The Gift of Labour

labour.jpg

Well, well, well, here we are again, hopefully somewhat rested after an unusual five months of dealing with the coronavirus forces that have intruded into our lives.  One glance at the calendar shows us that we are staring Labour Day in the face. This year, we are eager more than ever to embrace our place in the workforce.  However, this September, many people are searching for employment opportunities that help fire the economy and give personal satisfaction and monetary rewards.

If we’ve been fortunate enough to have had steady work at our job sites or home office during this pandemic, we’ve been the lucky ones. On the other hand, if we’re among the many who have suffered job losses that may never return, we feel sad, blue and even depressed.

Around me, I hear comments from people such as, “I’ve worked all my life and never been unemployed,” or “I’ve never missed a day of work in thirty years”.  Others wonder, “When will the world return to normal? I just want to feed my family”.

labour.jpg

Suddenly, we no longer yearn for the weekend or a couple of days respite. We realize what a gift it is to have satisfying work. Work gives life dignity and provides motivation to get up in the morning. Honest labour is a boon to the economy, to others and to further the development of the world.

Yes, I sometimes begrudgingly drag my body out of bed and off to work but I usually return home tired but aware that my work has meaning for myself, my family, and all those whom my life touches. 

This Labour Day, let’s not forget to pause and reflect on the gift of work.  

-Sister Jean Moylan, csj

Learning NOT to Lead

Maybe it comes from being the oldest in my family. Maybe it is because of being an extrovert. Or it just may be a habit of taking “charge” and being allowed to do that and being appreciated in doing so.

Whatever the reason, I have recently become aware that sometimes, one is best NOT to take the lead on a project that is birthed from within a group, but to listen to the source of the verbalized vibrant energy from within the group, to pull in the reigns, hold back and let what will be, be.

This requires great trust in others, in the unknown, and in allowing oneself to BE led by other leaders in the group.

Is this not what happens when a group adopts a new form of leadership to replace the “familiar” and comfortable ways of being and ministering together?

In my relationship with the Indigenous Knowledge keepers and elders with whom I have been privileged to work in presenting the Kairos Blanket Exercise, the evolution that has happened because of the pandemic is the urgency to continue to share the TRUTH of our Canadian history in another venue until the KBE becomes virtual.

What is being birthed by three Indigenous knowledge keepers is the teaching/sharing circles that are totally led by an indigenous person.  The focus is to educate we non-Indigenous allies who want to know and live the truth.

A sharing Circle session is 2 hours by Zoom and consists of a land acknowledgement and tobacco presentation by an ally, and then the Indigenous leader does the rest by focusing on a 20-30 minute teaching and inviting the group then to share how they feel about what was heard.  Then there is a checkout and closing.

My biggest learning is to HOLD BACK and BE led as one who also needs to learn.

Does this not seem to be the journey of the ripening process as we age, hopefully gracefully, and encourage the leadership that is present among us to flourish?

-Sister Kathleen Lichti, csj

He Didn't Even Take Off His Shoes...!

My nephew was away for several days. After his return, I said to his four year old daughter, “I bet your Daddy was happy to see you when he got home.” With a big smile she said, “He sure was. When he saw me, he rushed over and scooped me up and hugged me and he didn’t even take off his shoes!”

It struck me then and has since that this is a wonderful image of God: a God who is so eager and loves us so much that God scoops us up in a loving embrace without even taking the time to take off his shoes.

-Sister Nancy Sullivan, csj

World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation

An Echinacea flower unfolds one petal at a time, a raindrop glistens translucent on a leaf, a red-tailed hawk soars overhead. Our Earth held in a counterpoint of balance. Yet how often do we humans disrespect and harm this sacred balance that our Creator fashioned to ensoul our world?

When Pope Francis launched his encyclical Laudato Si’ in 2015, he also named September 1 as the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation - that we might take time to honour, celebrate and renew our spirits together in prayer for our common home. It is a time for contemplation and reflection that ushers in the entire Season of Creation that begins September 1st and concludes October 4th on the Feast Day of St. Francis. This is a sacred time to reflect on our human journey and renew our relationships with the natural world that sustains us with life-giving oxygen, soaring skies, and the breath-taking moments of beauty. It is also a time to recommit ourselves to the sacred task of healing our Earth and humanity’s journey that are inseparably bound in one continuous act of creation.

season of creation.png

We have seen how Covid-19 has devastated our world, and yet it has marked a moment out of time when all the human world had to pause and come together to feel once more our common threads of humanity with its diverse religious, political and cultural aspects. And our Earth began to breathe once more, as our technological and industrial world slowed its hectic, life-depriving pace. It is important that we now pause to reconnect and heal amongst ourselves and with all God’s sacred creation. We are at a moment, a crossroads for the future of life in all its possibility on our planet. With this awareness, the year’s theme for the Season of Creation has been named as “Jubilee for the Earth.” This theme invites us to reflect upon the integral relationship between the Jubilee sense of rest for the Earth and the intersection of our lived social, economic, ecological, and political lives. How might we live integral ecology in this time, in this world?

May the whisper of butterfly wings and the joy of a child’s smile meet with the choices we make today.  

As we celebrate the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, it is our time and our choice for life, all life on this Earth that most counts. We each have a moment, an opportunity to re-commit, to renew, and to grow in the wonder of one whole and holy life for all beings of this planet. Whether it seems small and perhaps not to matter much -it does matter where our hearts and souls say yes to life for all. For the future of all the children of Earth today and the generations to come. Our souls were birthed in this rare and wonderful Earth by our Creator God. May the whisper of butterfly wings and the joy of a child’s smile meet with the choices we make today.  

                                                                                                   - Sister Linda Gregg, csj