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The following reflection was given at a advent service at the IHM Center. |
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| Sr. Eleanor Mary Marconi, IHM serves as the Councilor for Missioning and Community Life at the IHM Center. |
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| Sr. Eleanor Mary Marconi, IHM We gather to pray this evening encircled by our Lady, the Virgin Mary, whose feast of the Immaculate Conception we celebrated on Monday and whose feast as Our Lady of Guadalupe we will celebrate on Friday. We ask Mary’s blessing as we reflect during this Advent time. Advent is about our longing
for God, the God who has already come to be with us, Emmanuel. Advent
is about our living God who has already come to be with us, Emmanuel. For a child is born for
us, a son is given to us. The divine and the human
intermingle – and nothing can ever be the same. God is immersed
into humanity and all our relationships now merge into One. As we wait
in hope for the coming of the Lord, we catch only glimpses of this oneness
when we know ourselves not to be alone, but rather to be intricately
connected to all that is. In an excerpt from Alice Walker’s The
Color Purple, Shug, one of the characters, speaks to this: God is immersed in our weak, sinful humanity and becomes one with us. God who takes on human flesh gifts us with a deep, insistent longing for the Divine. What are we waiting for? Ultimately, we are waiting for this deep, insistent longing for God to be realized at the second coming of Christ. Yet, even as we wait in joyful hope we are challenged to practice the teachings of Jesus – to proclaim the good news, to heal the sick, to comfort the brokenhearted, to work for justice for the oppressed. We the people in darkness, have seen a great light – in the compassion of God already revealed to us in Christ Jesus. Advent is a wondrous time in our liturgical year when we are reminded to rest, to sit attentively in God’s presence to await a new realization of the revelation of God in our day. It is a paradox that one of the busiest times of the year, the Christmas season, is precisely the time that we are reminded to stop, be still. God is like that – paradox floods upon us at every twist and turn in the Gospel. It is in the stillness that God is born now once again in us and is revealed anew. It is out of the stillness that God calls us to be light to those still in darkness, to speak a word to the weary, the immigrant, the poor, the oppressed, those longing to belong, a word that will strengthen them, a word that recognizes them as sister, brother, friend and beloved of God. Our Advent waiting, longing is not just for God in the future. It is a challenge for us now to act with justice, to love tenderly, to walk humbly with God. Que estamos esperando? We are waiting, like Mary,
for God’s revelation in our lives, in our day. How can Mary’s
experience teach us so that, like her, we are open and ready when God’s
messenger appears. An excerpt from The Wounded Prophet, A Portrait of
Henri J. M. Nouwen by Michael Ford (Doubleday, 1999) I believe gives
us some insight into Mary’s experience. Mary’s openness and desire to engage with God’s messenger allowed her to hear God, to be guided by God, to move in the direction of God and to be led to places far beyond her own comprehension. We, too, are called to such openness and desire to engage with God’s messengers if we truly want to birth God anew in our world today. What are we waiting for? In stillness we wait and the longing for God grows deeper within us. If the stillness is born of a true desire for God, the longing growing within us will move us to realize more fully our baptismal call to service and personal transformation. We are bound to one another through the God in whose image we are made. While any one of us is poor, sick, brokenhearted, oppressed, we are bound to serve each other to bring healing, hope and justice in action and not just in thought. In a letter to a friend,
C. S. Lewis writes: Is our Advent waiting this
year leading us to take one step so that when we have waked, washed
and dressed we will find ourselves not still in bed but about the work
of bringing light and hope into the darkness, to proclaim the good news&. Fear may be at our side as openness to God’s way presents itself. Yet, like Mary our waiting in stillness and desire for God can give us the courage we need to begin with one step to realize the Kingdom of God in our very midst where the immigrant, the poor, the oppressed, the outcast are welcomed. God’s immersion into our humanity made it very clear that all of creation is precious in God’s sight. I believe it is God’s desire that our immersion into the Divine will make it also very clear that all of creation is precious in our sight. We opened our prayer this evening remembering that it is International Human Rights Day. All of creation precious in God’s sight – how precious is it in our sight? As we heard Eleanor Roosevelt say: “Where after all do human rights begin? In small places close to home, such are the places where every man, woman and child seeks equal justice, equal opportunity, equal dignity.” In small places close to home we are called to bring light and hope to those who wait in darkness. What we long for can be so close to us but missed because we are looking for something else, somewhere else. Dewitt Jones in his video, Celebrating What’s Right With the World, says that “if we believe it, we will see it.” Wilkie Au (The Enduring
Heart, Paulist Press, 2000) records a rabbinical story that expresses
well the truth that what we long for can be discovered exactly in the
earthly context where God has placed us, not in some idealized heavenly
city. The heavenly city is right where we are – if we believe
we are in it, we will see it. The next morning, in all
the innocence of folly, he got up, gave thanks to the Isn’t it right where
we are that God calls us to see one another, to touch each other’s
wounds and bring a healing energy into our midst that will radiate throughout
the whole earth? Last month Sr. Terry O’Rourke
shared a profound message with us as we joined together to celebrate
our founders. I would like to recall part of her reflection in which
she said: Jesus immersed himself in
our world in his time and took the step toward healing and love, coming
as light in the darkness, bearing good news and bringing hope. This
is our world in our time, will we take the step toward healing and love
to be light in the darkness, bearers of good news and hope? For after
all, I close with the words of Eleanor Roosevelt: “When will our consciousness grow so tender that we will act to prevent human misery rather than avenge it?” The consciousness of God was grown so tender that Jesus the Christ was immersed into our humanity to teach us how to prevent human misery rather than avenge it. “My heart shall sing of the day you bring&and the world is about to turn. Que estamos esperando? |
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