A Talk on “Spe Salvi” the Encyclical of Pope Benedict XVI

Posted by frjcmaximilian on Apr 28th, 2008

“Spe Salvi:  Saved in Hope”
A Presentation to the Hamilton Council of the Knights of Columbus
On the Pope’s Recent Encyclical”
April 28, 2008
Fr. John C. Garrett

In October 2000, I had the privilege of being in Rome for the canonization of St. Katharine Drexel.  There were several persons raised to the Altar of the Saints that day; one of them being St. Josephine Bakhita.

St. Josephine was born in the Sudan, and at the age of 9 she was kidnapped into slavery.  As a slave, she was beaten regularly.  Throughout her entire life she bore 144 scars left from the many times that she was flogged.  Five times she was sold in the slave-markets of Sudan.

In 1882, when she was about 13, she was bought by an Italian merchant for the consul Callisto Legnani, who then took Josephine back with him to Italy.  It was then that she came to know a completely different kind of “master,” and I do not mean Mr. Legnani, who did treat her kindly.  No, Josephine learned about the “master” above all masters; the living God, who was goodness in person.  She came to know that this “master,” the Lord, knew her and loved her.  She came to know that this Lord had been flogged like her, and now awaited her at His Father’s right hand.

In fact, she came to more than just know about Jesus; rather she encountered Him through His disciples, His Church.  From her encounter with Jesus, Josephine came to have hope.  Not just a hope to have a less cruel master, but the great hope.  In her own words, “I am definitely loved, and whatever happens to me — I am awaited by this Love.  And so my life is good.”

In 1890 Josephine was baptized, and in 1896 she took vows as a Canossian Sister.  In addition to working in the sacristy and as the porter, Sr. Josephine promoted the missions, “the liberation that she had received through her encounter with the God of Jesus Christ, she felt she had to extend, it had to be handed on to others, to the greatest possible number of people” (Spe Salvi #3).

Now you might be wondering what does this story about St. Josephine Bakhita have to do with the topic of tonight’s talk, Pope Benedict XVI’s encyclical, Spe Salvi, which is translated, Saved in Hope.  I started with this personal connection to St. Josephine Bakhita because His Holiness holds her up in his encyclical as an example of true Christian hope.

What is hope?  The Catechism of the Catholic Church describes hope as, “the theological virtue by which we desire the kingdom of heaven and eternal life as our happiness, placing our trust in Christ’s promises and relying not on our own strength, but on the help of the grace of the Holy Spirit” (CCC #1817).  In developing a deeper understanding of this definition of hope, the Holy Father starts by presenting an analysis demonstrating how throughout much of the Sacred Scriptures, particularly in the New Testament, the word “hope” is often used interchangeably with the word “faith.”  I will not go through all the examples of this from the New Testament that the Holy Father uses to show this — you will have to read the encyclical for that — rather I just want to emphasize the importance of this point.  For many people in our world the word “hope” is equated with the idea of a wish for a better future, but largely cut off from any connection to the present reality of their lives.  The Christian concept of hope is much different.  While certainly looking towards the future, it is not focused on just the “not yet.”  Certainly the Kingdom of Heaven will not come to completion until the end of time, as Christians we are called to start building up the Kingdom of Heaven here and now.  Our faith in Jesus Christ draws the future into the present, so that the present is actually changed.  Life itself is given a new basis.  If we really have hope, we live our lives differently.  As the Holy Father says in the encyclical, “Here too we see as a distinguishing mark of Christians the fact that they have a future:  it is not that they know the details of what awaits them, but they know in general terms that their life will not end in emptiness.  Only when the future is certain as a positive reality does it become possible to live the present as well” (Spe Salvi #2).

What is Christian hope?  It is to come to know God, the true God.  St. Paul, in his letter to the Ephesians says that before they encounter Christ Jesus, through his preaching, they were without hope because they were without God in the world.  Christianity is not a message calling for some kind of social revolution.  Rather Christianity is an encounter with the Lord of Lords, the living God, or the Master above all the other “masters” as St. Josephine Bakhita discovered.

