Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Healing and Forgiveness Talk

[Here is a talk I gave last week on a Confirmation Retreat about the Sacrament of Reconciliation]
                So tonight we have an opportunity to go to confession and receive the sacrament of reconciliation. Now raise your hand if this makes any of you nervous? I totally get the whole nervous thing. I mean we literally call what we are going to do “Confession.” When I think of the word “Confession” my mind goes straight to the whole dramatic Hollywood movie scene where you have the criminal in jail locked up for questioning and the mean cop comes in and demands the person take responsibility for the wrongs they have committed.  Often times I think that’s how we look at confession. We have to go to a room where a priest is waiting for us to confess all the terrible things we have done and the sins that we’ve committed. So if you look at it this way, confession can seem like a pretty scary thing.
                For a really long time that was my perception of confession and it scared me so much that I never went. So a little bit about myself, I grew up Catholic, was baptized as a baby like most of you and made my first confession when I was 7 and then received my first communion not too long after. My family wasn’t that strong in their faith and so we went to church sometimes, but never on a consistent basis. It wasn’t until I went to college that I really found my faith and was introduced to Jesus. So I went to confession when I was 7 and then I didn’t go again until I was 19 years old. It wasn’t because I didn’t have the opportunity too, I was just too scared to go. I remember there were times growing up where my grandma or my aunt invited me to go with them, but I always found a way to get out of it.
                When I was younger I never went because I never thought I did anything bad enough to need to seek forgiveness. I thought going to confession was something you did only if you had done something really really bad and you didn’t want to go to hell because of it. I remember telling my Grandma, “I don’t have to go to confession, I haven’t done anything that bad.”  When I was a kid I hardly ever got in trouble, sure I fought with my brother here and there, but I didn’t steal, I got good grades, I wasn’t a bully, for the most part I was pretty well-behaved. I think the worst thing I did was not clean my room. (Which I still struggle with by the way). So at the time growing up going to confession just wasn’t all that pressing for me.
                Then, as I grew older I never wanted to go to confession, because I was too embarrassed to go. I was worried that a priest would judge me for cheating on a test or lying to my parents. I thought that since it had been so long since I had gone, I would have to list every terrible thing that I had done, like every time I fought with my brother or every time that I had lied,  and so the list just seemed to long for me to want to go. For a while I was ashamed to even go because I would think “What am I gonna tell the priest when he asks ‘how long has it been since your last confession?’” I mean who wants to say “Father forgive me for I have sinned, its been 5 years since my last confession.” Ok well you laugh, but imagine saying “it’s been 12 years.” Because that’s how long I waited to go.
                But eventually, I did make it to confession, and surprisingly it was not as bad as I thought it would be. It was actually an amazing and liberating experience. So when I was a sophomore in college I wanted to get confirmed since I didn’t do it in high school. For those who don’t know I graduated from SDSU. (Aztec for life!) When I was there I went to a Catholic church on campus called the Newman Center. The Newman center offered confirmation classes and so one of the requirements was we had to go on a retreat. It was there at the retreat that I had my confession. Now the retreat that I went on was not a big as this one, um actually there were only 3 participants who went and 8 leaders so it was a lot different, but it was still beautiful. There were 5 girls in my confirmation class, but somehow they all managed to get out the retreat, but I went. And let me just tell that retreat was an amazing experience and completely changed my life. It just really opened up my eyes to our catholic faith and it was there that I learned that Jesus was someone I could have a relationship with, someone who I could talk to everyday, and someone that I could become friends with.
                Just like this one at the retreat we had an opportunity to go to confession and I remember that they didn’t actually call it confession instead they called it by its actual name “The Sacrament of Reconciliation.” The priest Father Bruce when he was explaining it said that reconciliation is where you come to God and ask for his mercy. It’s not really about confessing every horrible thing you have ever done in your life, but instead admitting the things that have kept you away from God and saying that you don’t want those things to keep you away from God anymore.  He explained that when we go to confess rather than say every bad thing we had done, instead just talk about what is keeping you from being in union with God. Hearing it explained this way really opened up my heart to the sacrament and gave me some relief because I was worried that I was gonna have to list every terrible or mean thing I had done in the last 12 years. Instead, I was given perspective and rather than look at all the petty things I had done, instead I could focus on the things keeping me apart from God. Like the things listed on the wall. For me what kept me from God was my pride, or my lack of prayer, taking others for granted, or missing Mass, it was my attitude and the way I lived my life.
                So when the time had come for Confession, I remember I was the first person to go. Part of it was because I was so nervous I knew if I didn’t go first I wouldn’t go at all.  At the same time, I was simply tired of not going and I knew that 12 years was far too long to wait. When I went I talked to Father Bruce told him that it was only my second confession, and I hadn’t been since I was a kid. Then I waited for him to scold me for waiting so long, but instead he just looked at me and smiled and said “The Lord is so happy that you are here right now.” Hearing that was all the encouragement I needed to tell him my sins and my failures and ask for forgiveness. It was like with one smile, God completely knocked down my wall that I had been building for the last 12 years. We talked for a while, then he gave me some words of encouragement and tips on how I could better devote my life to God and sent me on my way. As I walked away to say my penance I remember leaving and just filling such relief and freedom. I knew that I was forgiven and loved by God, and I felt so silly for waiting so long to experience that. The experience was just so much different than I thought it would be. I mean I expected to be scolded or condemned, I thought I would be judged or ridiculed but none of that was true. Instead I was offered mercy and peace, I was met with a gentle spirit and a guiding hand. The experience really opened my eyes to the abounding love and mercy of God.
                When we go to reconciliation we get to experience firsthand all the love and mercy that God has to offer us. The priest who hears our confession, is a representation of Jesus himself and is there waiting for us with open arms to welcome us back into the Body of Christ. A sin is anything we do to separate ourselves from God. When we sin we put up walls between us and God, but when we go to Confession we have a chance to knock down those walls and move forward away from the things that hurt our relationship with God. Confession doesn’t have to be a scary daunting thing, rather it can be a beautiful thing that we experience that offers us a clean slate and fresh start to be the people that God created us to be. Often times, I think the hardest part about Confession, is not telling someone our sins, but rather admitting to ourselves that we aren’t as good of a person as we thought we were, admitting that we aren’t perfect or are flawed in some way. It can be uncomfortable to examine your life and look at your personal flaws or admit the things that you’ve done wrong, but at the end of the day we are all in need of God’s love and mercy and we have all sinned in one way or another.
                So tonight I invite each of you to open your heart to the Sacrament of Reconciliation and take advantage of the Love and Mercy that God has to offer you. Stop holding on to the sins that tear you down, but rather take a chance to let them go and be liberated. Jesus died so that sin would no longer have power over your life. It doesn’t matter what you have done in the past, tonight you have a chance to let it all go and start over. That’s the beauty of reconciliation, being able to have a clean slate and a second chance to do what is right and live a life pleasing to God. I promise you that there is nothing in your life that you have done in the past, that God won’t forgive you for, all you have to do is ask for his forgiveness. Scripture tells us “If we acknowledge our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive our sins and cleanse us from every wrongdoing.” (1 John 1:9) The lord’s mercy and grace is yours for the taking all you have to do is take it. So don’t be like me and wait 12 years to experience God’s love and mercy take advantage of the opportunity that is right here before you right now. It’s been 3 years since that confession, and I have never regretted going for a second. In fact the only thing I have regretted is not going sooner.

