Ecclesiastes 1: 9 reminds us “There is nothing new under the sun”
I had to laugh at this in morning’s Mass which I planned 2nd communion was “We are Many Parts” Key of F (So So Do Re Mi) and two minutes later we did the closing hymn, “Take Up Your Cross” (WALY WALY) Key of G also (So Do Re Mi)
Translation for you non musical types: “The last two songs we sang at church today both began with the tune of “How Dry I AM” (Which is actually Irving Berlin Song and it is not about a bathroom door!)
“Do You Love Me” From Fiddler on Roof and one from West Side Story take the same intervals but manipulate the Rhythm ( Which Carey Landry then copies pretty much note for note for his OCP song “When You Seek Me” It is also the reggae song “By the Rivers of Babylon”
Then I was on to classical tunes and the lively spot about 5 minutes into the 1812 overture is the first thing that comes to mind.
You know with so few notes in the western world, it is delightful and wonderful how they all interact, and can be used and tweaked and borrowed.
Well, anyways I’m not sure exactly what it is I’m coming home singing…
Chapter 44 of the Book of Sirach speaks on Godly Men, and reminds me very much of my Father, Patrick Murdy.
Now will I praise those godly men, our ancestors, each in his own time:
Stalwart men, solidly established and at peace in their own estates–
Their wealth remains in their families, their heritage with their descendants;
Sirach 44: 1, 6, 11
I’d like to pay homage to my Dad on Father’s Day. Thankfully he is still in the Land of the Living, and I spoke to him yesterday. But I’d like to share more about him, to give praise to this Godly man right now.
Sr. Renee Branigan once taught me that when you write or make a speech you “Tell people what you are going to say, say it, and then tell them what you said.” So with that advice, here are a few things you should know about Dad. He is a simple and wise man. That simple wisdom of Dad’s is something I treasure.
Do it right, enjoy yourself while you are at it, have coffee with friends, share a meal and a joke or two, enjoy the beauty around you, give to your parish – both your time and efforts and your check; give to your community, think twice before you speak, do what it takes to develop patience.
This picture of Pat the Riverat says a lot about him as a man, and as a father.
My Dad is, and always has been an amazing man. He grew up on the banks of the Powder River in Eastern Montana. His family was very poor, and his Father Lloyd Murdy was often away for months at a time working on other ranches. Dad learned to be self sufficient at an early age, working at paper routes and then in a clothing store.
When he was in high school, his parents were going to make him drop out to go to work. Dad insisted on staying in school, and took his Junior and Senior years by correspondence; working by day and studying into the evenings. In the end he graduated from Custer County High School in 1948. It was not long after that that he entered the Marine Corps.
On one of his first trips home from basic training on leave, this green young kid from the styx got taken advantage of by someone near the bus station who was doing a scam. He arrived in Montana hungry and with just a few cents in his pocket. But he learned a lesson from that experience and no one’s fool after that.
My Mom and Dad met accompanying another couple on a date. They were both seeing other people but there was obviously a strong attraction between them. He went to Korea and she continued in nursing school and they wrote back and forth. He served with the 1st Medical Battalion and was an ambulance/truck driver. His unit was at the Ichon landing. After the war they were married. Dad went to work for the seismograph crew, and Mother was a nurse so they traveled with his work.
When they came to Chinook, Montana, Bob Inman was the first person they met (Bob and Dad have both told me this J) They worked in the area, and the seismograph crew was going to be moving on, but didn’t know if they’d have a job for Dad in the new location as he was low man on the totem pole. Mother was working for Doc Leeds, so Dad took a position as a grease monkey at Taylor Motors. But Mom and Dr. Leeds had other ideas, and they convinced Dad to go back to school for lab/x-ray training.
They moved to Great Falls for that. A great deal of the radiology training was with Dr. Pectkevich (whose son John Misha Petkevich became an Olympic skater) Dr. Petkevich had trouble with his eyes, so would play ping pong with Dad in the evenings while quizzing him. Dad taught me to play ping pong years later. We would play at St. Gabriel’s or the back of the old Eagles. It was a fun time with him. My Folks both knew a lot of sorrow in their lives. Their first child Timothy James, lived but a very short time, undergoing surgery and many treatments before hand. Dad happened to do the bloodwork that showed his Father Lloyd Murdy had cancer, and the tests showing Mom’s Mother, Walburga Maria Schmidt had Leukemia. By the time they were 32, they’d each lost a parent and a child, and had four children under the age of seven. That is a lot for anyone to handle. But those are some of the things that began to temper his quiet, deep faith.