A point emphasized by the Pope is that our encounter with Christ is both informative and performative.  By this His Holiness means that it is not sufficient to know a lot of facts about the Church.  It does not matter if one has memorized a bunch of the doctrines of the Church.  What is essential — that is pertaining to the core or heart of the matter — is the encounter that changes how we now live our lives.  It is not necessarily a changing in “what we are doing” but a change in “how and with what attitude we are doing it.”  As Christians, that is as a person who has encountered the Risen Christ and has formed a relationship with Him, we live as pilgrims:  living in the here and now, the particular circumstances of our lives, while always remembering that our true homeland is heaven.

Why is this encounter with Christ Jesus so profound?  The Holy Father uses two images found on ancient Christian tombs to explain this.  The first image is that of the philosopher, represented on the tombs as Jesus holding a staff and a scroll.  When we think of an image of a philosopher today, we probably think of the stereotypical “absent-minded professor” who seems to be lost in the world of ideas and out of touch with the practical reality of normal life.  This is not the idea of the philosopher in the ancient world.  The philosopher was someone who taught the essential art, the art of living and dying, the art of being authentically human.  The philosopher was seen as a person who really knew what life was all about.  The early Christians clearly saw Jesus as someone who really knew what life was all about, and took seriously His promise, “I have come that you might have life, life to the full.”

The other image from the ancient Christian tombs is one one more familiar to us; Christ as a Shepherd. The image of the shepherd recalls for us the dream of a tranquil and simple life.  In the words of the Holy Father, “The true shepherd is one who knows even the path that passes through the valley of death; one who walks with me even on the path of final solitude, where no one can accompany me, guiding me through:  he himself has walked this path, he has descended into the kingdom of death, he has conquered death, and he has returned to accompany us now and to give us the certainty that, together with him, we can find a way through.  The realization that there is One who even in death accompanies me, and with his ‘rod and staff comforts me’, so that ‘I fear no evil’ (cf Ps. 23 [22]:4) — this was the new ‘hope’ that arose over the life of believers” (Spe Salvi #6).

The Holy Father asks each of us a fundamental question:  Is the Christian faith for us today a life-changing and life-sustaining hope?  Does it change the shape of our lives?

The Pope then uses the example of the Baptismal Rite as means for exploring this issue.  In the Rite of Baptism, the priest or deacon should meet the child to be baptized with their parents at the door of the church.  Then, after asking the name given to the child, the priest asks, “What do you ask of God’s Church for this child?”  One of the responses that the parents can give is “Faith”, and then the priest asks, “What does faith give you?” and the parents respond “Eternal life.”  This is what baptism is really all about.  It is not just an act of socialization within the community.  It is about receiving the gift of Faith, which is oriented towards Eternal life.

Perhaps the reason so many people seem to reject the Faith today is because they are not attracted to the prospect of eternal life.  The Pope points out that this is due to confusing eternal life with living this life forever.  What we call “life” in everyday language is not real “life.”  Ultimately we do not know what the reality of the blessed life is really like, but there is a knowing in our not knowing.  We know that this blessed life exists because we desire it.  “We do not know what we would really like; we do not know this ‘true life’, and yet we know that there must be something we do not know towards which we feel driven” (Spe Salvi #11).  We want a true life, untouched by death.  This unknown “thing” is the true “hope” which drives us.  It can cause despair if in our pride we are not patient with our not knowing.  The Holy Father describes eternal life as “To imagine ourselves outside the temporality that imprisons us and in some way to sense that eternity is not an unending succession of days in the calendar, but something more like the supreme moment of satisfaction, in which totality embraces us and we embrace totality” (Spe Salvi #12).

The Holy Father then turns to an analysis of the modern world’s critique and deformation of Christian hope.  The most common critique of the Christian concept of hope is that it involves an abandoning of the world to its misery, in order to take refuge in a private form of salvation.  Christian hope is portrayed as being individualistic.  Nothing can be further from the truth.  Sin was understood by the early Church Fathers as the destruction of the unity of the human race.  They understood redemption and salvation as the re-establishment of the unity.  In fact the word “community” comes from the Latin “com” which means “with” and “unitas” which means “oneness.”  Thus the redemption and salvation that Jesus won for us begins to take shape in the world through the community of believers, which we call the Church.

