Tuesday, March 10, 2026

ONE OF MY HEROES FOR "CHOOSING TO STAY"


Father Pierre Teilhard de Chardin S.J.
1881-1955

BORN IN FRANCE
DIED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

There seems to be a lot of discouragement going around, not only about the leadership of our country, but also about the leadership of our Church in this country. What discourages me most is that the leadership of our Church in this country helped elect the present political leadership of our country. 

Because of their "failure to convince" people of our moral position on one issue, they have turned to our political system as a way to "force" people to accept our moral position. It seems to me that they may have been entrapped by the third temptation in the story of Jesus in the desert as he was discerning the direction of his ministry. Jesus rejected cozying up political power, but rather called for radical personal conversion! For that reason, I accept our moral position, but I simply reject their means to reach it! Consequentialism, a perennial favorite moral heresy, for anyone not fully up to speed on basic principles of Catholic moral teaching, is the belief that good ends justify evil means. Despite the fact that this notion has been condemned ever since Paul wrote Romans 3:8, some Catholics, deeply believe it anyway. The Catechism of the Catholic Church is clear:(#1789) "One may never do evil so that good may result from it." My only hope is that Pope Leo will be able to find more truly effective spiritual leaders, people able to convince others of our moral positions without having to cozy up to politicians who seek to use our faith for their political ends. 

Even though it is tempting some days to leave our Church and even our country, I have decided to stay with both, to the bitter end if necessary! One of my heroes, in this area of my life, is Father Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, a French Jesuit and a scientist. Because of his new ideas, he was silenced by Rome in 1926. He was urged by many to leave, not only the Jesuits, but also the Church. He decided rather to "go on to the end and with a smile if possible." Why? He said, "When I took my vows I committed myself. To break them would be an offense against honor." "One must work from within," he said. "Those who leave no longer have any influence."

I am a Christian - a Catholic Christian! As a Catholic Christian, I am committed to the Catholic Church, warts and all, but I roundly reject "Christian Nationalism!" As an American Catholic, I can proudly say that "I am consciously Christian, deliberately Catholic and unapologetically ecumenical and interfaith!" As one Baptist Minister said recently, “I’m greatly concerned about uniting church and state because it has never gone well for the church. It turns faith into just a political tool and ultimately drives people away.” When will we ever learn from history? As the American philosopher George Santayana, said "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it!"

Sunday, March 8, 2026

DO YOU HAVE A HEARSAY OR A FIRSTHAND FAITH?

 

They said to the woman, “We no longer believe because of your word;
for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this is truly the
savior of the world.”
John 4:42

On the first Sunday of Lent, Jesus invited us to conversion of life by going to the desert. The desert is a place devoid of distractions, a place to gain insight. On the second Sunday of Lent, Jesus invited us to go up the mountain with him.  Mountains are places where you can go to gain perspective, to get the big picture. From a mountaintop you can see into the distance – where you’ve been and where you are headed. On the third Sunday of Lent, Jesus invites us to go to the well, a place one goes to quench one’s thirst.

In many ways, people today are thirsty, restless and looking for meaning. The Prophet Haggai, about 520 years before Christ, described our culture quite well when he wrote, “You have sown much, but have brought in little; you have eaten, but have not been satisfied; you have drunk, but not been exhilarated; have clothed yourselves, but not been warmed; and you have earned wages for a bag with holes in it.” We “have it all” on one hand and yet we are still not satisfied on the other. We are “cravers for more!”

It has been suggested that our consumer culture has spawned a new climate of thirstiness and restlessness. The experts call it ‘churn,’ using the word to describe our short attention span and our ‘what’s next’ attitude. This restlessness is seen in a consuming lust for endless distractions and amusements. This restlessness is being fed, some believe, by the overstimulation and excessive exposure to violent movies, fast-paced videos, computers and cell-phones, loud hard-wired music and over-scheduling. All these together exacerbate agitation, restlessness and hyperactivity. 

What the world seems to be craving right now is what Jesus called “rest for one’s soul.” He said on one occasion, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” Jesus offers “rest” to those who are “worn out” in their search for “meaning.”

In this gospel, we meet a wonderful woman who is an example of all that!  Jesus meets this woman at a well. She is tired - tired to the bone. She is physically tired - tired of being thirsty and having to constantly draw water and carry it long distances. She lived a half mile away and the well was over 100 feet deep. She was emotionally tired - tired of trying to find satisfying relationships in her life. She had been “looking for love in all the wrong places,” as the country song goes. She had been married five times. She was tired of being discriminated against by others. Jews hated Samaritans like her, and women in general were considered socially inferior. She was spiritually tired – tired of a burdensome religion that was not really satisfying. At the well, she meets Jesus and pours out her heart to him and he, in turn, gives her “living water” and “rest for her soul.”

Fellow seekers, all of us are like this woman in some degree. We all have a void in our lives that we try to fill. Some of us strive frantically our whole lives to fill that void by gaining material things, gaining stature, gaining status, gaining fame, finding the perfect relationship and much more. The fact of the matter is we will never fill that void with “things or stuff” because that void was put there for a specific purpose. We have a built-in missing piece – given to us by God himself.

What is the purpose of that void? What is that missing piece? It is the place where God belongs! Only God can fill that hole. Saint Augustine of Hippo described it best when he said, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you!”

It’s as if we all running around with a hole in our souls that we are desperately trying to fill. The truth of the matter is that only God can fill it, and yet we try our best to fill it with unsatisfying distractions and amusements, objects and things. Lent is a time to stop by the “well” for “living waters” and find “rest” in God.   

The best meditation for this gospel could be Francis Thompson’s “The Hound of Heaven.” “I fled Him, down the nights and down the days; I fled Him, down the arches of the years; I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways of my own mind; and in the midst of tears I hid from Him…”

I have always loved the words of Celie in the movie “The Color Purple.” Celie feels a hole in her life. She is more than a bit aggravated by the feeling of God’s absence in her life – what she refers to as God “just sitting up there glorifying in being deef (deaf).” She speaks for many people today when she says, “It ain’t easy trying to do without God. Even if you know he ain’t there, trying to do without him is a strain.”   Those who experience the strain of trying to “do without God” will no doubt feel a hole in their souls, a hunger and thirst that nothing seems to satisfy. Lent is time to re-connect with God after ‘trying to do without him.”

Jesus has taken us to the desert, to the mountain and to the well so that he might lead us to conversion of life, a life that is full and satisfying.

 

 

 

 




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