Archive for October, 2008

The Lord Is A Perfect Fit

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Recently, I went for a short hike to take in some of the fall outdoors. It was a beautiful day, and I went to a little park that’s outside the city. There’s solitude and a few ponds and several trails. And there’s a 400-foot-high hill you can climb, with a big ol’ craggly rock on top. So I climbed the hill to the top and spend some quiet time there.

So there I was, beautiful day. Bright and warm sun. Gentle breeze. Silence. I thought, I feel like laying down and doing nothing and just resting. I thought, that is not something I have the opportunity to do very often. Then I thought, I’m going to do it.

But there was one problem. I was on top of a big craggly rock. Ugh.

Now when you lay on a rock, the first thing you want to get comfortable is your head. Of course, there’s a big difference between a down-feathered pillow and a limestone. So I put my noggin back, and after only a little movement, I found a perfect spot for it. I checked my back – it seemed a great fit. Then, there was the feet and legs. They have to hang just right or they’ll fall asleep and you won’t. So I did a little shuffling and, bingo, I had a perfect spot for them. I felt like I was in bed:

It was a perfect fit.

I laid there for about an hour. Slept, relaxed, rested. On the big craggly rock.

Now if someone walked up to me the day before and said to me, “Jerome, I see you are tired. You know, I think I have just the thing for you. I know of a mountain you can climb where there’s a big craggly rock. You can lie on it and get all the rest you need. What do you say?”, I would probably be thinking, you know, he’s got some problems.

From a distance, life with God does not look comfortable. We see a big craggly rock. We know it’s firm and sound, but we see hardness and shapes that are not the norm we’re used to. How can that be comfortable? How can I find my rest and security there? We look at Christian discipleship, or we look at the priesthood, or at consecrated religious life as a brother and sister. We see the hardness and we see the shapes that are not the norm we are used to. And we can say, “It’s a hard life”, and want to get away from it.

We can miss the whole gift: it’s a perfect fit.

On God rests my deliverance and my honor; my mighty rock, my refuge is God.” (Ps 62:7)

Don’t be afraid of life with God, of entrusting all that you are and all that you have to Him. Don’t be afraid of how it looks from the outside. Yes, there’s hardness and things that are not the norm of the world. But try it, I promise you’ll be surprised.

You’ll find it’s a perfect fit.

Only For You

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

When the Lord called me about 6 years ago, I had to make a big decision. On the one hand was intimate discipleship with Jesus in the Eucharist. On the other was, well, a lot. So, I took some good advice from a priest and did a retreat to listen and decide.

I was drawn very powerfully to Jesus’ words, His Person, His Love : “Your words were found, and I ate them, and your words became to me a joy and the delight of my heart; for I am called by your name, O LORD, God of hosts.” (Jer 15:16)

But He was asking me to leave a lot.

First, I was dating a wonderful woman who I thought might be “the one”. We were very close, and it had many signs of marriage. Our hearts were the same. I had money set aside for a ring.

Second, I had a career in engineering and business that was growing. See, I had succeeded in college and grad school in engineering and math and finance, and God had blessed me with all the big academic awards. I had developed an impressive reputation in the field, and I made very good money in investing. I had begun to work with a close friend and co-worker at starting our own consulting business. We both had the expertise and credentials, and the respect of our contacts. We had business cards, contacts, a mailing address. We were getting set to go and put a lot of money and time into it.

Third, I had recently bought a condo in the Back Bay of Boston, and had turned it into a home. It is in one of the prime locations of the city, across the street from the Charles River. All of downtown Boston was in walking distance, and at the Fourth of July, the big Boston fireworks display would go off across the street from my home!

Fourth, I had many, many good friends. Friends from youth, from schools, from work, from other friends. The same group of guys that used to hang out together when we were young still got together. People still stayed in touch, and we shared so many great memories through the years. They were all like brothers to me.

So, in the retreat, when I looked at married life with this woman, I thought, yes!, this is what I want. It was beautiful and I wanted it.

Then, I looked at the Lord. I knew what He was asking. And I wept.

I said to Him, “Only for You.” I thought, “For no one or anything else would I leave her and having children and a family and a house and a career and everyone and everything else. For no person, no family member, no friend, no money, no fame, no position, no possessions – nothing.” I said to Him, “Only for You. ONLY for You.”

