‘No one can
come to me
unless he is
drawn by the Father who sent me,
and I will
raise him up on the last day.
It is written
in the prophets:
They will all
be taught by God,
and to hear
the teaching of the Father,
and learn
from it,
is to come to
me.
Not that
anybody has seen the Father,
except the
one who comes from God:
he has seen
the Father.
I tell you
most solemnly,
everybody who
believes has eternal life.
John 6:44 -
47
I've not feared death for a long time. In
earlier days death was my nemesis, but I have lost enough people I love (and
who love me) to have gained the utter confidence in knowing that is okay.
Getting there might be tough, but being there will be just fine. Just fine.
One of the tasks Toni and I set ourselves some
years ago was to include our chosen epitaphs in our wills: mine is, "I will raise him up on the last
day" (John 6:44). I want this verse to express that very same confidence
about what happens after I die. Now,
I can wax lyrical - as I have done before - about what that means exactly - and I can assure you there is
nothing definitive and absolute either in my
understanding or in that of the Church. What we do have are any number of
allusions and metaphors. These go to enrich our understanding, but not to
define it. Inasmuch as we learn to accept that we will never comprehend the
breadth and beauty of the universe we live in, we can live very comfortably
without resolving every unknown.
Having Jesus reveal himself as 'the bread
come down from heaven', John provokes us with the idea that is not we who decide
to seek God, but God who draws or beckons us to meet his Son. Again, we don't
have a great deal of information, but we must assume that the acceptance of the
invitation is for those who are leaning towards and who possess a yearning to know him, follow him and
love him, and who live out the Great Commandment. The invitation includes the
offer to know the Son in the breaking of bread.
Jesus tells us that those who eat this
bread will not die. While this may be a mystery it is not just for the elite,
but for all who desire and yearn to know Jesus. This alone should be our
encouragement to ensure the Word of God is heard everywhere. It may be
difficult to sell eternal life in the 21st Century when our lives are far
removed from Lukan poverty. Do all our wealth and worldly goods mean
anything if we have nothing beyond indulgence and self-satisfaction?
If you were writing your epitaph, what
would you write?
Peter Douglas
How getting older—and feeling invisible—is preparing me for the kingdom
of God
by
Paul F Morrissey OSA
It
is strange to feel invisible. I don’t remember exactly when it began to happen.
The only thing I know is that I am not seen much anymore when I walk by people
on the street. It is a little discomfiting, a little bittersweet.
I am
now in my late 70s and rather healthy, even athletic for my age, so it came as
a shock to realize people rarely look back when I glance at them. Not just
women who, understandably, do not often glance sideways. Men do not see me
either. Young people rush by, earphones plugged in, oblivious to me—and others,
I suppose, except for those near to them in age.
You
could say this phenomenon is the result of the digital revolution. The
smartphone gods insulate and captivate many of us in our own worlds. But this
invisibility happens in smaller gatherings, too, even with people I know.
Conversation whirls around the table. Snippets of this or that experience are
shared. Chuckling to myself, I remember when I competed in the same way for the
storyteller spotlight.
Now
I often sit and wait. It is not a bad space to be in. It can be rather peaceful
if you can get over the need to speak in order to exist. I watch the Ping-Pong
match for good chunks of time before anyone notices me and asks, “So what’s
happening, Unc?” I try to awake from my reverie and blurt out something
exciting and meaningful. It usually comes out making only half sense. “I rode
my bicycle for an hour yesterday.... I planted some sunflower seeds...wrote a
poem.” I wait for a follow-up question, but usually it doesn’t come.
The
world belongs to the young. “Yet I’ve got so much to share if anyone wants to
know,” I muse to myself. “They need to live their own lives though, discover
their own meaning,” another voice reminds me. This is the way we all move on,
“pass out of the picture,” as my father used to say. Pierre Teilhard de
Chardin, S.J., says that this “diminishment” is how we prepare for the great
merging with the cosmos that occurs when we die:
And if by chance we escape...there still
remains that slow, essential deterioration which we cannot escape: old age
little by little robbing us of ourselves and pushing us on to the end.... In
death, as in an ocean, all our slow and swift diminishments flow out and merge.
Oh
well, at least it is the ocean. I love the sea. But merge? Yes, this great
anthropologist and priest believes that we must decrease so that Christ can
become our all.
I
believe it, too. It consoles me, especially on one of my more invisible days.
Yet every now and then it is still a shock to my ego. A voice in me wants to
scream. I want to stick my tongue out or do something crazy to throw my nephews
and nieces off balance. The 20- and 30-somethings among my relatives might
laugh and roll their eyes at each other and me. But the littlest ones—the 2- or
6-year-old great nieces and nephews—seem intrigued by a little craziness from
an elder. The brave ones among them then run up to my outstretched arms and
jump in. I am not invisible to them.
