gathering a congregation of sages…
by bam
if you asked me today what church i belong to, i might stumble into an answer that wasn’t much of an answer. it might go round about. explain that sometimes i feel like an orphan. yes, there is a place where i go on the sundays when i’m on duty. i’m an altar girl at a church that welcomes my presence, where the sermons are great, but where i’m not much of a signer-upper which makes me feel a bit like a slacker. i have a synagogue, where sometimes i wander in to talk with the rabbi. where i can find myself in the deepest of prayer.
but the truth i’ve been wrestling with all summer long is that, mostly, i feel lost, adrift.
i didn’t grow up with a deep congregational sense. i talked to God most of the time from behind the closed door of my childhood bedroom. i found God in the notes i wrote, night after night during high school, to a motley band of the broken-hearted, the lost, and the otherwise looking for warmth. for a friend.
good thing i grew up with a mama who quoted emily dickinson more than anyone else. who taught me the lines of this poem that’s been ground into my soul in the finest of fine-grain elixirs:
Some keep the Sabbath going to Church – (236)
Some keep the Sabbath going to Church –
I keep it, staying at Home –
With a Bobolink for a Chorister –
And an Orchard, for a Dome –
Some keep the Sabbath in Surplice –
I, just wear my Wings –
And instead of tolling the Bell, for Church,
Our little Sexton – sings.
God preaches, a noted Clergyman –
And the sermon is never long,
So instead of getting to Heaven, at last –
I’m going, all along.
the other thing my mama taught me––the one line she etched onto my soul was this: don’t let the Church get in the way of God.
my mama, a girl who grew up in a convent where the nuns taught her to curtsy each time she dashed past the statue of the Pink Madonna (a story is told that one of the nuns–these are Sacred Heart nuns–once tried to paint a portrait of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and what she painted was so godawful, they tossed a rug over the thing, to hide it, and some time later when the rug was pulled off, lo and behold, there was a breathtakingly beautiful Mother of God decked out not in the usual blue but in pink. thus, the Pink Madonna that Sacred Heart girls (and their dutiful daughters) seek out whenever and wherever in the world they sense themselves in breathing distance of one of the few extant copies), my mama, as devout as the day is long, is far more radical than you might imagine for a girl who grew up in a convent in the most parochial burg of cincinnati, ohio. and that might be one of the things i treasure most about my mama.
and maybe that has something to do with my unwavering quest to find my way in this world along a path populated by sages, and not always of the churchly persuasion. i find holiness in unorthodox moments and places and, often, smack dab in the thick of a sentence.
i might not belong to a particular church these days. but i gather a goodly––and godly––congregation of pathfinders along my way. my church, quite often, rises up from the page.
i read, hour by hour, and day after day, with an eye out for wisdoms and truths, and guideposts to stir me. something akin to wandering an orchard, plucking from trees the lushest of fruits. i find my convictions deepened. my heart, often on fire. my intent: to make this blip that is my life as blessed as i can make it. i live by a gospel of love, one with an emphasis on that which is tender, and gentle not harsh. i believe, more and more, in humility. in understanding how little i know. and how much there is still for me to learn. to understand.
we live in a world that some days feels like it’s spewing all that i detest: there is cruelty, and hubris, and parading around as if no one else matters.
but then i open a book. or click on a text from a most blessed friend. and i read words that resonate. that underscore what seems to be Truth with a capital T. and i feel less alone, and less lost.
these are the lines that spoke to me this week in this holy space of my own making; one is from hafiz, the 14th-century sufi poet, another from thich nhat hanh, the blessed buddhist monk who died just two years ago, and the third is from greg boyle, the jesuit priest who founded Homeboy Industries, the world’s largest gang intervention and rehab program, based in east LA, and whose book, barking to the choir, is now on my most-wanted list.
first up, a prayer poem sent by a beloved friend, one from hafiz, the sufi poet, from a translation by daniel ladinsky, and which my blessed friend found in the pages of greg boyle’s barking to the choir:
Every child has known God,
Not the God of names,
Not the God of don’ts,
Not the God who ever does anything weird,
But the God who knows only four words.
