Guest Bloggers

Sisters of St. Joseph Awards of Excellence

St. Joseph’s Health Care held one of its premier annual events on March 19, 2019.  Four exceptional women received a Sisters of St. Joseph Award for Excellence at Parkwood Auditorium in London.  Honoured were: 

Dr. Rookaya Mather, ophthalmologist, Ivey Eye Institute, St. Joseph’s Hospital

Martha Scott, occupational therapist, community Stroke Rehabilitation Team, Parkwood      Institute

Corrine Wilson, registered practical nurse, Assessment Program, Parkwood Institute Mental Health

Marie Carroll, dietary aide, Food and Nutrition Services, Mount Hope Centre for Long Term Care.

Following a warm welcome by Dr. Gillian Kernaghan, CEO, and congratulations from Margaret Kellow, The Board of Directors, Sister Cecilia Dronzek (pictured far left) brought congratulations from the Sisters of St. Joseph and gave a brief address outlined below:

Today March 19th is a special day for us, the Sisters of St. Joseph, as we celebrate the feast of St. Joseph our patron. Back at our home, it is a day of great celebration. It is a pleasure for me to join in your celebration of those judged by their peers as persons who reflect and embody the values of respect, excellence and compassion in the workplace.

Last month I attended one of King’s University College lecture series. The speaker was Sr. Teresa Maya, a religious sister from San Antonio Texas. Her topic was building a culture of encounter throughout our world. She challenged us to build bridges across all that divides humanity and to cross the bridges others have built.

That same week, I read an article in the Winter Issue of Occasional Papers. The editor wrote that the focus for this issue came from a 2015 book by Daniel Goldman on the Dalai Lama entitled, “A Force for Good”.  In it, Goldman details the Dalai Lama’s belief that every compassion-driven human act is integral for a more peaceful, harmonious world. Intentionally combining our collective energy and compassion as a force for good in the world is the only way, the Dali Lama asserts, that we can tackle the intractable problems plaguing our world.

As I read through what your peers said about you, the recipients of the Sisters of St. Joseph Awards for Excellence and as I reflected on what inspired me both from the lecture and the editorial, the words, “creating a culture of encounter”, “building bridges”, and “belief that every compassion-driven human act is a force for good in our world”, I could see similar threads in both their concepts and your qualities as stated by your co-workers who nominated each of you for this special award. It is evident that the values on which St. Joseph’s Health Center was founded are alive and active to this day. - Sr. Cecilia Dronzek

 

Sr. Jean Moylan

 

 

Transformation and Transfiguration

In Philippians 3:17, we hear St. Paul challenge “Sisters and brothers, join in imitating me.” How can we imitate Paul? We see it in the earlier passage (3 b) “for Him I have accepted the loss of everything, and I look on everything as so much rubbish if only I can have Christ and be given a place in Him.” Paul put his faith in God as did Abram in our first reading, Genesis 15:5

How blessed we are today to know that we have Christ and have a place in Him if we keep our eyes fixed on Him, trust Him and as Paul encourages “stand firm in the Lord”.

In St. Luke’s Gospel 9:28-36, the Transfiguration is the final event before Jesus took the road to Jerusalem. Peter, James and John saw the divinity of Jesus – yet in their human weakness during Jesus’ Passion, Peter denied Jesus and the other two ran away.

How often do we fail to see the divine in those we meet daily? The first line of a hymn that we sing on this Sunday is– “We behold the splendor of God, shining on the face of Jesus.” Let us replace the word “Jesus” with the names of those we meet today.

If we keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, “He will transform our wretched bodies into copies of his glorious body.” Phil. 3:21

 - Carole Anne Guay CSJ

He’s Not a Tame Lion

Through all his writing, speaking and preaching, Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury 2003-2012, would want us to experience the God he knows, the God who is “not a tame lion.” The quote comes from C.S. Lewis’s series of children’s books, Chronicles of Narnia, in which many of the characters, in discussing the Lion Aslan, who represents God, will remark., “He’s not a tame lion you know.”  Lewis and Williams highlight this God of surprises, the God who does the unexpected and asks us to surprise ourselves too. This God is wild, powerful, unpredictable, as well as loving.

