Monthly Archives: February 2016

Arise during Lent

ARISE Together in Christ is a three-year, parish-centered process of spiritual renewal and evangelization that enables people to deepen their faith, develop a closer relationship with Christ, grow in community, and reach out in service to others. It emphasizes people living in good relationship with one another, as they make concrete applications of the gospel to their life situations.

The start of Lent: Ash Wednesday, retiring for the day, preparing tomorrow’s post.  I will be unable to put together a post in the morning, desiring to capture thoughts on the day.  I have a bedside vigil schedule for tomorrow, from eight in the morning until work. It is a longer vigil.  The gentleman is ninety, living in Macedonia, near my work.  He is Catholic, attending the church of Cosmas and Damian.  I am intrigued as the church is located near my employer.  It has been quite some time since I was blessed with a bedside vigil.  I greatly look forward to the opportunity to draw close to another soul preparing for eternity.  The abundance of grace is good to be near, prayers and silence offered in witnessing and fellowship.  This morning after mass at St Clare I attended the Arise gathering.  Inclement weather caused a low turnout, only two women and myself.  The numbers meant nothing as the gathering proved fruitful.  A seriousness, thoughtful and shared, while sowing private seeds, was encountered.  The opening paragraph is from the Arise website.  The program is designed for mature Catholics, calling forth silence, song, prayer, and reading.  I admire the structure, intelligent, while not focusing upon brilliance.  The humble women proved sagacious, keen in perception, mature in faith, accomplished in life.  Both are married having raised families.  They are women whose personal life reflects their faith.  I am confident to say we all feel blessed to have shared our time together, everyone looking forward to the next meeting.  I followed the Arise gathering with mass at St Paul Shrine, startled by the beauty of the Rosary case my Cuban poet friend felt moved to gift me.  The case originates from Lourdes.  She admires my Rosary from Lourdes, a gift from my mother, therefor felt it appropriate her unused case from Lourdes should serves as its container.  God is moving into my life a new maturity of fellowship.  Saturday is a men’s meeting at Sacred Heart.  The Hospice though slow in demand of volunteer service, expands in a different way.  Training, both attending and conducting, emerges.  I will be part of a training class, providing support as a working volunteer to those entering volunteer service.  Also, the Franciscan Third Order from St Paul Shrine has invited me to speak at one of their gatherings about Hospice volunteer work.  I spoke with the Hospice.  They will provide me with a more seasoned volunteer in guidance.  I have more thoughts, yet acquiesce to silence, the non-stating of ideas offered to God as a petition.

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Lent meditation

Truly my intention is only to represent simply and naïvely, without art, still more without false colours, the history of the birth, progress, decay, operations, properties, advantages and excellences of divine love. And if besides this you find other things, these are but excrescences which it is almost impossible for such as me who write amidst many distractions to avoid. But still I think that there will be nothing without some utility. Nature herself, who is so skilful a workwoman, intending to produce grapes, produces at the same time, as by a prudent inadvertence, such an abundance of leaves and branches, that there are very few vines which have not in their season to be pruned of leaves and shoots. – – St Francis de Sales ‘The Secret of Sanctity’

simplicity-desales

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Pre-Lent feasting

Overslept this morning, not complaining, treasuring the rest, pleased with provided blessings presented at Sacred Heart noon mass, preceded by a Holy Hour in a quiet quant sacred adoration chapel. Before mass, there he was, the one and only, J. Ivan Prcela greeting me as if we had known each other for a lengthy period of time. He was full of news, upset with his publisher. His just released autobiography is not being distributed to his liking. He dispensed with many words, handing out papers before losing himself to mass. I am touched by the blessing. Admiring the fact God is introducing legitimate intellectuals into my life. God is good and all giving. Tomorrow, Ash Wednesday, the start of a cleansing fast, will kick off with a structured faith emboldening gathering at St Clare. Preceding will be mass. Following will be a noon mass at St Paul Shrine to meet with my Cuban poet friend. She has a gift for me. Once again, God is good and all giving. I almost forgot to mention a feasting delight. Two days in a row, Casa Dolce has spoiled me with a lamb shank in truffle sauce over a hearty risotto. I have been unable to conduct a photo shoot due to the brisk business constantly going on. It seems I am not the only one appreciating the excellence of the fine Italian bakery and café. The feasting was topped off with a prune paczki and coffee.