Dad was always an insightful and compassionate man. In the winters, he taught himself Spanish by listening to records. Chinook is sugarbeet country, and there were many crews of migrant workers to tend to them. They would come into the clinic, and not be able to communicate. Dad took it upon himself to learn the Spanish. In 1970, in Chinook, MT, THAT was a big deal. It was a different world, and the concept of being bilingual or providing for all was not even being spoken of.
Dad was always a hard worker. Full time at the clinic, then doing household projects, or formica and handy man projects for other people. He sold Fuller Brush products for a number of years; basically doing whatever it took to feed and clothe a large family. When we were younger, Dad was not always the most patient man. He learned to tie flies as an evening activity in an effort to teach himself patience. His flies are still talked about in Chinook. He sold them at the local hardware store. A few years back someone came up to us at lunch and said, “Pat, you still owe me a bunch of wooly worms!”
Going fishing with Dad was a wonderful time. Often it was loading up the car after work on a weeknight and heading out to Ross’s Reservoir for a bit, or to the FFF fish for fun club. He and the guys did cowcreek each year too. When I called Dad yesterday to wish him a happy Father’s Day, he and his grandson Hunter were out in the street. He was teaching Hunter to cast a fly rod. They were catching some mighty fine rocks!
When I was a very small child, Ron Popeil’s “Pocket Fisherman” was the hot item of the year. I had my heart set on one and got it for Christmas. When we went out fishing that spring, Dad kept laughing at my “Mickey Mouse Outfit….” However, I caught more fish that day then I ever had so couldn’t rub it in too much.
When it came to fishing and working in the yard, I loved my time with my Dad just as much as the boys did. When I go home to this day, we often get a one day license and go out. Dad taught us an important lesson very early on. Going fishing and catching fish were two different things, and it really didn’t matter if you did both! Going fishing was getting away, and relaxing and being quiet, and appreciating nature, and being attentive to the environment around you.
That’s how you knew where to stand on the creek bank so your body didn’t cast a shadow, or how to watch the water for that fish nibbling on a bug so you could cast out towards it. You breathed in, you saw and you existed.
Similarly, Dad taught many young men similar lessons as a scout leader. This quiet man who absolutely hated to be in front of a crowd learned to get up and do it for the sake of his kids and many others. He had many a story to tell about the tenderfoots who didn’t prepare their meals and backpacks right out at Cow Creek, or the kid who ended up with a blister on his hike for not heeding advice. While Dad has a very playful time, when it came to learning and teaching he was all business and commanded a great deal of respect.
While with the scouts, Dad began to canoe the Missouri River. He and Ray Reid took down tons of Scout groups. Their first trip was lead by another individual, and kids got spread out way too far up and down the river. Dad and Ray decided never again. They got these red and green felt hats. Dad and the red hat were lead. You stopped, never going past the lead canoe, and Ray was green for go. You always stayed ahead of the canoe. Dad still has that felt hat. In the early 70’s brother Jim got a hold of it and sewed a groovy band of trim on it though. Somehow even that is fitting.
I remember our first family trip with cousins and many other relatives. It was a wonderful time, even though we had some horrid weather to contend with. Through the years Dad took well over a hundred river trips, scouts, 4 H kids, family reunions, and many other private parties.
He told me the story of taking the church altar boys down the river. In the white rocks, he pulled all the canoes together out in the calm waters on a beautiful sunny day. He told those kids, “Sometimes in your life you will be tested, and you may sit and church and wonder what it is all about….. but if you EVER wonder if there is a God, just look around you now. Remember this beauty. Remember this moment. Remember this day!”
The thing about Dad was, when you do something you do it right, whether that be the way you clean the hedge or thatch the lawn, or the way you load a canoe. A half assed approach just wouldn’t do. He is always methodical and thoughtful in the way he works. While I learned his work ethic, and to stay with a project however long it takes to complete it, I’m a bit more like my mother in a scattered, creative approach to my life.
But just yesterday, I used the footstool dad made me when I was little. It has been repainted numerous times, from the pink with a decal, to yellow, to the gold that matches my kitchen now. It was well built and has stood the test of time.
In a small town clinic, the hours can be pretty sporadic. Some weeks he was putting in 60 hours, and some weeks there were not as many hours. It becomes hard to live like that. At the age of 57, Dad made a huge change, and went to work for Blaine County as the head of the maintenance department.
