Saturday, November 24, 2012
Come and See
We will be hosting a special "Come and See" weekend from December 7-9, 2012.
It will be a great opportunity for prayer and discernment. This weekend is open to catholic men in their 20's or 30's who are seeking to better know God's will in their life. Spend a weekend with our friars in London and learn more about following Jesus in the footsteps of Saint Francis!
For those men in Europe who are interested in spending a weekend at our friary in London, England, please contact Fr. Emmanuel Mansford, CFR, at the phone number below.
Fr. Emmanuel Mary Mansford, CFR
St. Fidelis Friary
Killip Close
London E16 1LX
UK
0207 474 0766
Friday, November 2, 2012
All Saints and All Souls
Yesterday was the Solemnity of All Saints! Pope Benedict XVI says that “to become saints
means to fulfill completely what we already are, raised to the dignity of God’s
adopted children in Christ Jesus…” In
saying this he seems to be echoing St.
John who writes in his first letter: “beloved:
see what love the Father has bestowed on us that we may be called the
children of God. Yet so we are… Beloved,
we are God’s children now…(1 Jn 3:1-2)".
St. John
and Pope Benedict thus reveal to us that the path to saintly glory begins with
the recognition of what we have already received at our baptism, namely, divine
sonship! Sanctity is nothing more than
our full reception of this awesome gift, our true identity!
Brothers,
no one needs to enter religious life or enter a seminary or get married in
order to prove something to God; to prove that he is worthy of Love! It’s not about our worthiness, but about His
gift: “In this is love, not that we
loved God but that He loves us and sent His Son to be the expiation for our
sins” (1 Jn 4:10). Discerning and
choosing a vocation is simply a response to our Father’s love for us which
comes to us through His Son Jesus. The
Church teaches that religious profession—professing and living the vows of
poverty, chastity and obedience—is “a special and fruitful deepening of the consecration received in
Baptism” (Vita Consecrata,
29). Essentially, this means that
religious life is all about going deeper in our sonship, our relationship with
God our Father! That’s good news! Have courage, God, your Father is calling you!
I would
also like to offer a brief thought regarding All Souls Day. Most of us
are well aware that we can pray for the poor souls in purgatory; that our
prayers actually help them as they continue to be purified along their journey
to heaven. However, not everyone is
aware that they can pray for us! They
can do so because we are members of the same body of Christ, and while they can
no longer pray for themselves, their prayers are powerful before the throne of
God on our behalf. Therefore, I invite
you to consider including them in your discernment, especially if you are
struggling to know God’s will or struggling to say yes. One proposal is to ask our Lady, the mother
of the entire Body of Christ, to gather up a group of souls in purgatory who
also struggled with discernment, or who didn’t discern, or who didn’t discern
well—in short, a group of souls that may be in purgatory for not saying a
complete yes to their vocation or for dragging their feet in doing so. Offer to pray, through her intercession, that
these souls will be released into the arms of Jesus very soon. And then ask her to guide these souls in
praying for you as you discern and seek to choose God’s will for your
life. Praying to the souls in purgatory
is not magic, but it is another way that God our Father helps us along our
journey. Isn’t it great to be Catholic?!
God bless you all,
Fr. Isaac Mary Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph
Friary
Harlem, NY
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Marriage and Religious Life - Part 4
Over these last four weeks, we have been considering the
call to both marriage and the religious life.
We have studied their fundamental differences and have also discovered
their mutual complementarity. These
reflections were an attempt to highlight the beauty and the richness of both of
these vocations so as to aid some readers in their personal discernment. I certainly hope this goal was accomplished. Yet, I want to close with a word of caution
and an exhortation.
First of
all, the word of caution: In your
discernment, don’t get lost in the world of lofty theology and overly-sentimental
idealism. The theology is beautiful
brothers, and it is all true. However,
our knowledge and understanding of marriage and the religious life is helpful only insofar as it leads us to a true
encounter with Jesus Christ! Sacred
Scripture tells us that Jesus is the author of our salvation. If that’s true, then that means He is also
the author of our vocations.
Vocational
discernment and vocational choice take place in the context of a relationship
with Jesus. And as our relationship with
Him grows, eventually he asks us the same question he asked those two “vocation
visitors” in John’s Gospel 2,000 years ago, “What do you seek?” (Jn 1:38). And so begins the dialogue, the open and
honest dialogue with Jesus regarding the deepest and truest desires of our
hearts. On one hand, the answer to the
question “what do you seek?” is “You, Jesus!
I come seeking you.” That response is true regardless of what marriage we are
called to.
