Monthly Archives: January 2016

Overexposure recovery

Abbott William

At the time I was working through many difficult years, especially 1950 to 1978, all the Lord’s plans were hidden.  I was obliged to live on faith—a very tried faith, yet an unwavering faith.  My confidence and hope were always unbounded. The misunderstanding of others, both in family and among ecclesiastics, was deep and hurtful, and yet, I aver, for them not that blamable.  I did not fit the normal pattern; I did not travel the conventional route, as the poet Robert Frost wrote:

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Abbot William ‘A Calling: An Autobiography and the Founding of the Maronite Monks of Adoration’

The above photo is one taken of Abbot William.  Daily, he goes for a walk.  I think the walk is in the morning, or it might be after lunch.  The monastery’s ubiquitous Irish Setter joins the abbot on his daily walk.  The Abbot’s ponderous manner, his slow purposeful approach, is evident as he traverses the long drive winding to the monastery.  I observed him heading out upon his walk, desiring to photograph him.  Positioning my camera outside on its tripod, I waited for his return inside the guesthouse, looking out the window.  During my photo opp vigil, John the hermit appeared in the guest house lobby, engaging me in conversation.  Amidst many words about silence, John the hermit then remarked that if I was waiting for the abbot he was passing by now.  I looked out the window realizing I was going to miss him.  I rushed outside, calling out to the abbot that I would like to photograph him.  He muttered words, which I perceived as polite, yet dissuading against a photo, the word ‘hurry’ audibly distinguishing itself amongst words lacking clarity.  The abbot turned his back to me, preceding to enter cloister grounds.  I snapped the above photo quickly, in my haste not checking shutter seed.  It was too slow, over exposing the photo.  I marveled at the results.  As I enter into the abbot’s autobiography, I am convinced the photo captured the essence of the man.  There were many distant silent moments of intimacy with the abbot.  Intimate for me that is.  I am convinced none of the moments meant anything to him.  The first moment was an initial moment at the monastery.  When I arrived, after unpacking, I entered the church between four and five PM, reposing into Adoration and prayer.  There was one monk seated in the rear, and to my right, conducting his own Adoration amidst the prayer stalls of the monastery.  Concluding prayer and departing, he turned and smiled before exiting.  Later, speaking with the welcoming Lebanese priest, he informed me the Abbot conducted his afternoon Adoration between the hours of four and five.  Reentering the Church, observing the prayer stall of the monk seated during my initial Adoration, it was obvious it was the abbot’s as his abbot staff rested to the right of his bookstand.  That first evening, I commented on the matter in a post, the blessing offered through the Our Lady of Guadalupe painting during night prayers marked me.  The monk’s effort: deliberate, profound, mysterious, ancient, and elegant arose in sublime peculiarity.  I watched Abbot William closely during my stay.  I will absorb myself within his story.

I am going to dedicate myself to a serious increase in my reading time.  The Abbot’s autobiography, suggested reading by John the Hermit and Father Garrigou-Lagrange will center.  My new mass and adoration schedule at St Clare Church settles soundly.  The first thing in the morning contemplative effort rewarding in anonymity, profound in reclusion and recollection.  There is a bit of the natural delight within the effort as the Italian bakery and deli Casa Dolce provides an amazing breakfast between mass and adoration.  The food is incredible: eggplant parmesan, stuffed artichokes, salmon pate, meatloaf and garlic potato mounds, elaborate pasta dishes cold and hot, kale salad, kale/sausage/white bean soup, Italian wedding soup.  The variety is immense with everything reasonably priced and prepared at a superior gourmet level.  Plus there is a daily dish set upon the deli counter for sampling.  The salubrious ambiance extends socially, while remotely, as daily a group of elderly gentleman meet for breakfast and coffee at the deli.  The retired men are obviously quite successful, sharing stories, anecdotes, and observations on life, Cleveland, Florida, and times gone by with zest and humor.  I find their conversation pleasant and engaging, while having no desire to join them, retaining a focus of recollection within the presence of God.

