Monday, May 31, 2021

How Big is Your Heart?

 

After challenging us to engender an ‘open world’ in chapter three of Fratelli tutti, Pope Francis now proposes that we have “A Heart Open to the Whole World.” (#128-153)

This brings before us the whole issue of migrants and refugees. Francis is not pollyanna about this crisis. To “welcome, protect, promote and integrate” these struggling people he knows that individual governments can’t do this alone. He comes right out and writes what many are thinking: we need to “develop a form of global governance” to address this issue as well as several other pressing issues such as war and weapons of mass destruction.

The US learned this long ago. The Revolutionary War had just ended. The 13 colonies were governed by The Articles of Confederation, and were suffering from huge debt from the war. Alexander Hamilton went to President Washington and told him the Articles were just not working, that the colonies needed to federate. Washington replied that the colonies would never agree to federation. Hamilton said, “Oh yes they will, Sir.” He proceeded to go to each colony and tell them that they would have a Guard, but we were going to have a US Army. And by the way, we would assume all their debt from the Revolutionary War, because we were going to have a US Treasury. They all signed on the bottom line, we had a Constitutional Convention and we became the United States of America. We Federated while simultaneously honoring state identity.

Francis is joining others globally in envisioning something similar for the nations of the world.

Something called The Constitution for the Federation of Earth already exists and is presently being considered by the United Nations. Many realize that immigration, climate crisis, poverty, health, and economic issues cry for global solutions in our day. One nation can no longer go it alone. The European Union is one effort to federate while honoring individual nation identity.

Interested? Order a copy of the Constitution named above and read it carefully, especially the Conclusion, “Our Great Hope at the Dawn of the 21st Century,” and the Appendices. Go on line and check out “Citizens for Global Solutions.” Francis is right on target. Are our hearts big enough to envision a united world?

"See, I am making something new…do you not see it?"

The Final Step – Down

 

We have celebrated them all…all the great feasts: Easter, Ascension, Pentecost, Trinity…and now comes the capstone: Corpus Christi, or in English, The Body and Blood of Christ. It is the capstone, even though it is the final step – down. How so?

Take a wide view. We have a God who is driven by love to send its own deepest Word, its identity, into the human world to fix something that is broken. A relationship is broken. So, in the virgin’s womb he mends it. The Word creates a union between divinity and humanity that can never be broken again. Then he shows us what he intends to do with that hangover we call death…his and ours. After he brings us to life, he takes our very humanness home to the very throne of God and sends us his own Spirit to remind us what wonders he has done, to fill us with joy.

But bending way down to become one of us was not enough for this love. He cannot bear to leave us to struggle alone to respond to the Spirit. He found a way to take one more step – down. Yes, he bent way down to hide his majesty under the veil of our humble humanness. Yes, when he was silenced upon the cross, he made his many wounds become so many mouths to tell of his love. But he was not finished. One more step. He chose to bend down to become a thing. His veil this time is bread. He became our food…on hand, anytime, hidden...so as not to frighten even the tiniest child. So now it is our turn to bow down. For it is only in bending low that we can reach this Lover, who waits like a beggar for a meager return of love.

 Down into time-space; down into flesh; down into death-which-dies.

One more step:

Down into bread; it is finished.

You feed me with your risen Life.

Then it’s up from death to life, up from grave to glory, up with you into eternal life.

You would have it no other way.