Wednesday, June 29, 2016

A Divine Dialogue

(with apologies to Plato, Socrates, et al)
God:   Have you seen any of my prophets around here? I need some.

Ima D.Sciple: Who are you looking for? Where do you think they might be?

God:   Who knows! I put my Word in their mouths a while back; I hope they didn't forget about that.

Ima D. Sciple: What do you need? Can I help?

God: I need some witnesses. Today so many people are upset; they see their world falling apart around them. They've lost trust in institutions of any kind – church, government, business… They’ve stopped reaching out to anyone who thinks otherwise and focus only on themselves and their problems. "We need someone with answers," they say. Then some charismatic, self-proclaimed expert comes along and says “I can solve all your problems. All we have to do is….,” and they eagerly jump on board.

Ima D.Sciple: Your Son was surely charismatic.

God: Yes, but he never said his answers were simple or painless; quite the opposite. And he warned about people who would come saying they had all the answers, but who were really wolves in sheep's clothing.

Ima D.Sciple: Is this why you are looking for your prophets?

God:  Definitely. My Son knew that when people were feeling lost or beaten down, they needed hope, but not the cheap hope that promises easy, painless, and just–around-the-corner solutions that are usually too good to be true. Rather, they need true hope that requires work, struggle, and often collaboration with others who share the same vision.

Ima D.Sciple:  This is where your prophets come in, isn't it. They know hope isn't cheap; it costs.

God: It cost my Son his life, and he paid it so everyone could have honest hope. I need witnesses to remind others of this bigger reality. They will remind those in trouble that problems are solved not by calling people names but by calling them forth, not by alienating but embracing them.
When people are so desperate they can't think through the "easy" answers to spot the risks; when they accept doing violence to others so they can have their own way; when they ignore the life-threatening needs of others to fill their own less acute needs; these are times and places my followers need to wake up to their calling.

Ima D. Sciple: Can't you do something? After all, you are God!

God:  So was my Son, but remember how he left things. We decided to give our disciples opportunity and resources, then leave the rest to them. Our gift to them is to be co-creators of the Kingdom. If they do their job, through them justice, peace, and harmony will weave through the human fabric. The world will be transformed.

Ima D.Sciple: And here I am. I guess I have some decisions to make, don't I?

God: You and many others, but if you decide, together you will re-make society to better reflect love, which is the true nature of God. Remember, we are with you through it all.

       Sr. Colleen Winston, OSB

1 comment:

  1. Dear Sister thank you for this stimulating trumpet call! Yes, but strangely we must do what we don't want to do in order to move forward -- it is the link between the empowerment of women and the old churches that is a key, because the empowerment of women is the most positive development of the last 100 years, and it is an unstoppable force, and continues in Asia and Africa. How can we link Saint Mary and the old churches to that power of change (which is both greatly good, and not good in some aspects)? Also, we are truly in a new age now, and our needs are not the same as they used to be. For the first time "faith" itself is being discarded by society (this also a development of the last 100 years or so) -- what does this mean? Needs. Bridging and alliance, teaching more widely, how can we build up the idea that faith is exciting, that faith is fashionable, that spiritual life is cool? For a generation or two, from now on, holding onto to good developments, & preserving what is eternal and real and good. OSB can do a lot -- how can you be more visible and more vocal? In support and thanks, yours in Christ

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