Nothing Satisfies

Found myself with a rare free moment during the day. After a quick check on the internet for something, I found this little signpost for encouragement. It is a strange signpost, but one none the less. And the trick to remember with signposts is to follow where they point, not to collect them or stand around admiring their form or cleverness in design.

I do not know if I have found answers. When I first became a monk, yes, I was more sure of “answers.” But as I grow old in the monastic life and advance further into solitude, I become aware that I have only begun to seek the questions. And what are the questions? Can man make sense out of his existence? Can man honestly give his life meaning merely by adopting a certain set of explanations which pretend to tell him why the world began and where it will end, why there is evil and what is necessary for a good life? My brother, perhaps in my solitude I have become as it were an explorer for you, a searcher in realms which you are not able to visit … I have been summoned to explore a desert area of man’s heart in which explanations no longer suffice, and in which one learns that only experience counts. An arid, rocky, dark land of the soul, sometimes illuminated by strange fires which men fear and peopled by specters which men studiously avoid except in their nightmares. And in this area I have learned that one cannot truly know hope unless he has found out how like despair hope is.

— Thomas Merton, The Hidden Ground of Love [via]

I am, or at least think I am, in this desert. Oddly enough, part of me wants to be here because I know or sense that it will strip me of my conceptions, my things and objects of God—my God who is objectless. What will remain? My mind still searches for explanations, at times desperately seeking something to hold on to, but only finds dust or thin wisps of smoke. Nothing satisfies. Emotions crave feelings to feed upon and to foster the illusion of a reality, almost any reality, of some solidarity to grasp. But more nothing, no-thing. Nothing satisfies.

Merton says, “…in which one learns that only experience counts.” I wonder. Explanations are like concepts, objects of the mind. God is beyond objects, beyond things. The mind takes experience and makes memories out of them, forming objects out of them. They become things, things to hold on to, to use and to manipulate. Experience is collected like others objects. It is not experience I can depend. But what? What remains? Nothing satisfies.

Pure relationship is what I think I seek. There is no certitude. In relationship, there is no object, no I-It. There is only I-You. There is no object to stand on. There is nothing, no-thing. And in there lies the despair, and the hope. One leads to death, the other to life. Oh! the thin border between the two. Some how, nothing, or no-thing, must satisfy.

On the thin border,
between faith and doubt walks Christ,
calling all to trust.

Meaning of Mercy

From Br. Joseph —

Blessed are the merciful,
for they will be shown mercy. (Matthew 5:7)

The word mercy is one of those loaded words with many meanings and connotations. Unfortunately, the modern use of this word tends to focus only on its association with pity or clemency. By checking the dictionary, we find far deeper and richer connotations than mere clemency (although this is an important component) that have serious implications for Christians. From dictionary.com:

  1. Compassionate treatment, especially of those under one’s power; clemency.

  2. A disposition to be kind and forgiving: a heart full of mercy.

  3. Something for which to be thankful; a blessing: It was a mercy that no one was hurt.

  4. Alleviation of distress; relief: Taking in the refugees was an act of mercy.

As we see, the first one is the primary use of the word today, but it is the other three that cause us to open our hearts and reach out to others, to love others.

This richer, four-fold definition opens deeper meaning to the Trinitarian prayer at the beginning of Mass when we say, “Lord have mercy. Christ have mercy. Lord have mercy.” Are we not asking for all four components of mercy—clemency and forgiveness for our sins, to give thanks, and for help in our suffering?

And again in the Jesus’ Prayer, the word mercy is the very hinge, in all of its meanings, between Jesus Christ and us:

Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me, a sinner.

The four-fold meaning of the word mercy takes on new dimensions when encountered in Scripture. Look at Jesus’ words in Matthew 9:13, “I desire mercy, not sacrifice.”

Stop and take a moment to let that sink in. Jesus desires mercy, not sacrifice… Why would He say that?

When, where, how do you give mercy? Who do you give mercy?

And so we implore Our Lady of Mercy, pray for us…

Recognize mercy in your life.

