Greetings Friends and Parishioners,
Due to Thanksgiving and earlier deadlines, I am writing this on November 19 while Fr. Barnes is away for his annual retreat. In fact, I happened to make my own annual retreat just a few weeks prior. Many people expressed surprise by the fact that my retreat consisted of 5 days of total silence at a monastery out in the Catskill Mountains. “I could enjoy one day of silence, but definitely not five!” was a common reaction. Well, I can tell you one thing: it was challenging for me too! But challenging in a good and necessary way.
We begin now the wonderful season of Advent, in which the Church asks us to prepare our hearts to encounter Christ amid darkness and in his humble poverty. And so, it’s a fitting time to reflect on the necessity of silence in our lives: not a mere absence of sound, but an intentional silence. A silence that allows us to discern the whispering voice of God and the subtle movements of the Holy Spirit deep within our hearts.
When I spend five days on silent retreat, for example, does that mean that I am always listening well to the voice of God? Definitely not! I’ll admit that it usually takes me the first four days to finally cut below all the surface-level thoughts and emotions. And then once I get to that deeper place, is it like winning a prize of consolation? No! Because any encounter with Christ and the divine life that he shares with us (grace) normally touch us in a place where we experience our own poverty and weakness. And so, I prefer to liken a retreat as an extended period to “wrestle with God;” that is, to reflect more deeply on my own identity and vocation in the light of Christ’s love and mercy, and to see where I need to surrender more to Him.
It is truly a privilege to be able to make a retreat and I highly recommend it to anyone – even one day away (like Fr. Sijo’s quarterly retreat days here at St. Patrick’s!) can bear much fruit. But the good news is that all those graces are available to us simply through daily dedication to brief periods of silence and prayer. This season of Advent is the perfect opportunity to do so, especially as the culture pushes to get caught up in anxieties about holiday travel and shopping.
Truly, the Lord desires to encounter each of us amid whatever we are currently experiencing, amid whatever circumstances we find ourselves. The readings for the First Sunday of Advent remind us of Christ’s coming in majesty at the end of time; the total antithesis of how he first came in Bethlehem. And so, the way we prepare to meet Him in majesty is to seek Him now in mystery: a mystery that is revealed though weakness, poverty, and silence.
I hope you will avail yourselves of some extra opportunities we are offering this advent for confession – the greatest of all things you can do to prepare for Christ’s coming. (Be sure to listen to the announcements or check our website.) And let us all together embrace the true spirit of Advent!
Yours in Christ,
Fr. Patrick
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