Some of you here today may identify with some of these experiences. Exactly halfway through my seminary training, the Catholic Church went from being calm, serene and predictable to being stormy and chaotic – almost overnight. We changed, not with a whimper, but with a bang. My first year at Saint Meinrad in the Fall of 1964, we wore cassocks to class one semester and then cut-off jeans and shorts the next. One semester, we could be kicked out for drinking beer on campus. A few semesters later, the monastery opened the “Unstable,” a beer and pizza pub that still exists today. We went from celebrating Mass in Latin with the priest facing the wall to celebrating Mass with the priest facing the people. Churches went from hushed whispers to endless talking. People used to look down on you if you didn’t go to Mass. Now, they look down on you if you do! People used to admire you if you became a priest or nun. Now they think you’re nuts if you do!
Some like to blame Vatican Council II for all this, but to jump to the conclusion that Vatican II caused all this is simplistic and quite naïve. There were monumental cultural shifts going on in those days in our society that would have affected us even if Vatican II had not taken place at all! In fact, Protestant Churches, Jewish communities, families, marriages and universities were all affected by these same cultural shifts in their own unique ways.
By the time I was
ordained in 1970, I knew even then that I was going to serve the Church as a
priest in the eye of a storm – in one of those many tumultuous periods in
church history that come around every few hundred years. Just as I was about to
get on the bus, hundreds of priests and nuns were getting off. I knew even back
then that I was going to have to learn to ride the waves and shoot the rapids,
without puking my own guts out, if I was going to be able to help others
weather the storms of change. I realized
even then that I needed something to hang onto – a rock-solid image or two that
would keep me from going under.
The Quaker Song
“How Can I Keep from Singing?” was hot back then and seemed at the time to be
exactly the image I needed. Andy Gardner of Indianapolis sang it at my First
Mass and I have played it every anniversary for the last 54 years. “No storm
can shake my inmost calm while to that Rock I’m clinging. Since love is Lord of
heaven and earth, how can I keep from singing? Through all the tumult and the
strife I hear the music ringing. It sounds and echoes in my soul; how can I keep
from singing?” Many know it as my “theme
song” back when I was pastor at the Cathedral.
The second image I
chose was the image from the Prophet Jeremiah in our first reading today. That
reading is, of course, based on Psalm 1. It speaks of a tree planted along a
riverbank, whose roots go deep underground and out into the running water. This
tree doesn’t depend on good weather or bad weather because it has an
underground water source to sustain it. Its leaves never droop and it always
bears fruit – through thick and thin, in good times and in bad. I have always wanted to be like that tree!
These two images –
the solid rock that “no storm can shake” and the “tree growing along a
riverbank” - have sustained me during 54 years of change and chaos. As a priest, I have always tried to “cling to
the rock” and to be like that “tree with long roots.” So far, it’s working!
During the sex abuse scandal in the church, I was very concerned about the nearly 200,000 Catholics in our archdiocese, especially those who had given up on the church or who were barely hanging on before that scandal came to light. At first, I thought there was nothing I could do to help them. I was mistaken.
In 2002, it occurred to me that I could enlarge my pulpit if I had the chance to write a weekly column in The Record dedicated to offering the average Catholic an encouraging word. I was both challenged and humbled to be given that opportunity. I wrote that column every week for fifteen years. Now I have my own blog where I can post my homilies and other writings for an even broader audience. So far there have been 552,000 (a half million) page views of my Encouraging Word blog.
Then, there were my Parish Missions, a time when extended preaching could be done over three nights or even a few weekends. I have preached close to 75 Parish Missions over the years, in three states. I got more requests than I had time to honor because of the hundred plus national and international priest retreats and convocations that I have led in ten countries. Now that I have moved on from Parish Missions and Priest Convocations, I decided not to throw those presentations in the trashcan but publish them last month in two books so that even more people might find them helpful.
Considering the low-grade depression that we have seen in our church in recent years, we must look for ways to give people reasons for hope! We need to find ways to prevent this from continuing. Th most effective way to do it is by obviously living the Christian faith. By that, I don’t mean turning into some kind of religious fanatic who “hate” in the name of “love,” fooling no one! We can do this. We must do this. We do not have room for self-righteous indignation or verbal, printed and visual theatrics. We are all responsible for turning this around – even if we must do it one-person-at-a-time. We must get back to the business of being the salt of the earth and the light of the world and quit getting distracted by all that is happening around us.
During all this, I have been impressed by the faith of people in the pews. I try not to be discouraged by those who do not show up, but to be encouraged by those who do show up! When I was almost drowning in discouragement several years back, their continued faithful presence at Sunday Mass preached an encouraging word back to me.
I believe that the present purging and cleansing in the church will ultimately be good for the church. The truth will set us free, even if that truth does sting in the meantime.
The words of Jesus to Peter in the gospels,
after his Bread of Life teaching, are now being addressed to us, “Will you go
away also?” Do not join those who give up! Let us join those who search for
even better reasons to stay!