Monthly Archives: June 2012

Yep, He’s a Keeper.

As per the graduation requirements for my MA in Biblical theology, I have been teaching a Bible Study at a local parish for the past few weeks.  It has been interesting, nerve-racking, and all around a great learning experience (not to mention somewhat exciting to realize that hey—I actually have learned a thing or two over the past year that didn’t leave my brain during post-finals hibernations).

Now as I said, I’ve been teaching the study for a few weeks now, but last night’s class was the first time that my fiancé came.  Actually…last night’s study was the first time that I let my fiancé come.

Something you may or may not know about me: I get very nervous and uncomfortable speaking in public.  Presentations in front of the classroom were pretty much my worst nightmare in school.  I realize this isn’t that unique of a trait, but it’s still mine.  I’m shy.  The thought of being the one leading a Bible study was scary enough, but at least if I tanked—I thought—I’ve really lost nothing, because the people in the class don’t really know me anyway.  Making a fool of myself in front of my fiancé was a completely different story.  So I just wanted a couple of practice rounds to get my feet wet and really see what it was all about before I let him come.

So after a few weeks of Tyler-less Bible studies, I finally let him come.  It wasn’t really that I thought I was ready or that I was all that fantastic of a teacher so much as it was that I just missed him and wanted him there.   I was pretty nervous, and found myself wondering on the drive over if I had made a mistake in asking him to come.  But then something crazy happened.

I was myself!

I was more myself in last night’s study than in the previous weeks combined.  I was more relaxed, more confident, and found myself stumbling over my words less.  It was as if Tyler was the thing that was missing the whole time—the secret ingredient to my teaching comfortably.  And then on the car ride back to my place, something cool happened again.  I actually had someone to talk to about how the Bible study went.  And surprisingly, I wasn’t too embarrassed to do so.

All this to say: I’m an idiot.  Also, the people closest to you in life are a really important asset to who you are—even if you don’t realize it yet.  So don’t try and keep them at arms length.  When you finally let do them into the most nerve-racking and scary moments of your life, you’ll just end up kicking yourself for waiting so long to do so.

Speaking of public speaking, I have TWO talks to give next week.  Please pray for me!  (But you can bet I’ll be bringing my secret weapon with me this time :) )

(cary pennington photography)

“Are you meditating?”

Back when I was about 15 years old, I happened to be sitting against a wall by myself after school one day, waiting for my mom to pick me up.  I didn’t much feel like socializing that day, so I decided to take advantage of the down time and start praying a rosary.

I didn’t want to make a scene or draw attention to myself (…and when you’re in high school you feel like everyone is staring out you no matter what you do), so I shifted my eyes down slightly toward the concrete and tried to hold my rosary in my lap so as not to be “showy”.  But somewhere in the middle of the tension pulling me at one end to mentally escape my high school campus and on the other to remain aware of my surroundings so as not to look like a weirdo, I didn’t notice that someone I knew was standing next to me.

I guess I didn’t pull off my prayerful nonchalance as well as I’d hoped, because I was startled mid Hail-Mary by a familiar female voice asking, “Are you meditating?”

It was an honest question and I knew right away that she was not at all asking because she thought it was weird.  But as startled as I was by the abrupt question, I was even more surprised by the answer forming around my lips:

“Well…um—Yes,” I replied.  But silently I finished the newly developed thought to myself: “…I guess I am meditating”

She nodded and kept on walking, and that’s really the end of the memory.  I have no recollection of anything else I did that day—before or after that brief exchange.

The reason that story sticks with me to this day is because, prior to that moment, if someone had asked me hypothetically what the rosary is (or what we as Christians are called to in prayer), I would have told them in so many words that we are to meditate on the life of Christ.  I may have even used the word, “meditation.”  But it wasn’t until I was actually called out and asked by name, smack in the middle of my prayer: “Is that meditation?” that it actually hit me.  What I am supposed to be doing with the rosary is meditating. 

I think what kept me from grasping that concept up until that point was a false understanding of what mediation is.  When I heard, “meditation,” I always pictured a Yoga class full of a bunch of women chanting with their hands pressed together, surrounded by burning candles.  As I understood it, meditation was what you did when you wanted to “clear your head,” and essentially empty yourself of your emotions, desires, and thoughts.   But that’s no way to enter into a conversation, and it’s certainly no way to seek a deeper understanding of who you are as a person.

In order for meditation to mean anything, you have to have a subject on which it I worth meditating.  And what better a subject than the One to whom we owe our very life?  Surely He understands our thoughts and our deepest longings; and desires to use those for His greater glory and our eternal happiness.  If our meditation doesn’t lead us to seek true and lasting happiness, it’s a wasted effort.

CCC 2705: Meditation is above all a quest. The mind seeks to understand the why and how of the Christian life, in order to adhere and respond to what the Lord is asking. The required attentiveness is difficult to sustain. We are usually helped by books, and Christians do not want for them: the Sacred Scriptures, particularly the Gospels, holy icons, liturgical texts of the day or season, writings of the spiritual fathers, works of spirituality, the great book of creation, and that of history the page on which the “today” of God is written.

CCC 2708: Meditation engages thought, imagination, emotion, and desire. This mobilization of faculties is necessary in order to deepen our convictions of faith, prompt the conversion of our heart, and strengthen our will to follow Christ. Christian prayer tries above all to meditate on the mysteries of Christ, as in lectio divina or the rosary. This form of prayerful reflection is of great value, but Christian prayer should go further: to the knowledge of the love of the Lord Jesus, to union with him.

