On the news this morning was a story of a radio station in the western wilderness of the United States. Although it only broadcasts within a 150 mile radius, the station is causing great tension among those in the area, generated by a talk show, where the host verbally and viciously attacks environmentalists. He encourages others to call in and join in his attack and if someone who disagrees should dare to phone in, the host castigates the caller and all who think that way, even saying menacingly that if some harm were to come to “them,” it would have no more effect on him than if a bug were squashed on his car windshield.
“Blest are they who show mercy,” Jesus teaches.
I listened sadly yesterday as one popular radio talk show host said that moderation meant weakness. Compromise indicated a lack of principles.
“Blessed are the peacemakers,” Jesus says in today’s gospel.
The gospel message is counter-cultural, going against the beliefs of the popular culture. The word compassionate means to “suffer with” and Jesus encourages us to suffer with those around us, to comfort, to listen to, to love.
A friend of mine once suggested that we look at everyone else on this planet as “one of us.” Instead of looking at people on either side of an issue as “us” and “them,” they now all become “one of us.” We are all sharing this life and world together. It changes the way we read the paper, enter a discussion or hear the news: “One of us” was executed in capital punishment. One of us was got drunk and drove a car that hit another one of us. A gang murderer becomes “one of us” and his victim, “one of us.”
With today’s beatitudes, Jesus gives us simple rules for living in this complicated world and for loving each other, being with each other in sorrow, mercy, hunger, peace-making and the quest for holiness. We can only pray that in our journey today, we can open our hearts to each other, those we love and those we don’t; those who frighten us, those who have injured us, and those we have injured. Each one is a part of who we are and our world, “one of us.”
Maureen McCann Waldron
The most important part of my life is my family – Jim my husband of 47 years and our two children. Our daughter Katy, a banker here in Omaha, and her husband John, have three wonderful children: Charlotte, Daniel and Elizabeth Grace. Our son Jack and his wife, Ellie, have added to our joy with their sons, Peter and Joseph.
I think family life is an incredible way to find God, even in (or maybe I should say, especially in) the most frustrating or mundane moments.
I am a native of the East Coast after graduating in 1971 from Archbishop John Carroll High School in suburban Philadelphia. I graduated from Creighton University in 1975 with a degree in Journalism and spent most of the next 20 years in corporate public relations in Omaha. I returned to Creighton in the 1990s and completed a master’s degree in Christian Spirituality in 1998.
As our children were growing up, my favorite times were always family dinners at home when the four of us would talk about our days. But now that our kids are gone from home, my husband and I have rediscovered how nice it is to have a quiet dinner together. I also have a special place in my heart for family vacations when the kids were little and four of us were away from home together. It’s a joy to be with my growing family.
Writing a Daily Reflection is always a graced moment, because only with God’s help could I ever write one. I know my own life is hectic, disjointed and imperfect and I know most of us have lives like that. I usually write from that point of view and I always seem to find some sentence, some word in the readings that speaks right to me, in all of my imperfection. I hope that whatever I write is in some way supportive of others.
It’s an incredibly humbling experience to hear from someone who was touched by something I wrote. Whether the note is from someone across campus or across the world, it makes me realize how connected we are all in our longing to grow closer to God.