It was probably the best decision he ever made. He worked full time until he was 75, and still works one day a week there. In that time he has mentored many young men in another way, teaching them work ethics, and communication skills. He also had a wonderful with the women in the offices and doing their special projects, and finally being able to go have coffee with the guys. He felt blessed to be able to work and still does.
Perhaps my favorite image of my Mother and Father was the two of them dancing. They were lighter than air when they waltzed, and when they did the polka they were suddenly twenty years younger. I remember as a teenager when they started going ‘out’ again; and I was waiting up for them. Very strange. But they were very happy then.
Sadly, Mother’s dance card ran out at the age of sixty. Her death was a painful thing for all of us, but devastating for my Dad. I remember calling him once and asking “How are you doing?” He said, in his silly humorous way of deflecting pain, (which I’ve inherited) “Oh I’m making all sorts of new lady friends. There is Mrs. Campbell, and Mrs. Dinty Moore, and Mrs. Paul’s…” Fortunately though, he did make a new friend.
He and Donna Neibauer found each other. She’d been widowed since we were in high school, as Neil passed away at a Father-Son basketball game. I played guitar for his funeral and the Highliners sang “Peace is Flowing Like a River” and other songs. Jody and Joel were classmates, Tom and I, and Jamie was a year younger. We’d know their family all our life through church and school and life.
How blessed those two have had twenty years together. I can’t say it wasn’t difficult in the beginning, because my heart was still grieving Mother’s death. He wrote me a letter once that said something like this: “Jill-babe, you know the heart is an amazing thing. You think you love someone with all your heart, and that there is not room for anything or anyone else. And then you find out that it expands.” His heart had expanded with the capacity to love again. Donna has always done a wonderful job of trying to make us feel welcome and family, and I’m grateful that she and Dad have each other. Together, we have all walked through a number of moments of joy and pain which have melded us as a family.
That simple wisdom of Dad’s is something I treasure.
Do it right, enjoy yourself while you are at it, have coffee with friends, share a meal and a joke or two, enjoy the beauty around you, give to your parish – both your time and efforts and your check; give to your community, think twice before you speak, do what it takes to develop patience.
Perhaps it sounds like a joke to start out a post with “What do sacred scripture and “The Lion King”have in common?” but there really is an answer, and a good reason for this post. Well, at least I’d like to think so. You could some it up by saying “Turn, turn, turn” or “The Circle of Life.”
Let me explain further.
Many of us don’t know a lot of scripture. But many others don’t know the scripture that they DO know. For example, if I said, “Can you quote me the third chapter of Ecclesiastes?” you will probably respond “Can I whoee the whatza?” or “Sorry, I have no clue.” But if I flip on the 1965 hit “Turn, Turn, Turn” by the Byrds, chances are you will be able to sing it almost word for word.
This text is taken almost word for word from scriptures. Here is the citation from the New American Bible.
There is an appointed time for everything,
and a time for every affair under the heavens.
A time to give birth, and a time to die;
a time to plant, and a time to uproot the plant.
A time to kill, and a time to heal;
a time to tear down, and a time to build.
A time to weep, and a time to laugh;
a time to mourn, and a time to dance.
A time to scatter stones, and a time to gather them;
a time to embrace, and a time to be far from embraces.
A time to seek, and a time to lose;
a time to keep, and a time to cast away.
A time to rend, and a time to sew;
a time to be silent, and a time to speak.
A time to love, and a time to hate;
a time of war, and a time of peace.
Because of the association with the song, many pastors shy away from it, and yet, this is a very universal scripture. It fits most of life’s situations one way or another, yet remains very personal, and helps one gain a healthy perspective on much of life. I have seen it used at times of great joy, or people cling to it at times of sorrow. For many it is a passage of strength.
I loved the movie version of “the Lion King” to be sure, and was known to sing “Hakuna Mattata” etc. In fact, back in the monastery, one of the Sisters lovingly called me “Pumba” But one of the most powerful experiences I have ever had in my life was the opening scene to the Broadway version of the Lion King. I am sure that I was so moved, so happy, that I could have left at that point without even seeing the rest of the show. The music and symbolism and everything converged in an extremely powerful manner.