And keeps repeating them, saying:
“Come Dance with Me, come dance.”
i love a God who whirls with me, who invites me into the dance.
next up, thich nhat hanh:
Understanding someone’s suffering is the best gift you can give another person. Understanding is love’s other name. If you don’t understand, you can’t love.
oh, that we should enter deep into the wounds of another. and therein find the walls of our own hearts widening and deepening, and our compulsion to hold a trembling hand the surest thing we can do.
and, finally, once down the greg boyle rabbit hole, i just got deeper and deeper, and then i found this:
“For unless love becomes tenderness—the connective tissue of love—it never becomes transformational. The tender doesn’t happen tomorrow . . . only now.”
― Gregory Boyle, Barking to the Choir: The Power of Radical Kinship
tenderness, the connective tissue of love . . .
to which i whisper, amen…
who do you gather in your congregation of sages?
photo above, of Mater Admirabilis, the Pink Madonna, is from our trip to rome back in may, during which, dutiful daughter that i am, i trekked to the top of the Spanish Steps, rang a bell at the convent of the sacred heart (my mother’s breed of nuns), turned over my passport for entry to the upper chapel where Our Lady resides, and beheld her.



Having been taught only by Dominicans (both Sinsinawa and Nashville), with four women in my father’s family all Sinsinawa Dominicans while I was growing up, I was unfamiliar with the Pink Madonna, and the next time I am going to Rome, I will get the rest of the details from you! She is beautiful!
You always put everything in perspective on a Friday when you drop into my inbox, and I am so grateful for that!
I hope you are doing well and you are in my prayers.
LOVE
MDP
hullo dear MDP! she is beautiful, the pink madonna. and what i loved is the basket of pink-paper notes that lies at her feet. the custom is to reach for a blank piece of pink paper, scribble your prayerful request, and then drop it into the basket at Mary’s feet. it’s quaint and it’s real. a sometimes especially rich combination.
thank you for prayers, sweetheart. all is well.
Thanks, Beloved. Needed this. Right there in the drifting boat with you. Love you.
oh, my beloved. hold my hand while we drift here awhile. xoxox
Barbara, Your Mother had a tenderness that came with everything she did. My Mother was raised by the Mercy nuns in Iowa and I always thought her tenderness came for those kind and loving ladies.It is great to love and learn from them!
what a beautiful beautiful thing to read about my mama. thank you from the bottom of my heart…..i am verklempt. bless you, dear maureen. xox
keep the sabbath going … absolutely love this and love you ❤️
giant squeeze. and a hug that reaches clear across the way. welcome home, darling. welcome home.
I know that feeling of being adrift, a church gypsy so to speak, but most weeks you will find me at the church down the street. Twelve years of Catholic education give me an excess of Catholic guilt! However, I do question a lot of what I hear, and then I do turn to different sources as you do. I would like to think I am dancing with God, and I do strive to be that tender person that God wants me to be. Thanks for the introduction to your sages, including your mama! What wise words!
love that “church gypsy.” amen and underscore to all you say. having a “church down the street” sounds kinda lovely….
my dear friend who sent me the first greg boyle, just sent me this note….(all that follows is from my friend):
My favorite line from Boyle this week was:
“Health in any community might well reside in our ability to stand in awe of what folks have to carry rather than in judgement at how they carry it.”
My other favorite was the story told of when Boyle and another priest were reading their morning paper and drinking their morning coffees when the doorbell rang repeatedly. At first they ignored it, assuming it was a homeless person asking for something that they didn’t feel like interrupting their paper for. Finally, the other priest went to the door, was gone for a bit, then returned and silently resumed reading his paper. Boyle asked “well?” and the other replied that the petitioner was “Jesus in his least recognizable form.” Loved that.
Loved this! Each sage is a gem, and so are you, dear heart. Never knew that your mom grew up in a convent! The stories you must have heard about that experience in addition to the Pink Madonna…
it was a convent school, a sacred heart school, and she always refers to it as “the convent.” she didn’t live there, and wasn’t a postulate. but it was very close to her house, and it was a hugely important swath of her life…..
big hug to you. xox