But, we also
recognize that Jesus is calling us to something specific, something
personal. And it takes time and it may
take struggle—struggle with ourselves and struggle with God—in order to arrive
at a place where we can freely choose the vocation that God is calling us to.
We may be
really attracted to religious life while also having a deep desire for
marriage, secretly wondering, “Can I really be happy without a wife and
children?” Or maybe our hearts contain a
question or a fear of a different sort:
“Can I be holy without becoming a priest or religious?” The answer to both questions is YES, ABSOLUTELY, DEFINITIVELY...as long as
God is not calling you to that respective vocation! Our happiness
and holiness will be found in
whatever vocation God is calling us to!
The Second Vatican Council states quite clearly that “all Christians in any state or walk of life
are called to the fullness of Christian life and to the perfection of love” (Lumen Gentium 40). So again, the question is “which marriage or
which vocation is God calling you to?”
Discovering
the answer to that question will depend largely on the answer to another
question, and here comes the promised exhortation. The question is: Can we trust God? The answer and exhortation is: YES!
Can we trust that God has a plan for our lives? YES!
Can we trust Him with the deepest desires of our hearts? YES!
Does he want us to be happy? Can
He make us happy? YES! YES!
And He will do so if we keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, “the pioneer
and perfecter of our faith” (Heb 12:2), the one who “came that [we] may have
life, and have it abundantly” (Jn 10:10).
God bless you all!
Fr. Isaac Mary Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph
Friary
Harlem, NY
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Marriage and Religious Life - Part 3
I concluded
last week’s reflection on marriage and discernment by stating that “the
question is not whether one is called to marriage or not, but which marriage is
one called to?” This week’s reflection
will explain the meaning of that surprising statement, demonstrating that
religious life points us to the ultimate
marriage between God and man in heaven.
As a reminder to our readers, this is the third part in a four part
series and this reflection will be more meaningful if one has read the first
two parts (see e-letters of 10/10/12 and 10/15/12).
In Matthew 22:30, Jesus boldly
declares to the Sadducees that “in the resurrection they [man and woman] neither
marry nor are given in marriage….” At
first glance, these words of Christ seem to undermine everything we have said
about the greatness of marital love.
However, as we’ll see, they actually reveal the ultimate fulfillment of
it!
Let’s return to the gospel from the
27th Sunday in Ordinary time, Mark 10:2-16. In this passage, the Pharisees approach Jesus
seeking “to test him” by asking him whether divorce is lawful. After they remind him that Moses allowed
divorce, Jesus reminds them that this was a temporary concession made because
of the hardness of their hearts and that “from the beginning of creation” God
made the marriage bond between man and woman indissoluble. The reason for this is that “from the
beginning of creation” the sacrament of marriage has existed to point us to the
ultimate marriage, the marriage of
Christ and His Church. And, in heaven, this
ultimate marriage is fully realized;
the sacrament of marriage gives way to reality!
The sacrament is no longer needed!
This is where religious life comes in!
In Matthew’s version of the same gospel
passage (Mt 19:1-12), after Jesus restored the permanence of marriage according
to God’s original plan, his disciples concluded that it was better not to marry
because of the difficulty presented by Christ’s teaching. But, Jesus takes the discussion to a whole
different level: “Not
all men can receive this precept, but only those to whom it is given. For there are eunuchs who have been so from
birth, and there are eunuchs who haven been made eunuchs by men, and there are eunuchs who have made themselves
eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. He who is able to receive this, let him
receive it” (Mt 19:11-12, RSV).
I don’t think I need to explain
what eunuchs are! But, in the Christian
tradition a eunuch “for the sake of the kingdom of heaven” is someone who
freely forgoes the earthly sacrament of marriage in anticipation of heaven,
where men and women “neither marry nor are given in marriage.” In Perfectae
Caritatis, the Vatican II document on the appropriate renewal of religious
life, the Church teaches that “for ALL CHRIST’S FAITHFUL religious
recall that wonderful marriage made by God, which will be fully manifested in
the future age [heaven], and in which the Church has Christ for her only
spouse” (PC, 12). Again, Genesis 2:18
tells us that “it is not good for man to be alone.” Religious who faithfully live the vow of
chastity reveal that the ultimate fulfillment of solitude, the ultimate
communion that all men desire, is found only in union with God. This is the Church’s understanding of
religious or consecrated life, a life that already participates in the ultimate
marriage between Christ and His Church in heaven.
So, again, I pose to you the
question, “which marriage are you called to?”