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Exchange with a Cuban poet

Here is an email exchange with a Cuban poet, hopefully a new friend.

Thank you for sharing this thoughtful writing. Quick expanding thoughts.

When we act from fear we act wholly rooted in past experience and delusions about the future. When we act from love we act from authenticity and fearlessness. The former, no matter how practical its manifestation, eventually leads to despair. The latter can only lead to hope and imagination.

I embrace basic Catholic theology, Augustinian thought: ‘all is good’. ‘All is good’. Everything created is good because it is or was created. God is all good and therefore would never create anything intrinsically evil. That presents the question of good and evil, yet let’s forego such a deep question. As I advance in age, reason, speculative linear thought, the temptation to become bogged down in dogma are identified as not my spiritual path. That is why I love poetry. Implicit, implied, impressed thought rendered power through planting, touching, elevating existence. Seeds sowed and nurtured. Sharing the experience of being human within a lack of definitude allows potentialities and possibilities to reign supreme. Mystery assumes its proper framing. I perceived the young writer, young in that the essence of the words exuded a youthful mind, is properly forming his path. I admire and cherish the alleged reality. Yet truth in its grandeur and immensity, approached from an Apophatic perspective, strips one of defining itself the closer one advances upon truth. Advancement is a matter of revealing, a negating and reducing process, a thing transcending over time. I loved the writer’s exposing of simplicity through his concentration upon basic concepts: love, hope, and fear. The quoted paragraph is powerful. I would add though that ‘fear’, and this touches upon Crane Hart, is good also for fear is created by God. Fear must become a part of a healthy spiritually. Furthering, I quote words from St Thomas Aquinas reflecting and deepening the young writer’s expressed thoughts: …all fear arises from love; since no one fears save what is contrary to something he loves. Now love is not confined to any particular kind of virtue or vice: but ordinate (orderly) love is included in every virtue, since every virtuous man loves the good proper to his virtue; while inordinate (chaotic and disorderly) love is included in every sin, because inordinate love gives use to inordinate desire. Therefore fear is to be embraced if one is to advance in the spiritual life. A broadening of realities occurs when one develops and refines the ability to fear properly.

Quick thoughts. I will read your next linked article later this morning. Now I have to prepare for mass at St Clare. I really enjoyed myself at Siam Café yesterday.

Here is the email. I am honored a distinguished poet, a highly-respected professor, has taken intellectual interest in me. I am a blue-collar bum in the world of academia. I adore my my lowly position, embracing the humility, while admiring those of advanced reputation. Maybe it is a fault, yet I find delight in elevating others to a vaunted position, praising and showering them with admiration. Speaking of that reminds me. John the Hermit keeps leaving messages, wounded I dismissed him. It is difficult for me to be honest to the point of criticism. I allowed him to assume the position of spiritual master. It proved difficult upon our relationship. It establishes the fact that lowering myself, falsely providing the means for another to lose themselves to pride, is not in accord with Divine Will. It is a subtle observation, the need to be honest even if it stings another. I am trying to learn not to fear being right or wrong, to allow confrontation to exist within the bounds of the continual Presence of Christ. Anyway here is the email from my Cuban poet friend.

Subject: Promised article by Jacob Martin, published in the Observer.

The meaning of Spartan life: Hart Crane and his promise of imagination

A path once weaved through the Freiberger Field where the iridescent window walls of the Tinkham Veale University Center now stand. I walked that way to class often as a freshman in 2010, relishing the simple pleasures of novelty, the pseudo-autonomy in the face of other pathways to the main quad and the number of architectural and artistic gems to which that path exposed its travelers.

I’d noticed the life-sized bronze bust of a man nestled behind Kelvin Smith Library many times but never felt compelled to actually see it until last week when my friend and mentor, Professor Laura Tartakoff, asked me about it. When I told her the above information, she asked me why I hadn’t walked over and truly looked at it.

I had no answer.

I am seduced by the intrigue of idleness and succumb to the ease of laziness from time to time, but more often than not I deem one thing more important than another thing and act accordingly. This is logical, but why do we care about some things more than others? Why hadn’t I ever taken the momentous initiative to confront the statue?