               

               

                

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

We Plan, but the Lord Decides

It is human nature to make plans and have dreams; we live in a very futuristic society. We are always preparing, always planning, and dreaming about the future. As children we were asked “who do you want to be when you grow up?” and if you’re a student the question is always “what are you going to do after you graduate?” we learn at an early age to look towards the future. There is nothing wrong with setting goals for your life, or having dreams. We need to have dreams for our lives, we need to set goals, and its normal to hold desires in our hearts; these things can motivate us and give us something to work towards or offer us hope and something to look forward to. It is ok to dream and make plans for our life, but we must never forget that it is God who is ultimately in control of our lives. Proverbs 19:20-21 states:

“Listen to counsel and receive instruction, that you may eventually become wise. Many are the plans of the human heart, but it is the decision of the LORD that endures.”

When making plans for our lives we must always listen to counsel and ask the Holy Spirit for guidance. It is important to remember that the plans we make for own lives and the dreams we have for ourselves are nothing in comparison to the plans that God has always made for us. At the end of the day God is the creator of the universe and holds the power, and in our planning we must never lose track of God’s power and direction in our life. It is the decisions of the Lord that endure and withstand the test of time, not ours. We have no reason to fear because our God is faithful and abounding in love and mercy; Jesus came so that we might have life and have it more abundantly. 

Monday, August 11, 2014

Finding Courage in the One Who Conquered the World!

John 16:33 I have told you this so that you might have peace in me. In the world you will have trouble, but take courage, I have conquered the world.

We all find ourselves in times of trouble every now and again—suffering and distress are simply a part of life. Still, when times are tough, we can find peace in knowing that Christ is with us throughout our troubles and is always by our side. We can draw courage from Jesus who has conquered the world and will never cease to do so. We must not forget the greatest victory that took place when Christ died on the cross and then rose on the third day. In conquering the world through this great sacrifice we were forgiven for our sins and have been offered new life in Christ Jesus. If Jesus was willing to die for us in such a way, then how can we not believe that Jesus won’t also be with us during our troubling times? The Lord is faithful and is with us through every trial we encounter in our lives; he is always there to offer us the grace and strength we need to overcome our hardships. So the next time we experience trouble in our lives let us turn to Jesus, the one who conquered the world, and ask him to feel our hearts with peace that we may take courage and keep moving forward in our lives knowing that he will be with us every step of the way. 

