Monday, October 7, 2013

Per Jesum ad Mariam (and back, of course!)

Ok—before you call me a heretic or criticize my admittedly non-existent Latin skills[1], please do read all of this post, written in honor of the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary…

I’ve been wanting to write about Mary, the Mother of God, for a while, especially since a lot of people I’ve met lately (even dedicated Catholics) don’t seem to be able to connect with her. I used to be one of you. I grew up in the Bible Belt of East Texas, where Catholics might well be seen as “Mary-worshipers,” though to be fair, I can’t remember ever being personally faced with this accusation. Even so, I wanted to prove that I did not, in fact, worship Mary, and therefore I kept my distance. Also, I had and do have a very close relationship with my mother—I couldn’t imagine needing any other mother. And, finally, if I did, how was the teenager in a lacy veil whose portrait hung on my bedroom wall supposed to fill that role—she was probably younger than me! For many years I guess I made my heavenly mother a pretty rebellious daughter.

Tightly wound up with the story of Mary and me is the story of me and the rosary. When I was little and couldn’t sleep, my mom would pray a rosary in German and I’d be out. (Sometimes I still try that strategy…) Probably in middle school, I tried saying a rosary every day. I ended up grumbling so much about it, though, that it brought more negative than positive energy into my life, and I decided to stop. When I got to college, however, it seemed as if all my friends were rosary-obsessed! I remember one semester, when my three roommates would kneel lovingly around a little picture of Mary, light a candle and pray a rosary almost every night. I never did feel like joining them, but one night, as I was hunched over some homework in the next room, trying not to listen to the prayers, I realized that this resistance was all pride and that I was being very hard of heart. So, humbling myself, I joined their prayer, eventually making it down to my knees in the warm little candle-lit living room.

The next major part of my journey with the rosary came late senior year. As a German major, I was obsessed with literature and films about the Second World War. It was this kind of torturous fascination—depressing as the stuff was, I couldn’t stop reading it. But being of German background, I often felt immense guilt in the process. One night I simply couldn’t sleep, overwhelmed with the weight of the world and its history, so I decided to pray a rosary in German, like my mom used to do with me. Praying in the language that had been so horribly twisted in the war felt like a wave of redemption as I refused to accept the guilt of other people in other times and places (goodness knows I’ve got enough of my own). I felt close to Mary in a way that I’d never felt before, remembering the kindness of my mother and grandmother and coming closer to peace with my ethnic history.

A major reason my devotion to Mary grew during college was probably the sheer fact that I was separated from my “earthly” mother. Aside from that, however, I remember a few moments that really impacted my relationship to Jesus’ mother. Watching “The Passion of the Christ” during my sophomore year, I was struck especially by Mary’s role in the film. She was older by now, no longer the teenager bravely facing an unexpected pregnancy but a grown woman with many joys and sorrows written into the lines on her face. Her expression throughout most of the film remained one of sorrow and shock, face pale and eyes staring ahead in horror at the torture of her son. People kept coming to her for help, though, asking what they could do, perhaps most strikingly Pontius Pilate’s wife. Almost automatically, Mary would comfortingly hold the hand of whoever came to her, lost. Even in her worst pain, it was still her nature to be there for others.

Another moment occurred in the chapel one day, as I was praying the glorious mysteries of the rosary in the sunlight illuminating the tabernacle. At the mystery of the Coronation of Mary as Queen of Heaven I suddenly (perhaps inspired by all the little kids running around) imagined Jesus as a little boy who has built up a kingdom in his backyard and is proudly showing it off to his mother, thrilled at the prospect of crowning her queen with a little chain of slightly crumpled dandelions that he spent the last hour weaving.

Here would be a good moment to address the seemingly heretical title of this post. In a way, I really did come to Mary through Jesus. When I was little, I’d think of how much I love my mother, and how sad I’d be if everyone else didn’t love her, too. So I’d imagine how Jesus must feel, and I’d ask him to help me love his mother more, to make him happy. Later, as I started growing into the awareness that each of us is called to a Lover-and-beloved relationship with Jesus, I started thinking of how, when I really like someone, I can’t wait to introduce him to my family. So I’d imagine Jesus beamingly introducing me, his beloved, to his mother, and the pleasure he must take therein. Ultimately I’d end up loving Jesus more by loving Mary as well.

