Monthly Archives: April 2017

Desert Father

In storms and squalls we need a pilot, and in this present life we need prayer: for we are susceptible to the provocations of our thoughts, both good and bad. If our thought is full of devotion and love of God, it rules over the passions. As hesychasts, we should discriminate between virtue and vice with discretion and watchfulness: and we should know which virtues to practice when in the presence of our brethren and elders and which to pursue when alone. We should know which virtue comes first, and which second or third; which passions attack the soul and which the body, and also which virtues concern the soul and which the body. We should know which virtue pride uses in order to assault the intellect, and which virtue leads to vainglory, wrath or gluttony. For we ought to purify our thoughts from ‘all the self-esteem that exalts itself against the knowledge of God’ (2 Corinthians 10:5).

The first virtue is detachment, that is, death in relation to every person or thing. This produces the desire for God, and this in turn gives rise to the anger that is in accordance with nature, and that flares up against all the tricks of the enemy. Then the fear of God will establish itself within us, and through this fear love will be made manifest. –St Isaiah the Solitary

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Post Easter Vacation

Mary statue Rosary Cathedral, many prayers and travails here.

Today is the end of a meaningful Easter vacation, a subtle advancement in peace of mind and contentment with life. The first night, Wednesday of Holy Week, the significant other and I traveled to Toledo to enjoy a memorable Tenebrae service at the Rosary Cathedral. In all of my religious explorations, I have never experienced anything on par with the Toledo diocese’s expression of the pre-Triduum prayer ceremony. Toledo’s elaborate Cathedral, Spanish Plateresque architectural style honoring its sister city in Spain, was packed. We arrived over a half hour early and already the church was half filled. The solemn ceremony involves the individual extinguishing of fifteen candles after the respective reciting of Psalms, hymns, and readings from Lamentations; including choir singing wafting down from hidden lofty chambers—the ceremony ends in darkness and a dramatic roll played upon a Timpani drum. It was a powerful opening to a shared Easter vacation. I expressed to the significant other the desire to meet a gentleman involved in the cathedral’s administration. When we arrived in the late afternoon to take photos, there the man was walking in the parking lot, leading a band of school children. The conversation was a delight. Hopefully, he will pursue his longing to visit St Paul’s Shrine. We picked up my mother for the event, meeting my brother at the cathedral. Spending the first night of vacation with my mother, a grandnephew who is the child of a single mother, and my mother’s dog proved profound in the experience of familial charity. The rest of the Easter vacation’s religious celebrations would be conducted at St Paul’s Shrine. Last Super Thursday, we participated in the washing of feet, a blessing with Father Roger cleansing and kissing. Good Friday included a communion ceremony and the Stations of the Cross. Saturday presented an Easter Vigil Mass, and Sunday Easter Mass followed by baked goods and coffee. Everything coalesced into a manifestation of gratitude, joy, and exultation. Good Friday morning proved significant with a return to my basketball buddies. The significant other came along, sharing lunch with the gentleman, enamored with their maturity and fellowship. Several of my basketball buddies were not in attendance as a sponsored trip to New Zealand, a tournament in the exotic locale providing their Easter amusement. It warmed my heart to witness the significant other genuinely thrilled to share the men’s company. Texts from the basketball buddies following the lunch, expressing elation for meeting the significant other, proved the matter must not remain a onetime deal. I felt blessed to share the friendship of Cliff, an eighty-seven year old man who still participates in the full court games. Easter Sunday with my family, celebrated at my sister’s abundant home, proved worthy in furthering the bond with the significant other. Children were everywhere, in most part due to a newly arrived Toledo family who joined my sister’s church. The family of six boys under the age of nine provided plenty of energy to the event. The father/husband engaged with interesting conversation regarding his childhood in Louisiana, and intimate knowledge of New Orleans.