Friday, July 18, 2014

Do Not Fear: The Lord is With You

The world is filled with struggle—loved ones die, kids get sick, parents lose their jobs, hearts get broken, nations go to war—this is the reality that we live in, but in the midst of a terrible world filled with pain and suffering, one thing remains: God is faithful.

Deuteronomy 31:8 states “It is the LORD who goes before you; he will be
with you and will never fail you or forsake you. So do not fear or be dismayed.”


Though we may suffer in this world Jesus is always with us throughout our suffering, ready to pick us up when we fall and comfort us in our hurting. When we cry, the Lord cries with us, and when we turn away from him, he never abandons us, but is always there with arms wide open offering us his unconditional love and mercy. Though often times we fail or lose faith and turn away from the Lord, Jesus remains constant and never turns away from us. When we falter Christ is there to be reconciled with us and never forsakes us for the wrong we have done, rather the Lord is always with us offering us his love and his grace abundantly without conditions. We can find comfort in knowing that God will always remain faithful and continue to offer his love and grace to us until the end of time. We can find strength in knowing that Jesus conquered the world and will never fail us, so we have no reason to fear or be dismayed.   

Friday, July 11, 2014

Finding Joy in Life’s Trials

Consider it all joy, my brothers, when you encounter various trials, for you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. - James 1:2-3

It’s a popular saying, “What doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger” or as St. James puts it, “trials and testing of the faith produce perseverance.” The experiences we have in this world shape our perspectives on life and give us wisdom; they are something we can look at with great pain or something that can give us hope and be a cause for joy. Trials test our faith, but when our faith is tested it allows us to persevere and gives us the ability to grow. We all know how terrible life can be at times, but that doesn’t mean we can’t find joy in even the worst of circumstances. It’s important to remember that most circumstances are temporary, and even the worst day in your life must come to an end, offering you at the very least a tomorrow. As Christians we believe in the joy and the hope of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. His life, death and resurrection, teach us that there is a life after the one we have in this world, a life where our joy may be complete in him. So rest assured that the trials in your life are only temporary, and there will come a time when the suffering in this world will no longer hold power over you. Remember that Jesus offers us fullness of life and one day we too shall be resurrected with him; hold on to the hope given to us by God’s grace. Times may be tough, but they teach us to persevere and they give us reason to turn to the Lord and ask Jesus for his grace. Christ is the greatest joy that we will ever receive in this world and no trial can ever overcome or overturn the promise of Salvation grated to us through Christ’s death and resurrection. 

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Love of Enemies

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your heavenly Father, for he makes his sun rise on the bad and the good, and causes rain to fall on the just and the unjust.” –Matthew 5:43-45

This week I had a bible study with some friends on the topic of “loving your enemy.” We talked about how important it was to love everyone in this world, even people who have hurt us in the past and to remember that every person in this world was created in the image and likeness of God and deserves to be loved and treated with human dignity regardless of how we feel about them. Growing up my aunt always reminded me that even the worst of people in this world still had a mother and father who loved them and offered their children support even when they did wrong. Furthermore, even the worst of people who may not know their parents or have no family still have a heavenly Father and creator who continues to love them even when they reject him or turn away from his love.
What stood out to me from this passage was the verse “for he makes the sun rise on the bad and the good, and causes rain to fall on the just and unjust.” I particularly like this verse because here Jesus tells us that God holds no favorites, and simply loves everyone, even the just and unjust. God freely offers his love and grace to all of creation with the passing of each day regardless of the wrongs or rights we have committed in our lives. In addition, everyone in this world will have to live through the rain or struggle at some point of their life. The challenge Jesus gives us is to love not just our family and friends, but especially our enemies and all of his people. I believe when he uses the word love he simply means “treat every person with dignity and respect” or “wish the best for every person,” and always “treat others as you would treat yourself.” Though this often times may be hard, especially with people in our lives who have hurt us, this is the challenge that Jesus gives us and we must comply.

Today, I challenge you to take some time to pray for someone who has hurt you, maybe someone you consider an enemy; sometimes even offering a prayer for them to God is the most loving thing you can do for a person. 