Here are the lyrics (Melody Elton John – Lyrics Tim Rice)
From the day we arrive on the planet
And blinking, step into the sun
There’s more to see than can ever be seen
More to do than can ever be done
There’s far too much to take in here
More to find than can ever be found
But the sun rolling high
Through the sapphire sky
Keeps great and small on the endless round
It’s the Circle of Life
And it moves us all
Through despair and hope
Through faith and love
Till we find our place
On the path unwinding
In the Circle
The Circle of Life
It’s the Circle of Life
And it moves us all
Through despair and hope
Through faith and love
Till we find our place
On the path unwinding
In the Circle
The Circle of Life
I know that in comparing and contrasting these two I’m not in original territory, as others have remarked on the similarities. However what I AM aware of is just how much I’ve been experiencing that circle, that turning in my own life, and in the lives of those who are around me.
Within one twenty four hour period this week, I saw or heard about the following:
Experienced the much anticipated meeting of a friend’s young grandchild
Prayed for two people began radiation or chemotherapy for cancer
Heard a beautiful young woman began a new ministry as cantor
Watched a woman found the inner strength and self worth to leave an abusive relationship
Sobbed when the nineteen year old son of someone I went to college with was killed in a farm accident
Rejoiced as a cousin gave birth to beautiful twins
I was just struck yet again by how many events go on around us all the time, and how rapidly life moves and changes. The circle goes awfully fast sometimes and once more, it is bigger than me and beyond my understanding. It reminded me of one of my favorite quotes by T.S. Elliot “We had the experience but missed the meaning. ” Don’t miss the meanings of the moments in your life. Sometimes we have to live, and just figure it out all later along the way.
I woke up this morning, and started to grumble because it seems overcast again. I made a pot of coffee and then started scratching my finger. I have a danged MOSQUITO BITE right by the knuckle on top of my third finger. It is annoying, but a reminder of what a wonderful evening I had yesterday.
Last night, I sat around a campfire with a group of people, and the topic was HOPE. We had a wonderful, in depth discussion on times when life has been good, or when it has felt hopeless, and how grateful we were for the gifts God had given us. Then I prayed with the scriptures of the day and they help one put it all in perspective. It is all in Christ.
From the beginning of Paul’s second letter to Corinthians
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all encouragement, who encourages us in our every affliction, so that we may be able to encourage those who are in any affliction with the encouragement with which we ourselves are encouraged by God.
For as Christ’s sufferings overflow to us, so through Christ does our encouragement also overflow. If we are afflicted, it is for your encouragement and salvation; if we are encouraged, it is for your encouragement, which enables you to endure the same sufferings that we suffer.
Our hope for you is firm, for we know that as you share in the sufferings, you also share in the encouragement.
Followed by “Taste and See that the Lord is Good” for a Psalm and the Beatitudes for the gospel.
After our discussion last night, a friend and I pulled out the guitars, and a bunch stayed and we sang around the campfire for an hour and a half, enjoying the fire, the laughter, the camaraderie, the fresh air, summer, life. It was THEN that the stinking mosquito bit me.
And yet as itchy as it may be today it is my reminder that “our hope for you is firm, for we know that as you share in the sufferings you also share in the encouragement ” It is also a reminder of what a wonderful time I had last night, and to enjoy the day.
Prologue: Lilacs change very quickly, and in that sense, the post is almost past its time. I started it and was not able to finish my thoughts until now. I’ve actually been working on this post off and on or a week and a half. And yet, because of that, it is important I finish it.
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I’m in a musing mode, so this is a reflection on an episode that happened over twenty years ago, along with the events of this week, and the common thread running through them all. Lilacs. Life. Living.
In the spring of 1991, I was a young Benedictine Sister. I was going to school full time at Dickinson State University, and lived in a small house three blocks from the school with a couple of my Sisters. It was very convenient. I could pray in the morning, go to classes, come home for dinner and prayers with the Sisters and go back and hit the practice rooms at night. It was also twenty miles from Sacred Heart Monastery, so I could return quickly and frequently.
So, I was combining university life as a music major , monastic life, and daily living like preparing meals, shopping for groceries, mowing the lawn, and taking care of the garden. It was a wonderful time. Then the phone rings on the evening of May 20, 1991. It is my Mother. She says, “Hey Jill Maria, what do you have going this week? I have my garden all in, and have a bunch of extra tomato plants. I’m thinking of bringing them over.”
I said, “Our Sister Josephine died, today, and we will have her funeral, but other than that I’m free.” Mom said, “Oh, I would like to go to that. I am coming over. It will be good to see you.”
