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Monday, August 27, 2018

Today I set before you two choices: life and death--which will you choose?


As a result of this, many of his disciples
returned to their former way of life and no longer
accompanied him. Jesus then said to the Twelve:
Do you also want to leave?   --John 6: 66-67


How often does life come down to commitment? One question: are you committed or not? Are you all in or just dabbling?  Are we committed or not?  Or the alternative question might be: What are we committed to?  In the words of the old folk song, “Which side are you on?”

First, I will say that I am –I think—someone with commitment issues.  I am always (and much too easily) tempted to just blow things off; it’s kind of my go to reaction to almost any interruption or snag in my plans.

“Dad, we’re out of dental floss!” 
“Honey, cancel those airline tickets; looks like I’ll be heading to HEB this weekend.”

Thursday evening I was planning to go the hospital and volunteer, but by the time I got home from work, I was tired and looking for any excuse to “have to stay home.” This isn’t something I’m proud of, but it is something I live with. I don’t know how much of it is simple laziness and/or how much is a deep-seated psychological problem with commitment. Regardless, it is not always easy to get myself going. But it is always good for me when I do.

When I got to the hospital, I found that the chaplain had forgotten to leave me a list.  My first thought was that this must be a sign from God: Return thou to thy grilled cheese and Dr. Pepper and regular Thursday evening TV viewing habits.  But, something inside me said: probably not. SO,  I walked over to the business office and asked the cashier, showed her my badge, explained the situation and after a brief wait, she gave me a 6-page list of about 40 names (and room numbers). Of course, I couldn’t do them all, but I could do some. So I sat down and looked the list over to see if there were any names I recognized; people I know, or people I have visited before. Nada.  After whispering a prayer, I crossed myself and headed to the elevator. First stop, 3rd floor; ICU.

Walking through the ICU, you see faces of exhaustion, fear, confusion, resignation; family and friends standing around the edges of a bed, watching a sleeping body, uncertain what to do. Hungering for a word of reassurance.  And in the beds the almost lifeless look of the sleeping patient with the tubes and cables strapped to them, blinking and flashing monitors hovering close by.  As they awaken you a kind of frightened emptiness fills their eyes; an emptiness that seeks only to be filled with comfort, consolation--hope. I have a lot of respect for ICU nurses.

The first two rooms I visit are empty. The beds have been cleared and remade and they await the next round of fear and hope and help.  But in the third, the patient is turned away from the door with her back to me.  She is motionless. Maybe asleep.  And then I notice a sign on the door asking visitors to speak to a nurse before entering.  Of course, this too could be a sign from God. So, I go find a nurse. Instead of telling me that I need to turn back and go home (that Dr. Pepper is still waiting for me…), she smiles and says: It’s okay. Go on in. 

In my heart I was still thinking: it is possible this woman is asleep.   At this rate I could get through all 40 names in less than an hour. Coming back to her door though, I found the patient had turned over and she was looking straight at me. Entering the room, I introduced myself and that was when I noticed the tube coming out of her throat.  Stopping at her bedside, I put my hands on the rail and spoke her name, intending to ask if there was anything I could do for her. But, before I could finish she had reached up and taken my hand in hers and held it so tight it hurt. Her nails digging into my palm, she clutched my hand and waved it slowly in small circles above her. I stood there, just gazing into her eyes, stunned by their fear, their desperation.  She clung to me and I let myself be clung to –there was nothing else I could give her.  We were like that for several minutes. Just staring at each other, holding onto each other; just being there—together—so that we weren’t alone.  And of course, that was when I knew –this is where I am supposed to be. This is exactly where I am supposed to be. Right here. Right now. With this frightened and lonely person, letting her cling to my hand and not saying a word. I was made for this.

As the intensity of her grasp subsided, I could see a calm fill her eyes and asked if she would like me to say a prayer.  In response, the circling became more intense and her head nodded slightly.  So, I did. I can’t remember exactly what I said, but I know I asked the Lord to let His healing and His blessing be ever present through the hands and the words and the touch of the nurses and doctors and all who entered that room. And I asked that the Lord open our hearts to the grace of His love; His will. And then we prayed the Lord’s Prayer together. I saw her lips moving silently softly forming the words.  We were together maybe 20 minutes. I had never met her before, and will probably never see her again; and she never said a word –but she spoke to me like a prophet with her anguished eyes and that desperate grip and those fierce nails.