One final thought. Since I’ve been living in Germany, about two years now—going on three, I’ve developed an affection towards Our Lady of Guadalupe. This image of Mary, seen absolutely everywhere in Texas, from statues in churches to stickers on oversized pick-up trucks and tattoos on big-muscled men’s arms, is a pretty rare sight over here. So on the few occasions I see this image, like on a pro-life prayer card or on the back of a song book, I feel a little bit of home. (This has also started to happen with hearing spoken Spanish in general—who’d have thought?) When I think of Mary as Our Lady of Guadalupe, I think of the sister in Georgia who was always ready to heal hearts by having a diaper ready to give to an immigrant parent in an emergency, or the sister in Amarillo who taught me how to make tortillas from scratch. When I think of Mary in general these days, I often think of her hands. Not the perfect porcelain hands you see on the statues, but warm hands with short, practical fingernails and chapped skin from washing dishes. The hands of my mom making school lunches at five in the morning every day for years. As I work to transition from a helpless little girl into a capable woman, I am inspired by Mary at the wedding in Cana, knowing what to do and when to do it, taking initiative and encouraging others to follow Jesus.




[1] For my fellow non-Latin-knowers, per=through and ad=to. The real phrase is “Per Mariam ad Jesum”.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

God Takes no Prisoners: Thoughts from the Eucharistic Congress in Cologne, 2013

Last weekend (June 7-9), I was blessed to be able to attend the national Eucharistic Congress in Cologne, Germany. Though a cold and a lack of sleep kept my hoped-for euphoria and spiritual high to a minimum, I didn’t go home without having experienced God.

If I look back and think about how much prayer and praise and perpetual adoration was going in that city for the five days of the conference, it’s pretty amazing. Actually, it should have been Heaven on Earth—maybe for many people it was. For me, this abundance of spiritual light threw into sharp relief much of the darkness in the world and in me. I had prayed Saturday afternoon at Holy Hour that we at the congress might see Christ in the Eucharist and in each other more clearly. All throughout the rest of the day, it became more and more clear how much I wasn’t doing that. Especially with regards to the homeless people on the street. One man asked me for a euro to buy a hot meal and I gave him 50 cents because the alternative would have been a two euro piece. Immediately the verse came into my mind: “the measure with which you measure will be measured out to you” (cf. Mt 7:2).[1]

When I went back to night adoration a few hours later, the light coming from the altar hit my body like a tangible force. Multiple huge candelabras surrounded the altar on which Christ in the Blessed Sacrament rested in a pearly white monstrance that just glowed in light of the spotlight. Faced with all this glory, I felt small and full of darkness. As I knelt I could just hear Jesus saying, “Now you’re kneeling in front of me, but when I asked for a favor you only gave me half.” I was automatically praying Glory Be’s, but my breath felt foul and hypocritical as the prayers crossed my lips. But I kept praying—what else could I do? Ceasing to pray wouldn’t get me anywhere either. All that I could do was to keep getting up again, every single time I fell. I say that every time. Then it hit me that, because of Christ’s love and his sacrifice, this getting up every single countless time is not completely pointless. It’s only pointless when we give up. We can become better people, with God’s help. God wants us to be righteous—fortunately he has the power to make us so!

Later on, I was imagining telling my friends about the incident with the homeless man. (I talk to people in my head a lot.) Being fellow sinners, they may (or may not) have tried to brush away my guilty feelings or justify my actions to make me feel better. Why wasn’t I imagining telling Jesus about these things? Because he would have done none of the above. God doesn’t take excuses, gives no quarter. Yes, no eye, no heart looks upon us with more love and acceptance and mercy than God’s. But God’s love for us is so great that he can’t stand to see us trapped in our sins. His merciful gaze contains an inherent call to change.[2] When we kneel as sinners before his glory, God takes no prisoners—he refuses to let us settle with being prisoners of our weaknesses and sinful tendencies, and gives us the strength to drag ourselves up out of the mud again and again to let ourselves be transformed by his grace.