The weathered bust behind KSL is a memorial to poet Hart Crane and features three excerpted passages from his poems “Ave Maria,” “For the Marriage of Faustus and Helen” and “Voyages VI.” Each passage, while fragmentary and different, shares the themes of loneliness and despair, imagination and hope.

Each excerpt captures the absurdity of humanity’s puny voice, the insignificant significance of time and its merciless passage, the indiscriminate prayers of heathens offered from a plate of despair, the beautifully ordered disorder of nature, the peculiar promise of imagination, the anxious hope of life and ruthless finality of death. Taken together, the excerpts capture the essence of humanity.

Anyone familiar with Crane’s poetry will recognize these themes. Tortured by the nuanced contradictions and disheartening experiences of life, Crane sought to face the darker side of humanity eye to eye, a task he abandoned when he committed suicide at age 32. However, one perhaps surprising trademark of his ever-enduring work is optimism.

As another academic year comes to a close and I prepare to graduate in May, Tartakoff’s prompt to visit the campus memorial is nothing short of divine intervention. While we personally choose what we ascribe cosmic significance to, every graduating senior should read the words on the memorial’s stones and pay attention to the stirrings they excite.

For what is life after college but a myriad of possibility? And what is life devoid of conviction, of faith in something? Crane’s words encapsulate the curiosity of innocence, the reverence of wisdom and the uncertainty of it all. They encapsulate what it means to live deliberately from moment to moment.

His words immortalize the beauty of moments and remind us that moments—good, bad or otherwise—are all we have. We are reminded that moments and their fleeting presence allow us access to something bigger, something connected, something divine.

But is imagination, or is hope enough to combat the pangs of loneliness and dodge the abyss of despair? Is optimism enough to sustain the spirit of humanity?

I often sit with these questions, vacillating between the spirited hope of Crane’s poetry and defeated despair of his ultimate action. But life has its own agenda of aloof whimsy and dictates how consciousness will register the intoxicating potential of reality.

Most of the time our awareness unknowingly dissolves into memory, situating itself in the mundane monotony of complacency and routine simultaneously rendering us numb. Sometimes though we remain committed to the moment and our awareness seems to transcend the tangible for an experience more euphorically inebriating than any drug.

Crane’s poetry charges us to remain in the euphoric state at all times. It challenges us to hope, imagine and remain optimistic. “The imagination spans beyond despair” is written in “Faustus and Helen,” but our human stain keeps us in the fetters of an antagonistic duality between fear and love.

When we act wholly rooted in past experience and delusions about the future. When we act from love we act from authenticity and fearlessness. The former, no matter how practical its manifestation, eventually leads to despair. The latter can only lead to hope and imagination.

I read the words on the unassuming memorial after an early-morning run. The ground was still wet and dew droplets on the surrounding overgrown blades of grass glistened in the misty pre-dawn haze of light that had escaped the horizon. I was tired but invigorated from the run so I stayed dedicated to every aspect of the experience.

That moment culminated in the realization that I am graduating from college. It’s a surreal realization I’m still processing, but I’ll never forget the moment that pulled me from my numbness behind KSL. That’s what it means to be alive because that’s what life is: a series of moments.

Moments are what matter. They’re all we have, what hope affords, what love gives value to. Moments have a special power to them when we pay attention because they enable us to imagine, and imagination transcends life itself.

This is Jacob Martin’s final column with The Observer. He sincerely thanks anyone who has ever read it over the past few years. Sine qua non.

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Baptism

Yesterday I suffered a bit of a heartbreak. My grand nephew, Andre, a boy I have posted about was baptized in the Church. I am deeply saddened I could not be there. My son understood my love and concern, my need, sending a photo from the awesome event. God is so bountiful in supplying splendor and majesty that it is difficult not to simply collapse to the ground in tears. This is truly a wonderful photo, one of the best things to  happen to me in quite some time.

