The
Year of Mercy asks us to stretch ourselves to new limits so that we reconcile
with our brothers and sisters. Truth be told, we all want forgiveness and
reconciliation, but truth also be told, we want to control how it is done. We
want the other person to conform to our expectations and to say things in the
manner we want to hear. If we don’t get just what we want, we storm off in a
huff. Besides that, we may carry tremendous hurt and anger because we are
victims of someone else’s betrayal and we cannot be the first one to initiate
the process of reconciliation. The game changer though, the mysterious element,
the transformative agent, is the mercy we receive when we are forgiven and when
we forgive. The effects of reconciliation are much more powerful than we can
realize. Once love is restored to broken relationships, we find that a part of
our true selves has returned and we are lighter and happier because something
fundamental is back in balance.
Pope
Francis, because of his Jesuit training, knows something fundamental about who
we are. He would say that we are loved sinners, with the emphasis on the
qualifying adjective: loved, forgiven, cherished, honored. We may know it
intellectually, but we have to really feel that we are loved and forgiven. We
might have to update our definition of sin to something like this: Sin is a
failure to bother to love. The sin is in not even trying.
Typically,
when we go to the sacrament of reconciliation, we tend to gravitate to negative
ways of thinking. Two such examples are: (1.) I did something wrong, I harbored
anger, I yelled at someone, therefore I am not a good person, or (2.) someone
did something awful to me or treated me poorly, therefore I caused it and I
must be a bad person. Point One: I want you to hear this:
Your sins are forgiven. The ones you committed 20 years ago, the ones you do
today, and the ones you will commit in the future have all cancelled out by
Jesus Christ 2,000 years ago. You are already forgiven because God has already
chosen you, has fundamentally and unequivocally decided to love and honor you. You
are free, and nothing can take that away. And the anger that you feel, that is
good. Anger is very good because it tells us something is out of balance, like
a boundary being crossed. We get down on ourselves because we do not express
our anger or our feelings well. This is our growing edge: to express our anger
in a positive way that reveals to others what we feel and think. Point Two: Often we are the victims of
other people’s violations, but somehow we think we did something wrong. As a
victim, we are powerless and we are deprived of the opportunity to speak our
voices adequately. We assess we are to blame. This is false. We cannot let
others have that power over us. Christ does not want us to be debilitated. We
wants us to free us of the chaos that lies under the surface of our
consciousness. If there is one thing I want you to know, it is that you are
lovable, forgiven, respected, saved. Christ has already chosen you to be in a
special friendship with him. I want you to feel his love.
You
know, we haven’t been taught how to pray well at all. We were once told, not
directly, but through example, that we were the ones responsible for prayer and
if God did not answer us, we must be doing something wrong, that God must not
really care for us, that there is something fundamentally so flawed with us
that God won’t even bother with us. Ugh! I want that thinking to change.
Let
me tell you how I begin my prayer because it is probably different from the way
you enter into it. I call to mind the Rock Opera, Tommy, composed and sung by
The Who way back in 1969. The blind, deaf, and dumb Tommy sang, “See Me, Feel
Me, Hear Me,” because he was deprived of his senses. I suggest that this is the
way we enter into each prayer, even the Liturgy of the Mass. Before all else,
we stand before Christ, The Spirit, The Creating God, and we say, “O God, I
want you to see me, feel me, hear me, know what I am feeling.” The point is not
that we look for God, but that God gazes upon us. We ask God to behold us and to
simply direct God’s gentle eyes on our soul. Everyone wants to be seen and
heard and known by others. We most basically want to be seen and heard and
known by God. It is a paradigm shift for many. We simply stand before the warm,
loving gaze of God and we let ourselves be known. In other words, we receive
God’s mercy. If prayer continues, great. If it ends here, well, that is
terrific too. If it continues, we have to tell God how we feel. The problem is
that we have so many feelings we do not know where to begin and we don’t want
to share the negative ones. Well, we are what we feel, and God wants us to tell
all. Open yourselves up a bit and let yourself feel vulnerable. Tell God the
thirty-three competing, complex feelings you hold within yourself. Refrain from
evaluating them. Just list out your feelings and the incidences that caused
them. Go slowly enough so that God might feel with you as your feelings emerge.
Let
me give you an image to contemplate. Imagine a newborn in her parents’ arms.
All the parents can do is look upon the child for hours at a time and gasp at
the miracle before them. Parents spend hours just amazed at the new life in
their arms. A friend once wrote me an email saying, “Fr. John. I just can’t
express it. I look at my grandson for hours at a time and the time passes so
quickly. He cannot love me back yet, but all I can do is share my love with
him.” This is the perfect way to begin prayer. We realize we are simply in the
hands of God, and the only possible thing God can do is to spend hours looking
at us while we take God’s breath away. God showers love and wonder at us and we
feel what God gives us. That’s not a bad way to begin prayer. This is an
appropriate way to begin prayer.
I
want to enlarge this image with another example because some of us may not be
able to feel as vulnerable as a child in the arms of God. So, this story comes
from an experience in Jamaica when I was a teacher in a ghetto inner-city
school. A student of the school had an extraordinary mother who taught me about
prayer. She had a routine with her daughter that taught me how to really give
and receive love and mercy. Through an ordinary day, the mother’s routine
helped the daughter walk tall and straight through the dangerous streets of
town. Every morning, the mother would make sure her daughter’s lunch was packed
and breakfast provided. When the girl went to brush her teeth, her mother would
sit in her winged-back chair. When the girl came out of the bathroom, put on
her backpack, she would go over to her mother’s outstretched arms. She said,
“Daughter, I love you so much and I’m going to miss you all day long. Hurry
home from school because I can’t wait to see your face later today. You are so
beautiful and you are part of my heart.”
The
girl would then wriggle out of her arms, knowing she is loved, but as she
headed towards the door the mother would say, “Daughter, stop right there. Turn
to me. Let me see your face again. I want your face in my memory all day long.
I’m going to miss you. Hurry home now. You take my breath away. You have such a
beautiful face.”
This
is how God sees us. Each day when we rise, God’s warm gaze is fixed upon us and
we give God such amazement and wonder. I sense that God pauses to catch his
breath because God is stunned by who we are and who we are becoming. I feel
God’s pride as God just says, “Wow, you are so beautiful, and all I want to do
all day long is to gaze upon you, the one I created and formed. I can’t take my
eyes off of you. You have such a beautiful face and I want the image of your
face in my memory all day long. Hurry back and see me later because I’m going
to miss you.”
How’s
that for a way to begin prayer? And that is just the start. From my experience,
this is a prayer that provides peace, serenity, and comfort. I can walk down
the street taller and straighter knowing that God is in radical solidarity with
me. It begins with God’s mercy upon me. It begins by knowing that when God
looks at me, God sees my whole person and not merely my sins. I feel whole. I
feel restored. I feel as if God has my back through all the day’s tribulations.
God teaches me to see the world more like God sees it. Mercy is the bridge that
connects God to us, opening our hearts to the hope of being loved forever. It
is a wellspring of joy, serenity, and peace. May our prayer this evening be
that we can receive undeserved mercy from God just to know how profoundly God
loves us.
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