Archbishop Williams is the author of many books and is a theologian, scholar, poet and mystic.  He speaks 11 languages. However, when Williams speaks of his experience of God, he poetically reflects the Mystery, where words about God cannot go.  That’s why his insights on the Narnia Chronicles are so powerful and helpful. He reminds us that this God of surprises stretches us and calls us to surprise ourselves. In his book, The Lion’s World: A Journey into the Heart of Narnia, (2012) Williams says:  “The truth of God is found in rebellion against the oppressive clichés of the world.”   He reminds us that our idea of God is often soft and cuddly and may come from our own ego needs and not our experience...

In his latest book, Christ: The Heart of Creation (2018) Williams further challenges our ideas about God and asks us to confront the inadequacies and dangers that come from ideas and beliefs, but not from a true and personal experience of God. He wants to connect us again to the God who people experienced in the life and resurrection of Jesus. This God is not a tame lion.

A C.S. Lewis Lenten Series (2013) is available here

Even better for us, Dr. Rowan Williams will be in London beginning Saturday March 16th for three events:

  • Metropolitan United Church is holding a Saturday morning workshop March 16th.
  • The William T. Orr lecture will be held, along with evening prayer, at St. Paul’s Cathedral on Sunday evening, March 17th
  • Dr. Williams will receive an honourary degree at Huron College on Monday, March 18th

For further information please click here

 

Granola bars and curbside sharing

Well, here we are beginning another sequence of 40 days in preparation for the celebration of Easter! I have been around this cycle 70 odd times. What is the new for this year? What energy and hope is equal to the great mystery of love that Jesus offers?

I recently read an article that immediately shifted my thought back to a dear relative, who practices almsgiving not just during Lent, but every day of the year. I admire her so very much. She has that wonderful ability to hold compassion and common sense in one basket. A solid woman of faith. Whether it be a granola bar or a $5 Tim’s gift card, she is ready to share what little she has with the outstretched hand on the corner, at the intersection, in front of the grocery store. She recognizes struggle and dignity. I see in her actions the sacred. Recognizing another human being, sharing an awareness that the life we all share is life given by God. That brief encounter can be more than one person helping another; it is an exchange of love inherent in all whom God has created. Christ’s birth into human life has raised the bar. Every encounter is a God encounter, concretized in the ordinariness of daily life.

Lent, characterized by the actions of prayer, fasting and almsgiving is filled with liturgical readings that remind us: “I was hungry and you gave me to eat”. Maybe this Lent, my “new” will be to focus on all those miracle moments when the hungry are fed . . and give thanks, that humanity cares.

You might like to view the article that got me thinking

- Loretta Manzara, csj

Lent, God’s Love Story for His Children

Lent is often associated with ‘giving something up’, but it is really a time of spiritual discipline, a time of preparation for the great feast of Easter.

A disciple is one who learns from the master. Immediately after his baptism, Mark says that the Spirit drove Jesus into the wilderness/desert to be tempted by the devil. The desert represents times in our lives of struggle, disorientation, and painful experiences that make us vulnerable to temptation.  Lent offers a special opportunity of taking our woundedness to the divine physician for healing.

We enter into the rhythm of lent beginning with Ash Wednesday.

Jesus invites us to greater intimacy through

Prayer – healing for ourselves and the world;

Fasting – depriving self of physical support through discipline and growing trust in God.

Almsgiving – sharing our resources generously with the poor.

In the following five weeks, we journey with the gospel themes of repentance, mercy, forgiveness, as we build the Kingdom of God in preparation for Easter.

Passion/Palm Sunday week, the holiest week of the Christian year, focuses our attention on the sacred mysteries of:

Holy Thursday: the Blessed Eucharist and the washing of the feet,

Good Friday: the suffering and death of Jesus for the salvation of the world

Easter Sunday: Jesus vanquishes death forever through love.

Lent is a good time to begin or deepen the Lenten practices of prayer, discipline, and almsgiving.  Through these ascetic practices we learn to nurture the silence within, and come to experience joy and wellbeing.

Maranatha, Come Lord Jesus.

                                                                                                                         Anne Marshall, csj