Too often when life gets hard, or inconvenient, I retreat to safety, sink into the couch of routine: what I know and what makes me feel comfortable.  Too often, I turn away from the challenges and the difficulties; the places where Christ hopes to meet me.  That night I didn’t.  And thanks to that woman, and her wordless message, I hope to change not just my habits, but my heart.  I hope to…

Over the past couple of weeks the Church’s sex abuse scandal has returned to the news.  And now for two Sundays in a row I have waited for the priest to say something about it, and for two Sundays –nothing; instead we have heard bad jokes and spiritual platitudes… I understand that priests are human, and they get anxious and fearful and even lazy at times; much like me.  But, I think when there is a scandal of this magnitude, we --the people in the pews—are in a kind of ICU moment.  We are confused and frightened –like we are awakening from a nightmare—and we need someone to offer us a hand to hold, to offer us a word of comfort, to tell us that they too are confused by it and they too are frightened, but that they aren’t going to avoid it. They aren’t going to go back to their former life and their old ways and pretend like nothing happened.   As Pope Francis made clear, the best way to heal such a wound is not to cover it up but to open our hearts, our lives, our eyes and get it out into the open and let the sunlight and the Lord begin the healing.

For me, that is the real challenge in life –to face it, to open your heart, to open your eyes and to go forth and face the life God gives you, to receive and be nourished by the bread that God gives you to eat each day, and to find in it the Love of God.  Don’t turn away and go back to your former life; that road leads to the couch, and a kind of living death… 

As Peter said when Jesus asked the apostles if they planned to leave Him:

“Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.” (John 6:68)

We are called to be alive; not to be safe, not to be cautious, but to be alive. Yes, life can be hard, the times can be tough.  But a life worth living requires a little effort, and a lot of commitment. Get off the couch and go out into the world and be alive; be a living witness to the love of God.  Don’t hide.  Don’t take the easy way… Don’t play it safe. Each day we have set before us two choices: life and death, blessing and curse…  I say take a risk; make a commitment; choose life. (cf. Deuteronomy 30: 19)




4 comments:

  1. Good post, Herman. I think maybe I would like to visit the sick, but I don't know where/how to start, and don't know where to get help/learn. Good for you, for trying. At my mom's church and at ours, the priests did speak eloquently about the abuse crisis. Our new priest even told us he himself had been abused by another seminarian, while in seminary, and was told he didn't know what he was talking about. But, he said, he decided to stay. A powerful witness. Thank You, God.

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    1. Pam
      Thank you very much for this note. Like so many, I am struggling with this whole scandal and our beloved church.And I am glad there are priests who loved Her enough to continue serving --and to give such a powerful witness. As for serving or visiting the sick, I started off as a homebound Eucharistic minister and one Sunday a deacon at church spoke to us about his work as a hospital chaplain and he invited anyone who was interested to enroll in a seminary program that trains volunteers to make hospital visits. We are sent to be a presence, and specifically not to bring communion. It was a 6 week class at the seminary (one night per week) and the focus of the class was on listening and communication skills. We were given a little prayer book with some readings and a kind of liturgy in it. And then we were assigned to Memorial Northwest hospital. There was a great chaplain out there named John Champagne. I loved him. Now I volunteer at memorial City because it is closer to my house. I would call the seminary and see if there are any training classes for hospital volunteers. Or look into homebound visits in your parish --a very wonderful ministry and beautiful way to get your foot in the door, so to speak.
      god bless you.

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  2. Thanks, Herman. I will try to check this out. I used to take Communion to the homebound, years ago, but the aridity increased with each visit, until I could scarcely bear it. Towards the end, I was pregnant with Rebecca and when she was born, I quit and never went back. I still don't know why that happened, or what I should have done about it (if anything), or even if I was supposed to stop. There was also a woman I used to visit in a nursing home (one woman), and it took half an hour for her to stop sitting there in a daze and start talking, and I would sit and listen to her for another half hour, but I really, really wanted to go, after that hour, and by that time she really, really wanted me to stay and listen to her some more, and the tension was too much for me, so when she was in hospital or asleep for about 3 times in a row, I stopped going there, too. :(
    I don't know what all this means, if anything. I think it's a gift, that you can find meaning in it.

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    1. It can be hard to sit and listen and there are times when we have to set a kind of limit --we can't let the ministry grind us to dust. Even Jesus would go away by Himself sometimes to pray and be alone with the Father. We have to respect that in ourselves as well. But, to be with someone for even 15-20 minutes can be quite a gift. Often when I visited the homebound, it was the chat after the Eucharist that seemed to be the real gift... They were grateful to receive the Eucharist, but they needed the presence of God in a person as well. Someone they could touch or could smile at and tell about their day... One couple who had lost their only son many years ago would always point to the picture of him on the wall and tell me time and again about how wonderful he was... what a good boy, and especially how thrifty he was... ? But, they needed to tell someone this--like it was a prayer of remembrance for their beloved boy who was almost a man.

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