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The Sabbath and the Cross...Giving our Lives Day by Day PDF Print E-mail

Third Stage In Our Year of Prayer

The Sabbath and the Cross…. These images are our entrees into this season of Lent, into this third stage in our Year of Prayer. It is a time when we are called to consider our lives given day by day, or, as the recent letter from the Central Team suggests, "to discover the wounded heart of Jesus in the wounded heart of the world" (A Spiritual Journey, p. 25).

As a way to focus us again in our Year of Prayer, I want to recall Kathleen’s image given to us in October at the opening of the Chapter and the beginning of the Year of Prayer. Kathleen invited us to glance backward and to experience again the origins of our vocation. She gave us the image of the one snapshot, a single photograph taken which draws our mind and heart to a focus…a focus on the simple beauty and truth that is God among us. Then Sheila’s reflections in December: she spoke about our call to be women of communion, women of reconciliation. She gave us an image of the Indian man at the Fort Benning Protest carrying incense and blessing all who gathered at the Gates of the School of the Americas, blessing those who dared to say "presente" giving voice for those whose voice had been silenced by violence.

And now the readings for today have given us the Sabbath and the Cross.

Often we have reflected on the meaning of the Sabbath, the call to cease from our work and simply to be. To be open to God’s work. Lent also does that for us as we take a more focused look at our lives and ask ourselves: is God at the very center of who I am and what I do? And if not, we are given a chance to return to that center. As a spiritual director once told me: turn toward the One who is turning toward you. Lent is a good time for that turning. A year of prayer is a good time for that turning. Jubilee is a good time for that turning.

Our vocation is built on Sabbath time. When I was considering my own vocation to the Society, the words of St. Madeleine Sophie Barat helped me name our particular gift to the Church. She said, this little Society has two movements: the first is to sit at the feet of the master and the second is to go out into the whole world and proclaim with our whole life and being: know his heart.

Sabbath time is a time to focus on that first movement to listen to our own heart and to listen to the sound of God in the midst of the world. Not necessarily to rapidly race to the answers but to sit, holding the joy, holding the suffering, holding the words calling out to us… listening and then listening some more, mulling it over in our hearts and then responding with our very being. Giving our lives day by day that God will be made known through our love.

The Sabbath and the Cross…our images for today…

Several years ago, I read an article entitled "Is Lent a Retreat?" written by Peter Fink, SJ. IS lent a retreat? And if so, a retreat from what? As I pondered this, I came to believe that lent is not so much a retreat from life but actually a movement toward…a movement toward the cross, toward the edge of things. A movement toward the border of what we know as our security, as our daily routine, to the border of our zone of comfort. Lent is a time to be at the border.

On Wednesday, Ash Wednesday, those in initial formation are going to the border. Rosemary Thompson, Justine Lyons, Barb Quinn, Delia Flores, Regina Shin, Diana Wall (who is sick but will be with them in spirit), Kim King, Janine Siegel, Kathy McGrath, Agnes Chimbayo along with RSCJ from San Diego (Marina Hernandez, Trudy Considine, Irma Motto and Fran Tobin). They will cross the border into Tijuana, Mexico. They will enter into a new culture. They will spend time at the border in Mexico and experience life from that perspective and they will cross again and consider life at the border from this side of Mexico. They will talk with people who have crossed the border and they will talk with people who prevent others from crossing the border. They will try to immerse themselves in the life at the border. I suspect they are going not so much to learn to but to be changed. This is not simply an educational experience for learning sake, though that will also take place; it is about changing one’s life. It is about going to the border in order to be changed.

Lent is about going to the border. To go where we are not secure, to go where we are not able to use our standard ways of knowing, to go to the border so that we can listen in a Sabbath sort of way.

As a community we are being called through our Year of Prayer to a worldwide Sabbath time of reflection. We are invited in this particular stage of the journey to reflect on the call to give our lives day by day. I want say a word of thanksgiving for the many and varied ways that RSCJ give their lives day by day. During the short time I have been in St. Louis we have been meeting with many groups of people and visiting RSCJ in their areas and places of ministry. I am simply overwhelmed at the dedicated way RSCJ are giving their lives day by day for love. Recently, the Team met with 4 RSCJ who are completing their time as Headmistresses in our schools. What an inspiration it was to recognize and to celebrate how they have been giving their lives day by day for the students and adults in their school communities. And how fruitful that ministry of love has been. And not long ago, I was at the funeral of Regina Griffin, an RSCJ cut down in the prime of her life by the ravages of cancer. The reading at her funeral mass was the Beatitudes and everyone remarked how completely Regina lived the Beatitudes. How she went among the poor and became their advocate but most of all how she simply embodied in her own being what it means to be poor in spirit, what it means to mourn, what it means to suffer for justice sake. Another example is Oscar Romero whose 20th anniversary of martyrdom in El Salvador will be celebrated on March 24th. A man who was willing to change and died for what he stood for. All these are lives given day by day for love.

To give our lives day by day for love involves tremendous letting go of presuppositions, past hurts, prejudices, and simple dislikes. Lent is a good time for letting go, for going to the border and for crossing over, for turning towards the One who turns towards us.

In his article: "Is Lent a Retreat?" Peter Fink, SJ reminds us that lent is a time of personal conversion and crossing over. Lent is a personal journey. But as he says, Lent is a deeply communal time. Lent is a time when the whole community, the whole Church, together enters into a period of profound prayer and conversion. Whether it be in parishes with the RCIA program, preparing adults for the sacraments of initiation or whether it is in our little Society, we are called, each one of us and all of us together, especially in this year of prayer, to turn together – as one body - to deepen our vocation. We are called to take this year and to sit at the feet of Jesus and together go to the border, to cross over, to become whole, to give our lives day by day for love.

Finally, what are we called to during this Season of Lent, in this Jubilee year, in this 200th year of our founding? One thing we are called to be is Jubilee people. This is the great jubilee time. We are called to go to the border of what is expected and we are called to free prisoners, to live Sabbath time, to forgive debts most especially of those who are unable to repay them, to let land lie fallow, to reestablished relationships that are broken. This is only possible when we know God’s love enough that we have the courage to stand at the border in silence and then cross it. Knowing we may be changed. Knowing that we are called to give our lives day by day for love.

Ellen Collesano, rscj
 

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