Advent is the liturgical season of vigilance or, to put it more mundanely, of waiting. During the four weeks prior to Christmas, we light the candles of our Advent wreaths and put ourselves in the spiritual space of the Israelite people who, through many long centuries, waited for the coming of the Messiah.
In the wonderful avant-garde German movie "Run Lola Run," a young woman finds herself in a terrible bind: she needs to gather an enormous amount of money in a ridiculously short period of time. Throughout the movie she runs and runs, desperately trying through her own frantic efforts to make things right, but nothing works. Finally, at the moment when she finds herself at the absolute limit of her powers, she slows to a trot, looks up to heaven and says, "Ich warte, ich warte" ("I'm waiting, I'm waiting").
Though she does not explicitly address God, and though there has been no hint throughout the movie that Lola is the least bit religious, this is undoubtedly a prayer. And in the immediate wake of her edgy request a rather improbable solution to her problem presents itself.
Lola's prayer has always reminded me of Simone Weil, that wonderful and mysterious twentieth-century French mystic whose entire spirituality is predicated upon the power of waiting, or, in her language, of expectation. In prayer, Weil taught, we open our souls, expecting God to act even when the content of that expectation remains unclear.
In their curious vigilance and hoping against hope, both Lola and Simone are beautiful Advent figures.
"I'm waiting, I'm waiting," they both exclaim. And so are we.
Thank you Father Barron for your refection's today! +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ I hope each of you have a day filled with wonder and thankfulness!
Refection question: What am I waiting for in my life?
Peace and all good, Brother Ed, OFM brotheredofm.com |
The original Tau House was located at 1029 Governor Nicholls Street, NOLA from 1976 – 2013 founded by Father Bob Pawell, OFM. 37 years of Franciscan love and compassion. The garden was a place to remember those who loved and journeyed with the friars, sisters and faithful friends. Now the garden is at the Poor Clare Monastery, NOLA. Members meet in each other's homes for prayer and reflection. May the fount of living waters bless you!
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Advent Day 3 - Father Barron's refections
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