Padre at the Daily Kos,
Paul Coelho wrote, “None of us can know what tomorrow will hold, because each day has its good and its bad moments.”
So, a short note on this Easter Wednesday, and thankfully I did survive Easter and even Easter Monday. Holy Week was admittedly quite a difficult week for me, and for the first time that I can remember I actually dreaded the coming of Easter, and as it and my birthday, which fell on Easter. As the day drew drew closer I felt as if I was hurtling toward the abyss, which is one reason I posted nothing here for the past couple of weeks. The abyss is not a fun place to look at, and as such, one should take it in moderation, but I digress...
Frankly, to be honest, it has been a few years since I felt as bad as I did last week, beginning on Palm Sunday. Every passing day I was reminded of haunting doubts, of abandonment, of painful events from the past, especially of things that I have experienced at the hands of people who were supposed friends, and minsters of the Gospel. The worst day was Easter Sunday morning, when I felt like Charlie Brown, standing alone on the pitcher’s mound in the pouring rain, and yes it was raining, and I was alone in the chapel.
Thankfully, that moment passed, and even though the rain continued to fall, my mood was cheered by Judy, and our dogs, my brother and my mom, as well as our friends, local ones, and those around the world who wished me very kind thoughts, words, prayers, and love for my birthday.
I feel a lot better than I did on Easter morning, and I seem to be getting back to my normal self; not that I will ever stand accused of being normal, but normal for me.
As far as Easter, and faith, and doubt, I am no longer hurtling toward the abyss, but I am pretty much back to my normal continuum of faith and doubt, and yes hope for a better day and tomorrow. I don’t think that I ever will return to an easy faith, I think that Paul Tillich got it right when he said, “Doubt isn’t the opposite of faith; it is an element of faith.” That seems to be borne out in scripture, Saint Thomas, Jeremiah the prophet, and even Saint Paul all seem to have struggled with that existential question, as well as the struggle if feeling abandoned, and having known the pain of defeat. Likewise, the French Christian mystic Simone Weil noted in her book Grace and Gravity, “He who has not God in himself cannot feel His absence.”
But without pain, without doubt, without defeat, we can never experience the exhilaration of victory, we can never know love. As Paul Coelho wrote in his novel Manuscript Found in Accra, “I am here to tell you that there are people who have never been defeated. They are the ones who never fought. They managed to avoid scars, humiliations, feelings of helplessness, as well as those moments when even warriors doubt the existence of God.’’
As far as my struggles with faith, calling, and my priestly vocation, I’ll have to continue to deal with them on a daily basis; of this, I am sure, because as Coelho noted, “What was broken will never be the same again.” That my friends is true, but it does not rule out the fact that in life, what was broken can by transformed and be made better than it was in the first place, and I guess that is why we hope, and why Easter only comes after the anguish of Good Friday and the fearful solitude of Holy Saturday. Otherwise it would have no meaning.
I think that in a way, what I experienced last week, allows me to take God more seriously, less frivolously, and allows me to empathize with those who struggle, who feel the pain of defeat and failure, and to be there for them, as much as others are for me.
I am taking this week to reflect and recharge. I have a number of short articles pre-loaded into my own site at Padre Steve's World, so if you don’t catch me here, you can see those articles over there.
So, until my next post.
Peace
Padre Steve+