Roadmap to Contentment: Do Not Be Afraid!

There are four lines—we could call them “words”—that are on the walls of every Pauline chapel in the world. They surround the Tabernacle. They are, for me, the roadmap to contentment no matter what life throws our way.

By the time I was 28 years old, I had read them, while I was in the chapel to pray, at least…let me get out a calculator…at a minimum 10,000 times. Every day, at least twice a day, for the thirteen years I had been in the community of the Daughters of St Paul….

These words are one of the first things you see after you enter the Daughters of St Paul. They become a path into the charism as you learn more about the heart of James Alberione to whom Jesus spoke these words in a moment of crisis. They become, over the years, a key to understanding your own life as it unfolds.

Do not fear.
I am with you.
From here I will cast light.
Be sorry for sin (this phrase is also translated: Live in continual conversion).

Breaking these down into “words”:

  • Fear
  • I AM
  • Here
  • Continual

A seed is planted

It was just a few short years after my perpetual profession. I was driving to the hospital a sister, an elder sister of the Carini family, who had been a Salesian all her life. This woman religious had been a Salesian provincial superior simultaneously with Sr. Mary Celeste Carini, who had been the provincial superior of the Daughters of St. Paul (and, actually, the first vocation from the United States).

I remember at that time my heart was fragile as it tried to make sense of community dynamics I felt unprepared to navigate. As we crossed Route 9 in Brookline on the way to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital to visit Sr. Mary Celeste, she said words I’ll never forget: “Every day of my life has been more beautiful than the one before.”

I almost choked.

I was silent.

What?  I wanted to cry out! How can you say that, after 60 years of religious life!

Unfortunately for me, I said nothing, and missed the opportunity to learn something more of her story and wisdom. I am grateful, however, that I tucked that piece of wisdom from one of my older sisters into my heart, planted it there, so to speak, where it worked its way deep into the soil, sprouting roots. I returned again and again over the years to sit beside the tiny seedling as it offered new shoots and abundant blossoms.

I was on a quest

You see, I was, in my late twenties, on a quest. I borrowed Butler’s 4 Volume Lives of the Saints from the library, and at night read through the story of every saint who had been a religious. It took me several years.

What did I learn? Every one of them suffered something in their community at the hands of some member—every one without exception.

We can think of John of the Cross, imprisoned by his brothers and yet the writer of Dark Night of the Soul and Ascent to Mount Carmel, and for centuries now the premier guide to contemplative prayer and the journey to holiness.

Or Saint Thérèse Couderc, foundress of the Cenacle Sisters, who was removed from her position as Foundress and Superior, falsely accused of mismanaging funds, sent far away from the motherhouse, and set to doing, basically, yard work and taking care of other hidden responsibilities. What prompted this? A priest decided he was in charge and put a newly received novice as responsible for the community (since she had money-connections). Thérèse Couderc had an understanding of life with God, which she sums up in a phrase: “the surrendered soul has found paradise on earth since she enjoys that sweet peace which is part of the happiness of the elect. …To surrender oneself is to die to everything and to self, to be no longer concerned with self except to keep it continually turned toward God.” This story is not that different from that of Saint Jeanne Jugan, foundress of the Little Sisters of the Poor, and Blessed Marie Ann Blondin, foundress of the Sisters of Saint Anne….and others.

Actually, we could say, in religious life there seems to be quite a lot to “fear.” Religious communities are not immune to the misunderstandings, agendas, jealousies, and injustices that can plague individuals in any relationship or group. After all, we too are still very much on the way, as yet unable to see with the eyes of Christ and to live with the open-hearted love of Christ that gives itself away without expectation of return. We are also very much trying to live, as Saint Paul teaches us, in continual conversion.

So, when Jesus is saying to me as a Daughter of St. Paul, “Do not fear,” is he saying, “Don’t feel afraid?” “Have no fear?” “Be strong!”

I think Jesus is saying that no matter what happens, nothing and no one can separate me from his love for me and his plan for me to be part of his mission for the salvation of the world.

Image by freestocks-photos from Pixabay

After watching moms in our Alexandria Pauline Book Center, I like to think of this word “fear” in the context of a little child. When a child is frightened by something, it runs to its mother, stretches her little arms around her mother’s leg and buries her face, hiding herself, she naively believes, from all that frightens her. And the mother doesn’t say, “Be strong. Why are you afraid? I’m so ashamed of you!” Instead, her heart melts that her child trusts her mother to protect and guide her through the scary moments that are a part of growing up. She reaches down to be with her child. She permits her those frightened feelings while at the same letting her experience security and comfort in her presence.

“Sacrifice was never a matter of surprise”

Thinking of “childhood,” I am reminded of these words of Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, who describes her early months and years in Carmel in this way:

I found the religious life just what I expected, and sacrifice was never a matter of surprise. Yet you know well that from the beginning my way was strewn with thorns rather than with roses.