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Psalm of Praise 

Forever I will sing the praises of my God
Glory and honor and praise be to God almighty Father
For through your goodness you sent your only Son to die on the cross for my sins;
Holy are you Lord Jesus Christ who suffered for my sins,
Blessed is HE who comes in the name of the Lord,
Through his death and Resurrection salvation was given to the world
Glory and honor shall be yours forevermore
Majestic are you Holy Spirit, who gives wisdom to those who open their hearts to you
May praise and adoration be with you always

Faithful is the Lord our God,
The Lord is never far from his people
God will protect those who love him
And call out to those who have forgotten him
God’s love knows no boundary
It is freely given to all creation

The Lord is kind and gracious
All of heaven and earth shall rejoice in the Lords goodness
God is merciful to His people,
Forgiving is the Lord, abounding in love and mercy
Praises be to God forever and ever
Glory and honor is yours from now until the end of time

Amen.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Religion or Relationship: Living the Faith Requires more than our Sunday Obligation

     I read recently in the book Evangelizing Catholics by Scott Hahn that Pew researchers found in a study that “only 48% of Catholics believed beyond a doubt that God was a personal God, a God whom they could know and with whom they could build a relationship[1].” Pretty interesting information considering the word religion actually means “relationship.” Hahn goes on to explain that this information means that at least to some extent 52% of Catholics think of God as an impersonal force. When I read this I was amazed, I kept thinking to myself how could it be that just over half of the people at Church each Sunday consider the same God who loved us so much that He would give up His life for us to be quote on quote “impersonal.”
     One of the first things written in the Catechism of the Catholic Church is this: “The life of man - to know and love God,” in a way this is our purpose in life—to know and love God, but in order to get to know a person and fall in love with someone, you have to have a relationship with them first. Our God is very much an approachable God who wants to spend time with us and build a relationship with us. When Jesus was here on this Earth He spent time with His disciples getting to know them and experiencing life with them, and although Jesus is no longer physically here with us He has this same desire for our lives today.  Jesus longs to have a relationship with each one of us and He never ceases to take the opportunity to draw us into a relationship with Him. The problem is relationships are a two way street and Jesus cannot do all the work; we have to meet Him half way, we have to accept His love and be willing to put in the work to build a relationship with Him.
     So how do we do this? It starts with doing more than fulfilling our Sunday obligation and going to Mass each Sunday. After all, if you simply went to see a person each Sunday for one hour and you sat and stood when you were supposed to, said the same things over and over even prayerfully, that wouldn’t do much to build a strong relationship with that person—in many ways you would simply be going through the motions. Mass on Sundays are where we go to worship God, but if that is all the effort we give to build a relationship with God, than we’ve missed our mark. As Catholics, as sons and daughters of the holy covenant, we are called to communion and intimacy with God and in particular Our Lord Jesus Christ, for to know Jesus is to know the Father. Building a relationship with Jesus requires much more than spending an hour with Him each week, it requires effort and conversation, it requires prayer, and it should take top priority in our lives.
     Each one of us is called to communion and intimacy with Jesus, that’s the point of our Catholic faith. The Lord never ceases to draw us closer to Him, but it is up to us to respond to His invitation and we do so in faith. Scott Hahn explains this further in his book when he states:
A relationship with him [Jesus] isn’t just a part of our Catholic faith; it is our Catholic faith. Everything else about being Catholic — the sacraments and saints, priests and rosaries, holy water and the Bible itself —serves to facilitate that relationship. They’re gifts to know him better, to help us draw closer to him and share in his life.[2]
Everything about our Catholic faith—the Mass, the Bible, the Sacraments—are beautiful tools that should be used to help us build a relationship with Christ. So, if all we ever did was attend Mass we wouldn’t be doing much to foster a relationship with Christ. It is up to us to spend time in prayer to tell Jesus about our day, ask him for help with our problems, and try to get to know him better as we give him the opportunity to get to know us. As Catholics we need to move beyond the one hour every Sunday obligation spent at worship. We need to make God a part of our lives in every moment of everyday. We need to spend time with Jesus every day, not just one hour a week. If we hope to build a relationship with God it is going to take time and effort, but in the end it will be rewarding and it will allow us to grow and bear fruit.
     Recall the parable of the 10 virgins from the Gospel of Matthew who awaited the bride groom, 5 were prepared and brought enough oil to light their lamps at night and 5 were not. While the 5 without oil went to buy some at the market, the bridegroom came and went with the others who were prepared. When those 5 returned and knocked on the door they asked “‘Lord, Lord, open the door for us!’ But he said in reply, ‘Amen, I say to you, I do not know you.[3]’” The Lord knew 5 of the virgins and they did their part to build a relationship with Him, but the other 5 were ill prepared. 48% of Catholics believe God to be a person they can have a relationship with, the other 52% may not; we may not know who is bringing the right amount of oil to light our lamps, but rest assured when the time comes for us to knock on the door we do not want to hear from the Lord “Amen, I say to you, I do not know you.” It is up to us to build a relationship with Jesus personally in our own life, remember the Lord always does his part in building that relationship with each of us. Only you can decide for yourself to meet the Lord on that two way street, when you do be comforted by the fact that He is always there waiting with arms wide open offering us His unending love and mercy.