Put another way, are you called to the sacrament of marriage which is an image of the ultimate marriage of Christ and His Church, of God and man? Or are you called to religious life, to
freely surrender the earthly sacrament of marriage so as to anticipate and already participate in the wedding feast of
heaven? As you begin or continue to ponder that question this week, stay tuned
for next week’s final installment of our four part series on Marriage and
Religious Life!
God bless you,
Fr. Isaac Mary Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph
Friary
Harlem, NY
Monday, October 15, 2012
Marriage and Religious Life - Part 2
Last week we considered briefly the vocation to married life
in light of the Lectionary readings for the 27th Sunday in ordinary
time. Next week I would like to offer a
brief consideration of the vocation to religious life. This week, however, as a bridge between our
reflections on the vocation to marriage and the vocation to religious life, I
would like to make some practical observations about marriage and discernment.
The
Church’s teaching on the sacrament of marriage (see e-letter of 10/10/12) is quite
rich, and very beautiful. Let’s face it,
it’s downright attractive! And authentic
discernment of religious life demands that we are honest about the
attractiveness of it. Therefore, if
someone discerning religious life feels a desire for the vocation of marriage,
that desire should not be ignored! We
need to face the desire for marriage, think about it, pray about it, speak to
our spiritual directors about it—it is a holy desire, “ordained by God and
ordered to his purposes,” (Fr. Robert Barron, Magnificat, October 2012, p. 99).
And even if we are called to the
priesthood and/or religious life, that does not change the fact that we are
made for another, made for marriage! It
is written into every aspect of our person—spirit, soul and body. So, even though one may be called to
religious life, his sexual desire will not mysteriously disappear. Moreover, his emotional/affective desire for
another will not mysteriously disappear.
And finally, his desire to be a father will not mysteriously disappear. In religious life, all of that becomes part of
that gift of self made to God in living out the vow of chastity. In fact, for the religious, these desires
become power for loving God and others in a free, total, faithful and fruitful
way, and in this they are uniquely fulfilled.
Religious life is not an escape
from marriage. It is not a safe place
for those who are uncomfortable with or afraid of their sexuality or for those
who are emotionally immature and afraid of relationships. It is a place where one must face and fully
embrace his sexuality and his emotional life and with the help of God’s healing
grace seek to integrate them fully into his personality and his life. From this standpoint, the expectations of one
called to religious life—psychological and sexual maturity—mirror those for one
called to married life. And this makes
sense, for as we’ll see next week, the question is not whether one is called to
marriage or not, but which marriage is one called to? Until then…
God bless you,
Fr. Isaac Spinharney, CFR
St. Joseph
Friary
Harlem, NY
Interested in learning more? Call us at
212-281-4355
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Marriage and Religious Life part 1
This past weekend, we had the privilege of welcoming seven men on a come and see visit in order to discern a possible call to religious life. I found it to be both surprising and humorous that the gospel passage for that Sunday (the 27th Sunday in ordinary time), the last day of the visit, was from Mark 10:2-16 where Jesus affirms the indissolubility and dignity of marriage! However, after I stopped chuckling to myself and began to dig in and prepare for the homily, I realized that this was a gift from the Lord offering these young men, and indeed all of us, an opportunity to understand both the vocation to marriage and the vocation to religious life more deeply. Over these next four weeks, I would like to reflect on both of these vocations in the light of the readings from last Sunday and recent Church teaching. My hope is that these reflections will highlight both the fundamental differences and the complementarity between these two vocations and, therefore, aid some readers in their personal discernment. We’ll begin this week with marriage.
In last Sunday’s first reading from Genesis 2:18-24, we read “the Lord God said: ‘It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a suitable partner for him” (Gen 2:18). Immediately this tells us something important about man (mankind; ourselves), namely, that he is incomplete without another. Man is made for communion. Marriage is a communion of persons and it is in the context of this communion that he experiences the happiness he was created for! That is why later on in the same reading, Adam, upon seeing Eve for the first time, cries out with joy: “This one, at last, is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh.” Adam’s first words weren’t, “Wow you’re gorgeous” or “would you like to go out to dinner sometime?” Instead, he responded to Eve’s presence with the intensity of a poetic, star-crossed lover because in her he saw his own completion, the meaning of his existence. A modern translation of Adam’s exclamation might be “I will give my very life for you!” or “You are everything to me; I will never love another the way I love you” (Fr. Robert Barron, Magnificat, October 2012, p. 99).
In marriage, Christ elevates this natural intensity of love to a sacrament! And He does so because this awesome sacrament reveals something even greater than the natural intensity and happiness of human love. It actually reveals to us the love of Christ for His Church.