Now, that is all well and good, but let me put it in perspective. Mother lived eight hours away in Chinook, Montana; and I was in Dickinson/Richardton, North Dakota. So for Mom to pick up and say, “I’m going to drive eight hours to bring you a few tomato plants….” and to do so in the middle of the week without taking my Dad on the road trip was all a little bit unusual.
Well, she came, and it was gorgeous Spring weather. She got out of the car and hugged me, saying “You’ve got to smell the lilacs while they’re in bloom.” Fine…. and I happy to see Mom. But it was still all a bit strange. We had coffee and a good time and planted the tomatoes.
That night we went to Sister Josephine’s Wake. Now, Josie was from Hershey Pennsylvania, and always had a bit of candy to give, especially to “the Fathers,” so that night we passed out Hershey’s Candy Bars to everyone after the service. The next day we buried Sister Josephine. It is a short walk from Sacred Heart Monastery Chapel to the cemetery where we laid Sister with all her old friends. On the way we sang “Jesus Remember Me,” and “Surrexit Christus” as the casket was lowering in the ground. It was a beautiful, fresh day, with lilacs and spring, and resurrection, and hope. We were laying to rest a Sister who lived a long full life.
Throughout her days with me, Mom kept remarking in a sing song voice, “You’ve got to smell the lilacs while they are in bloom!” She left, I smiled, and didn’t think too much about it, getting back to life as usual. That week I got a letter from Ma saying “Thank you for being there for me.” It was an unusual statement, and I could of just taken it as meaning she had a good time, but it began to niggle away inside me…. I started praying hard for Mom, and dreaming about her. In retrospect, I am pretty sure she already knew she was sick, and that she was somehow sharing it with me. I think that experience of the joyful, playful funeral gave her an important piece that she needed at that time.
Life went on. The lilacs faded. Summer came and we had glorious tomatoes. That October, I got a call from Dad on a Monday night telling me, “Your Dear Mother is quite ill.” They found cancer, and were doing biopsies. On Friday, I talked to the Folks again. Mother told me herself they were estimating she had six months.
My whole family was together for Thanksgiving that year. It was the last time we were ever all together at 700 Minnesota. Usually, when Mom cooked, you stayed out of the way, and let her, because you couldn’t do it as well or as fast as she could, but this year was different . She wanted me by her side.
There is a moment in the Catholic Mass called the Anamnesis, or remembering, during the institution narrative, as Jesus tells the disciples “Do this in memory of me. ” For me, that last Thanksgiving was an anamnetic experience. Mother would tell me, “Remember, we always put the cranberries in this red dish.” “Remember, this plate came from your brother.” “Remember…..” I always remember.
Mother died March 20, 1992. That spring, I looked out at the garden, remembered her tomato plants and the lilacs, and wept. I don’t think I could smell the lilacs that year. I wanted nothing to do with the garden. None of the other Sisters had time so it sat dormant.
I graduated from DSU, and made my final profession of vows that summer. I was no longer living at the Dickinson house. So imagine my surprise when my dear friend Sister Brigid called me, saying, “Come by the house, I’ve got something to show you.” We prayed together and had coffee and talked, and she said, “Lets take a walk out back.” There in the garden were tomato plants. They had reseeded themselves. How amazing that life is. There again was a simple but beautiful example of the resurrection. Mother was teaching me, showing me.
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Fast forward a few years to 2002. As much as I loved the Sisters and the monastic lifestyle, it was becoming apparent that for a number of personal reasons, I needed to make a change, so I made the difficult decision to leave Sacred Heart Monastery. I entered a three year leave of absence, called exclaustration. During this time, I could return to religious life, or make a decision to sever my formal ties with the community.
It was a challenging time. I was starting a new ministry as director of music and liturgy in a large parish. It was a huge transition. I worked hard and there was a lot to learn, a lot to wrap my head around. I was living in a simple apartment most of the year. But basically, I was 40, and starting over from scratch. In the spring of 2003, I decided it was time to buy a house. If I decided to return to the Monastery, I could always sell it. If not, well then, the best way to get equity was to purchase property. (LOL remember it was 2003, not 2013!!!)
The market was hot. I placed offers on a couple homes and didn’t get them. Then my Realtor said, “there is this place on Hilltop I want you to check out.” Hmmm… I read the add for the place in the paper, and it was not at all what I was thinking of, and the front looked kind of blah. But I dutifully went to check it out one Sunday afternoon. Ironically, the selling Realtor had a flat tire, and never showed, but by the time I drove up the lovely meandering street to the top I was charmed by the street and the neighborhood.