[1] Evangelizing Catholics by Scott Hahn
[2] Evangelizing Catholics by Scott Hahn
[3] Mathew 25:11-12

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Our God is Faithful- Created to Love and know Love

From the Catechism:

27 The desire for God is written in the human heart, because man is created by God and for God; and God never ceases to draw man to himself. Only in God will he find the truth and happiness he never stops searching for:

The dignity of man rests above all on the fact that he is called to communion with God. This invitation to converse with God is addressed to man as soon as he comes into being. For if man exists it is because God has created him through love, and through love continues to hold him in existence. He cannot live fully according to truth unless he freely acknowledges that love and entrusts himself to his creator. - Vatican Council II, GS 19 # 1.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches us that we were created by God out of love to love and be loved. Our very existence shows us that we are loved; otherwise we never would have been created.  The truth is that God loves each and every one of us enough to create us and offer us a life here on Earth. With each new day that we are blessed with God continues to illustrate his love for us by continually calling us into existence and in response we are called to live each day of our lives responding to His love by loving Him in return and showing our love for Him through our actions.   The desire for God is written in our hearts, it is a natural instinct, a part of who we are. It is safe to say that as human beings we long to be loved and love others, it’s a part of who we are; it’s what we are created to do.  We search for happiness we search for joy we search for truth and we search for belonging. In response to our searching God draws us nearer to Him with every opportunity that He is given and never ceases to draw us into His loving arms. Our God is faithful and He longs to have a relationship with us, He never stops seeking a relationship with us and He never turns away from us. We can find peace in knowing that God is on our side and will never leave us to face our troubles alone, we cannot escape God’s love for us, and never have to live without the love of God in our lives.
In our lives we often become restless and search for things that will make us happy and satisfy the needs of heart, we look for things to satisfy a whole in our hearts that can only be filled with truth and communion with God. We seek to have a perfect relationship with people that can only come from God, we make people and things our everything, rather than the Lord our God, and too often we stumble and fall because we look to the world to satisfy our needs rather than God. The good news is we don’t have to do any of this, we can turn to God who gives to all generously and abundantly. We can rest assured that our God is faithful and is always there to pick us up when we fall, to draw us closer to him, to help us in our endeavors, and to answer our prayers.
We have a God who loved us so much He took human flesh and suffered and died on the cross in our place. We have a God who knows the hurt we carry in our lives and offer us a peace that is different from the rest of the world. We have a God who gives us eternal life, so that whoever believes in him might not perish but live forever. We have a God who conquered the world and will help us to do the same. We have a God who offers us redemption who give us newness of life in Him, who creates all things new and brings together all things for His good. We have no reason to worry, because we can find joy even in our troubles because God is with us and will never fail us. He’s already won the victory, it’s what we just celebrated on Easter, what we celebrate with every Mass and what is promised to us with the passing of each day. We are reminded that we are loved every second of everyday of our lives because we continue to exist.
So let us live each moment of everyday with the peace that comes with knowing that we are loved by God our creator. Let us live our lives in response to his love offering Him glory through our actions and singing praises to His Holy Name. Let us learn to love one another as He loves us and let us never forget that our God is faithful and will never leave our side.

Psalm 118:1; 24 “Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good, his mercy endures forever” “This is the day the Lord has made, let us rejoice in it and be glad!”

The Good Friday Talk "Pick Up Your Cross and Follow Me"

