Accounting for One’s Hope

“Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have.” 1 Peter 3:15

We might find ourselves at times somewhat hesitant to answer this soul-searching question posed in 1 Peter 3:15. Yet, being ready to give an accounting for one’s hope has the power to ground us. Furthermore, I trust it has the potential to be life-giving for others.

Regarding hope, a newly published book by Maude Barlow caught my attention. As an avid bookworm, how could I resist adding it to my library? The writer is a well- known Canadian activist and author. She openly admits in the first sentence of the introduction that she has been contemplating the notion of hope for a long time. In her book, Still Hopeful: Lessons from a Lifetime of Activism, Barlow, without hesitation, eloquently delivers the reasoning behind her hopefulness amid global trauma.

The author relays her life experiences during her forty plus years as a social activist. She was active politically during the struggle for the expansion of women’s rights, the battle against free trade and globalization, and the global fight for water justice. Her recollections transport the reader through the twisting, slow course of societal transformation while conveying the lessons she has learned in the process. Barlow provides the reader with 223 pages of wisdom and encouragement. Woven within her engaging storytelling are eight cameo appearances of other notable changemakers who answer the question, “Where do you find hope?” Together with Barlow, they contribute an antidote to the temptation to succumb to a growing sense of universal pessimism.

At right, Maude Barlow being interviewed about Still Hopeful: Lessons from a Lifetime of Activism and here is a link to a wonderful 4-minute interview on Global News.

 -Sister Nancy Wales, CSJ

Growing Peace

As we come nearer to Christmas, we hear the music and the many greetings offering Peace and Goodwill to all.  And we all need to hear this many times over the coming weeks.  However, this is a greeting that is most welcome at this time of year, but it is also needed any time of the year.

The coming of Christ, the Prince of Peace, is what we long for during these remaining Advent days, and it is a longing that lives in us every day of the year. But we can’t make Christmas with our backs to the troubles of our world.  When we look around the world, we see war and hunger, natural disaster destroying crops and livelihoods, economic warnings and homelessness and sickness and death both far away and close to home.

Image: Unsplash/Tamara Menzi

David Steindl-Rast, a Benedictine monk, invites us to take our place as peacemakers in today’s world.  This longing that we all have hidden within our hearts begins when we can turn this longing into a movement for peace.  How you ask?  To quote Brother David, this peace will be…

  • More than a truce: it is love and forgiveness and recognizes that the price of every gun is a theft from the poor.

  • Saying yes to reverence, dialogue, and sensitivity, and saying yes to economic and educational security and affordable housing security.

  • Saying no to violence, competition, and war, and saying no to the terrorism of poverty, ignorance, homelessness, racism, and ecological devastation.

  • Saying yes to mercy, kindness, forgiveness, cooperation, and a convergence of the heart, whereby we summon the courage to stand up for freedom.

We can begin to make this path homeward to peace, when, as the poet Rumi suggest:

Let the beauty we love be what we do.  There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground.”

Take a few moments to consider how to see beauty around you and metaphorically kneel and kiss the ground.

If we can try living this way, each day we can grow the Peace wherever we are.

-Sister Joan Atkinson, CSJ

Third Sunday of Advent

Here we are in the midst of all the pre-Christmas parties, in the middle of cold weather and snow, in the midst of Advent and we read from the letter of James: “Be patient like the farmer who waits for his precious crops.  Strengthen your hearts for the coming of the Lord.”  For many of us this may seem like it is much easier said than done.  Many of us are frantically attempting to be patient with the family and community.  Here I am supposed to be living in peace and expectation, but life seems upside down and inside out.  Like John the Baptist in today’s gospel we are asking “Are You the one to come?”  I need some assurance that it is You Lord.  Hopefully You have not forgotten me, or just maybe I have not forgotten You, in the midst of the frantic running around?

Waiting is not an easy task.  It demands courage and strength.  What am I waiting for?  Do I really listen?  Do I really see?  Do I really hear?

I had a dear friend Sadie whom I met when she was a patient, and I was a chaplain.  She suffered greatly from her common law partner who would not allow her to go to the doctor.  When I met Sadie, she was blind and lost her nose to cancer all because of neglect.  She was a patient at St. Joseph’s hospital for more than a year.  Needless to say, she was a great teacher for me.  In the world’s view she was an unfortunate soul who had nothing.  One day I was reflecting with her and asked her when were her happiest days?  Her response was amazing!  It was this present year that she spent in the hospital.  You see, she had people who cared for her.  Her birthday and Christmas were wonderful!  She had presents coming out the door of her room.  Before this she had never celebrated her birthday or Christmas!  This year she had friends; she felt loved and was secure and free from harm! 

in their simpleness they witness truth to us

As I reflect on my dear friend and her life I wonder if sometimes the moments that we feel most empty can be the seeds of hope.  After all, the seeds put into the earth bear much fruit.  Today I am asking myself to hold onto the Sadies of our lives because in their simpleness they witness truth to us.  John the Baptist witnessed to the Truth, yet he needed encouragement along the way.  From my prayerful reflections on the readings of today I believe if we give love freely our faith will remain secure in the Lord. 

Sadie was a teacher without knowing it, pointing the way to Jesus.  Look for the teachers who show the way to the Lord even when they do not have a great education; even if they do not recognize it, they are leaders! 

Finally from Oscar Romero: “There are many things that can only be seen through the eyes that have cried!”  From Sadie, I believe she would be encouraging us “to let these tears water our hearts to see more clearly through the eyes of faith!”

From Sadie:  Merry Christmas to all!

-Sister Kathleen O’Neill, CSJ

Gaudete (Joyful) Sunday

Lately I have been watching the children preparing for Christmas. Such enthusiasm, joy and excited anticipation. Their preparation seems to involve going to parades, shopping with family, making cookies, making lists of special things they want from Santa and telling everyone they see how many days left till Christmas.

In some school settings there is a similar excitement brewing as Christmas cribs are built, pageants rehearsed and joyous songs practiced for the welcome of the Christ child.

Image: Unsplash/Austin Schmid

As we approach this third week of Advent I delight in the invitation to also prepare joyfully for the rebirth of Jesus in my whole being.  Isaiah’s (35: 1-6,10) vision of the desert blooming abundantly challenges our own dryness to rejoice and sing aloud the goodness of our God. The reading from James (James 5: 7-10) invites us to be patient and strengthen our hearts while waiting for the coming of the Lord. Jesus, in Matthew’s gospel, (Matthew 11:2-11) reminds us to go tell each other of the wonders we see.

Could it be that our call this Gaudete Sunday is to announce the presence of God all around us with great Joy? Would the sharing of the wonders we have seen and experienced help someone else to prepare to receive Christ into their hearts in a new way this Christmas? This week I will plant Joy!

-Maureen Condon, CSJ Associate