of time, effort, and energy, especially if all that responsibility falls on the pastor. You can avoid burnout in two ways. First, clergy should share this duty with staff or volunteer ministers, if possible. Second, clever use of technology can facilitate these types of personal interactions and make them sustainable. For example, while I could never personally greet everyone who walked in our doors on a weekend, our online greeter ministers can engage with everyone who watches online through a chat box (more on that below).
Our strategy has been to push the boundaries of technology while also going old-school with personal contact. Below, you’ll find a few other things we’ve been doing to keep up personal contact among our members and guests.
Weekend Guests
Personal touches have been a staple of corporate hospitality and even of our own weekend strategy here at Nativity for years. While we can’t meet in person, our strategy has shifted to making the online Mass broadcast as personal as possible. Online ‘chat ministers’ engage viewers in the chat box that accompanies each Mass. Chat ministers greet guests by name and help lead them in worship.
Givers
One strategy for our communication with givers has been tailored to their method of giving. For those with recurring, automatic gifts, we have continued our practice of thanking them for their gift by mail and email. For those who usually give by envelope at Mass, we mailed pre-addressed envelopes for those who might want to continue giving while our campus is closed. By going that extra mile to making giving easier, we communicated to our givers that we are thinking of them. This last strategy has been especially fruitful.
Teens
One of the most unfortunate restrictions of the quarantine was that many of the usual routines of senior year and graduation have been disrupted. What was supposed to be a memorable spring for many has instead been forgettable period of solitude. Our Student Ministry Team came up with a great way to personally recognize graduating seniors. For each student, they made a special care package and are in the process of delivering them to their homes (while social distancing).
Elderly
While many of the elderly members of our parish have reported that they have tuned in and benefited from our online Mass broadcasts, we recognize that not all of them are accustomed to communicating in that way. The elderly are especially important to reach because many of them live alone and will likely stay home from in-person gatherings for longer than everyone else. For all these reasons, I am currently in the process of calling our 80+ parishioners.
Staff
Most all of our staff have been working from home full-time for a couple of months and we’ve started to notice a ‘fatigue’ setting in from the isolation and impersonal nature of work. That’s why, over the course of a couple of weeks, I met by video chat for a personal conversation with each of our staff members. This check-in allowed me to catch up and offer support and encouragement.
If we have learned anything from the COVID-19 crisis, it is that personal communication in ministry remains important and life-giving. The lessons we’re learning about personal contact extend beyond forced quarantine, and we are looking to continue many of these strategies beyond.
Living In A Time Out Of Shape
If you are finding yourself more aware of time than ever at the moment, you are sharing something of the experience of a group of refugees who have been reflecting with Dr Anna Rowlands on the impact of the distortion of time. What does it mean to spend time well, and how might our collective experience of the current restrictions affect the way we impose them on others in future?
Dr Anna Rowlands is St Hilda Associate Professor in Catholic Social Thought and Practice at the University of Durham.
This article is taken from the ThinkingFaith.org website where you can find a wide range of articles by clicking here
Time – and how we spend it – has suddenly become a major topic of social discussion. Recent media chat is full of interesting, earnest, sad, even humorous, exchanges about two themes in particular: what does it mean to spend time well? And what happens to us when those markers of time change suddenly, in a way that is beyond our control?
Droll contributors note that the only differentiating factor that marks a day now is whether it’s time to drink coffee or wine. More earnest voices ask whether you’ve maxed your commitment to learning new skills, found ways to be even more productive and managed to beast yourself with a new-found exercise drive. Meanwhile, the more dystopian remind us that for most people this is not, as Matthew D’Ancona wrote last week, ‘a surreal sabbatical’ but rather a ‘nightmare’ just to be survived. To suggest anything else, D’Ancona writes, is a denial of what this really is. Strikingly, Jonathan Freedland, quoting the Russian former detainee and writer Victor Serge, notes that we live with the unsettling paradox that in a state of lockdown days can feel like they race past and yet the seconds drag.
As we are robbed of the markers of time, so we invent new ones. In resistance to the numbing sameness of our days, whether on the front line or restricted to home, determined that we can still shape and differentiate our reality, we create new public rituals that mark, claim and leave their human imprint on time, like clapping for the NHS. To lose your time markers is somehow inhumane. We have come to learn this in recent weeks, and rightly to resist this deadening hand, too, where we can. That’s what the human spirit does: it reinvents the goods that it knows are vital and finds suddenly threatened.
One of the reasons I am so interested in this new public awareness of time is that I have spent the last few years working on exactly this theme with a group of people who are experts-by-experience in the philosophies of time, but whose voices are rarely heard in public debate. These voices belong to refugees stranded in the most dysfunctional end of the UK asylum process. They know acutely what it is like to lose your everyday markers of time and have to reinvent them.
In a day centre in the East End of London the Jesuit Refugee Service works with, and is partly staffed by, a group of refugees who are living in destitution without the right to work, without public welfare support and with a constant risk of being detained in immigration detention facilities. During fieldwork I conducted over two years with the JRS community, time and its distortion became one of the main experiences that refugees reflected on.
Refugees talked about their sense that enforced idleness, the time it takes for appeals to be processed and the wasting of their skills and talents as they endure a lengthy waiting over years rather than months, creates a sense of ‘degrading in time’, creates a sense that you lack value and slowly erodes those very skills as they lie unused. We live, one interviewee told me, in a society that demands you contribute, but when you are not able to contribute that reduces a sense of self-worth and social value. It unsettles and uproots people in deep and lasting psychological ways.
As is well documented, for those who have been detained the stress of counting their days up against an unknown limit, creates acute mental stress. Not knowing when this will end makes the experience far tougher. We know that those detained fear both stasis, that nothing will change and that they will remain in this place of suffering, and yet they also fear at the same time sudden and catastrophic change. This is a terrible double mental bind that many fail to understand as the long term legacy of detention.
Yet, those I interviewed were clear that they, like we are now, find ways to resist the flattening and deadening of time. This is crucial to survival and wellbeing. ‘Being able to spend your time well really matters’, I was told. Spending time well means creating spaces that overcome isolation and where experience can be shared, and stories told. Interviewees told me that they had valued being able to volunteer to help others in need, to learn new skills and keep alive the ones they have. Crucial was the ability to feel that they had expertise that could help others on the same road. It will surprise no one who has survived the asylum system that so many people have volunteered so quickly in this crisis.
My hope is that the current situation and our own relative shrinking of freedom, often but not always with forms of privilege still attached, will give us a small insight into both the harm that such restrictions cause, even in the most resilient of people and situations, and would make us cautious in the extreme to now ever knowingly inflict such powers on others without extreme cause.
And we might possibly look with new admiration at those who find ways to survive such pain and use it as the basis for a life lived well for themselves, with and for others. This is the risk and the task of all human living and loving, and we find wisdom on this theme in the most hidden and difficult of places.
We might also remember that it is precisely these communities, already wise in the challenges of negotiating disordered time, who face some of the greatest challenges in shielding themselves from this virus. Here the option to socially distance, that creates such strain for many of us, remains a social privilege that even though challenging, many cannot take for granted.
Dr Rowlands’ full report, ‘For our welfare and not for our harm’, can be downloaded here: https://www.jrsuk.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/For-our-welfare-and-not-for-our-harm_Dr-Anna-RowlandsJRS-UK.pdf
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