[1] Whatever you may think of my action here, it’s my often stingy attitude that I’m trying to work on.
[2] This post reminds me a lot of Rainer Maria Rilke’s poem, “Archaic Torso of Apollo”, though of course the gods in question are quite of a different nature.  J  For the German poem, go here: http://rainer-maria-rilke.de/090001archaischertorso.html Here is the best English translation I’ve found so far: http://somethingtobedesired.blogspot.de/2006/04/rilke-post-archaic-torso-of-apollo.html

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

A Song Amid Snow-covered Graves: Easter 2013 Part 2

Holy Saturday was possibly the most fruitful day of the Easter Triduum for me this year. Usually this day always ended up being more full of baking and egg-dyeing and getting ready for Easter Vigil than actually meditating on the significance of the day itself. This year, since Easter Vigil was at 5 a.m. on Sunday, I decided to go to what was called a “Trauermetten” on Saturday morning—basically really long Morning Prayer with monks. (For those of you familiar with the Liturgy of the Hours, Nocturns and Lauds put together.) Anyway, after every Psalm, the altar server extinguished a candle in a big candelabrum in front of the altar, until there were none left. Overall a pretty somber service—it was, after all, a service of mourning.

Afterwards, in keeping the mournful spirit, I went to the cemetery. What better place to spend the day when Christ lay in the tomb? I felt very much in solidarity with Mary and the other women who would have been mourning Jesus’ death after his burial. But I realized that I couldn’t quite replicate the sorrow and despair that must have been felt by those women, because I knew about Easter. Easter changed Holy Saturday forever, from a day of utter hopelessness to a day of quiet, hidden hope. Similarly, the Resurrection changed death forever. I went around to all the graves of my relatives and told them to take courage, because Christ who rose on the third day would also raise them on the last day. (It sounds better in German: Habt Mut! Denn Christus, der am dritten Tage auferstanden ist, wird auch euch am letzten Tage auferstehen lassen!)  Anyway, nature was cooperating beautifully with my meditations. The sky was gray and a very silent snow was falling, covering all the graves like a stifling white blanket. But in the trees, the birds were singing like crazy, all ready for spring. This juxtaposition of silence and sound—of visible death and life that I couldn’t see, only hear—reflected very well the idea of hope hidden under the outward signs of death and desolation.

***

As I said above, Easter Vigil was at five in the morning. Actually four, because we turned the clocks forward. Theoretically, this is very cool—it always felt a little weird that we celebrated Jesus’ death on Friday and only a little over 24 hours later, his resurrection. Celebrating Sunday morning would actually make it the third day. In practice, however, my body was not used being in church so early. Exciting though it always is for to me be up before the sun, I quickly realized that 5 (4) a.m. was really quite early to be sitting in a cold, dark church, especially without caffeine beforehand. I found myself annoyed by every little thing, like that you had to buy the candles, or that it was just impossible to heat such a huge old church. The gorgeous words of the prayers that make Easter Vigil possibly my favorite Mass of the year just seemed like far-off words, and the readings somehow managed to bring to mind nearly every major political or philosophical dispute I’d had since I got here. I was on my way to being very tired and grumpy, all alone in the darkness with only my negative political thoughts and my guilty feelings about things from the past to keep me company.

Suddenly, however, it was time for the Gloria. The lights came on, the church bells rung, the organ played. I nearly cried upon being able to see the faces of the people around me (at such hours I’m predisposed to being emotional). At that moment it hit me that there were other people there—that I wasn’t nearly as alone as I’d felt, even though I knew almost nobody. It crossed my mind that Christ is the Light of the World, the Morning Star as the Exultet proclaims, and that his light is able to free us from the prison of ourselves and our same old thoughts and guilty feelings. His light wakes us up to the fact that other people exist, helps us open our eyes to the world around us. His light helps us go outside ourselves (something I need to work on constantly). By the end of Mass, the sun had risen outside. Above the altar there is a huge golden-yellow stained glass window, which I assume depicts the sun, through which light was just pouring.