It is rather interesting that this critique that the modern world makes of Christian hope — that it is individualistic — really stems from its own deformation of Christian hope.  The basis of the modern age is the correlation of experiment and method to arrive at an interpretation of nature in conformity with its laws.  Everyone can see that Man’s dominion over the world has become disorder (as Christians we would say it is because of the Fall), and up until the modern age it was expected that what was lost by the Fall would be recovered (redeemed) by faith in Jesus Christ.  However, with the modern age came the idea that redemption/recovery of the lost unity and dominion will only come through scientific discovery that is put into practice (what we might call a short definition of “technology”).  In doing this, religious faith is not denied explicitly, rather it is just made a purely private matter that is irrelevant for the world.  Hope becomes “faith in progress.”  Just consider the example of all the “promises” made on behalf of embryonic stem cell research — if only the religious fanatics would stop bringing their religious faith into the public square we are promised we will have cures for all the worse diseases in the world.  They rather not be bothered by the “inconvenient truth” that other, more ethical means that respect the dignity of the human person are available, and have already demonstrated to be more useful than stem cells from embryos.

This “progress” which we are now expected to put our faith in is the growing dominion of “scientific” reason.  Progress is the overcoming of all forms of dependency so that we can achieve “perfect” freedom.  Both “freedom” and “reason” are seen by the modern world as being in conflict with religious faith.  This “faith in progress” develops not just in natural science but in political “science” that calls for new structures of society that will lead to freedom; i.e. communism.

Pope Benedict asks what does this progress really mean?  Certainly scientific and technological progress offers new possibilities for good, but they also offer possibilities for evil; e.g., nuclear weapons, the “Final Solution” that attempted to rid the world of those races that were “scientifically” seen as inferior.  Clearly these scientific and technological developments need to be checked with ethical development.  Moral growth is also needed.  We need a criterion of measurement in order to tell good from evil, and when we look at every human criteria all are found lacking.  Something infinitely Good, True, and Beautiful is needed.  We discover that Man needs God, otherwise he remains without hope for discovering the Good, the True, and the Beautiful.  Faith and reason are not in conflict with each other, rather they need each other in order for each to fulfill their mission.

Incremental progress is only possible in the material sphere.  While we can build on the moral treasury of the past, moral decision making is always new and free.  Science can help, but it cannot redeem Man.  Man is redeemed by Love, which implies a relationship, and unconditional Love provides true certainty in life.  An honest looking at our relationships with other people shows us that they cannot provide this unconditional love we need for certainty.  No matter how hard people try, we human beings are all finite.  Hope can only be founded on our relationship with He who is Goodness itself, Truth itself, Beauty itself.  Hope is our relationship with He who is the source of life; God, who embraces the totality of Reality.  “For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor present things, nor future things, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom. 8:38-39).

Finally the Holy Father discusses several settings for learning and practicing hope.  Unsurprisingly, the first setting is prayer.  St. Augustine once said that “prayer is the exercise of desire.”  Man was created for God, however our hearts are too small for the greatness to which they are destined.  God stretches our hearts.  God always listens to us even when others do not.  Prayer is not a stepping out of history into a private happiness.  Rather it must be incarnate, it must be rooted in our time and place.  While prayer is personal, an encounter with God, yet it is guided by the public, liturgical prayer of the whole Church, which is the Mystical Body of Christ.

Another setting for learning about and practicing hope is action and suffering.  While we cannot “build” the kingdom of God by our own efforts, we can receive the grace of God’s Kingdom.  We must open ourselves to allow God to enter us.  We must open ourselves to truth, love, beauty and goodness so that we will do God’s will.  While we should do what we can to banish suffering, we must have the humility to recognize that it is not within our power to completely banish suffering.  By accepting our finiteness we open ourselves to God’s infiniteness.  “The true measure of humanity is essentially determined in relationship to suffering and to the sufferer….  A society unable to accept its suffering members and incapable of helping to share their suffering and to bear it inwardly through ‘com-passion’ is a cruel and inhuman society” (Spe Salvi #38).

Allow me to end with the invocation that the Holy Father ends the encyclical, “Holy Mary, Mother of God, our Mother, teach us to believe, to hope, to love with you.  Show us the way to his Kingdom! Star of the Sea, shine upon us  and guide us on our way!” (Spe Salvi #50).

A Homily for the 6th Sunday of Easter (2008)

Posted by frjcmaximilian on Apr 27th, 2008

St. Peter tells us, in our second reading today, to “Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hope….”  How many of us are truly ready to do just that?  A good starting point for answering this question is looking at what do we, as Christians, mean when we use the word “hope.”  Fortunately for us, Pope Benedict XVI recently wrote a beautiful encyclical that is all about hope; in fact it is entitled, Spe Salvi, which is translated “Saved in Hope.”

