“Be a Bridge” by Rev.
Dr. Barbara Billey, ARCWP Priest, Heart of Compassion International Faith
Community Liturgy (Aug 07, 2016)
A Reading from the Gospel
of Mary
When the Blessed One had said these
things, he greeted them all. “Peace be with you!” he said. “Acquire my peace
within yourselves!”
“Be
on your guard so that no one deceives you by saying, ‘Look over here’ or ‘Look
over there.’ For the Human One exists within you. Follow him. Those who search
for him will find him.
Go
then, prea
After
he said these things, he left them.
But they were
distressed and wept greatly. “How are we going to go out to the rest of the
world to announce the good news about the kin-dom of the Human One?” they said.
“If they didn’t spare him, how will they spare us?”
Then
Mary stood up. She greeted them all, addressing her brothers and sisters, “Do
not weep and be distressed nor let your hearts be irresolute. For his grace
will be with you and will shelter you. Rather we should praise his greatness,
for he has united us and made us true human beings.”
When
Mary said these things, she turned their mind toward the Good, and they began
to debate the words of the Savior.
Homily Starter
“Be a bridge.” Bishop Bridget Mary
Meehan spoke these words to me the day after my ordination, a little over a
year ago. I had shared with her my concern about two friends who were in a
conflict.
Jesus was a bridge. In today’s
reading from the Gospel of Mary, Jesus reminds us to seek and to find Him.
Where? Inside ourselves; He is with
us always and already.
Mary of Magdala was a bridge, too. In
the synoptic Gospel narratives, we see numerous examples of her in relationship
with Jesus, as ministry partner and intimate companion – healing the sick,
casting out harm, anointing Him for his passion and there at the foot of the
cross when He took his last breath. She is the first person to witness Jesus’
resurrection before He ascends to God. He tells her, “My God is your God”, a
bridge for her to the Divine. Then she begins the evolution of Jesus’ mission
by commissioning the disciples to proclaim the good news of the Spirit of Jesus,
here now.
In the Gospel of Mary, while the
disciples are aware of their sacred calling and, moments before, have seen the
Risen One, once he leaves them they experience the all too familiar human
terror that comes with saying yes. What is the cost to us? Will we suffer the
same brutal fate that Jesus did? Many of us might ask the same questions when
faced with a life-altering, sacred invitation.
In a gesture of profound empathy,
Mary of Magdala offers reassurance that graces will come. Her central message: the
Risen One gives us what we need and our strength is in one another. She is
anchored in His peace within herself and her power is potent. She is a bridge to the Holy, for them
and for us.
We need only reflect on the last year
to know this truth. Our Heart of Compassion International Faith Community has
grown and deepened. We have become good friends and faithful companions in
Christ, a diverse faith community of persons from many faith traditions and
spiritual perspectives that spans two countries, Canada and the United States.
We celebrate a pastoral circle of five persons from Ontario, Michigan and Ohio,
including Michele Birch-Conery who was ordained our ARCWP bishop in September
2015. We moved Michele into a new home that we lovingly call the ARCWP
Hospitality House. Our community also made a significant donation to the Holy
Name Sisters’ refugee fund.
We have been bridged to the Sacred,
and although our bridge has sometimes been over troubled waters, we have been
abundantly blessed. However, as with Jesus’ disciples, we cannot contain this
energy for ourselves alone.
Today, we will anoint one another to
be a bridge beyond ourselves. As companions in Christ, our sacred calling must extend
outward to address the real needs of people in our local and global
communities. How? We are one Body of Christ and we are His peace; this is
enough.
Barbara
Billey, M.Ed., M.A., D.Min, Windsor, ONT, Canada is a registered
psychotherapist and art therapist who gives presence to a wide range of youth
and adults. As a priest with the Heart of Compassion Faith Community, she
facilitates inclusive liturgies using sacred arts in order to evoke encounters
with the Sacred. An urban priest and compassion activist, Barbara is mobilizing
citizens to seek adoption of the Charter for Compassion by her local municipal
government. Through the Wisdom Women Circles of Compassion Initiative, she
supports the empowerment of young women from several faith traditions using
creative expression. She was ordained a priest with ARCWP on July 25, 2015.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.