Joyful Gospel Living:

Joyful Gospel Living

“All have one origin.”

While driving home last week, I passed the historic John Woolman house on Branch Street in Mount Holly, NJ (Burlington County), where a large sign on their picket fence announced that the first Sunday of October was World Quaker Day.  Knowing the history of the Quakers in our town and the annual celebration of this event, I checked the internet to see what the 2024 theme was.  For their global celebration, the Society of Friends had chosen “Living the Spirit of Ubuntu.”  The Zulu word “Ubuntu” declares “I am one because we are one.” 

In their weaving document (tapestry) for the celebration, the Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC) wrote, “Ubuntu is about unity in our diversity. Our diversity is what makes us rich and vibrant: we are all equal and beloved in Christ Jesus. This keen focus on community was a compelling call to work for justice, finding peace through listening to the stories of others and healing for past injustices.

In his letter to the Hebrews on the 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time, St. Paul describes the humility of Jesus in taking our human nature, with His willingness to suffer, so that we might learn the way of salvation: “He who consecrates and those who are being consecrated all have one origin.  Therefore, He is not ashamed to call them ‘brothers’ [and ‘sisters’].” On this first Sunday of October, we Catholics can also appreciate the meaning of “Ubuntu” with our Quaker friends, because we all share one origin in God, who made us in the Divine image and loves us unconditionally.  This openness to others is the very work of the Holy Spirit in making us one.

Ordinarily, the Church would joyfully celebrate the feast day of Our Lady of the Rosary on October 7th.  Sadly, though, this is the second year that this feast day is marred by the ongoing violence in the Holy Land where the Blessed Mother was born and gave birth to our Savior, Jesus Christ.  The violence began with an unsuspecting terror attack on Jewish villages that led to death, destruction, and kidnapping of hostages.  The war then continued to escalate, as well as in other parts of the world where people long to live “ubuntu.”

The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem is Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, a Franciscan friar who has ministered in the Holy Land for many years.  In his September 26th letter to the faithful of his diocese, the Patriarch made this appeal for unified prayer, knowing that faithful Christians in Gaza and the West Bank have suffered greatly during the difficult months of war and deprivation:

“We too have a duty to commit ourselves to peace, first by preserving our hearts from all feelings of hatred, and instead cherishing the desire for good for everyone.  By committing ourselves, each in our own community contexts and in the forms we can, we should support those in need, help those who are personally invested to alleviate the suffering caused by this war, and promote every action of peace, reconciliation, and encounter.   Yet we also need to pray, to bring our pain and our desire for peace to God.  We need to convert, to do penance, and to implore forgiveness.  Therefore, I invite you to a day of prayer, fasting, and penance on October 7th, a date that has become symbolic of the drama that we are experiencing.”

In our daily prayers, we should strive to practice the “Little Way” of St. Théresè of Lisieux, who taught us to be childlike in our relationship with God.  Through humility, we open ourselves to trust more fully in God and to allow His grace to penetrate our innermost being.  As the Patriarch said so well, we do need to be converted from our self-centered focus and to imagine what God has planned for those who love Him.  Just imagine the power of this prayer when people of good will throughout the world put their hearts, minds, and spirits behind the words…

Prayer for peace

Lord our God, Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, and Father of all mankind,

Who in the cross of Your Son and through the gift of His own life,

at great cost You wished to destroy the wall of enmity and hostility

that separates peoples and makes us enemies:

Send into our hearts the gift of the Holy Spirit,

that He may purify us from every feeling of violence, hatred and revenge,

enlighten us to understand the irrepressible dignity of every human person,

and inflame us to the point of consumption for a peaceful and reconciled world

in truth and justice, in love and freedom.

Almighty and eternal God,

in Your hands are the hopes of all and the rights of every people:

Assist with Your wisdom those who govern us, so that, with Your help,

they will become sensitive to the sufferings of the poor

and of those who suffer the consequences of violence and war;

may they promote the common good

and lasting peace in our region and throughout the earth.

Virgin Mary, Mother of Hope,

obtain the gift of peace for the Holy Land

that gave birth to you and for the whole world. Amen.

During this October month of the Holy Rosary, let us take time to pray for all those throughout the world who are suffering because of unjust wars, indifference, fear-filled evacuations for their safety, gross human indignities, and senseless loss of loved ones:

“May the Lord bless us all the days of our lives!”

Teresa S. Redder, OFS

October 6, 2024

 

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