I perceive work demanding extensive time during the winter, Ordinary Time before Lent and Easter.  I will be forced to work Saturday and Sunday this coming weekend.  I accept the work mandate, committed to stockpiling cash.  I spoke with John the Hermit yesterday, discussing my life, my direction, or more clearly my lack of direction.  He is convinced I have a religious calling.  I should be clear in defining John for his desire to establish the life of a hermit may present him in a foolish regard.  When I first observed him in Massachusetts, I was convinced he was an east coast wealthy businessman.  He is taller, handsome, physically fit, carrying himself with great dignity, intelligence, and sophistication.  There is an unmistakable presence of success, good health, sanity, and peace about the man.  I was even a bit startled to comprehend that he really has no professional occupation, bouncing throughout his life from various forms of employment, including time served as a Benedictine monk.  The man is authentic in his dedication to religious pursuits, his direction and advice astounding with insight.  When I opened up to him for the first time, that I was unclear on direction, he responded remarkably, laying out a simple approach based upon acceptance and the three ‘Ps’ as he calls them: purity, peace, and presence.  Purity in the sense I remain in a state of grace, abiding in behavior and thought according to the commandments of God, a life in imitation of Jesus.  I will add that I have firmly established St Joseph as a spiritual and natural life anchor.  The life of St Joseph accompanies me throughout my work day, and his presence has become stout and staunch within my prayer life.  Peace in the sense that I trust in God, not becoming overly excited or depressed within my attention to the moment, my commitment to do the best I can at work, in my obedience to my employer.  I live in the now, not investing too heavily in possibilities perceived in the future, nor weighed down by the past.  John the Hermit advises that I allow the sanity and security of a future religious life to bring comfort as I give everything I have to the moment.  He speaks of a commitment to bank money, gathering funds, highlighting September as crucial for that is the month religious communities welcome new members.  I place within the realm of future realities providing comfort the vacation to Spain with my mother.  Finally, Presence in the sense of remaining within a state of recollection, carrying Christ forefront in my heart through my day.  He gave wonderful practical advice such as slowing down at work, walking a little slower, taking my time more during endeavors.  I had to chuckle as his words were the very words of our engineering tech at work.  He is constantly telling me to take a breath and relax.  The Hospice calls have ceased for the moment.  I perceive, without thought or deliberation, the calls from the Hospice as the voice of God.  If there are no calls it is God desiring I focus my efforts interiorly, strengthening my prayer life, now increasing my time dedicated to reading and religious study.

I love God.  He makes me smile.  I make plans and quickly He changes them.  The Hospice calls, calling three times after my post.  Tomorrow reignites bedside vigils, with the Hospice stressing the next week will call forth a serious need for vigil volunteers.  I never received a call from the Hospice while on retreat in Massachusetts.

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Tending to a Divine Son

When Joseph carried the Child in his arms, acts of loving faith welled up constantly in his heart. It was a worship that pleased our Lord more than that which he receives in heaven…  The purer and simpler a soul, the more magnificent its love and adoration.  Adore the Word present in the altar, born as a little Child for you; no matter what you do, your adoration will never equal in worth that of St. Joseph.  Join with his merits.  A soul that loves God offers everything to Him in love and God listens to such a soul.  ~St Peter Julian Eymard

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St Joseph: Eucharistic Adoration Prototype

St_ Joseph Painting

“At Nazareth Joseph’s days were filled with work which necessarily took him away at times from his Infant God. During these hours Mary replaced him, but when evening brought him home again, he would pass the entire night in adoration, never tiring, only too happy for the chance to contemplate the hidden riches of Jesus’ divinity. For he pierced the rough garments the Child wore, until his faith touched the Sacred Heart. In profound adoration he united himself to the special grace of each one of the events in the life of Jesus. He adored our Lord in His hidden life and in His Passion and Death; he adored in advance the Eucharistic Christ in His tabernacles: there was nothing that our Lord could hide from Saint Joseph. Among the graces which Jesus gave to His foster-father (and He flooded him with the graces attached to every one of His mysteries) is that special to an adorer of the Blessed Sacrament. That is the one we must ask of St. Joseph. Have confidence, strong confidence in him. Take him as the patron and the model of your life of adoration.”  ~ St. Peter Julian Eymard ~

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Spanish vocabulary builder

En una noche oscura
con ansias en amores inflamada
¡oh dichosa ventura!
salí sin ser notada
estando ya mi casa sosegada,

One dark night,
fired with love’s urgent longings
— ah, the sheer grace! —
I went out unseen,
my house being now all stilled.

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Hermitical life

It appears my new friend, John the hermit, will be calling me quite a bit.  If yesterday is indicative it will be about three times a day.  In his hermitical pursuits, he shuns the internet, creating the need for someone to conduct online research for him.  I find the endeavor charming.  He currently needs contact information on the Order of St Paul the First Hermit located in Pennsylvania.  I found it interesting that my lead of Father David Mary and the Franciscans in Fort Wayne, Indiana has already been explored.  John spent a short time with the order, however he discerned fundamental differences in regards to the tenants of life as a hermit.  His call to the hermitical life could not be fulfilled aligned with the Franciscans.  The intelligence, commitment, and passion of the man cannot be denied.  He is authentic.  There is a health and vigor about his presence, as well as an obstinate confident consuming nature that would serve a hermit well.  His complimentary words that he admires what he observes God fostering within me, convinced I have the makings of a fine hermit, discerning that I have the predisposition and inclinations toward an absorption within silence.  He looks for monks throughout his social endeavors.  The kind words are pleasing since I am the kind of man few people find it necessary to say kind things to.  At this time, he has approximately twelve men willing to join him, four priests and a bishop sharing spiritual desires.  He is drawing up a constitution with the assistance of the bishop, believing it is God’s will for him to align himself with an established order.  I cannot say I am ready to become a hermit, although I am willing to provide support and fellowship, lending an absorbing ear to the vast amount of spiritual, psychological, and healthy living information the mature man of years has acquired throughout his life.  I have a solid feeling I will be seeing him soon visiting Cleveland.