………………………..

These days, since my mother’s death over a month ago, I have been busy caring for my father and putting things in order around his house. There is a lot to do, and in between I find some time to reflect on what has happened the last two years of my mother’s life.

The Lord sent me home to my parents’ house two years ago, and He gave me the gift of being His servant in His shepherding my mother home to His eternal Life. I had the privilege of becoming my mother’s de facto spiritual director, of leading her through conversion, through reconciliation with her resentments, through the pitfalls of the end of life struggle, to finally experience the great Mercy of Jesus’ Heart. No one but she and I and heaven know all the things that transpired. When she became sick in March, she looked at me frightened and asked, “Will you stay with me all the way?” I took her by her hand and smiled at her, and said, “I will.” In the end, she died in my arms. Now, I still pray with her, and I have Masses said for her progress in purgatory. We are still going home together.

Although I naturally mourn for her physical loss, words can’t describe the happiness I have underneath it all because of this. As I thought about it the other day, I thought, “Who has this happen to them? Who gets to do this? I can’t think of anyone having something like this happen to them, being Jesus’ chosen servant for Him to shepherd their own mother home to eternal life, all the way through her very last breath. Hardly anyone is given to understand these things, never mind actually do them. Presidents, business moguls, sports stars, Hollywood actors, professors? Popes, bishops, priests, religious? In my limited knowledge of the lives of the saints and martyrs, I don’t know of any – but I don’t think even St. Augustine received such a gift.

So why me? I have no status – I’m not on the radar screen of all those positions. Because I gave up everything to follow Jesus, I’m a nobody when it comes to the political world, the entertainment business, the worlds of technology and business and medicine and academia, and even Church affairs. How did I get to do this?” And as I thought about, I became, you know, a little frightened at the immensity of the gift and the honor.

And then, I heard the words of Jesus, “Only for you, Jerome. ONLY for you.”

And every one that has left house, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands for my name’s sake, shall receive an hundredfold, and shall possess life everlasting. And many that are first, shall be last: and the last shall be first.” (Mt 19:29-30)

Don’t be afraid to give up everything for Jesus and be the lowest. Believe His words: you will receive a hundredfold.

And His Life.

Showing God’s Life in the Flesh

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

I made a slideshow of some of my mother’s pictures, because a lot of people were requesting it. It’s a great slideshow of pictures that my sister-in-law made around the time of my mother’s funeral. The slideshow puts her life “in the flesh”, so to speak.

I thought I’d make one with the computer, and then post it somewhere, or email it out. So, after fumbling for a good few hours, I learned the other day how to make a slideshow using a thing called flashvideo. Now, I don’t know how it all works, but the bottom line is that this software makes two computer files. Not one – that would be too simple – but two. Both files are needed.

So, what’s the deal with two files? Well, one is huge and contains all the goods. It has all the pictures, the slides, the music, all the information for timing the slides and making them change at the right time, making sure the music matches the slides. It has 10,174 kilobytes. It has everything.

What about the other file?

Well, it’s tiny. It only has a measly 2 kilobytes. And it has only one little job. What is it?

It opens the web browser and lets the other computer file – the one with all the goods – do its thing.

That’s all.

So, if I send the little file alone, of course it can’t do anything worthwhile, because it doesn’t have the goods. 2 measly kilobytes! The big file has all the goods. But that little file is very important! Because if I don’t send that little one along, the big file can’t do anything either. It can never even get into the web browser. And my mother’s life is not made visible.

The Blessed Virgin Mary does not appear in the Bible doing great and remarkable feats. In the Bible, she does not convert anyone with preaching, she does not heal anyone’s sickness, she does not drive out any bad spirits, she does not fight battles, she does not shepherd people to safety, she does not conquer world poverty. In fact, she’s hardly mentioned by name. Mary is tiny. And she has only one little job: it’s to open herself and let God in.

Of course, Mary alone can do nothing worthwhile: “Apart from me you can do nothing.” (Jn 15:5) God has all the goods: “No one is good but God alone.” (Mk 10:18)

But Mary is very important! “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb!” (Lk 1:42) God can do nothing without Mary. Without Mary, God cannot even enter the world.