Here is recent talk I give at the Newman Center for a Good Friday Mini-Retreat
                Today we reverence the death and suffering of Jesus Christ and on Easter we will celebrate in the Lord’s resurrection. We’ve all heard the story right? Scripture tells us that Jesus was betrayed by Judas for 30 pieces of silver, arrested and found innocent by Pontius Pilate of the charges brought against him, but falsely condemned to death in an effort to appease the crowds and the Pharisees who demanded that He be crucified. We have been told that while this was happening Peter denied Jesus three times and that when Jesus was crucified on the cross many of the people who followed Him, including his disciples were nowhere to be seen with the exception of Joseph. The bible tells us that Jesus was scourged and crowned with a wreath of thorns, that He himself had to carry the cross he was to be crucified on up to Golgotha which means “Place of the Skull.” On the way there Simon the Cyrene was constrained to help carry the cross for Jesus part of the way because Jesus was so weak they feared that he might die before he could be hung on the cross. Scripture tells us that on the way to Golgotha Jesus fell three times and throughout his journey He was mocked and ridiculed by the soldiers and the crowds that watched. We’ve heard how Jesus was struck multiple times, spat on, and terrorized and that when He finally reached the place where He was hung Jesus was stripped of his garments and nailed to the cross where he hung for three hours and was then pronounced dead all the while being continuously mocked and ridiculed by the crowds who watched. In the crowd Mary, his own mother watched helplessly while here Son was murdered and after He died they placed Him in her arms, there was nothing she could do for him. Like I said, we’ve all heard the story.
                Tonight I want to take a closer look at the suffering and death of Christ, the cross that he carried, as well as the cross that I carry in the midst of trying to follow Jesus and simply get through life.
                Father Bruce has mentioned several times in his Homilies that Jesus did not promise us happiness, instead he said pick up your cross and follow me. In Matthew 16:24-25 Jesus tells us “whoever wishes to follow me must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me. For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” These verses can also be found in the Gospel of Mark and Luke. It’s a reality we must all live with, we are not promised happiness instead we are given a cross. Jesus had to carry his own cross and walk to Golgotha where he was crucified, and in a similar way we carry our own cross everyday as we walk through life.
                The idea of carrying a cross is not news for me; in fact I am reminded everyday of one of the crosses I carry as I follow Jesus. When I was a junior in high school I was diagnosed with Fibromyalgia. For those of you who don’t know people with Fibromyalgia have overactive nerves that cause widespread pain throughout the body especially in the muscles and joints. My condition won’t kill me, but it is something I will live with for the rest of my life. I wake up most mornings feeling like I worked out too hard the night before and on my bad days I feel like I got hit by a truck and can barely get out of bed. Each day I am greeted with pain and so I am no stranger to the idea of suffering, especially in the physical sense, but despite my condition Jesus tells us “whoever chooses to follow me must deny themselves, pick up their cross and follow me.” For me this means, I can’t let the fibromyalgia win, and being in pain is not an excuse to not get out of bed, to not experience life, and to not follow Jesus, but having said this it’s been a struggle.
                The reality is that life itself is a struggle and that there are going to be times in our life where we go through pain and suffering. Jesus himself who was God, had to suffer in his lifetime, and we struggle and suffer throughout our lives as well, suffering is simply a part of life. St. Paul tells us in Philippians 1:29 “For to you has been granted, for the sake of Christ, not only to believe in him but also to suffer for him.” In many ways we can look upon our sufferings as ways to grow closer to God and to somewhat understand a little bit of the pain and hurt that Jesus underwent when he crucified on this day almost 2 thousand years ago. At the same time we can look at our sufferings as opportunities to look to the Lord for healing and help in our distress, we can use our moments of suffering as reminders that we are in need of God’s grace and support. The important thing is to remember that just as we suffer in our lives, Jesus did the same and then some. It is important to remember that in Jesus is a God that understands the weight of carrying a cross and the afflictions that happen in this world.
                When I think about carrying a cross, I think of three things, I think of pain, suffering, and brokenness, all of which I have been able to experience recently in my own life, and all of which Jesus also experienced in his. You see at the beginning of this semester something happened that changed my entire world. I found out that my 16 year old cousin Samantha whom I am really close with was diagnosed with Stage 4 Lymphoma. I will never forget the night I got the call when my dad told me my cousin was in the hospital and that the doctors found a tumor the size of a softball in front of her heart. When I found out, I was actually here at Newman in the middle of a meeting with some girls for the women’s retreat. As soon as I got off the phone, I told them what happened and we went to the chapel to pray. As we were praying so many questions arose in my head. Would my cousin survive this? Would she die? Could my family live without her? Would this be the thing that broke us? Would everything be ok? What was going to happen next? There was nothing I could do except pray.
A few days later I was able to go home and spend a day with my family and my cousin at the hospital; being with her seemed all too familiar to me. You see when I was 13 my younger sister Mia was diagnosed with leukemia and after almost 3 years of treatment she beat it. I knew my cousins condition wasn’t a death sentence, I knew she could beat the cancer, but at the same time I also knew there was a chance she could die. You see even though my sister beat the cancer, there were far too many close calls, and so my cousin’s diagnosis terrified me.