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Eyes of glory

Since one of the things that please thee most, and most deeply touch thy heart, is to have eyes that know how to gaze upon thee, give me, Lord, such eyes as these that I may contemplate thee: eyes of the dove, simple; eyes chaste and modest; eyes humble and loving; eyes filled with devotion and with tears; eyes attentive and discerning, to know thy will and do it. May I, gazing upon thee with such eyes as these, be myself regarded with those eyes of thine with which thou didst look upon Peter when thou didst lead him to weep for his sin; with those eyes with which thou didst look upon the prodigal son when thou didst go forward to welcome him and give him the kiss of peace; with those eyes which thou didst turn towards the Publican, when he dared not raise his own towards heaven; with those eyes with which thou didst gaze upon the Magdalen, when she washed thy feet with the tears from her own; those eyes, in fine, with which thou didst gaze upon the Spouse, in the Canticles, saying to her, Behold thou art fair, thy eyes are as those of doves. Thus, well pleased with the eyes and with the beauty of my soul, adorn me with those virtues and graces with which I shall always appear beautiful in thy sight. – – St Peter Alcantara ‘Treatise on Prayer and Meditation’

St Peter of Alcantara

St Peter of Alcantara

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Words wrapped around mystery

A wonderful lunch after Sunday mass, fellowship and socializing at Siam café; feasting, laughing, and talking amidst diverse company. Jason, operatic singer, a non-Catholic supplying warmth and depth. A Cuban poet and her surgeon husband leading entertainers. The cultured, world traveling, couple inspire within the dynamics of being human. The Cuban poet is a quick expansive speaker, rambling and brilliant. She told me one story that escalated to the surreal, the words touching on personal ruminations and concerns. She spoke of being young, emigrating to the United States, learning English, attending a Catholic elementary school. During childhood, a teaching nun greatly appealed to her. The admired religious woman made a strong impression, identified with the name Sister Friend of the Family. The Cuban poet as a little girl loved interacting with the nun, always calling her Sister Friend of the Family. One day saddened, she told the sister she did not understand why she did not have a real name. As a child, she knew the nun was a friend to her family, however she wished the nun had a name beyond Sister Friend of the Family. With older insight, comprehending, the nun explained to her that she did have a name and it was Sister Francis Emily. For myself, the whole story enchanted, reverberating on many levels. The Cuban poet is a charm. She admitted I was a bit disheartening for her during my first introduction. She informed me I startled her, drawing forth pity when I came from nowhere and invited her to lunch. I said to her that I thought I was smooth and charming. She disagreed, saying she believed I was a lonely man who needed friends. She said she was so proud to see me now so happy and making friends. I could only laugh, the reaction she commonly illicits. She even coerced my attendance for Ash Wednesday mass at St Paul Shrine. She feels it is important to give me a Rosary pouch from Lourdes, supplying proper storage for my pouchless Rosary gifted by my mother. The Rosary was attained during a visit to Lourdes. It has been weeks since attending a weekly mass at the Shrine. Matters coalesce within the mystery of God, the man of prayer recently involving himself in conversation. He told me of the sublime peace he derives from Cavalry Cemetery, the grave site of Helen Pelczar, a Cleveland stigmatic, a particular source of heavenly inspiration. It is a favorite place, a ‘thin place’, of prayer for the man of prayer. He informed me it is the final resting place for the Poor Clare’s of Perpetual Adoration residing at St Paul Shrine. John the Hermit has left another voice mail. I am leery to listen. The Cuban poet sends an email. I would like to spend prayer time, and reflection, with the man of prayer at the Cavalry Cemetery. All in all, life is life, the Lord good and giving within His silence. The world calls, city life demanding and challenging. My abode, the inexpensive home of keeping for a friend convalscing in Virginia, has been invaded by cotton rats. I have never experienced such a dilemma. Seeking the advice of a professional, guided by the homeowner, an extermination and cleansing process has been put into order. I embrace the strangeness as spiritual, the ridding of the home of rodents as redemptive. It was identified that a qualifying condition was the extensive absence of humans residing. I am never home, sleeping and parting early in the morning. Once the baiting, trapping, ammonia spreading, ridding the basement of debris, and sealing entrance ways is complete, two cats will be acquired. A neighbor informed me it is a sad reality of the neighborhood that if aggressive measures are not put into place rat infestation will be a part of a home’s winter existence. Welcome to city life.

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