Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Where is Hope?

 

    What do you do when you receive news that pushes the bottom out of your heart, news that fractures any sense of stability you‘ve held on to despite the pandemic? I think about how many people have been in that position of getting news that someone they love has had their world turned upside down by addiction, accident, job loss, or other calamity. This, on top of pandemic, can shatter most anyone.

    When someone gets this kind of news, the question often surfaces: What can I do to help the situation? Often the answer is “not much” or even “nothing.” This feeling of being alone and without help when there is a crisis is enough to raise a cloud of frustration, even despair in most of us.

    Questions arise: How much more can a person carry?  Where is God in all this mess? In her head a Christian knows the answer is that God is present in the midst of it, but this question itself comes not from the head but from the heart. Answers are less black and white and more a matter of faith or trust.                  

    But where in this maelstrom of pain, disappointment, and helplessness does a person with faith find any hope? If God is there, hope has to be there as well, but in our current days where so much is nebulous, hope can be hard to find. Sometimes it helps if we try to open our ears and eyes, then look around.

    Do you notice the food servers and dish washers in that small restaurant where you picked up a lunch? They likely need to be there despite health risks. How about the folks who collect the trash you put curbside? Have you thought about how medical workers and teachers risk their health to do their jobs? What about generosity of carpenters who make free in-home desks for poor kids who have to go to school online? Each one is a manifestation of God’s care for us.

    But it’s not just adults who reveal God’s presence. What about kids who step up to do odd jobs for neighbors? How about kindergartners who make cards for shut-ins? Then there are older kids who go out of their way to relieve their parents by giving extra attention to their siblings.

     In other words, God is revealed in the actions of people who reach out to those who need help, and believe it or not, there’s a lot of that giving going on all around us. I think we see it, but often it doesn’t register as something special. The Uber driver, the cop on the corner, the grocery store clerks, postal workers, and many others are risking health to be of service and trying to keep their businesses afloat.

    When hopelessness, anxiety, and frustration surface in our daily lives during these trying times, try to recall the nearness of God’s love by paying special attention to its manifestations in our neighbors and even ourselves. Hope is around and within; we just need to pay attention to the ubiquitous signs of its presence.


                   
           Sr. Colleen Winston, OSB

4 comments:

  1. Thank you for these beautiful words and thoughts. This a great reminder for everyone. Sincerely, Brenda Goode from Louisiana

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  2. Dear Sister, thank you for this good content -- when unbearable crisis overwhelms someone, how should the loving ones (sisters) respond? This is the avenue of strength for the sister congregations. Using the media to the very best possible goodness, convents and contemplatives can offer deeply-felt warm spiritual and emotional strength to the needy. The contact-quality is so good now that Sisters can meet the suffering ones and give guidance in a way that has never been possible -- this would be the best outreach. You might say that this kind of thing should be done by the secular professionals; but I would say, that's the point. If the sisters are not giving healing to the suffering in spirit, why are they there? To pray? Of course to pray, but the population declines, and there are fewer there now. Outreach with evident warmth and love. In fact, your blog is part of this new work. It is not enough! Merry Christmas OSB God bless you amen.

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  3. Thank you Sister for positive words during difficult times. Such reminders are vital for all of human kind. God's blessings to you.

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