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Kristina Keneally, former premier of New South Wales, a self professing Catholic politician, writes a piece on Why I Support Gay Marriages.
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I'm a list maker.
I can't help myself.
Have a problem? Make a list of steps to take to fix up the problem...or at least making it more livable.
Many things to do? Write out that To Do list.
Money problems? Relationship hassles? Diet thoughts? List those solutions.....
Talking about want tos and want to dos with the kids? Grab that paper and pen, that IPad, and list.
Good books? Movies we want to watch? Places we want to visit? List, list, list.
Years ago, I even wrote a list of How To Unschool....People First headed the list. Most necessary as I can be task oriented.
As in this article..How To Be A Good Unschooler...
I think this is is the why behind my list making. I want to be Good. Hermione good.
Transcendent in awe.
One of the feast days this week was that of St John Chrysostom.
Pope Benedict XVI, in 2007, on the anniversary of the saint's death, wrote of St John and the Divine Liturgy.
"St John understood that the Divine Liturgy situated the believer spiritually between his life on earth and the heavenly reality which was promised to him by the Lord.....
These sacred rites, says St John, ?are not only marvelous to behold, but transcendent in awe. There stands the priest ... bringing down the Holy Spirit, and he prays at length ... that grace descending on the sacrifice may thereby enlighten the minds of all and render them more resplendent than silver purified by fire.""
Transcendent. Between heaven and earth. Out of the ordinary experience. Exceptional.
Not lacklustre liturgy.
Not banal trite catechism for children and adults.
But a chance to bridge that gap between the ordinary and the sacred.
To enlighten minds and souls.
In liturgy. And in our teaching.
You could have heard a pin drop in catechism class this week when we talked about the Mass, when we looked at sacred vessels, at crystal cruets, at polished bells. A ripple of a sigh, of awe, at the beauty ...not for the ordinary but for the special, for the celebration of mass, for preparing to receive Jesus in the Eucharist.
The need for sacred, for ritual, for beauty, for intellect, ideas out of the ordinary (transubstantiation,...the children rolled the words on their tongues, nodded as we spoke of the Body and of the Blood).. These needs were all fed, not by simplistic, euphemistic terms, not by garish drawings but by Truth and Beauty.
We build our Catholic identity, in ourselves and in the children, through sacred liturgy and an understanding of the liturgy. All senses are filled. Heart, mind, body, soul. We build a relationship with Our Lord...and this is shared with others. In true education. In true evangelization . In true ecumenism. In true social justice.
Emanating from that awe at transcendence.
Today
Tired. Bone tired. "Making your way upstairs is too hard" tired.
Prayer, I know some people who need prayer today.
Crunch workout. Belly Butt and Thighs Bootcamp. Bright happy clothes at 6 am help.
Saving moments of grace come in hugs and conversation with some young children at work. "Did you see my Fiji stuff? You can hear the sea in this shell."
In a cup of tea and a shared chocolate bar with Anthony, at the breakfast bar, paying bills, paperwork.
And hanging out at the library with Anthony. Him for research. Me for Kumon work and a Kumon consult.
Inadvertently we dress alike. Blue jeans, purple shirt, black jackets, black converse.
Twins. Arnie Schwartznegger and Danny De Vito.
What interest will Anthony find, for his next unschooling rabbit trail?
Yesterday was writing on the immortality of the soul. A quote from his writing...."We can easily draw the following conclusion: that there is within us a power which we call intellect or reason; a thinking or rational substance which we call the soul. A thinking substance must be a simple spiritual substance. A simple spiritual substance is independent of matter. What is independent of matter can exist apart from matter."
Today? Enjoying the library. The sun through the many glass windows. The sofas and cushions.
And work.
And errands.
And perhaps some reading.
Before more work.
And prayer.
Finding God in all things.
Contemplation in action.
Describing Ignatian spirituality ( James Martin's The Jesuit Guide to Almost Everything, some of my Kindle reading)
Yet describing the life of a wife and mother...perpetual action and motion , sprinkled with prayer and contemplation.
"The road is our home."
( Jeronimo Nadal, Jesuit, early companion of St Ignatius of Loyola, )