                After spending a day at the hospital with my cousin and my family, I had to return back home to San Diego for school. The walk through union Station to my train was one of the hardest things I ever had to endure. With each step I took towards the platform where my train waited for me I felt my heart break, and with each tear that I shed, I felt my insides be torn apart, I believe that it was only through the grace of God that I had the strength to leave my family and my cousin behind to come back to school.
When you find out that someone you love might die, the world stops. Everything that used to matter no longer seems important, and your whole perspective on the world changes; at least this was my experience. Finding out the news about my cousin changed my whole outlook on life and forced me to reexamine my life, but when I looked around I didn’t like what I saw. I looked at the cross that I had been carrying and suddenly it seemed a lot bigger than it ever was before. I looked at my cross and I didn’t just feel like I was just dealing with the news regarding my cousin or my fibromyalgia, suddenly I started noticing other things on my cross that I hadn’t realized were there before, things I never knew affected me and things from my past that I thought I had resolved, but actually never had. When I found out about my cousin it was almost as if the world grabbed me and slammed me across the floor and broke me into a bunch of different pieces. At first glance I felt like I was broken into a 50 piece puzzle, and then something would happen and I’d feel like I was a 1500 piece puzzle, then something else would happen and I would think I might as well be broken into a million pieces.
                I’d never felt so broken and confused in my life, I remember thinking to myself, how did I get here? Why am I feeling this way? I couldn’t understand how at 21 years old issues from my childhood were starting to come up and affect me like my parents’ divorce, or insecurities I struggled with my whole life were there and I just hadn’t noticed. Suddenly my insecurities started to surface and I no longer felt at peace with the person that I was. I could no longer look at myself in the mirror because I couldn’t recognize myself anymore, I didn’t know who I was I couldn’t understand how I got to this place of brokenness and hurt, of confusion and lack of direction. My whole world felt like it was turned upside down and I no longer knew which was up and which way was down. It was like I allowed myself to live in this illusion that everything in my life was fine and I wasn’t a mess, but then reality caught up with me and I had to face the fact that I was broken into a million pieces and I had no idea how to fix it.  
                I mean prior to all this happening, I felt fine. Sure I knew I was dealing with some things, but nothing I couldn’t handle. I knew that life had put me through the wringer at times, but I felt like I had overcome it, and issues from my past no longer affected me. I felt like I lived life carrying a heavy back filled with all the burdens and hurt that I had ever experienced, but thought I had overcome and let go. In reality rather than resolve issues from my past like my parents divorced or insecurities that I thought I grew out of, what I really did was place them into my backpack and forget about them. The problem is you can only put so many things into your backpack before you can no longer fit anything else or before the backpack breaks or explodes. This is what happened to me and the news of my cousin was too big and heavy that when I tried to place it in my backpack it no longer fit. Suddenly I felt like the backpack was too heavy to carry, and too big to move. Suddenly I felt like the cross that I had been carrying kept getting bigger and bigger and I didn’t know how to carry it anymore.
                It’s safe to say I was a mess.  I had panic attacks, I would break down crying, I felt like I was suffocating half the time, I had no idea what to do with myself, or how to fix things. I struggled to find joy out of the little things in life, what use to make me happy no longer mattered and things that were once so important to me seemed so insignificant. At the same time I was so angry with myself, for letting things get this far, for failing to notice just how much of a mess I was sooner. I felt like a liar, like I had lied to myself for years about what was going on in my life and I felt ignorant and stupid for not realizing just how broken and messed up I actually was. To make matters worse in the midst of all of this I felt stuck. You see while all of this was going on, I was still in school, I still had responsibilities as a student and responsibilities around Newman, I wanted to go home to be with my family, but every weekend there for something for me to do here and I felt like regardless of how I felt I had to keep moving forward.
                You see life doesn’t stop just because you suffer through various trials and just like Father Bruce said, Jesus never promised us happiness, he said “pick up your cross and follow me” I couldn’t stop following Jesus or living my life just because I was going through a hard time, I had to keep moving forward, I had to keep following Jesus and no matter how big I felt my cross was, I still had to pick it up move forward. I believe that when Jesus said pick up your cross and follow me, he meant bring everything you have and place it at the altar, take your pain and suffering and hurt and give it to me. I also think that picking up your cross requires honesty, you can’t give to the altar what you don’t know you are offering. All this time that I was living in denial, I was hindering myself from following Jesus, from allowing him to save me and heal my heart and soul of all the suffering and the brokenness that I was feeling. It wasn’t until I finally accepted all the hurt and the pain and stopped lying to myself about the issues going on in my past that I could finally hand everything over to God and allow him to start healing me.
                The breaking point for me was one night when my roommate asked me how my day was and I broke down crying hysterically. Telling her that nothing was ok, and I was so tired of feeling the way that I did, and not knowing how to fix myself. After 20 minutes of this, she stopped me and said “Stop trying to fix yourself because you can’t. Only God can. You gotta take everything that you’re feeling and give it to him.” After she finally calmed me down, I went to the Chapel to pray, but when I got there I had no idea what to say or what to do. All the tears that I had before were gone, all the words I had to share with my roommate were lost. I tried to pray and the words just wouldn’t come. I sat there for 20 minutes struggling to find the words, I tried kneeling, I tried sitting, I tried pacing, but nothing worked. Finally I was so upset, I walked straight up to Jesus nailed on the cross at the altar and I just let him have it. I remember telling him “Why do I feel this way, why I can’t I let you in. I just can’t take it anymore, I’m trying to give you all of this, to let you heal me, but it’s too hard, I don’t know what to do I don’t know what to say, just take this pain away from me, this cross is too much to bear, I don’t want it. I’m done, just help me, why aren’t you helping me.” 