I move beyond Easter of 2017 with peace in my mind and heart, content while contrite. During the upcoming Memorial Day weekend in May, the significant other and I will explore further deepening of our relationship with a workshop retreat at a Carmelite Monastery in Niagara, Ontario Canada, enjoying Niagara Falls during the time. The workshop will be a daylong session of meetings and discussions on the topic of falling in love. ‘Thy Will be done’, yet my desired intent aims toward a romantic advancement centered within the Church. On the backburner, a September trip to Spain, accompanying my mother to her homeland, is being suggested and processed. I reflect upon this year’s Holy Week vacation with remembrance of the struggles immediately following Christmas of this liturgical year. I am convinced the struggles announced the end of my recovery years. Oddly, the explosion concretized the fact the recovery world no longer possesses a viable means of enrichment. The relapse was not significant for the happening; rather its importance signifies the end of an immersion in recovery world entanglement. It is done. I owe nobody, and to stay attached or involved in any regard is improper. Everything about the recovery world is abolished and removed. There is no doubt it is the will of God. I eliminated a haunting $1,500 debt from my Indiana years, liberating in its eradication, another sign that everything from my recovery years is obliterated. The religious life lingers in allurement, yet the normalizing through romantic commitment and the overcoming of personal issues stands supreme as a personal vocation, a call to mature stabilization. It will be whole heartedly and singularly pursued. My prayer life broadens alone at the Shrine, amassing hidden treasure. That comes easy. I need no one in that regard, nor do I answer to others. Within the maturity of making an authentic attempt toward a Catholic romantic relationship, an exercising of familial commitment, devotion, and sacrifice, my life fits comfortably; soothing and freeing as with the sporting of a loose garment. I have conducted quite a bit of work and expense in establishing my temporary home as a relaxed, refined, place of residency. It has worked to establish a heightened sense of significance to my private time; escalating with film appreciation (Bergman’s ‘Fanny and Alexander’ and Tarkovsky’s ‘Nostalghlia’ notable), reading, writing, and significant other cuddling time. I am writing fiction once again, encouraged by my Cuban political science professor friend to pursue academic efforts at John Carrol University. Innovatively, life appears to be opening up, inviting me in. I came across two words I explored in a recently posted poem: centrifugal and centripetal.

“The difference between centripetal and centrifugal force has to do with different ‘frames of reference,’ that is, different viewpoints from which you measure something,” according to Andrew A. Ganse, a research physicist at the University of Washington. If you are observing a rotating system from the outside, you see an inward centripetal force acting to constrain the rotating body to a circular path. However, if you are part of the rotating system, you experience an apparent centrifugal force pushing you away from the center of the circle, even though what you are actually feeling is the inward centripetal force that is keeping you from literally going off on a tangent.”

I will end with what I feel is a particular recent blessing. A fox has moved into my life, making its home upon my neighbor’s garage, meandering about my backyard daily. I am enamored with the beautiful creature, drawn in by its sense of peace and lazy living. I am mesmerized when I am able to sit at the window watching it calmly pass the time of day. God is good and all giving.

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Following Easter

Wayward winds blowing, centrifugal,
Within the sense of detachment, distance and proximity,
A heart becomes penetrable, a companion in flight,
Simple sitting upon a rooftop, noontime napping,
A fox unaware, sleepy and lazy, unburdened by the world,
Seizing upon the essence of a multitude of experiences,
Centripetal, unbiased and loving, releasing foul air,
Objects becoming that for which they were created,
Through time and patience, the variety of seasons and weather,
Nostalgic reflections upon moments anticipating grandeur,
Splendid innocence amidst squalor and violence, children petting a wolf,
The beauty of slow moving black and white images, shadows and light,
Candles wasting away illuminating, two in number,
The effervescence of shared experiences accumulating,
Unguarded moments of eternity within uncloistered lives.

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A lover of Christ residing as a poet, a saint

At last we can watch, even in these poems of the Dark, the Saint (St John of the Cross), holding in one hand the supreme substantial vision, and in the other created loveliness, and friends with both, since neither was held by him for his own worship:

On the flowers of my bosom
Kept whole for Him alone,
There He repose and slept;
And I caressed Him, and the waving
Of the cedars fanned Him.

As His hair floated in the breeze
That blew from the turret;
He struck me on the neck
With His gentle hand,
And all my senses left me.

I continued in oblivion lost—
My head was resting on my Love—
Lost to all things and myself,
And, amid the lilies forgotten,
Threw all my cares away.

‘Upon God’s Holy Hills; the Guides St Anthony of Egypt, St Bruno of Cologne, St John of the Cross’ by C.C. Martindale

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Triumphant and unified

Dear brothers and sisters, this year Christians of every confession celebrate Easter together. With one voice, in every part of the world, we proclaim the great message: “The Lord is truly risen, as he said!” May Jesus, who vanquished the darkness of sin and death, grant peace to our days.

……….

All of us, when we let ourselves be mastered by sin, lose the right way and end up straying like lost sheep. But God himself, our shepherd, has come in search of us. To save us, he lowered himself even to accepting death on the cross. Today we can proclaim: “The Good Shepherd has risen, who laid down his life for his sheep, and willingly died for his flock, alleluia” (Roman Missal, IV Sunday of Easter, Communion antiphon).

Happy Easter!

Pope Francis 

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