A Blog by Mike Jordan Laskey. The original blog can be found here
At times we are called to
gaze even more attentively on mercy so that we may become a more effective sign
of the Father's action in our lives. For this reason I have proclaimed an
Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy as a special time for the Church, a time when
the witness of believers might grow stronger and more effective. – Pope
Francis, Bull of Indiction announcing the Jubilee of Mercy
I don't want to let Pope
Francis down.
I really want to gaze
more attentively on mercy this Jubilee Year, and grow into a stronger witness.
But first, I have some
questions. Like, what is mercy, exactly? It's not a word I use a lot outside of
the beginning of Mass. It sounds to my modern ears like weak surrender or cheap
forgiveness. Or, even worse, the self-satisfied flinging of a coin to a beggar.
Why not a Jubilee Year of Justice or Solidarity or Kinship or Encounter?
Thinking about this, I
vaguely remembered a pithy definition of mercy I had liked in Kerry Weber's
great book Mercy in the City, which I read a few months ago. So I pulled it off
the shelf and paged through the first few chapters, and there it was on page
12, where she quotes the Jesuit priest Fr. James F. Keenan. "Mercy,"
he says, "is the willingness to enter into chaos of another."
The willingness to enter
into the chaos of another. This definition unlocked my imagination, and I was
immediately flooded with images and stories.
Mercy is the Holy Child
Jesus Church community in Queens. When a desperate mother left her newborn son
in the church's manger scene in late November, multiple parish families stepped
forward to adopt him. "I think it's beautiful," Fr. Christopher
Heanue, the church administrator, said. "A church is a home for those in need,
and she felt, in this stable -- a place where Jesus will find his home -- a
home for her child." Parishioners have two name suggestions for the baby:
John, because he came before Jesus to prepare the way; and Emanuel, which means
"God is with us."
Mercy is the Intergenerational
Learning Center at Providence Mount St. Vincent in Seattle -- a preschool
inside a nursing home. Through planned and spontaneous activities, the kids and
the seniors interact throughout the day, sharing in art projects, exercise,
story time, and more. Both the youngsters and the residents have a lot to offer
one another and a lot to receive.
Mercy is a mother who
sleeps on the floor of her three year-old son's room at 2:00 am because he
thinks there are monsters in there.
Mercy is Oakland Athletics
pitcher Sean Doolittle and his girlfriend Eireann Dolan, who partnered with
Chicago city government officials to organize Thanksgiving dinner for the
city's 17 families of Syrian refugees last week. And mercy is the nonprofit
organizations -- many of them Catholic -- that have proclaimed "Refugees
welcome" in states where elected officials have threatened to close their
doors.
Mercy is when a person
returns to the Sacrament of Reconciliation after decades, nervous as can be and
embarrassed to have forgotten the act of contrition, and the confessor responds
with warmth, gentleness and bit of good humor.
Mercy is the hashtag
#PorteOuverte, or "Open Door," that scores of Parisians used on the
night of the terror attacks there to signal that they would open their homes to
anyone who needed shelter.
Mercy is Rosa's Fresh
Pizza in Philadelphia, where you can spend an extra dollar to have a post-it
put up on the wall. Homeless members of the community are then welcome to come
in to the shop and trade in a post-it for a slice.
Mercy is the Gospel
stories of the prodigal son, the woman caught in adultery, Matthew the
unscrupulous tax collector, and Peter the denier. The forgiveness they receive
does not condone them in their selfishness. They are not condoned, but
redeemed.
These images of mercy
share some things in common. Each example features the element of
"willingness" that Keenan emphasizes. Instead of avoiding or
dismissing the chaos of another, these practitioners of mercy move toward the
chaos with creativity and boldness. They make me wonder, "If we Catholics
were 10 times bolder and more creative in our practice of mercy than we are
right now, how might things be different?" Well, we'd probably have
preschools in all our nursing homes and refugees at all our family parties, for
starters.
The Jubilee Year of Mercy
begins on Tuesday, Dec. 8 and runs all the way until next November. How
willing, bold, and creative can we be?
[Mike Jordan Laskey is
the director of Life & Justice Ministries for the diocese of Camden, N.J.
He blogs for the Camden diocese at camdenlifejustice.wordpress.com.]
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