Positive-based emphasis on the 4th and 5th steps.
However, as we broach the topic on non-completed moral inventories, this is as good a place as any to emphasize that the inventory should not only be about looking at our negative qualities. Regardless of whether we were addicted or not, or were non-loving, impatient, dishonest or whatever, there are not many people who are totally devoid of any endearing qualities. I’ve met and heard of people who, in the midst of addictions, were still taking care of very sick and almost totally dependent parents, partners or loved ones. Of course we have to look at our negative qualities as they are blocking us off from the sunshine of God’s guidance and love, but that love never wavers and never stops shining. Perhaps when we keep that in mind -- and understand that as we look at these negatives we also realize and take heart in the fact that the Creator still loves us -- the work of the inventory becomes a gravitational, with-the-flow exercise. It becomes not a re-entry into the Creator’s kingdom, but more a realization we’d never left.
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But again -- we need to remember, as we enumerate these negative qualities, to also note the times when we were unselfish, were honest, or displayed love and/or courage at a difficult time. As we step out into the shattered ice of our seemingly non-connected life, clinging to the branch of the good that we did do regardless of how infrequent it was, we are really honoring and grasping the life-sustaining love of our Higher Power.
Sunday, July 8, 2012
charles de foucald
Step eleven - We sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with our Higher Power as we understood God, praying only for knowledge of our Destiny and the power to carry it out.
Charles de Foucald
In a little rural town called Otto, New York, about 25 of we members of a prayer organization called the Jesu Caritas Lay Fraternity, met the last weekend of June 2012 for our annual retreat. Early in August, a much larger meeting will take place in Bonn, Germany as people from all over the world will be in attendance. This year’s theme will be ‘daring to meet the other’. Our prayer life and activities try to mirror the spirituality of a turn-of-the-20th century French monk and mystic named Charles de Foucald.
Orphaned at a young age of 5 and growing up in the midst of the new secular-modernist era of mid-late 19th century France, Charles became a bon-vivant soldier and hedonist – far removed from worrying about anything like a destiny or God’s will for him. Going to and from Algeria and the desert as a soldier and a surveyor and witnessing the devotion of the Muslim’s prayer life was one of the many influences that led to an eventual conversion experience. Charles de Foucauld would change completely and would become overwhelmed with the love that Jesus had for him…and he wanted to return the love in kind. Perhaps as an inverse of sorts to the life he had led, simplicity became a central part of his being. Mesmerized by the simple, non-recorded Nazareth portion of Jesus’ life, after spending over 7 years in two different Trappist monasteries Charles went and lived in Nazareth for two years as a caretaker of sorts at a Poor Clare Monastery.
Eventually he went to a place deep in the Algerian desert called Tamanrasset because he wanted to be among the world’s most forgotten people. He lived the final sixteen years of his life there, converting no one and not having anyone come and join him. When he was gunned down and killed on December 1, 1916 on the outskirts of WWI, he likely considered himself a failure.
Alas, although while he was alive his dreams sure did not come to pass, thanks to the work, dutifulness and dedication of some very holy people, the legacy of Charles de Foucauld lived on. A devout Christian Frenchman named Louis Massignon who’d had a long correspondence with Charles throughout his life, commissioned a French writer named Rene Bazin to write de Foucauld’s biography. Several years later, the word of Charles’ life and of the rules for an order he'd wanted to initiate, were utilized by first a priest, Fr Rene Voillaume and then by a woman Madeleine Hutin, who became Little Sister Madeleine of Jesus. The Little Sisters and the Little Brothers of Jesus were formed. Those religious communities now live and work in South America, Central America, the darkest ghettos in North America, in Asia and Africa; they choose to work with the most forgotten. Again, as with their founder, conversion is not high on the agenda…care and love is. The Little Brothers and Sisters live like Jesus did more than talk about it.
Charles’ prayers to improve his conscious contact with a Higher Power exploded into a love story par excellence. One does not go to the earthly extremes this man did without really and genuinely finding Jesus in the face of all the ones he met – especially the forgotten or displaced. Hours on end, sitting in his little tent gazing upon the host-image of Jesus…some might find this overly austere, a waste of time – it most certainly was not for Charles. The oomph, the grace, the qi, the wherewithal to befriend the forgotten, to welcome his brothers and sisters at all times, to live the Spartan, barely sustainable existence he did – all this came from his beloved Jesus – the Source of all love. His dedication to touch, to imbibe and to receive that love was the driving force of his life.