Our Lady of Mercy, pray for us…

Longing for You

There’s this feeling in my heart
A yearning in my soul
And I don’t need to see a doctor to tell me what’s wrong
I don’t need an anti-depressant to feel I belong
I already know what it is
It’s a longing for you Lord

Chorus:
Come Holy Spirit, I have a longing for you
Set my heart ablaze with your love
Lord, Jesus Christ, let me feel your presence if you will
I’m longing for you Lord, I’m longing for you
Nothing can take your place in my life
I beg of you Lord, send your Holy Spirit
Send your blessed angels, to help me cast away
This sin which keeps me from you

Weak and foolish is how I feel
I can’t seem to bring myself away from sin
And closer to you
To try harder is what I need to do
If I want to fill this yearning for you
Please cleanse my soul God
Wash away all my impurities
Help me to follow you and your way

Chorus
 

— Max Marcott

I Am Their Father

From Br. Joseph (Sept. 18, 2007) —

Sunday’s Gospel reading was about the Lost Son in Luke 15 (aka Prodigal Son). I want to share a marvelous poem written about a century ago by Charles Péguy that references this parable. The poem is actually a portion of a larger poem called “A Vision of Prayer” published in the book titled God Speaks.

— — — — — — —

I am their father, says God.
Our Father who art in heaven.
My Son told them often enough
     that I was their father.

I am their judge.
But I am especially their father.
He who is a father is above all a father.
Our Father who art in heaven.
He who has once been a father
     can be nothing else but a father.

They are my Son’s brothers.
They are my children.
I am their father.
Our Father who art in heaven.
My Son taught them that prayer.
“Pray like this,” he said,
     “Our Father…”
He knew very well what he was doing that day,
     my Son who loved them so.

Who lived among them,
     who was like one of them.
Who went as they did,
     who spoke as they did,
     who lived as they did.
Who suffered.
Who suffered as they did,
     who died as they did.
Who loved them so,
    having known them.
Who brought back to heaven,
     back home,
     a certain taste for man,
     a certain taste for the earth.

He knew well what he was doing that day,
     my Son who loved them so.
Our Father…Those few words.
That barrier of words which my anger,
     and perhaps even my justice,
     will never pass.
Those few words that conquer me,
     the unconquerable.

That actually is the way I see them, says God.
During my eternity, eternally, says God.
Because of my Son,
     thus must I eternally see them.
And judge them, now? After that.
Now I must judge them like a “father.”
     As if a father were any good as a judge.

There is a famous example of that.
A story my Son told them.
A certain man had two sons, he told them.
We know well enough how the father “judged”
     the son who went away and came back.
The father wept even more than the son.
And that story is the story
     my Son has been telling them.
A certain man had two sons.

We know well enough how the “judgments”
     end up in that story.
A certain man had two sons.
It always ends with embraces.
And with the father crying
     even more than anyone else.

Our Lady of Mercy, pray for us…

Between Faith and Doubt

A prayer I wrote for our all-school retreat.

We are called.
But who calls us?
And why? How? What? When? Where?

These are all good questions, but—
of all of these, the most important is who?

In the name of…

On the thin border,
between faith and doubt—walks Christ—
calling all to trust.

Father, you call me to walk a path set out by You
to journey through this world,
to journey with You,
to journey with others—
my family, friends, even the stranger on the street—
to journey back home to You
and to our home in heaven.

I do not like to admit this, but—
I often do not know where and how to walk this path.
Sometimes the path is straight and level,
     clear and easy.
Sometimes the path is winding and hilly,
     foggy and hard.
The contrasts in life want to oppose each other,
     to drag and tear me apart,
but they are both always there, together—
     between joy and sorrow,
     happiness and pain,
     laughter and tears,
     friendship and loneliness,
     health and sickness,
     pride and humiliation,
     sound and silence,
     faith and doubt.

I forget Father—
     You are always there, in all these things.
Help me to see, to feel, to know,
     to recognize You in all things.
Everything belongs—
     because You are in all things.
All is gift. Thank You.

And so,
on the thin border,
between faith and doubt walks Your Son—
     calling all to trust,
     calling all to hope,
     calling all to love.
Amen.

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