
Family Spirituality
Living
Faith: a
collection of columns from Catherine O’Connell-Cahill that appeared
in At Home with our Faith.
Who’s leading whom?
A Jesuit priest named
Gary Smith is also a roofer. Not the kind of roofer you call when
your roof springs a leak, but a roofer nonetheless. He told his
story in the National Catholic Reporter a few months back.
Gary Smith and a group
of his friends became the support system for a friend of theirs
named Wells, who was dying of multiple sclerosis. These friends
decided to care for him, financially and otherwise, during his final
three years of life. They visited him regularly, and each man sent a
monthly check to pay for Wells’ medical needs and home care. Wells
called them "roofers," referring to the men in Luke’s Gospel who,
desperate to get their paralyzed friend noticed by Jesus, tore the
tiles from the roof of Peter’s house and lowered the stretcher
bearing their buddy right under Jesus’ nose.
Here are some words
from the funeral homily delivered by one of the "roofers": "We were
indeed the people from the gospel: packing him on his litter, down
the alleys, across the river, up the stairs, to the very roof. We
pulled off the tiles. We hardly had a choice. He was yanking on us
to do so. It really wasn’t hard. He was pretty light, after all. He
didn’t complain."
What made me want to
tell this story in At Home with our Faith was something that Wells
used to say during his illness: "My vocation, during this part of my
life, is to lead people to God by their taking care of me."
"It worked," said the
man giving the homily. Our hearts opened. . . . He led the way to
God. Our job was easy. All we did was carry him."
This blew me away. I am
forever hearing about people who consider suicide because they
"don’t want to be a burden" or don’t wish to endure what the final
months of their life might have in store. But here was a man with
the vision to see that by allowing people to take care of him at the
end of his life, he was in fact leading them to God.
Who else in life lets
people take care of them? Why, children, of course. Infants and
toddlers and 9-year-olds. Kids who need to cry on your shoulder or
be driven to baseball practice. Kids who need you to make macaroni
and cheese for the gazillionth time or to teach them how to drive a
car.
Wait, we’re
leading them to God, aren’t we? (Isn’t that the point of this
newsletter?) Of course we do lead our kids to God, mostly by our
example. But the story of the roofers reminds me that caring for our
kids puts us on a spiritual path to God, too.
Think of your day
today, or your past week. What have you done to care for your kids?
What spiritual lessons have you learned?
You may have found the
patience to let your 5-year-old struggle with tying his shoes even
though you’re in a hurry, because you know that’s the only way he’ll
learn. You may have found the strength and endurance to comfort a
sick child or a fussy infant in the wee small hours of the morning.
You may have found forgiveness in your heart for a teenager who made
you furious. You may have let your small child show you again the
wonders of the natural world and the virtues of walking slowly
enough to notice bugs and leaves (or currently icicles and snow
formations in my neck of the woods).
Just a few more reasons
to thank God for our daughters and our sons. COC