Maggie Beaudette

TRANSFIGURATION  

Image: Unsplash/Joanne Francis

Did you know that it is the intense heat of a forest fire that releases the seeds of the pinecone so that new growth can take place?

…tall, black tree trunks scarred from fire, now delicately outlined with fresh, white snow

…the lush, green of the forest floor in spring, following a fire

…the pinkish, purple blossoms of the fireweed plant growing in the spaces left vacant by fire.

These are images I see as I drive along our highway and roads after several years of intense summers of forest fires, These are transformation images for me.

 

As I reflect on the encounters I have had in my varied ministry, they too, speak of transfiguration.

…from two seven- year- old children in First Communion, one sharing her time when she talks with Jesus and the light in her heart as He speaks to her, and the other child telling of seeing Jesus, authentic, true and transforming.

…to the man who asked if I would come with him to a telehealth conference call…holding his anxiety.

…to the Inuit woman, sitting on my living-room floor, sharing for the first time her story of pain, trauma, and abuse, she, being transformed in the telling, me being transformed in the holding of story.

…to keeping vigil with my dying friend and eventually being able to say, “It is okay to go.”

In this second week of Lent, Jesus invites us to go up the mountain with him. He had a conversation with Moses and Elijah about his imminent death. Yet, in the intensity of that conversation, new life, glory, is proclaimed by the Father.

What conversation will Jesus have with you, with me? What transfiguration moments do I recognize each day?

 -Sister Maggie Beaudette, csj


Images: Unsplash/Johannes Plenio; David Dilbert

Third Sunday of Advent

The third Sunday of Advent is often referred to as “pink candle” Sunday, and in Latin, Gaudete Sunday indicating rejoicing and joy. The reading from Zephaniah, the Responsorial Psalm, and St, Paul’s words of encouragement, all ring with the tone of rejoicing, singing and gladness. This year as we listen to the news of a seemingly endless pandemic, catastrophic events related to weather, migrants searching for a better future, strained relationships, one might think, “about what could we be rejoicing?” Hearts are broken, lives are fragile, and hope can seem lost.

In the gospel from Luke, we continue to read about the people gathering around John the Baptist, seeking a new way of living, looking perhaps for hope, wondering, asking “what are we to do?” These people had not met Jesus, in fact, they thought that perhaps John was the Messiah, the long-awaited one who would change their lives.

But we have met Jesus. As we ask, what should I do? How am I to be? We need only to remember the two great commandments of love.

“Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.”
— Matthew 22: 37-39

St. Paul’s words, “Let your gentleness be known to everyone,” are key words for me as I reflect on today’s scriptures.

We also celebrate today the National Day of Prayer in Solidarity with Indigenous Peoples. This day was established in 2002 by the Canadian Catholic Indigenous Council, with the approval of the Bishops of Canada.

The theme this year is We are called to Healing, Forgiveness, Reconciliation. ” We, the Body of Christ, are called to live in friendship and harmony with all peoples. We are brothers and sisters of our One Creator God. God gives everything to all of us. God creates and sustains the wonderful diversity of peoples, cultures, races and creeds.” (2021 Message of the Canadian Catholic Indigenous Council)

And so, we ask the question posed to John the Baptist, “What should we do?

Sister Maggie’s view in Hay River, Northwest Territories

In Hay River, Northwest Territories, where I live our days in December are very short. The sun rises in late morning and sets in early afternoon. Often the afterglow from the sun at this time of year is a beautiful mauve to pink texture. As I drove down the highway today, the soft colours reminded me of the gentleness that St. Paul spoke about …Let your gentleness be known to everyone.

Sister Maggie Beaudette, csj