In the first place, my soul had for its daily food the bread of spiritual dryness. Then, too, dear Mother, Our Lord allowed you, unconsciously, to treat me very severely. You found fault with me whenever you met me. …

On the rare occasions when I spent an hour with you for spiritual direction, you seemed to be scolding me nearly all the time, and what pained me most of all was that I did not see how to correct my faults: for instance, my slow ways and want of thoroughness in my duties, faults which you were careful to point out.

One day it occurred to me that you would certainly prefer me to spend my free time in work instead of in prayer, as was my custom; so I plied my needle industriously without even raising my eyes. No one ever knew of this, as I wished to be faithful to Our Lord and do things solely for Him to see.

… And yet, dear Mother, how grateful I am to you for giving me such a sound and valuable training. It was an inestimable grace. What should I have become, if, as the world outside believed, I had been but the pet of the Community? Perhaps, instead of seeing Our Lord in the person of my superiors, I should only have considered the creature, and my heart, which had been so carefully guarded in the world, would have been ensnared by human affection in the cloister. Happily, your motherly prudence saved me from such a disaster.

And not only in this matter, but in other and more bitter trials, I can truly say that Suffering opened her arms to me from the first, and I took her to my heart” (Story of a Soul, Chapter VII)

Today I am in my early sixties, and much to my surprise, my heart resonates with the contentment of those words shared with me so many years ago by a woman religious faithful to her vocation: “Every day my life has become more beautiful!” What I couldn’t understand, or hardly believe, forty years ago, I know now, so gratefully, to be true.

I’m no John of the Cross, Marie Anne Blondel, or Saint Thérèse. But my heart has quaked many times as I’ve navigated, while living among my sisters, what it is to entrust myself to them and to God, even in moments of fear, loss, and pain. And I haven’t always done it well. Maybe it is because Saint Paul himself was no stranger to these circumstances—he paints them in broad strokes across his letters in the New Testament—that we his Daughters still seek together to live in reconciliation, even as the earth below us seems sometimes to quake, returning again and again to mercy and to love.

Image by Th G from Pixabay

All Sinners Welcome!

It is true that Saint Paul defined charity as patient and kind and not puffed up. It isn’t ambitious and doesn’t seek its own benefit. Perhaps these words brought forward a memory of his own, the days when he violently attacked the followers of the Way—without patience or kindness, in arrogance and ambition and for his own benefit. He continues, then, sharing what deeply had come to fill his life as both giver of charity and recipient of the charity of others: Charity keeps no record of wrongs. Charity bears all things. It believes all things. It hopes all things. It endures all things… (1 Corinthians 13:4-7).

I am reminded of the confessional in the old Cistercian monastery founded in Otterburg in the early 1160s which proclaims in a metal sign above the door: “All Sinners Welcome!” That is, if you’re a sinner, “You’re one of us – you belong!”

Sinners: we could define sinners as masterpieces that aren’t yet finished. Saints still in the making. Those who fall and rise and fall and rise. Those still unaware, weak of will, tepid in love. That is, all of us in one way or another. John of the Cross used to say that we act as sandpaper upon each other. We receive a spiritual refinement through what annoys us in others. Or Mother Thecla Merlo, our co-foundress, who reminded us that we are like pots and pans on a wagon. As the cart moves along we bump and bruise, scrape and, every now and then, break one another. I have been bumped and bruised and have bumped and bruised others. And I have forgiven and been forgiven, and tasted the honey of reconciliation (Colossians 3:13).

I didn’t enter religious life expecting a playground, although I was most certainly naïve about what life in a convent would be like. Even those who are engaged, discover after a few years (or months) of married life it isn’t always fair. It isn’t always what you dreamed of. It certainly isn’t easy. That the only way to make it work is for each to give 100%. And those who set out to do something valuable for the world in a chosen field or career path know that perseverance takes blood, sweat, and tears, amid lots of work, setbacks, and occasional breakthroughs.

But, as a person perseveres, they discover it is beautiful.

I promise you, as the years go by and you reap the fruits of the harvest, it will be very beautiful.

This is the first of what will be four articles on the words that are Jesus’ roadmap to contentment.

Prompts to take to prayer and share with others:

  • How do you react when you hear the words: “In my experience, life has been more beautiful every day.” When you hold these words, what memories and images and feelings emerge? Can you bring these to Jesus with gentle compassion? What does this part of your life need from you right now?
  • Have you ever experienced a time of crisis that ended up being an unexpected gift?
  • Are you still suffering the burden of loss and pain in relationships or life circumstances? In what ways can you see yourself in the stories in this article?
  • Talk to the Lord about what you most desire.

