My latest column for the Global Sisters Report reflects on what we're called to do and be about in these continuing days of the COVID-19 pandemic. The way we used to be is no longer, but facing the reality of now, what are we ready for? (And perhaps, what aren't we ready for?) May these questions lead us to deeper reflection and call forth in us a pioneer spirit that faces the future with hope, the present with truth, and the past with wisdom for us all.
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At the beginning of the pandemic, I, like so many, made a list of things I wanted to do and books I needed to read before the initial shutdown was over. At that time, we presumed the time inside would be brief, a welcome reprieve from the everyday demands of life. Now, months later, I find myself both laughing at the naivete of my thoughts in that moment and cringing at the privilege of those early days of planning.
I began to tackle my list by picking up a long-neglected
history of women religious in the United States. Subconsciously, productivity
served as a welcome distraction from the collective grief and personal anxiety
that was rising. The stories of apostolic women religious establishing missions
and setting the foundations for a growing church in the United States seemed
like an idyllic way to pass the time.
As I started into the history, I discovered wonderful
stories of resilience and ingenuity. These women were pioneers; they were few
in number, but great in spirit. Their efforts and example laid the groundwork
for all that would come after them. In their stories, I saw elements of the culture
of religious life. There was the drive to live the Gospel, an ever-deepening
call to humility, and an ability to do the unimaginable with hidden talents and
gentle influence. These early sisters were trailblazers, taking what they had
and committing it to make something more, even when no one thought it was
possible.
In the chill of mid-March, I curled up with the book and
lost myself in the story. Yet, it wasn't long before I soon realized that this
probably wasn't the best reading. As I remained confined to my convent, I read
the stories of young sisters in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who, at
ages younger than I am now, went out to serve in the midst of countless
diseases. They went where no one else would and ministered to those abandoned
by society. And just as bravely as they served, they suffered — and in many
cases, sadly, they died.
Dedicated to the task at hand, I kept on reading. Within a
few days and after countless stories of such self-sacrifice, though, I was very
confused about what I should do.
"What does showing up look like today?" I
wondered.
For ages, it looked like doing the impossible with little
training and sheer force of will. It looked like learning in action; like feats
of triumph achieved through communal support and ingenuity; like life lessons
learned and accelerated by trials in real time. It meant putting women who had
never taught in classrooms with dozens of children or sending ill-prepared
postulants to the frontlines of service.
Times have changed. Untrained assistance in the midst of a
pandemic is not the norm. Today, thankfully, health care professionals serve
those needs. Sisters, adequately trained and equipped, certainly serve in these
roles, facing the pandemic head-on as we've read about in these very pages.
But I realized in the experience of reading about days gone
by that there was and is a need to listen to the demands of
our times, questioning what active engagement looks like today and
what it will mean for us to rise to the occasion for the common good.
In the past, women religious (and women and the church in
general) strove to make ends meet without proper readiness, relying on numbers
over expertise. Now, facing our current realities- cultural, congregational and
global — we must ask: What has God made us ready for?
This question requires reflection both internally and
externally. It begs us to ask what needs in this world are we ready, willing
and able to serve? This is a question that women religious live to answer. We
are people and institutions imbued with mission. It is in our DNA to ask what
the need is that next entails our service, and then to move on to how we will best
be able to meet those needs — the needs of the world — head on?
The shadow side of this question of readiness, though,
invites us to pause for further reflection. If we can ask, "What has God
made us ready for?" we also need to be able to stop and reflect on what we
aren't ready for. This question is uncomfortable — either for the stark clarity
or unclarity that it reveals. It is a question that offers us an invitation to
examine our blind spots, to look at current realities, and to see what the
world we so often serve has to reflect back to us about who we are and how we
need to grow.
It begs us to ask: are we ready to face the reality of our
current state of being? Of the call of our charism? Of the quality of welcome
we offer, or the strength of the stands we take?
When we're able to face the clarity or lack thereof that
surfaces, we are able to actively engage the call and response of readiness.
This is what our first sisters did. They trusted that God would provide. They
lived into a sense of readiness. Ready or not, they took steps to serve needs
and created structures and stories in the process.
We now bear the burden and blessing of the legacy they left
behind. Rather than trudging blindly into the world, we are called to a
heightened awareness of who we are and what we carry. We go forth with the
awareness that God is working in us and through us, calling us to discern and
act in the ways we have been made ready and to risk the responses that
challenge our unpreparedness.
It is clear that what we once thought would be a momentary interruption to our everyday lives, is, in fact, a cataclysmic shift. Our work now is not to do what is convenient or productive, to tick items off a list or hide away from the realities that are evermore apparent; our work is to discern where God is calling us, to ready our hearts for transformation, and to work so that the stories of our being in these uncertain times give life to the world.
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