Goudou Goudou: that’s the word in Haitian Creole for
‘earthquake.’ Before January 2010, there
was no word in Haitian Creole for earthquake.
That’s how dramatic a change the shaking earth spawned, that they needed
a new word, even though the physical devastation we saw on the media left most
of the world speechless. I spent some
time in Haiti last summer with my brothers in Holy Cross there and I saw a
counter-image to what we had seen through the television. I don’t want to in any way idealize or
sugarcoat the destruction that earthquake wrought, but I want to be just as clear
about what rose up when the buildings fell down. I met people who were working together to
rebuild not just buildings but lives; I could detail project after project, but
what’s important is that each of them were driven by people working together,
people moved by a more profound sense of mutual responsibility than I often see
in more ‘developed’ nations, people who didn’t even know they were a community
until disaster hit. From the all too
real cross of that earthquake, God forged community, God forged family.
God keeps
doing that because God did that definitively on Calvary. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us, but
the world did not receive him. The world
crucified him. Christ submitted to being
lifted up on that cross, like the serpent on Moses’ staff, out of love for the
world, to heal this world of isolation where people don’t receive each other,
where Love is rejected, is crucified. In
John’s gospel, the first person to respond with faith to Jesus is his
mother. At the wedding at Cana, she
submits to his will in obedience, even as her tells her “my hour has not yet
come.” Well, now: his hour has
come. At the foot of the cross, she
stood at Jesus’ side during his hour, his time of being lifted up. Once more, he uses that strange address,
“woman.” A new command: “behold you
son.” Once more, she consents. From that
hour, because of that hour, the disciple and Jesus’ mother receive each
other. The world of isolation is
conquered by Love on the Cross. That
hour of terrible glory changed the world.
From the disaster of the Cross a new family is born, a family we are
invited into, the family of the Church, with Mary as our mother.
And here
we are! We are the Church, the family
forged by Christ on the Cross! We feel
aftershocks of that cross whenever we stand by a sister or brother in need, in
sorrow, in despair, trapped on their own cross.
To accompany someone suffering is to stand very close to Christ whose
reverence to God expressed itself in loud cries and tears; Christ who was fully
obedient to being human, who responded to a world of isolation with love,
costly love.
Heard by
God, Hebrews assures us, he was saved, but not saved from death: through dying,
rising and being exalted, he conquers death, he makes an instrument of brutal torture
into the altar of our salvation. And
now, our forerunner in the faith, he beckons us home, to follow him together on
the pilgrimage, a pilgrimage which doesn’t lead around suffering but through it
to eternal glory. Together we walk this
pilgrimage, this Way of the Cross,, together with Mary by our side, a woman who
knew much sorrow because she loved deeply.
That’s
the great genius of devotion to Our Lady of Sorrows. Mary knew much sorrow because she loved
much. She loved an infant, a boy, a
youth, a man who was fully obedient to being human. She nurtured him, protected him, taught him
and at last let him go to fulfill his deadly vocation, all without leaving his
side. And when we need a mother’s tender
care, she’s there for us too, all the while pointing to her son: “Do whatever
he tells you.” And when we need a
mother’s prod, she’s there, pointing us to her son, to encounter Christ in our
neighbors’ crosses we stand by, to let him form us into one community, one
family, one Church from that cross.
When we
encounter the cross, we come very close to resurrection. When we encounter grief, sickness, job loss,
loneliness, when we listen to our neighbors’ cries, we hear resound the
aftershocks of Christ’s reverent loud cries, cries to his Father, and we know
we are hearing the cries of the one who is now our Savior.
This is a
beautiful vocation, of a Church that doesn’t avoid suffering, but suffers
together, that accompanies each other, that encounters Christ in each other’s
suffering, that turns to God with loud cries in their need, hears the call
louder and louder to become one family and walk together to live forever with
our loving Savior. But, I’m guessing
there are at least some here who have been let down, who haven’t found grace in
suffering, but have been left, painfully alone.
Maybe some have even suffered at the hands of the Church. This beautiful image can seem so painfully
far away at times, I know. We’re not
there yet. We’re on pilgrimage and we’re
not there yet. But Christ is.
If the
Church were just another human support group, we wouldn’t be a very good
one. But we’re not. Jesus forged this community from the
world-changing cross on which he died, and then he rose! We don’t always live up to our identity, but
Christ is raising us up: us, the disciples he loves.
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