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Encounters with Christ
In a recent conversation with a friend in ministry, I remarked that
the scary part of what we do isn’t coming upon the empty tomb. The scary
part is in turning and walking away from that empty tomb. We are tempted
to remain there and wait, holding onto the threads of the familiar. We
may embrace the emptiness as our own, desiring God to fill it. We may stand
there confident that new life is ours, strong in the knowledge that our
battle is won. Truly we are invited into all of that, such is the great
gift of our faith. Most of us, though, cannot stay there, for we are called
to travel down the path of ordinary life that takes us through sickness
and grief, fear, violence, indifference, and so many other dimensions of
our human condition. We must find the way to connect all of these things
so that in our suffering as well as in our joy, we encounter Christ in
one another. This calls us to act deliberately. When we seek other dimensions
to our spirituality, we must seek retreat in a way that is meaningful so
that our inner selves are open to Christ. We have to seek out the Christ
in the strangers we meet, in the difficult people who challenge us, in
the busy, crowded times that are so different from the tomb moments. We
must immerse ourselves in the larger Body of Christ so that when we fall,
we are able to let others hold us up. From that weakness we gain the strength
to be fully present to those who most crave Christ’s presence.
This issue explores some of the ways we encounter that presence.
By prayer and through our worship experience, we constantly strive to enter
into the holy. Paul Colloton speaks of the relationship between
prayer and liturgy and how both form us to celebrate in a more complete
way. Understanding the need to nurture that prayer life and inner sense
of presence, Jean Marie DuHamel offers a model of the retreat experience
that develops the concept beyond what is ordinarily offered in a parish
setting. Reflecting on the story of Emmaus, Mary Amore considers
hospitality, sacred Scripture, eucharistic meal sharing, and evangelization
as pathways along which we may come to recognize Christ. Leisa Anslinger
writes of the importance of forming and gathering community as an ongoing
effort of building identity as a people in Christ. Delving into our understanding
of the paschal mystery, Roc O’Connor explores how we engage the
living reality of that mystery in many different ways.
That mystery calls us to step out into the unknown and to seek God in
unexpected times and places. In that mystery is courage to leave behind
what is secure to discern and discover where our next steps will take us.
Through that mystery is the clarity that oftentimes comes with endurance,
the compassion learned through injustice and vision forged by obstruction.
Striving to live attuned to God’s presence, we ready ourselves for that
graced moment when we become more fully aware of the action of that presence.
May our hearts burn within us as we work to better form our communities,
to develop our retreat experiences, to offer more selfless service, to
pray and worship with fuller commitment. In doing so, may we fearlessly
walk away from the tomb to encounter the living Lord. ML
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