Because she opened herself up to God completely, God came into the world. Everyone got to see Him in the flesh.

You may not feel that you can do anything worthwhile. You may be convinced that you don’t have the goods. But you are very important! Without you, God can do nothing. Without you, He cannot even enter the world.

Each of us has one little job: to open ourselves up and let God in. Then He can enter the world around us. Then everyone can see Him – in the flesh.

Finding Jesus

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

I was poking around the internet looking for something recently when I came to find out that I am on the list of “Missing Classmates” for my high school alma mater. It’s a long list of people who graduated from the school that the alumni association can’t find. They are seeking me.

Now, I’ve moved around a bit since high school, and somehow my alma mater has always been able to track me down. I always wondered how they know where I’ve moved to. Pennsylvania, Worcester, different addresses in Boston, a time in the seminary, they never lost sight of me. But apparently, after I entered the Franciscan community, they lost me. Now, I am missing, and they are seeking me.

I wonder to myself, why don’t they check my parents’ house, the address that I was at when I was at the school? Why don’t they check my father’s house? If they did, they wouldn’t just get my father to speak to – they would find me, myself! You see, right now, I am in my father’s house.

When Mary lost Jesus, she found Him by going back to square one, the origin: His Father’s house. She did not find a lead there, or a clue as to where He was – she found Him.

And he said to them, ‘How is it that you sought me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?’” (Lk 2:49)

Do you feel that you’ve lost Jesus, that your prayer life is dead, that you have no inspiration and frankly have lost any desire for spiritual or religious activities or fellowship? Do you want to find Him? Then go to His Father’s house. You won’t find a clue, a lead, a helpful hint.

You’ll find Him.

One thing have I asked of the LORD,
that will I seek after;
that I may dwell in the house of the LORD
all the days of my life,
to behold the beauty of the LORD,
and to inquire in his temple.
” (Ps 27:4)

Thank You

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

Thank you to all for your prayers and support and love for my mother and family.

Your Mass intentions and spiritual enrollments for sharing in Mass graces are so important for my mother. We’ve honored them in our home.

And Tobias the elder opening his mouth, blessed the Lord, and said: You are great, O Lord, for ever, and your kingdom is unto all ages: For you scourge, and you save: you lead down to hell, and bring up again: and there is none that can escape your hand. Give glory to the Lord, you children of Israel, and praise him in the sight of the Gentiles: Because he has therefore scattered you among the Gentiles, who know not him, that you may declare his wonderful works, and make them know that there is no other almighty God besides him. He has chastised us for our iniquities: and he will save us for his own mercy.

See then what he has done with us, and with fear and trembling give glory to him: and extol the eternal King of worlds in your works. As for me, I will praise him in the land of my captivity: because he has shown his majesty toward a sinful nation. Be converted therefore, sinners, and do justice before God, believing that he will show his mercy to you. And I and my soul will rejoice in him. Bless the Lord, all his elect, keep days of joy, and give glory to him.

Jerusalem, city of God, the Lord has chastised you for the works of your hands. Give glory to the Lord for your good things, and bless the God eternal, that he may rebuild his tabernacle in you, and may call back all the captives to you, and you may rejoice for ever and ever. You shall shine with a glorious light: and all the ends of the earth shall worship you. Nations from afar shall come to you: and shall bring gifts, and shall adore the Lord in you, and shall esteem your land as holy. For they shall call upon the great name in you.

They shall be cursed that shall despise you: and they shall be condemned that shall blaspheme you: and blessed shall they be that shall build you up. But you shall rejoice in your children, because they shall all be blessed, and shall be gathered together to the Lord. Blessed are all they that love you, and that rejoice in your peace. My soul, bless the Lord, because the Lord our God has delivered Jerusalem his city from all her troubles. Happy shall I be if there shall remain of my seed, to see the glory of Jerusalem.

The gates of Jerusalem shall be built of sapphire, and of emerald, and all the walls thereof round about of precious stones. All its streets shall be paved with white and clean stones: and Alleluia shall be sung in its streets. Blessed be the Lord, who has exalted it, and may he reign over it for ever and ever, Amen.

(Tobit 13)