Children
are on the other end of the invisibility continuum. They are just beginning to
come out of it themselves. Babies peering over their dad’s or mom’s shoulder
are still in this invisible world. When an adult peeks into their world and
grins, something registers in the little brain: “I am seen. I am...I.” Thus
begins the long road to consciousness and visibility. Aging is our eventual
return to invisibility. It is our entering the kingdom of God—unless you become
like little children you will not enter it.
A
balance is needed between our mid-life selves, eager to make our mark on this
world, and the child who watches this dance with curiosity from either
side—infancy and old age. It is not simply a matter of quietly surrendering to
age and invisibility and the night. We are meant to struggle, even to fight
with all our might this diminishment, until we have to let go a little bit and
then a little bit more. If we do not resist this path, we would rarely exercise
or eat healthy foods. We would never use a skin cream. We would just live off the
immortality that youth seems to promise. Then before we know it, we are staring
at a wreck in the morning mirror and wondering why. You gave up, didn’t you?
I
began to tell a friend about this invisibility recently. Before I could explain
what I meant, he immediately acknowledged that he, too, experiences this, even
though he is only in his mid-60s. The way he described it was that he hardly
sees anyone looking at him with a glimmer of sexual or relational interest
anymore. We all enjoy seeing a flicker of—let’s call it personal—interest in
another’s eyes as we go through our rather regular days, don’t we? A sign that
we are still a little intriguing. Not just a role or object. That we might be
worth having a cup of coffee or glass of wine with.
To
be seen—to be desired, to be a person and not simply a role—is a beautiful
human need no matter what our age is. God created us this way. When we become
older (I like this term better than old) this need to be seen is even more
poignant and challenging. Not just for ourselves but for those who may pass us
by. The singer and poet John Prine croons of this experience in a way that can
wring your heart:
Ya’ know that old trees just grow stronger,
And old rivers grow wilder ev’ry day.
Old people just grow lonesome
Waiting for someone to say, “Hello in
there, hello.”
In
South Africa, the people greet one another on the road by saying, “Sawubona.”
It means, “I see you.” The answer is “Here I am.” In other words, you are not
invisible to me. You are someone. You are God’s beloved child, whatever race,
religion, sex or sexual orientation you may be. Prine calls for the same kind
of recognition:
So if you’re walking down the street
sometime
And spot some hollow ancient eyes,
Please don’t just pass ’em by and stare
As if you didn’t care, say, “Hello in
there, hello.”
Hello
in there. We need to look at others and also at ourselves in this way. We must
not simply be passively invisible. We need to help each other know what this
invisibility means as we age. We need to have faith that each of us has a
purpose, every day, until God calls us into his kingdom at last. Teilhard calls
this kingdom “communion,” and he prays that it is truly a great holy communion:
You are the irresistible and vivifying
force, O Lord, and because yours is the energy, because, of the two of us, you
are infinitely the stronger, it is on you that falls the part of consuming me
in the union that should weld us together. Vouchsafe, therefore, something more
precious still than the grace for which all the faithful pray. It is not enough
that I should die while communicating. Teach me to treat my death as an act of
communion.
•••
This
winter, a 97-year-old parishioner died. Never married, Edna had lived for many
years with her sister, Alberta, who had died a few years before. Her
middle-aged niece and nephew moved in to care for Edna. She moved around in a
wheelchair. The priests brought Edna Communion every Sunday. During the past
year, her head dropped lower and lower, and she looked bedraggled and weary of
living when she sighed, “Don’t get old!” I began praying that God might take
her to himself sometime soon.
Heading
for the coffee and donuts gathering after the nine o’clock Mass on Sunday, I
saw the ambulance in front of Edna’s house. I stopped. The door was tilted
open, and I went in. Her nephew met me in the dark hallway and whispered, “Edna
died in her sleep last night.” Shocked, though I should not have been, I looked
into the living room where she always sat. There Edna lay, sprawled on the
La-Z-Boy chair where she slept at night, her arm curled out with her hand open.
Her eyes were cracked open a slit, almost a smile on her face. She could almost
be sleeping.
Gazing at her face, I spoke to her, “Edna,
Edna, you are finally at peace. Thank God!” I reached for her hand, barely
cool, and pulled her eyelids down. Pouring some water from a drinking glass
into my hand, I blessed her on the forehead with the sign of the cross. Her
smile urged me to rest in the silence of her entering the invisible world, the
great communion.
This
article also appeared in print, under the headline "Becoming Invisible
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