---
Being that Otto, NY is only about two hours south of Niagara Falls, the day after the retreat, the very gracious wife/husband, hostess/host of the weekend then furthered their service work by taking me up there. And there, for the first time in my life, I saw a rainbow from above. With all the falls, and whirlpools, and gorges and rapids, I suppose it’s not that rare of an occurrence. But it was a beautiful and clear one also – the variant colors of the water spectrum were very distinguishable. And I thought about Charles looking down on us --- at our little gathering in the woods, at the rainbow coalition he’ll be seeing in August.
God’s will, our destiny. Logic begs me ask if the work of the Little Brothers and Sisters really makes any difference. Do they really change anything? The story is that their numbers, like with most all religious orders; are diminishing. 100 years later, as Charles views a world that near deifies the life he lead in his squandering, stuffing days, does he, even as he drinks in the beatific nectar of a life given to God, feel the pain of the forgotten worsening as the haves take more and more? As fanatics and the blood-curdling inequality hath turned many of his Muslim brothers into terrorists? The view of the world for one so dedicated to the forgotten is surely not rose-colored.
----
A few years back, a ‘little brother’ named Vishwas led a Jesu Caritas retreat we, had in Philadelphia, Pa. His ministry, among other things, was to wash out the stall between the countless showers of the street people who came to the shelter where he worked. His nickname became ‘the shower priest’ and he seemed damn proud of it. He was leaving our retreat to head to rural Mexico where the majority of the still living brothers were going to live in community.
But I thought of those individual homeless folk who felt just a tad better about themselves because they were able to shower in a spot that was not a sty. Did he make a difference?
My good God, yes, a thousand times yes. The little pockets of grace, of love, of caring are the milieu of our Destiny. When and if it flows back into the mainstream of our world, maybe someday in a generation far downstream, we will find a treasure at the rainbow’s end.
But until then, it is our Destiny to create those little pockets. In the end it is the connection behind those actions that live on and on. Charles realized this and the connection of he and his Jesus has spread to countless numbers of the worlds’ people most left out. Even in his most wayward days, the letters of prayer and camaraderie sent by a female cousin, likely kept his Higher Power connection alive. In like manner, perhaps for all of us who try, however tenuously to do as the Creator wills as we navigate through this valley of tears, it is our prayers and good works that keep us from going completely under.
Finding God’s will and doing it, the essence of the eleventh step- a magnificent Destiny indeed…keeping afloat as we try to turn those tears into laughter.
Daring to meet the other is what the 12th step is all about.
Charles de Foucald
In a little rural town called Otto, New York, about 25 of we members of a prayer organization called the Jesu Caritas Lay Fraternity, met the last weekend of June 2012 for our annual retreat. Early in August, a much larger meeting will take place in Bonn, Germany as people from all over the world will be in attendance. This year’s theme will be ‘daring to meet the other’. Our prayer life and activities try to mirror the spirituality of a turn-of-the-20th century French monk and mystic named Charles de Foucald.
Orphaned at a young age of 5 and growing up in the midst of the new secular-modernist era of mid-late 19th century France, Charles became a bon-vivant soldier and hedonist – far removed from worrying about anything like a destiny or God’s will for him. Going to and from Algeria and the desert as a soldier and a surveyor and witnessing the devotion of the Muslim’s prayer life was one of the many influences that led to an eventual conversion experience. Charles de Foucauld would change completely and would become overwhelmed with the love that Jesus had for him…and he wanted to return the love in kind. Perhaps as an inverse of sorts to the life he had led, simplicity became a central part of his being. Mesmerized by the simple, non-recorded Nazareth portion of Jesus’ life, after spending over 7 years in two different Trappist monasteries Charles went and lived in Nazareth for two years as a caretaker of sorts at a Poor Clare Monastery.
Eventually he went to a place deep in the Algerian desert called Tamanrasset because he wanted to be among the world’s most forgotten people. He lived the final sixteen years of his life there, converting no one and not having anyone come and join him. When he was gunned down and killed on December 1, 1916 on the outskirts of WWI, he likely considered himself a failure.