For many people hope is little more than a wish for a better future.  It tends to be rather abstract and “pie-in-the-sky.”  Hope is not seen as something that has anything to do with present reality.  As Christians, we have more solid understanding of the virtue of hope.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church describes hope as, “the theological virtue by which we desire the kingdom of heaven and eternal life as our happiness, placing our trust in Christ’s promises and relying not on our own strength, but on the help of the grace of the Holy Spirit” (CCC #1817).  A quick reading of this definition of the virtue of hope might lead some of us to conclude that it is just a fancier way of saying that it is a wish for a better future.  There is no denying that there is an element of looking to the future in Christian Hope, but there is much more to it.  Hope is the desire for the kingdom of heaven and eternal life as our happiness.  This is not just a desire for something only in the future, but a desire for something NOW.  While the kingdom of heaven will not be complete until the end of time, it is the desire of every person who takes serious their Christian faith to desire the building up of the kingdom of heaven now.

This is one of the reasons why in Scripture the words faith and hope are often used almost interchangeably.  Faith and hope is not just about the “not yet.”  Rather they draw the future into the present, so as to change the way we live in the present.  Our faith in Jesus gives life a new basis; He reveals to us what life is really all about.  One of the first images of Christ to appear on Christian tombs had Jesus carrying a philosopher staff.  For the people of that time, a philosopher was someone who teaches the art of being authentically human, both in living and in dying.  Christian faith and hope is lived because Christ Jesus has communicated the substance of what true life is.  As He says in the Gospel, “I have come that you might have life, life to the full.”

In his encyclical, Pope Benedict uses the sacrament of Baptism as an example for learning about hope.  The sacrament of Baptism actually begins outside the church; the parents and the child should be met at the door of the church as a sign that the child is not yet a member of the Church.  After asking the parents what name do they give their child, they are asked “What do you ask of God’s Church for your child?”  Now there are several acceptable answers to this question such as “baptism,” “entrance into the Church,” etc., but one of the better answers is “Faith.”  In the old rite of baptism the priest would then ask, “What does faith give you?” and the parents would answer, “Eternal Life.”  Right in that simple exchange we see the connection between faith and hope; Faith in the Lord Jesus points to Eternal Life.  It also points to the nature of this faith and hope.  The child is obviously not able to understand a bunch of doctrines and dogmas; in fact the parents and godparents have to say the Creed for the child.  So faith is not primarily about knowing a group of facts.  Faith, and hope, is about having an encounter with God, and encounter with Jesus Christ who loves us and has saved us.  It is Jesus, through His Passion, Death and Resurrection, who has redeemed us so that we can share in eternal life.  While their parents, and hopefully their godparents, will teach the newly baptized child their prayers and the basic “facts” or doctrines of the faith, their real responsibility is to witness a living, loving relationship with Christ Jesus in their own lives so that their child will also desire a living, loving relationship with Christ Jesus.

So what is this hope that we should always be ready to give an explanation of?  St. Paul, in writing to the Ephesians says that they were without hope because they were without God in the world.  As Pope Benedict says in his encyclical, hope for the Christian is to come to know God.  Hope is a relationship with God who is Beauty, who is Truth, who is Love.  Hope is a relationship with God who is the source of life.  The unconditional love of God is what gives us the certainty that we need in life.  As St. Paul says in the Letter to the Romans, “For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor present things, nor future things, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom. 8:38-39).  How do we give an explanation to anyone who asks us for a reason for our hope?  By witnessing in our lives our relationship of love with Christ Jesus which calls us to love our brothers and sisters with His love.

A Homily for the 4th Sunday of Easter (2008)

Posted by frjcmaximilian on Apr 13th, 2008

[An Olive wood statue of the Good Shepherd.  Naturally, I do not want to get into “advertising” here on my blog, but since I borrowed this image from www.holylandmarket.com, I would like to give a plug for them, and the other communities of Christians still living in the Holy Land, often in poverty, who make a living making these items.]

The image of the Good Shepherd is one of the most familiar in all of Christianity.  Archeology has uncovered tombs of Christians dating from the second century after Christ that have this image carved into them.  Clearly, for the early Christians, and for us, Jesus was identified as the Good Shepherd, guiding His flock to heaven.

