Paradoxically, it is when we too can become weak and vulnerable - when we accept and embrace our utter reliance on God for everything - that we will become most like him.
A vocation, then, is the unique and unrepeatable path by which each of us is drawn into communion with God - right here and now - and sent forth by him into the waiting world (also right here and now).
As we send our graduates forth on their chosen paths, we would do well to remember that we, too, are called to be forever young at heart: filled with zeal and energetic anticipation for the great and wild adventure God has planned for each and every tomorrow.
We dedicate June to the Sacred Heart of Jesus in order to contemplate the depths of Christ’s love poured out for each of us.
This coming Monday, then, should be a solemn act of gratitude: a moment for each of us to resolve that no life surrendered in duty will be forgotten.
Jesus did not suffer and die for the unnamed masses. He does not offer his body and blood to some random stranger who happens to be in the communion line. His love is not poured out on everyone interchangeably. It is poured out individually, in a unique friendship that will never be repeated and can never be replaced.
Most of us will never fully understand the mystery of the Trinity, but God gives us enough clues that we can start to imagine the awesome, all-engulfing power of its reality. We can have some small sense of the immense love that courses without pause between and among the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
A mother’s heart is marked by something beyond reason and rationality. It is self-gift in the extreme, offered whether it will be recognized or not, appreciated or not. It really is a remarkable embodiment of heaven on earth, and it’s only fitting that we would honor and celebrate the Christ-like love that is motherhood.