This is the teaching of St. Paul in Ephesians 5:21-32. In this passage St. Paul begins by exhorting wives to be subject to their husbands because the husband is head of the wife AS Christ is head of his bride, the Church (Eph 5:23). But, he also exhorts husbands to love their wives AS “Christ loved the Church and gave himself up for her…” (Eph 5:25). Thus, he concludes that the mysterious, one-flesh union of husband and wife points to the greater mystery of the one-flesh union between Christ and His Church.
The Church teaches that authentic, married love is free, faithful, total and fruitful. This is because these are the very characteristics of Christ’s love for His bride. Jesus, the bridegroom of the Church, freely and totally gives Himself to the Church in faithful and fruitful love. Therefore both He in the gospel and the Church in her magisterial teaching affirm the indissolubility and dignity of the sacrament of marriage because it is an image of His marriage to the Church. If Jesus or the Church allowed divorce, that would be akin to saying that Jesus could divorce the Church; that He could come down from the cross.
The ultimate purpose of the sacrament of marriage is to reveal to us this awesome love of Jesus for His Church. That is why marriage and sexual love in the context of marriage are held in the highest honor by the Church. This is the core of Blessed John Paul II’s teaching in the Theology of the Body.
This concludes our brief reflection on the sacrament of marriage. I hope this offers you an opportunity this week to ponder more deeply this beautiful vocation. Stay tuned for next week when we will discuss.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
The Lord gave me brothers
Today, October 4, is the feast day
of our Holy Father St. Francis, arguably one of the most renowned and
celebrated saints in Church history.
While popularly characterized as the great lover of animals and an ecological
pioneer, those of us who seek to follow his way of life are inspired by his
love for Jesus and the holy gospel, and his desire to follow in the very footsteps
of his Lord by living a life of prayer, poverty, penance and obedient
suffering. And yet, for us Franciscans,
his appeal goes even beyond these qualities.
St. Francis was not only a great lover
of God, but a great lover of men. He
understood the two to be inseparable.
In is Testament—a short document
written at the end of his life entrusting his spiritual legacy to his
brethren—Francis, makes the simple, yet profound statement that “the Lord gave
me some brothers….” It seems as if it
were merely mentioned in passing, but the rest of the document and the
testimony of his whole life bear witness that this remark is charged with
meaning. His various biographers detail
story after story revealing the strong, but tender love that the poor man of Assisi had for his
brothers. For example, on one occasion a
brother woke in the middle of the night seemingly dying of hunger pangs as a
result of intense fasting. St. Francis, whose own fasting seemed to know no bounds, rather
than chastise the young brother, ordered all of the brothers to get up and eat
grapes with the young man so that the he would not be ashamed of his weakness. St. Francis
recognized his brothers as one of the greatest gifts God had given them and he
loved them deeply.
In our own community, the tradition
of Franciscan brotherhood lives on! It
is days like today, when in honor of St. Francis, almost twenty priests and
over fifty brothers and sisters gathered around the altar of the Lord for the
holy sacrifice of the mass that I am reminded that the Lord gave ME
brothers. It is days like today, when
our liturgical celebration extends onto the basketball court for some healthy
and holy competition or into our evening festivities when we seek to entertain
each other with some self-deprecating skits that I am reminded that the Lord
gave ME brothers.
However, my most powerful experience
of Franciscan brotherhood is on the non-feast days, when I am struggling day-in
and day-out with the few brothers that I live with to live the Franciscan
life. It is the moments when I am able
to share my heart and my pain with a brother or encourage him in his pain that
I am reminded that the Lord gave ME brothers.
It is the moments when I need to repent for not loving a brother as he
deserves and I hear him say “I forgive you from the bottom of my heart” that I
am reminded that the Lord gave ME brothers.
It is the many moments of laughter brought on by the brothers’ antics
that remind me that the Lord gave ME brothers.
Perfectae
Caritatis, the Vatican II document on the renewal of religious life, says
that it is much easier to live the vow of chastity in an environment of genuine
fraternal charity. I would extend that
statement to the living out of poverty and obedience as well. Fraternal life and charity is meant to be a particular
source of joy and strength for a religious in any community. St. Francis understood this completely and he
continues to teach it to us, the brothers whom God has given him!
Coming soon: an introduction to the three new members of
the vocations team.
God bless you,
Fr. Isaac Mary, CFR
St. Joseph Friary
Harlem, NY
Interested in learning more? Give us a call!
(212)281-4355
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