On my way home, though still tired and looking forward to some hot coffee, I stopped by the cemetery one more time, to announce to all those resting there that Christ was risen (though I’m sure they knew). I caught myself humming the TaizĂ© song “Surrexit Christus”. At first I was worried about bothering the other people who had come to pray, but then I figured, if there was ever a day to sing in a cemetery, it was Easter Sunday! And then I hurried home to share my Easter joy (and chocolate) with my grandmother.   :)

Monday, April 1, 2013

Pope Francis at the Prison for Minors: Easter 2013 Part 1

Easter caught me feeling pretty spiritually unprepared this year…as it did last year… Fortunately, the Holy Spirit showed me once more that God, and not my preparations or lack thereof, makes these Holy Days holy and spiritually fruitful.

It started with Pope Francis on Holy Thursday. It didn’t surprise me that he would visit a juvenile prison. What surprised me was that he prayed Mass there in place of the big Mass at St. John Lateran’s. It crossed my mind: what about all the hundreds of people who might have wanted to celebrate with the Pope? And how did these young people get so lucky? Now, these very messed-up, probably a little jealous thoughts were soon interrupted by thoughts of how annoyed the Pharisees etc. were with Jesus for eating with tax collectors and sinners, and how Jesus said he’d come to heal the sinners, since the righteous didn’t need healing. Now, I hardly mean to say that the hordes of pilgrim-tourists in Rome for Easter are more righteous than the kids in this prison. (Having been one of these pilgrim-tourists myself four years ago, I remember how un-righteous the crowds and the jostling and the long hours in line can leave you feeling, even if the overall experience is way cool, for once in a lifetime.) But the young people whose lives were literally touched by this beautiful feet-washing ceremony were probably much more in need of healing than many of the people who just wanted to see the Pope, and probably got a lot more out of the experience than a few blurry pictures. Alone the message that, yes, they are totally worth the attention of such an important personality on such an important day, is a powerful message to the young people, and maybe even more so to the rest of us.

The message of the Pope’s actions on Holy Thursday carried over to Good Friday for me, when I actually saw a clip of the Mass on the evening news. I was so surprised that, after washing the young people’s feet, he kissed them! I’d never seen any priest do that before. Apart from briefly wondering just how awkward it might feel to have my feet kissed, my thoughts immediately jumped to the Good Friday tradition of kissing the feet of Jesus on the Cross. I happen to like this gesture very much, and always manage to overcome my fear of germs to kiss those little wooden feet as a sign of love for the One hanging on the cross for me. (The last couple years I’ve had to do without, since this custom doesn’t seem as prevalent here in Germany.) But anyway, the Pope’s gesture got me wondering whether I could imagine myself kissing the feet of my fellow humans, in whom Jesus is more present than he is in a carved crucifix. Whatsoever you do for the least of my people, that you do unto me…

Sunday, February 17, 2013

A Pro-Life Texan's Argument against Capital Punishment

Being a proud Texan, I never thought I’d see the day when I would be tempted to say I came from Arkansas. (I grew up in Texarkana, on the border between the two states. Naturally there was much rivalry, especially in football.) However, during my time in Munich last year, I sometimes found myself wishing that I came from that little bitty state which the rest of the world had probably never even heard of. (Sorry, Arkansas—you’re really a very nice state!) What made me feel this way was the fact that, almost every time I introduced myself to people, the first thing they’d say upon hearing that I was from Texas was: “oh yeah, the death penalty state”. And if they didn’t say it, I could see it in their eyes. After all that, I still tend to shrink back a little when Germans ask me where I’m from.

Back home for the summer, I realized how much I really do like my home state. I mean, where in Europe—cool as it is—are you going to hear Christian radio playing in a sandwich shop, or see a car wash sporting a Bible verse on its marquee? And there’s just something about cowboy boots that makes you feel about ten feet tall on the inside. One of my favorite things about Texas, though, is its strong pro-life movement. Especially in Dallas, where it all began with Roe vs. Wade.