DT2991

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Return home reflection

Poisonous reptiles
Sorrow simply softening
Proper influence

Returned home from Massachusetts, sleeping soundly late into the morning. Astounding the amount of sleep, naturally reposing, decompressing, I enjoy when experiencing religious retreats. It seems sleep becomes as important to the spiritual expression as prayer and exploring the ways of a religious community. It becomes obvious the incredible level of stress my life endures. To center within a religious community, receiving the grace of consecrated ambiance focused singularly upon God, whites appear whiter and blacks appears blacker. Grey areas smooth into exhaustion. I stole the second line of the above haiku from a homily during mass at the Most Holy Trinity. The priest enlightened with the thought that sorrow is a softening influence. Properly, sorrow is not dramatic, nor arising from self-love, the denial of passions and appetites. As with all things, sorrow is good. Sorrow smooths away rough edges, easing us closer to God, illuminating the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. As whites become whiter and blacks become blacker, simplicity usurps complications and declarations. The difference is not what matters, rather the cultivating of love, the silence to allow God to guide, the proper understanding of myself. The gentleman I met in Massachusetts, the one living the majority of his life in Cleveland, proved relevant upon many levels. He is familiar with St Paul Shrine, knowing Shirley the Saturday afternoon prayer leader, friends with a woman I am familiar with at St Augustine in Tremont. The gentleman counsels religious communities, focusing upon diet, exercise, inner-healing, the extending of religious practice into the physiological. His ideas are mature, while also in all honesty trending toward a bit of lunacy. I am positive ultra-conservatives would identify too much of a New Age influence. Yet I love lunacy, for I myself tend to be a bit of a lunatic. Maybe the man is authentic, and maybe he is a bit of a quack, or rather maybe he is a bit of both. I rest in fellowship, seeking the positive, pleased we will maintain a friendship. The gentleman even confided he is now considering moving back to the Cleveland area. He will visit in the near future. His thoughts on establishing the life of a hermit played upon my mind the trip home, attaining potentiality with the understanding Father David Mary is nurturing and supporting two hermits within his Franciscan order. The man stressed his prayer life consisted of celebrating mass first thing in the morning followed by three hours of adoration. Over and over, he stressed the importance of silence, listening to the small still voice of God attentively, day after day, the reduction of noise, the enduring through days of mundane stillness before the presence of Our Lord. In the vocational video detailing the life of the Maronite Monks of Adoration, the impressive, strong, assertive intelligent and articulate vocational director talks splendidly about the subject. The former Cleveland gentleman possessed a lot of interesting ideas. While in a complimentary oppositional manner, I found delight in Father Robert, the guest master, the priest in the photo montage petting the Irish Setter. His charm, his simple intrinsic sense of humor, a lightness enjoying the comfort of laughter, provided depth to my experience. Father Robert’s conducting of mass leaves no doubt regarding his ability to be serious. His homily thoughtfully penetrated into exegesis, an obvious scholarly, intelligent, and educated mind. However in person, he sought and produced a humble simple nature. He is a priest advanced beyond lunacy. He is a man who makes friends, leaving those in comfort and warm memories. I am positive there is something profound in his manner of fellowship, his lacking the need to overwhelm with declarative statements, his ability not to impressive with overwhelming intelligence and personality. Observe the photo of him petting the Irish Setter (by the way I think there was a problem loading the photos–quality sacrificed), witness the stout and firm humility emanating from the man. It coalesces nicely with the realization of normalcy, a refinement of the spiritual life within smallness, the beauty of not needing to be a hermit or a self-perceived contemplative master, the embracing of the silence of St Joseph. It also calls to mind the reality that during the blessed retreat something could not be dismissed. There was a Lebanese couple a man and woman attending daily mass, remaining after mass in prayer. I perceived they were brother and sister, possibly husband and wife. The woman tremendously reminded me of Ann’s friend Kimmie. She wore a mantilla, a woman’s head covering, during attendance, providing a devout and pleasant presence. During the second mass, I could not remove her influence from my consciousness, my mind becoming fixated upon her if I allowed it. It took a struggle not center upon the holy woman. Nothing improper, yet it pronounced, once again, something deeply entrenched within the core of my being calling forth the desire for a wife within Christ. I spoke with the former Cleveland gentleman about everything with Ann, brutally honest in the obsessive level I took my defiance and need to be right with her, the two of us focusing upon what he perceived as important that being everything endured a symptom of unresolved interior issues, stressing that reality is more important than romance, delusion, or judgement. That is when he recommended the book ‘Healing the Eight Stages of Life’. What happen happened, being right or details are not as important as the fact I became so immensely upset and dramatically distraught. All is good in the eyes of God. Healing is the element of greater intimacy with God. I have to get ready for mass. I end.

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