Even for us, who have been raised far removed from the pastures, we recognize in the image of the Good Shepherd that the shepherd protects and cares for his sheep, wanting them to be happy and healthy, and giving them all that they need to grow and multiply.  One of the favorite images for Christ Jesus in Christian art, from the earliest years to the present day, is that of the shepherd carrying a little lamb around his shoulders.  Who of us do not take some comfort in that image of the loving care that Jesus, the Good Shepherd, has for each of us?  I think if we were more familiar with shepherding most would be very surprised at the real meaning of that image of the shepherd carrying the lamb around his shoulders.

The only time that a lamb is likely to wander away from the shepherd, and the rest of the flock, is when it is either fearful or overconfident.  And when the lamb wanders away, it is putting itself in great danger because it cannot protect itself from predators, and it lacks the experience and knowledge to really recognize danger.  When a lamb keeps wandering away, either because it is fearful or overconfident, a shepherd will sometimes purposely break one of its legs.  Then the shepherd puts the lamb around his neck and carries it to and from the pasture for the few weeks it will take for the leg to heal.  By that time, the lamb has become so attached to the shepherd that it will never again stray from its master’s protection and guidance.

What do you think about that?  It probably changes our feelings about that so familiar image of Christ as the Good Shepherd, but should it?

We are the sheep, and Christ is the Good Shepherd.  As St. Peter says in our second reading, we “had gone astray like sheep.”  When are we most likely to wander away from the teachings of the Church, the teachings of Jesus?

When we are frightened?  We get scared of something in our lives — maybe it is trouble at work, or unemployment, or trouble in our families, or facing an illness — and we run so quickly towards things that we think will give us “quick fixes” to whatever is frightening us.  Maybe it is the bottle, or drugs, or pornography, or overeating, or shopping, or any of a large number of addictions or escapes that our modern world offers us.  We run to them thinking that they will keep us safe and make us happy, but whatever comfort they offer us does not last for long, and then we are right back facing what scared us in the first place.

Or maybe we wander away from the Good Shepherd when we become overconfident and filled with pride.  We think that we know what is best for ourselves and others, and that we can fix all the problems.  Isn’t that just what the serpent said to Eve in the Garden when he tempted her with the fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil?  He told her, “you will be like gods, knowing good from evil.”  It was a lie when he said it to Eve, and it continues to be a lie that we often fall for.

Understanding the meaning of the image of the Good Shepherd carrying the lamb around His shoulders gives us something to think about when we encounter difficulties and suffering in our lives.  Because we have wandered away so often, we need some “pain,” some “brokenness” in order to learn that we must be dependent on the Good Shepherd to stay out of trouble, so that we will be truly healthy and happy, and grow and multiply.

Sin — whether it is from fear or overconfidence — is our wandering away from Jesus, the Good Shepherd.  Sometimes as the Good Shepherd, His correction seems painful and hard to us, but it is so that we can learn to entrust ourselves to Him, to allow Him to carry us, care for us, and protect us.

Jesus, the Good Shepherd, knows what will truly fulfill the deepest desires of our hearts and make us truly happy.  He knows us better than anyone because He is our Creator, our Brother, and our Lord.  He does want to lead us to the dream of a tranquil and simple life.  He did come so that we “might have life and have it more abundantly.”  Pope Benedict XVI, in his recent encyclical Spe Salvi: Saved in Hope, explains why Christ Jesus is the true shepherd that leads to hope:

“The true shepherd is one who knows even the path that passes through the valley of death; one who walks with me even on the path of final solitude, where no one can accompany me, guiding through:  he himself has walked this path, he has descended into the kingdom of death, he has conquered death, and he has returned to accompany us now and to give us the certainty that, together with him, we can find a way through.  The realization that there is One who even in death accompanies me, and with his ‘rod and his staff comforts me’, so that ‘I fear no evil’ (cf. Ps 23:4) — this was the new ‘hope’ that arose over the life of believers (Pope Benedict XVI, Spe Salvi, #6).

As one of my seminary professors said in the shortest homily I have ever heard, “Don’t be a stupid sheep.  Follow the Shepherd!”

A Note of Sadness and a Note of Joy

Posted by frjcmaximilian on Apr 12th, 2008

Life really can be filled with ups and downs.  Today was one such example, and in this case it had to do with two people who have dedicated their lives to the service of the Church.

