One of the things I most enjoy during visits with my family in
Southern California, is visiting the little beach town nearby. Main
Street lies between Pacific Coast Highway and the pier and is lined with
restaurants, cafes, pubs, boutiques, ice cream parlors and art galleries.
The shops are all individually owned and have a low profile, preserving
the small town community feel of the place.
One of our favorite cafes on Main Street |
On a recent visit, my little
girl and I turned in to a shop that sold art and nick knacks all about angels.
I noticed a good many statues and pictures of St. Francis and the Blessed
Mother as well, and wondered if the owner might be Catholic. I asked the lady
behind the counter. She was the owner and said, "Yes, I'm a strong
Catholic!"
"Perfect!” I thought.
I asked if she happened to know if there was a Saturday evening Mass at
the church, which is just one street over (we had only been there for Sunday
morning Masses in the past). She said she did not know the schedule, as
it was not her parish; she went to the church a few towns down the coast,
though her mother is a parishioner at this one. Well, as I love her
church as well, I asked if hers has a Saturday evening Mass. She did not
know.
You see, she only went to Mass
on Christmas. I don't remember exactly how the conversation went from
there, but it must have involved my mouth hanging open or something, because
she assured me several times that she is "a strong Catholic."
I mean, she must be, right, because she has a shop just for things about
angels?
Everyone’s favorite line from the movie, The Princess Bride, passed through my mind: “You keep using that
word. I do not think it means what you
think it means.” But I refrained from
letting it pass by my lips.
I'm sure I urged her to
consider more frequently availing herself of the source and summit of her Faith
- because that's the kind of person I am (i.e. one who spurts out things on any occasion). But, she has to keep her shop
running and that takes most of her time. She must be very busy, because
she admitted she doesn't even always have time for yoga!!
We walked out and uttered a
prayer that this lady would grow in her faith and feel a longing to return to
the Sacraments.
I'm sure we all know or come
across people who grew up Catholic and still identify with the Church, but
don't seem to know or do a thing
about it. They haven't left the Church, but they're
not in it. It's like they have fallen overboard from a
ship and are floating along in a life preserver. The name of the ship is
printed on the life preserver, so they still feel connected. And they
have no idea what they are missing or at what peril they are drifting out to
sea.
It was so astonishing to me and I still think about her (and pray
for her). How can someone be so sure and
proud of her affiliation with the Catholic Faith, but simply refuse to respond
to the invitation Jesus issues to live it?
Somewhere something went wrong
with the catechesis people like her received. Probably, they were never evangelized. I’m
not the first person to consider the cause.
Who knows? But what can we do for
them now? There may be many answers to this (start
discussions about the Faith, give a good example, challenge them) and they
differ for each person. But the one
thing we can do for every person we meet in this situation is to pray for them.
And yet, though this is a sad state of things, it is also a sign
of great hope. The angel lady has not left the Church. She still sees herself as connected in a “strong”
way. She feels she has a relationship
with God through His Church. And she
does. She has surely neglected it and is
missing out on the riches He offers. But
hope knows that there is a rope connecting her life preserver to the ship, the
bark of Peter. And she will be drawn in,
unless she herself cuts this line.
This is illustrated through Evelyn Waugh’s novel, Brideshead Revisited. As her father lies on his deathbed, resisting
reconciliation with God, Julia explains to Charles how G.K. Chesterton shows
this theme in his Father Brown mystery (I know, I’m trying to explain someone
in a novel explaining a novel to illustrate my point!):
“Father Brown said something like ‘I caught him’ [the thief] with an unseen hook and an invisible line which is long enough to let him wander to the ends of the world and still bring him back with a twitch upon the thread.”
In Brideshead, her father did, ultimately
reconcile (sorry for the spoiler, but it’s still well worth reading). This is not merely fiction. It happens in real life again and again. We can count on it when we pray and trust in
God’s mercy. Our heavenly Father, more
than anyone else, desires that these stray sheep return to His fold. In the context of the Bread of Life discourse
in the sixth chapter of the Gospel of John, Our Lord says, “And this is the will of the one who sent me, that I
should not lose anything of what he gave me, but that I should raise it [on]
the last day.”(Jn.
6;39)
You
see, we were made for union with God and are attracted to Him. Why do you think the angel lady’s shop is
devoted to angels and contains statues of the Mother of Our Lord? Her heart is yearning for God, but she has
been distracted by other things at present. A twitch upon the thread will bring her back.
It is as St. Augustine famously said, “Thou
hast made us for Thyself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it finds rest
in Thee.”
The entirety of the quotation from Augustine’s Confessions is too beautiful not to put
down here. And as you read it, I ask
that you make it a prayer, a twitch upon the thread, for all those who are drifting about in the lukewarm sea
in life preservers with the name of the Church indelibly stamped on them. That they may not be lost, but shall rise
again on the last day.
“Great are you, O Lord, and exceedingly worthy of praise; your power is immense, and your wisdom beyond reckoning. And so we men, who are a due part of your creation, long to praise you – we also carry our mortality about with us, carry the evidence of our sin and with it the proof that you thwart the proud. You arouse us so that praising you may bring us joy, because you have made us and drawn us to yourself, and our heart is unquiet until it rests in you.”
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