Green Bay in Pittsburgh
If you come to visit my office, you will notice in the hall
outside a host of art, photos and memorabilia from my days
in both Pittsburgh and Green Bay. I admit that the mix is
a bit of a personal mosaic — everything from an autographed
Steelers football to seminary posters, photos of Downtown
Pittsburgh bridges to nostalgic Steelers Super Bowl posters
from the former Horne's department stores. There's a little
bit of old Pittsburgh — and a little bit of old Green
Bay as well.
One of my favorites on the wall is a watercolor of a snowbound
church in Wisconsin. It is a print, painted originally by
Carolyn Barnard, and like all good art it says so many things.
I have to admit that I like it because it reminds me of my
service in Green Bay. I’m a Pittsburgh hometown boy
blessed to be home again. But that doesn’t mean I’ve
forgotten where I’ve been. Carolyn Barnard’s painting
reminds me every day of Green Bay in Pittsburgh.
There is another layer to the art, however. The painting
is so quiet. There is a stillness to it that speaks of a quiet
meditation, the feeling we get when we enter a church to find
that we are not there alone, but with Jesus in the Real Presence
of the Blessed Sacrament. You can feel the faith; you can
feel the presence of God. It is so real that you can almost
touch it.
Carolyn Barnard’s print from Green Bay reminds me of
that feeling each time I look at it. It is the serenity of
God’s presence in our midst, typified by a church on
a snowy evening, but a church with Jesus really present therein.
Frazzle and frenzy
This is the final notice for peace and quiet before the Thanksgiving
storm, followed by the pre-Christmas storm, and culminating
in the Christmas storm and the New Year’s storm. The
hectic days begin just two weeks from now, when we can often
work ourselves into such a frazzle and a frenzy. The whole
sense of giving praise to God at Thanksgiving, the joyously
penitential season of preparation during the four weeks of
Advent and the miracle of the incarnation of Jesus at the
Nativity can be lost in a whirl of doing things.
I keep reminding that we need to be excited about our faith.
There is no evangelization without that excitement, no real
catechesis, no true sense of mission and no vocation without
that excitement for our faith. It is that excitement that
makes “The Church Alive!”
But “excitement” does not equate to frenzied
activity. It means passion and deep dedication, but not “busyness.”
It means that we have “interiorized” our faith
— made our faith the essence of who we are, how we think,
how we feel and how we live our lives.
That passion, that excitement for our faith, is not only
found in silence — it is born from it. It is the quiet
moments of peace, prayer and contemplation that must be an
ordinary part of our lives, but something that we often miss
in our busy lives.
That’s one reason why eucharistic adoration is such
a central part of our celebration of the Year of St. Paul.
Silence before the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist
is the perfect act of contemplative prayer. To realize that
this is now going on every day in our diocese — even
those hectic days of the seasonal storm fast approaching —
is something that can fill us all with peace.
Finding peace
Now, I’m not going to fool you. I get caught up in
the “busyness” of this season just like you, and
perhaps even more. Advent and Christmas are hectic seasons
in the life of any priest as well. I know what most of you
will be going through because I will be going through it myself.
In the midst of that busyness, we need to take time —
time to search out and find quiet time in this upcoming season;
time to feel the presence of the Lord near us and in us. We
will find that peace at Mass, we will find that quiet in our
prayers, we will find both in eucharistic adoration at one
of our parishes. We can find that peace alone with God, and
we can find that quiet with others and God.
Robert Frost wrote his famous poem about “Stopping
by woods on a Snowy Evening.” He wrote of the quiet
“of easy wind and downy flake.” But then concluded:
“The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep.
And miles to go before I sleep.
And miles to go before I sleep.”
We all will have our promises to keep in November and December.
But let’s not forget that we do have to make and take
time for peace and quiet as well. It’s those silent
moments when we can hear ourselves think ... and God speak.
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