I am opposed to abortion for any reason in any situation. My opposition to abortion is, in the end, what pushed me over to the side of those who oppose capital punishment. How? Quite simply, really. When asked why I was against abortion, I would say, “Because no human being has the right to take the life of another human being.” That’s when it hit me…How could I call myself pro-life and not also speak out against capital punishment?[1]

I do not here propose to argue my case from the standpoint of practicality. In this argument I’m not interested in whether or not capital punishment deters crime, or how much money is spent feeding and housing prisoners, or how much money is wasted on legal proceedings surrounding the issue. Human life is to be protected whether practical or not. And though it is a good point, I’m not concerned here with the fact that courts make mistakes in judgment. All that I’m saying applies to people who really are guilty. I’m also not arguing from sentimentality, saying that nobody could deserve such a cruel thing as execution. I’d even venture to say that by committing murder one forfeits one’s own life. But here’s the catch, the whole reason I’m writing this. Just because a person does something for which they might deserve to die does not mean that the right to take their life falls into the hands of their fellow humans. Only the Author of Life has the right to decide when a life should end. “Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave room for the wrath of God; for it is written, ‘Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord’.” Romans 12:19

I said above that executing a murderer may technically be just, according to one definition of justice. A life for a life, right? But here’s one thing about cold hard justice: every sinner (that is, every human except Jesus and his mother Mary), technically deserves hell because of original sin. We certainly don’t deserve heaven, but we can go there because Jesus took our punishment on the cross and forgave us our sins. Justice without love and mercy is a cold, cruel machine. God doesn’t give us the punishment we deserve. Who are we to do differently to other humans than what God has done for us? The execution of a criminal only does further harm, depriving them of the chance to repent of their crimes and be reconciled with God, as well as tearing up the soul of the executioner, since, as automated as we have made the act of killing, someone still has to give the order, flip the switch, push the button. I call, therefore, on my fellow Texans (and fellow Americans, since Texas is not the only state with capital punishment) to take this step towards becoming more fully pro-life, by opposing capital punishment for all crimes.



[1] The question of self-defense may come up here. Self-defense is permitted because the intention is to preserve one’s own life, and not to kill the attacker (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2263). I do realize that this could prove problematic/confusing in cases where a pregnancy threatens the life of the mother. I’m sure there’s much written on that subject, but one thing at a time. As far as capital punishment is concerned, there is a difference between an unarmed prisoner locked up and isolated in a cell and an assassin coming at you with a loaded pistol and the intent to use it. See CCC 2267.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Spreading the Gospel of Joy by Playing in the Snow

In honor of St. Francis de Sales, whose feast was yesterday (Jan. 24), and St. John Bosco, whose feast is next week (Jan. 31).

A week ago we had our first real snow of the year here in Regensburg. I was of course thrilled, singing “Winter Wonderland” and the like at the bus stop before dawn. On the way to my classes (which all started late because of the weather), I was positively frolicking, kicking up snow just to watch it glitter in the sunlight. I got a few smiles from fellow students, and I wondered whether my professors would be more likely to roll their eyes or be amused if they saw me.
Of course snow is normal here. And it’s not like I’ve never seen snow in my life. But I’ve never seen this particular snow here and now. Of course snow is no fun if you’re driving. But just because it comes every year is no reason to write it off as boring. I feel like such a phenomenon occurs often in literary scholarship. If you read enough books, you realize that there are only a few basic plots and that most books follow one of a few general patterns. Everything’s been said already—do we really need new books? Modern literature tends to be full of this thing called ennui. I define this word as existential boredom.  The inability to take joy in life because everything has already been done by someone else. I started thinking about all of this a few months ago when I heard in a class that there were really no new stories, just the same old ones rearranged. I then started to argue that with every new person comes a source of new stories. Every person is a new and unique instance in this world, no matter how many billions of us there are. Every person is a different meeting point of experiences, characteristics and perspectives. No one has ever seen the world through your eyes or mine, and no one ever will again.

“I hope you never lose your sense of wonder,” says one of my favorite country songs[1]. Taking time to play in the snow, sliding screamingly down a hill in a trash bag, or even just pausing to look twice at the tiny frost crystals covering a twig, can help us keep alive that sense of wonder that is so essential to faith, and maybe even help someone else find it again.



[1] “I Hope You Dance” by Lee Ann Womack