Avoiding a Boring Summer

Saint Josemaria Escriva relentlessly telling it like it is:

If you say that you want to imitate Christ… and yet have time on your hands, then you are on the road to lukewarmness. (The Forge, 701)

The first time I read that it really stung.  It stung so bad that I printed it out and hung it on my wall.  Time to get serious, MaryWhat are you doing today to further the work of God?

It worked really well for that one day.  Then I got really busy with school and kind of forgot about it.  Hey, my homework is reading the Bible and writing papers on it.  Translation: God and me are totally good.

Except that I once again found myself in the midst of a battle.  School: a means of growing closer to God or just a giant to-do list to check off before I can enjoy my summer?  Thus began a ten-week struggle with many twists and turns, only to finally finish my work and once again be reminded of Saint Josemaria’s words:

If you say that you want to imitate Christ… and yet have time on your hands, then you are on the road to lukewarmness. (The Forge, 701)

Oh…so that applies even on summer break, too?  …So work isn’t just a means on the way to achieving the final goal of idleness?

Thank goodness.

Don’t get me wrong.  Everyone deserves a break from hard work.  But no one deserves to be idle, and no one should want to be idle, because it’s miserable.  We’re only about a week into summer break and already I’ve seen friends on Facebook complaining about being bored.  It’s a fate worse than finals week.  Give me something that makes me run around like a chicken with my head cut off, but don’t let me be bored.

Of course, Christ desires that we rest in the middle of these two extremes.  He desires that we have peace.  And truly, filling our time with things that build up the Kingdom is exactly the way to do that.

So here I am, at the start of my two-week summer break (year-round course work, people.  It’s a thing.), and once again faced with the question: “What are you doing today to further the work of God?” If you want a non-boring summer—whether yours happens to be two months or two days, it’s a question you have to ask yourself, too.

 

Also: The Fortnight for Freedom begins today.  Pray.  Get involved!

5 Things You Can Do to Make Today Awesome

1. Give at least ten minutes of your time to God in silent, uninterrupted, undistracted prayer. The sooner, the better.

2. When that pesky opportunity to tear someone or something down presents itself in conversation, refuse it. Say something nice instead.

3. Go for a walk. (do this in conjunction with #1 if that works better)

4. Think of how blessed your life has been.  Try to make a list of all of the good things in your life, and see how quickly you run out of paper.

5. Smile (even if you don’t feel like it).

Oh, and check out the daily readings for today.

“We know that all things work for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose” -Romans 8:28

 

Should You See “For Greater Glory”?

If you haven’t heard of the film, For Greater Glory, it depicts the true story of the Mexican “Cristero War” in the 1920s:

“It’s history that is not even that well known to many Mexicans…The Mexican government set up its own church, deported all foreign priests, and made the sacraments unavailable. Even after the war ended in 1929, each local governor continued to enforce the constitutional anti-clerical laws in different ways. It took a long time for this to change. Officially, priests couldn’t wear religious vestments in public until 1998.”

-Producer Pablo Jose Barroso from an interview with the National Catholic Register

Before I get into my review of For Greater Glory, you need to understand something about me.  I went to a Catholic university that focuses on bringing Christ to the culture through business and media.  As a result, many of my close friends are incredibly passionate filmmakers who also happen to be faithful Catholics.  (Me?  I started out on the film track and moved into the Theology-meets-media side of things.  Hence the blog).

I tell you this because after three years of sitting in classes with these people, having many conversations with them both in and out of the classroom about what good art is (and what it is not), I must admit that they have rubbed off on me.  These are both truly devout Catholics and dedicated filmmakers.  When a movie or television show combines these peoples’ two greatest loves—their Christian faith and film, as the film For Greater Glory does—you have what we call a sensitive area.

In discussions about good art, my friends often come back to the theme of what Blessed John Paul II says in his Letter to Artists: “beauty will save the world.”  If it’s not beautiful, then it’s not the Gospel, no matter what the subject matter of the art claims to be.  Their point: A bad film does not glorify God just because its subject matter happens to be faith-based.

So when I see a movie that attempts the audacious (yet so very needed) task of portraying the glory, truth, splendor, and/or truth of the Christian faith on the screen— even though I don’t consider myself to be anything of a filmmaker— I still tend to hear my friends’ voices in my head.

Now that you know all of this: What did I think of the film, For Greater Glory?

As a moviegoer, I was entertained.  As a Catholic, I was moved.  As an American living in 2012, with the HHS mandate threatening our basic right to religious liberty, I was sobered.

I truly do believe that we need more films that tell the great stories of our faith as For Greater Glory does.  We have so many of these stories, ranging from stories in Scripture that have stood the test of time to the incredible stories of the lives of the Saints and martyrs.  These stories need to be told, and they need to be told well.

It’s easy for me to say that as someone who is not a filmmaker, and I can understand that for a Christian person in the film industry, this is a scary task.  Knowing that these stories deserve nothing less than excellence means that if the film is not received well by an audience, it’s not the fault of the story itself but of the people who made it.  That’s a heavy burden.

So praise God for the people that realize the importance of telling these stories, and who believe in the power of them, as the makers of For Greater Glory do.  I sincerely recommend that all young Catholics go see this movie (not too young, though.  It is rated R for its depictions of violence).

And please pray for Christians in the film industry.  They’re hard at work for the Church; I promise you :)