Alas, although while he was alive his dreams sure did not come to pass, thanks to the work, dutifulness and dedication of some very holy people, the legacy of Charles de Foucauld lived on. A devout Christian Frenchman named Louis Massignon who’d had a long correspondence with Charles throughout his life, commissioned a French writer named Rene Bazin to write de Foucauld’s biography. Several years later, the word of Charles’ life and of the rules for an order he'd wanted to initiate, were utilized by first a priest, Fr Rene Voillaume and then by a woman Madeleine Hutin, who became Little Sister Madeleine of Jesus. The Little Sisters and the Little Brothers of Jesus were formed. Those religious communities now live and work in South America, Central America, the darkest ghettos in North America, in Asia and Africa; they choose to work with the most forgotten. Again, as with their founder, conversion is not high on the agenda…care and love is. The Little Brothers and Sisters live like Jesus did more than talk about it.
Charles’ prayers to improve his conscious contact with a Higher Power exploded into a love story par excellence. One does not go to the earthly extremes this man did without really and genuinely finding Jesus in the face of all the ones he met – especially the forgotten or displaced. Hours on end, sitting in his little tent gazing upon the host-image of Jesus…some might find this overly austere, a waste of time – it most certainly was not for Charles. The oomph, the grace, the qi, the wherewithal to befriend the forgotten, to welcome his brothers and sisters at all times, to live the Spartan, barely sustainable existence he did – all this came from his beloved Jesus – the Source of all love. His dedication to touch, to imbibe and to receive that love was the driving force of his life.
---
Being that Otto, NY is only about two hours south of Niagara Falls, the day after the retreat, the very gracious wife/husband, hostess/host of the weekend then furthered their service work by taking me up there. And there, for the first time in my life, I saw a rainbow from above. With all the falls, and whirlpools, and gorges and rapids, I suppose it’s not that rare of an occurrence. But it was a beautiful and clear one also – the variant colors of the water spectrum were very distinguishable. And I thought about Charles looking down on us --- at our little gathering in the woods, at the rainbow coalition he’ll be seeing in August.
God’s will, our destiny. Logic begs me ask if the work of the Little Brothers and Sisters really makes any difference. Do they really change anything? The story is that their numbers, like with most all religious orders; are diminishing. 100 years later, as Charles views a world that near deifies the life he lead in his squandering, stuffing days, does he, even as he drinks in the beatific nectar of a life given to God, feel the pain of the forgotten worsening as the haves take more and more? As fanatics and the blood-curdling inequality hath turned many of his Muslim brothers into terrorists? The view of the world for one so dedicated to the forgotten is surely not rose-colored.
----
A few years back, a ‘little brother’ named Vishwas led a Jesu Caritas retreat we, had in Philadelphia, Pa. His ministry, among other things, was to wash out the stall between the countless showers of the street people who came to the shelter where he worked. His nickname became ‘the shower priest’ and he seemed damn proud of it. He was leaving our retreat to head to rural Mexico where the majority of the still living brothers were going to live in community.
But I thought of those individual homeless folk who felt just a tad better about themselves because they were able to shower in a spot that was not a sty. Did he make a difference?
My good God, yes, a thousand times yes. The little pockets of grace, of love, of caring are the milieu of our Destiny. When and if it flows back into the mainstream of our world, maybe someday in a generation far downstream, we will find a treasure at the rainbow’s end.
But until then, it is our Destiny to create those little pockets. In the end it is the connection behind those actions that live on and on. Charles realized this and the connection of he and his Jesus has spread to countless numbers of the worlds’ people most left out. Even in his most wayward days, the letters of prayer and camaraderie sent by a female cousin, likely kept his Higher Power connection alive. In like manner, perhaps for all of us who try, however tenuously to do as the Creator wills as we navigate through this valley of tears, it is our prayers and good works that keep us from going completely under.
Finding God’s will and doing it, the essence of the eleventh step- a magnificent Destiny indeed…keeping afloat as we try to turn those tears into laughter.
Daring to meet the other is what the 12th step is all about.
June 17, 2012
Father’s Day 2012
As fate would have it, on the day before Father’s Day 2012, I found myself at a picnic at the same place where, when I was in early grade school, our church had a big picnic each year. It was an event I really loved and one of the highlights for me was watching my dad play in the men’s softball game they had. Watching him smoothly make all the plays at second base and sling in a hit or two really made me proud.