I had not seen the inside of the place yet, but there was this great little brass sign out front that said, “On this site in 1897, nothing happened.” It tickled me so much, I knew I was home. A few days later when we could reschedule a private viewing, my Realtor was grinning from ear to ear. She’d walked through the house and already “knew” it was for me. The flat ranch layout was wonderfully kind on bad knees. An older couple had the house first, so there handicapped rails and many other extras. So many of the features were things I didn’t know I was looking for, but were perfect when I saw them.
We made the offer and the process started. A friend of mine had helped me find my mortgage, and worked for the bank whom I got it through. However he chose to come to the signing as my friend and support, rather than in a professional bank position. I was nervous and extremely emotional. As another old friend would say, I was weepy with “boogery t-shirts.” I used my friend’s handkerchief, and don’t know if I ever returned it to him.
Throughout the proceedings I kept thinking, “Dear God, am I doing the right thing? Should I be buying this house? Oh, I wish I could talk to Mom.” I talked to Dad, and Aunt Donna was a great help, but I was still missing Mom. After I signed the papers on the house, and I was given the keys, the friend from the bank came with me to do my first walk through. I opened the kitchen double doors and walked out onto the patio, and breathed, and cried.
There, filling the air, filling the yard was a large lilac bush in full bloom. Mother was with me. Smiling and blessing me. It was such a wonderful gift. I smiled and laughed and cried some more and breathed it in, thinking ” You’ve got to smell the lilacs while they are in bloom.”
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This spring 2013 has been strange on many levels. The weather has done a number on just about everybody’s psyche. Rain, snow, storms have created many natural disasters, and there have been many violent man made disasters this year, including school shootings and bombings. In April I turned 50. This is supposed to be a milestone, but I’m not sure about that yet. Actually, I am. I am sure that I am grateful, and that life is not to be taken for granted. I am reminded of the shortness of the span of the lilac in so many ways.
In my family, my Mother was 60 going on 25 when she died. My Grandmother was 52, my Uncle, 49, and another Aunt at 63. My Cousin passed away at 30. So there is definitely a history of that demon cancer. However my Grandfather was in his 90’s when he died, and another Uncle led a good full life, so I’m not being a woman of doom. I just am reminded that one cannot take life for granted.
In my work at the parish, I deal with life and death on a regular basis, as we see weddings, baptisms, first communions, confirmations, and funerals. The cycle continues on and on. But our source of hope and salvation is in that, in the Resurrection.
Ecclesiastes tells us:
Vanity of vanities, says Qoheleth,
vanity of vanities! All things are vanity!
What profit have we from all the toil
which we toil at under the sun?
One generation departs and another generation comes,
but the world forever stays.
Yet, there are times when simply speaking, “it ain’t easy.” Within the last two weeks, there have been six deaths within the parish, including a dear old friend, and a man in his 50’s. Three friends lost their Mothers on or near Mother’s day, and I attended two of those funerals. And it was the first anniversary of a sweet friend’s Father, who died a senseless death right before Memorial day last year.
Today, my Dad called, telling me that my Step-Sister Jody died after a three year battle with pancreatic cancer. May she rest in peace. It is ironic to me that I work with funerals and families all the time, and yet feel so helpless to help my own family so far away. So what can I do? Pray.
All in all, it leaves me in a place of wonder, recognizing that God is God, and I am not. There are many things I’ll never be able to understand, and there is probably no scripture, no hymn, no poem, no image that can change that. There are may things I cannot fathom or comprehend. This is when I must just turn it over to God and ask him to increase my faith.
But this is when I must combine the wisdom of Rosemarie and the wisdom of Quoeleth…”What profit have we from all the toil?” “You’ve got to smell the lilacs while the are in bloom.” There are seasons and times when we definitely need to toil and to toil hard, but I need to remember to smell the lilacs, or the roses, or the crocuses; or listen to the chickadee, robin, cardinal, loon; look at the sunrise, sunset, stars, clouds, and moon.
If I do not take the time to be grateful for all life, and to put it all in perspective, then I am of no good to anyone else, and no good to myself. I’m no longer serving and praising God if I’m slaving or murmuring. None of us knows if we will live another day, another year, or another thirty years. There are chronic illnesses, debilitating diseases, and unfathomable accidents. We may waste away slowly, or be gone in the blink of an eye. But it is life! So hang on, live it, and be grateful.
Thank you to all those who have gone before me, and for the wisdom you have taught me. I pray that I may always live my life fully, gratefully.