There’s a
saying in my family for moments like that: “The issue’s not the issue.”
I found
myself in one of those situations recently. I’d been yanking away at small
things instead of giving God time and space to unravel the knots I’d been
making around my heart.
See, I have
this new theory that we make a wall of knots around our hearts for a specific
reason: we’re getting skittish about being bruised.
After all,
who really wants to sign up for getting beaten to a purple-blue-green pulp?
As my
siblings and I were always quick to chant for dish duty, “Not It!”
But Mother Mary
Francis (abbess of a cloistered community of Poor Clare nuns, by the way. Hardcore, right?)
explains something important about this in her book Anima Christi. She tells of traveling with a small group of nuns to
found a new monastery. With only a short time to prepare, in their eagerness to
work quickly and focus on their individual tasks, they ended up running into
each other pretty frequently. She returned home and realized she was covered in
bruises, “Beautiful little emblems of our earnest desire to do something
beautiful for God…so glad was I to have been bruised in trying to work with and
help sisters so dearly loved.”
It was the next part she wrote that really that hit me: “Easily the reflection opens out that we can never help one
another spiritually, either, if we do not wish to be bruised. With an unbruised
heart we shall never love. Indeed, it is inevitable that when we really love,
we shall get bruised.”
I was considering
this potentially pulp-like lifestyle when I remembered the mini-epiphany I had
on the last feast of St. Thomas the Apostle.
You know
Thomas, that doubting guy. I never had much sympathy for that one, I’m afraid.
Not that I really thought about him long enough to have much of anything
towards him, except a sort of mild bemused feeling. I’m not necessarily one of
those “show me” people, I couldn’t exactly relate on that level.
So the
mini-epiphany was this: maybe it wasn’t that Thomas wasn’t just all believe-it-when-I-see-it,
maybe Thomas was so reluctant to believe the Resurrection because he was hurt.
(Disclaimer:
I am by no means a biblical scholar or expert, but I’ve seen Mother Angelica do
the “Suppose this about a Bible Person” thing so I’m giving it a try.)
Suppose
Thomas came from a tough family. Suppose someone he loved had abandoned him.
Maybe he had reasons to fear vulnerability: maybe experience had taught him the
heart is safest when it is unattached.
And then
there was Jesus. Maybe for three years Thomas let Him untie the knots around
his heart, let Him pour love gently into the spaces that perhaps had been
bruised.
Supposing
that was the case, imagine what it would have been like to lose Him. To lose the Person Whose love you had experienced and
lived on for all that time, your best friend, your leader, the center of your
dreams and plans…gone.
How much
easier, how much more reasonable, to wrap up the heart in angry, doubtful knots
than to hold onto something as delicate and fragile as hope. So much simpler to
live in our heads instead of loving with our hearts.
So maybe
Thomas did just that.
Much as I hate
to admit it: maybe I do, too.
Because I cannot
express how much I absolutely hate the thought of living as a bruised, pulpy
purple mess. Can I get an "Amen"?
But the redeeming
beauty here is that Jesus is more familiar with the pains, bruises, wounds, and
temptations of the human heart than even we are. We might get bruised, but He
doesn’t leave us there. He knew that Thomas, and many more after Thomas, would
need the moment where He does not condemn our fear, but reassures our faith. He
sees our foolish attempts to avoid disappointment by pretending hope never
existed. He places His finger on that wound of our hearts when He invites us to
place our finger in the wound of His side.
Now, it is of course important to have a properly
formed intellect and will. I'm not talking about flower-power-fluffy-“love”
here. I mean real, come-what-may, Christ-like love being lived out for the glory of
God.
As a priest
told me recently: “Jesus made your heart for
something.” He has a plan for it. That plan, I’m pretty sure, does not involve
living surrounded by knots. Our Lord wants us to be free to serve Him in love. I
can be confident of this because the Church has even given us a representation
of the Blessed Mother as Our Lady Undoer of Knots.
Maybe if you’re
feeling knotted up, you can ask her to intercede with Her Son that He would set
you free, free to love as God intended. If you do, consider yourself in company...I need to ask her that very thing. But there's always hope for us, fragile as it might seem. John 8:36 even promises it:
“For if the
Son sets you free, you are free indeed.”
Yes, feeling very knotted and frustrated with people. Lord, help me!!!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful post :)
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