When Jesus Calls You Out of the Tree (Luke 19:1-9)

Jesus entered Jericho and was passing through it. A man was there named Zacchaeus; he was a chief tax collector and was rich. He was trying to see who Jesus was, but on account of the crowd he could not, because he was short in stature. So he ran ahead and climbed a sycamore tree to see him, because he was going to pass that way. When Jesus came to the place, he looked up and said to him, “Zacchaeus, hurry and come down; for I must stay at your house today.” So he hurried down and was happy to welcome him. All who saw it began to grumble and said, “He has gone to be the guest of one who is a sinner.” Zacchaeus stood there and said to the Lord, “Look, half of my possessions, Lord, I will give to the poor; and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I will pay back four times as much.” Then Jesus said to him, “Today salvation has come to this house, because he too is a son of Abraham.

Luke 19:1-9

It was, it is true, a simple out-patient procedure: metatarsal surgery. It was simple, that is, until I had a stroke the evening of the surgery. Eleven days later I was still in the hospital—struggling to walk, to eat, to talk. That was forty years ago, and I can say that “most” of my life has been lived post-stroke. The confusion of those first weeks and months opened up into the quiet desperation of years of rehabilitation…, flowing into a mighty struggle to uncover my fear of God’s power over my life…, surrendering into the trust that this was and still is a moment of a grace for me through which God gathered the direction of my life toward himself forever.

With the stroke, God took me from the outside to the inside, from the surface to the deep, from the visible to the invisible, from ambition to powerlessness, from earth to heaven, from complacency to a wrestling with him, from healing to more healing to more brokenness to even deeper healing. It is kind of like Zacchaeus. Let me explain.

The little man we call Zacchaeus had his life all figured out. He knew who he thought he was. He knew what he was about. He knew what he wanted, what he had, what he could get when he needed it. On the surface, in what was visible, he was settled in a complacency that isolated him from the others in the village charged that day with the electric excitement of the arrival of Jesus.

Around the passing of Jesus through their town swirled stories of people freed from demonic possession, the lame and the blind and the mute and the deaf and the lepers suddenly released from the captivity of illness, sinners casting themselves down before him in sorrow and repentance and love only to become one of his traveling companions. There was something more to Jesus than the ordinary roving teacher who passed through their village of Jericho now and then. But Zacchaeus didn’t need any of that. He was fine the way he was. But he was just a little bit, just the tiniest bit, curious. And that curiosity sent him up the tree to stake out a spot as an observer, and an observer only.

That was me. No, I’m not short and I certainly don’t climb trees. But I thought, at twenty-one, I had my life all figured out, the externals of my vocation mastered. I didn’t know that I needed healing, that I needed Jesus to make an intervention so decisive in my life that it would bring me face to face with him, that I needed my expectations and strategies upended and the rug ripped out from under me, as Jesus so mercifully did for Zacchaeus.

“I mean to come to your house for dinner today.”

Friends, when Jesus calls you out of the tree, when he moves you from the efficiency of life-all-planed-out, when he intervenes in your plans with a graced but often painful stroke of mercy, climb out of that tree with Zacchaeus. Stand with your head held high. Commit yourself to this new and deepening relationship that Jesus is initiating, and bring the Master within to the areas of your life that are the most broken, and let him change you forever.

Saint Paul points to the truth of these “Zacchaeus moments” in this way: “So we do not lose heart. Even though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed day by day. For this slight momentary affliction is preparing us for an eternal weight of glory beyond all measure” (2 Cor 4:16-17 NRSVCE).

Image credit: James Tissot, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Praying with this Passage of Scripture

Lectio Divina is a way of listening to God as he speaks in his Word. It is a practice of communicating with God through Scripture and attending to God’s presence and what he wishes to tell us. In this slow and prayerful reading of the Word of God, we allow ourselves to be transformed by the Spirit who forms us into the image of Christ. There are four movements in Lectio Divina: Read (lectio), Meditate (meditation), Pray (oratio), Contemplate (contemplation).

Begin by finding a still space to pray. Breathe deeply and become quieter within. Abandon any agenda, worries or thoughts you bring to this prayer and entrust these things to the merciful care of God. Ask for the grace to be receptive to what God will speak to you through this Scripture reading. Grant me, Jesus Divine Master, to be able to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God and your unfathomable riches. Grant that your word penetrate my soul; guide my steps, and brighten my way till the day dawns and darkness dissipates, you who live and reign forever and ever Amen.

Read (lectio)
Begin by slowly and meditatively reading your Scripture passage out loud. Listen for a particular word or phrase that speaks to you at this moment and sit with it for a time.

Pray (oratio)
Read the text a third time. Listen for what God is saying to you. Speak heart to heart with God. Notice the feelings that this conversation with God raises up within you. Share with God what you notice about your response to this conversation. You may wish to return to repeating the phrase quietly and gently, allowing it to permeate you more and more deeply.

Contemplate (contemplatio)
Read the text a final time. Now be still and rest in God’s embrace. Ask God to give you a gift to take with you from this prayer. You might ask God if he is inviting you to do some action, for instance, make some change in your thoughts, attitudes or reactions, in the way you speak or how you treat others. Thank God for this gift and invitation as you conclude your prayer.

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