                Looking back now, I don’t know what was wrong with me, I mean I was looking straight at the body of Jesus crucified on the cross and it never even occurred to me how much he must of suffered or how much pain he must of felt. Even on my worst day, all the pain and the brokenness and the hurt that I felt didn’t even come close to the pain and the suffering that he must of went through, yet I was so angry at him, when really I had no reason to be. I should have been thanking him, but instead I was so focused on my own cross and journey, that I forgot all about his.
                I forgot that he knew what it felt like to be hurt and broken and exhausted. I forgot that he himself carried a cross just as I had been doing. I didn’t realize that when I felt restless and unsure, he must have felt the same if not more. That just like my heart broke, his did too. I forgot that even though I felt like I was broken into a million pieces his body was literally broken and where I felt emotionally pained, he suffered the same, not just emotionally, but physically as well. At the same time I forgot about the promise that came with his suffering and death, and that he paid the price so I wouldn’t have to. I forgot that he was there for me and that he understood where I was coming from. At the time, I didn’t realize that all of this that I was experiencing was nothing compared to what he must have felt like when he carried his cross to his death. I failed to see that I could look at this experience as an opportunity to ask him for his grace and his healing and a way to somewhat understand even just a fraction of the suffering that he endured.
At the same time I had forgotten what happened after Christ’s death, I failed to remember that on the third day he rose again, I failed to see that Easter was coming. I forgot that through Christ’s death we are promised redemption, and we are never alone, that he is always with us and he’s been through the same things that we have. I think often times when we carry our cross and follow Jesus we often forget that we are indeed following Jesus and that there is hope in his resurrection, that despite all the pain and the hurt, Christ conquered death and He rose, that no matter how hard our lives may get, were able to rise with Him, and we don’t have to carry the burden alone, he’s there to help us, we just have to stop getting in the way of his help. We have to allow him to heal us.
                There was grace through my frustrations and yelling at Jesus because it allowed me to be honest with God and I was finally able to take everything I was feeling and give it to God. The Holy Spirit was definitely with me in the Chapel because as soon as I had reached my breaking point and I let go, I turned around and write behind me, my favorite reading was opened on the Lectionary. James Chapter 1 says “consider it all joy, my brothers when you encounter various trials, for you know the testing of your faith produces perseverance. And let perseverance be perfect so that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing. But if any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God who gives to all generously and ungrudgingly, and he will be given it. But he should ask in faith, not doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea that is driven and tossed about by the wind. For that person must not suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord, since he is a man of two minds, unstable in all his ways.”
                I read that passage over and over again in the Chapel and things just started to click. I didn’t feel perfect and complete, I felt broken. I didn’t ask God for help in faith, sure I prayed, but I failed up relinquish control to Him and allow him to heal me, I tried to put myself together, rather than let him do the work. I was completely unstable and I felt like a wave tossed about by the wind, but the thing is I didn’t have to do any of that. I may have felt alone, but I was never alone, the Lord was with me all along just waiting for me to let Him in. The night in the chapel was turning point for me, and finally I was able to let go, and relinquish control to God.
                It’s funny how much smaller my cross seemed to feel when I started to relinquish control to God. Sure none of my problems went away, and I was still in need for God’s mercy and intervention, but suddenly things didn’t seem as bad as they used, and although I still felt broken, I also knew that God would be able to put me back together, or make something new and complete out of the mess that had become my life. Since that night, things have slowly but surely turned around and rather than try to deny my problems and issues, I feel like I’ve been able to work with God and accept the issues as truth and a part of my life, I’m no longer trying to place things in my backpack and forget about them instead I’ve been trying to leave them at the alter and ask for God’s grace in dealing with these things. I know that this is going to take some time, but I have faith that Easter is coming and I know that I will find joy in persevering in these trials.
                So for all of you tonight as you look to your own life and the crosses that you have been carrying, I pray that you may be honest with yourself about the pain and suffering that you have been dealing with, I pray that you may take all of it and leave at the altar for God. It’s important that you don’t spend too much time focusing on your own cross that you are carrying, that you forget about the cross that Jesus carried. Remember that times of suffering and trials can be seen as opportunities to turn to God and grow closer to Him through this experience. Remember that Jesus understands where you are coming from and has been there before, but most of all remember that Easter is coming and that through Christ’s suffering and death we are offered redemption, remember that on the third day Jesus was resurrected and we too are able to celebrate in his Resurrection and experience newness of life in him.