First the sad note.  Last night we received a call that one of our permanent deacons here at the parish, Deacon Joseph Malloy, died suddenly.  To be honest, I do not know how many years Joe was a deacon, but I think it was over 25.  His sister-in-law is one of my mother’s best friends and lives just up the block from where I grew up, so I got to see Deacon Joe even when I was a kid, and before he was a deacon, when we went to the Kadelaks for birthdays and other parties.  He was an architect by trade, and often offered his talents to the Church — designing a chapel and columbarium at  one parish, and he was working on the designs for the elevator we are putting in at St. Anthony’s.  Deacon Joe was also very involved with Martin House, a diocesan charity that builds homes for the poor in Trenton, provides transitional housing, a thrift shop, and an educational center.  Each year, here at the parish, Deacon Joe ran the two clothing drives for Martin House, Giving Tree at Christmas, and a food collection at Thanksgiving for the Mount Carmel Guild, a diocesan charity I am involved with.

A few years ago Deacon Joe got very sick with cancer, and more than once people thought that he was a goner.  However, he pulled through, and the event had a profound effect on his life.  It helped him recognize that life, each day, is a gift from God so one should live each day in joyful gratitude.  He lived his last day that way.  He spent the day playing golf, and he called his wife, Judy, around 4 p.m. to say that he had a good day, and he was going to their one daughter’s house for something.  When his daughter came home around 5 p.m. she found him collapsed; apparently from a sudden heart attack.  He will be missed — for his gentleness, his kindness, the way he murdered names (he had dyslexia, so reading out loud was a challenge, but he practiced hard at it).

The joyful note today was the Jubilee celebration for Sr. Marie Olivette Weiss, OFM.  Sr. Marie celebrates her 75th anniversary of taking first vows with the Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia.  She has actually been with the Order for 78 years, counting her postulancy and  novitiate.  I first met Sr. Marie Olivette nearly 30 years ago when she was my teacher my freshman year in HS.  I had her for drafting, so I always give her the credit when people say that I have very good printing, and for teaching me how to draw a straight line, with a ruler.  She still walks over to the church for Mass, and is always so cheerful.  One of my favorite memories of her happened just about a year ago.  I had the 8 a.m. Mass one Friday, and then I had a 9:30 a.m. funeral, an 11 a.m. funeral, and then I had to run over to the school for stations of the cross.  I ran into Sr. Marie as I was leaving after the 8 a.m. Mass.  She was talking with one of our daily communicants, so I said a few words of greeting to them, and then I excused myself telling them about my busy day and needing a cup of coffee to get through it.  I ran to Wawa for the coffee (I was at our St. Anthony campus and the rectory is at the Our Lady of Sorrows campus, a few miles away).  I went through my busy day, and around 3:30 p.m. went upstairs to my sitting room to put my feet up.  I was only there a few minutes when the secretary buzzed me and said that Sr. Marie was on the phone for me.  I picked up the phone and said hello to Sr. and asked her how I could help her.  She started by apologizing for not inviting me into the convent for coffee, but since it is for retired nuns, she was worried that some might be in the kitchen in their bathrobes.  She said that she was bothered by that all day, feeling that she should have invited me in.  I told her not to fret one instant more about it; that I was not fishing for an invite.  It was just one example of her simple generosity.

A Prayer Request

Posted by frjcmaximilian on Apr 8th, 2008

I would like to ask the readers of this blog to say a prayer for my sister, Ann Marie (pictured above in Hawaii).  One of the family issues that we have been facing since the beginning of Lent this year, is that Ann was diagnosed with a brain tumor (I cannot discuss the other family issue).

Ann lives in St. Louis with her husband, Kevin, and their for children, Paddy, Brigit, Deirdre and Declan (pictured below,  their 2005 St. Patrick’s picture)

Ann is a pediatrician, and she had a very bad migraine in January which led to her going for a scan which revealed a small tumor, on the surface of the brain.  Her neurosurgeon was pretty sure that it was benign, so they did not rush to have surgery.  The surgery was today.  My mother flew out to St. Louis on Sunday, and she just called to say that Ann is out of surgery.  They could not get all of the tumor out (they “left the tail”) because it was “feeding” from a major blood vessel.  We are still waiting to hear the pathology report.

Please pray that Ann will have a complete recovery, and will be able to get back to work and fun with her family soon.  I even shaved my head in solidarity with Ann (although they did not need to shave all of her head).  Also, pray from my other family issue, which I cannot share with you just now.

Bald Fr JC

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