The 50’s were ‘happy days’ for us actually. Dad was doing well in his floor covering sales job and a new Ford every two years and a week or two down the shore were parts of our life. Unfortunately things changed pretty drastically when dad’s company went under in the recession of ’62. Raising a family of six when shopping from one job to the next can really hurt.
By that time, the school/church picnic was long gone. During one of those softball games there was an outfield collision so bad that the smaller of the two bangers was carted off on a stretcher. The picnic lost its charm after that and I really think that was the last one. And looking back on it that outfield crash was like a metaphor for the crash of values and structure the era brought in. Fidelity, morality, monogamy and family values were smashed out of the mainstream by our dedication to the Colossus of a stuffed appetite.
For sure there was a need for some revolutionary spirit in the era. The closed minds of the American Dream-ers could justify anything we did as long as it was in the interest of the U S of A. We had a natural baddie called communism, and their tenant of godlessness was more than enough for us to totally muffle their call for a more equitable sharing of the goods. As good and moral a man as was my dad, when it came to communism or anti-war activity, his mind was closed tight as a drum. I remember him calling Phillip Berrigan a ‘GD traitor’.
I walked a similar pro-Vietnam walk through my high school years, and a nice high draft lottery number kept me from the fray. And while I shifted considerably to the left in college, I was more a drunken apathetic than any kind of standard bearer. I’d be out of school almost 20 years before I’d tackle the addiction demon. Reconnecting with my Higher Power via the 12 steps of AA did the trick.
------
They had us light a candle and write a name on a card before mass today. I wrote down my dad, his dad, and his grand dad. And at the ‘Holy, Holy, Holy’ prayer we sing, inviting all the angels in heaven to join us in praise of God, I lost it big time thinking of all of them and the All of so many others who walked this earth and who at least tried to get it right.
Picnics. Dads, baseball, a kinder gentler time…may their grace keep us moving forward.
Father’s Day 2012
As fate would have it, on the day before Father’s Day 2012, I found myself at a picnic at the same place where, when I was in early grade school, our church had a big picnic each year. It was an event I really loved and one of the highlights for me was watching my dad play in the men’s softball game they had. Watching him smoothly make all the plays at second base and sling in a hit or two really made me proud.
The 50’s were ‘happy days’ for us actually. Dad was doing well in his floor covering sales job and a new Ford every two years and a week or two down the shore were parts of our life. Unfortunately things changed pretty drastically when dad’s company went under in the recession of ’62. Raising a family of six when shopping from one job to the next can really hurt.
By that time, the school/church picnic was long gone. During one of those softball games there was an outfield collision so bad that the smaller of the two bangers was carted off on a stretcher. The picnic lost its charm after that and I really think that was the last one. And looking back on it that outfield crash was like a metaphor for the crash of values and structure the era brought in. Fidelity, morality, monogamy and family values were smashed out of the mainstream by our dedication to the Colossus of a stuffed appetite.
For sure there was a need for some revolutionary spirit in the era. The closed minds of the American Dream-ers could justify anything we did as long as it was in the interest of the U S of A. We had a natural baddie called communism, and their tenant of godlessness was more than enough for us to totally muffle their call for a more equitable sharing of the goods. As good and moral a man as was my dad, when it came to communism or anti-war activity, his mind was closed tight as a drum. I remember him calling Phillip Berrigan a ‘GD traitor’.
I walked a similar pro-Vietnam walk through my high school years, and a nice high draft lottery number kept me from the fray. And while I shifted considerably to the left in college, I was more a drunken apathetic than any kind of standard bearer. I’d be out of school almost 20 years before I’d tackle the addiction demon. Reconnecting with my Higher Power via the 12 steps of AA did the trick.
------
They had us light a candle and write a name on a card before mass today. I wrote down my dad, his dad, and his grand dad. And at the ‘Holy, Holy, Holy’ prayer we sing, inviting all the angels in heaven to join us in praise of God, I lost it big time thinking of all of them and the All of so many others who walked this earth and who at least tried to get it right.
Picnics. Dads, baseball, a kinder gentler time…may their grace keep us moving forward.
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