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"From
Conversion to Mission" I tried to reassure the young man that he was more blessed than he thought,
that indeed, though God seems distant, God in fact has him by the shirt. I
explained that what he was going through, some of us in ministry would call conversion.
Conversion has been minimized to be interpreted as a change of denomination --
Protestants becoming Catholic, Catholics becoming Protestant, non-Christians
becoming Christian, and Christians becoming non-Christians. While conversion may
involve such a change in denominations, the core of conversion is a much more
profound experience. The story that I led with gives evidence of two key
dynamics in conversion: 1) a cry for more in life -- is that all there is, my
job, career, money, pressures; and 2) a cry for help -- I cannot do it alone: I
need people; I need community. Conversion is a break-through on the level of
human experience to the need for God and the need for other people. Recently, I asked a group of people to reflect on how God has blessed them or
gifted them. Typically, many people in the group spoke of tangible things. Some
said God had made them good teachers, others that God had made them good
writers; others boasted of some other trade skill God had blessed them with.
Only one younger woman spoke of something more ethereal. She said the greatest
gift in her life was depression, which she had wrestled with for some years. She
said that the experience of depression had sensitized her to the pain and
struggle in other peoples lives. She said that because of her own suffering, she
could spot even disguised ache in others, and respond to it. Then she said:
"I offer people hope. I tell them that they ought not to give in, but with
God's help, move on to new life." Listen to what the young woman was
saying: the greatest gift in my life has been the cross, through it I have been
changed, and now I can use that changed self to care for others. Conversion -- it is about so much more than changing denominations. It
involves the ability to think paradoxically or, as I would say, paschally. Such
a process involves being able to re-interpret even life's struggles through the
life, death and resurrection of Jesus. This paradoxically, paschal thinking is
convinced or convicted that the same process is now going on in us. In such a
world view, even life's breakdowns are experienced as break-throughs to new
levels of being. Some months ago, I was off work for a variety of health problems that caught
up with me. I had never before in my life taken several weeks off from work. I
am obsessive-compulsive; I've always believed obsessive-compulsives make the
world go around. When physical and psychological problems caused me to "hit
the wall," I could not work. Without work, I went into a kind of
withdrawal. One night I felt a strong need to be in a sacred space, so I went
out driving, looking for a church. Much to my dismay, I could not find a
Catholic Church open, so, I stopped in a Lutheran Church. I sat in one of the
benches, picked up a copy of the Scriptures, and began to pray the psalms. I
also began to weep; my spirits were very low. I have always valued busyness and
success, and I felt that I was failing miserably. In a way, I felt it was
"all over for me." Then, I looked up into the sanctuary and saw two
banners hanging there. To the left of the crucifix hung the words "Become a
New Creation." To the right of the cross were the words "In Christ,
all things are made new." I dried my tears, got up and began to pace,
talking to God, thanking God for the sign. Much more than changing denominations, conversions involved the jumping of
the imagination to a new thought, a synthesizing insight, or what one interprets
as apparently God's voice, God's will. In that moment in the Lutheran Church, I
felt God saying to me, "It's not over...but I am calling you to
newness." The centrality of the cross in the middle of the two promises of
newness indicated to me also that this newness would involve some struggle, some
pain. But that has been and is still with me, as long as I sense God with me
speaking, promising, leading; as long as I sense that I am living out God's will
and plan. Recently, when I picked up one of the newspapers, I was struck more than I
usually am by the figures of starving children in Somalia. I have seen the
swollen stomachs, the apparently large heads, the haunting eyes, and the shriveling
limbs before. But this day's picture particularly stayed with me. I wanted to do
something. But in my enthusiasm to do something, I also felt frustration. What
could I do? I could send money, and I have and I will, but that will not
eradicate the problem. Then I remembered what Jesus said in the gospel of Luke,
that flesh and blood do not constitute family, but rather a deeper bond -- the
spirit of God that we share and the will of God that we pursue. What troubled me
about this particular picture of suffering people was and is a growing
conviction that we are all family. We have been trained to not make eye contact
with the poor, the hungry, the homeless, the dying child in the newspaper. But
God will not allow our consciences to rest with a "no eye contact"
approach. We need to make eye contact, for the suffering of the world are our
brothers and sisters. In addition to engaging in acts of charity for and toward
them, we must carry them daily in our heart, in prayer. Conversion is much more than changing denominations. It is awakening to the
whole Gospel -- the necessary connection between the Kingdom of God that Jesus
preached, and the work of social justice. God's Kingdom is no less than this,
the transformation of society with the power of the Gospel. Jesus did not intend
His words to be misused for feel-good religion. The Gospel is simultaneously
comfort and challenge. As I told this story in Portland, Oregon recently, a
young campus minister said that she was experiencing some of the same tug, or
pull, that is, to put the Gospel into action. My stories reflect a little bit of what is involved in conversion: a cry for
more, or God; a cry for help, or loving relationships; paradoxical thinking,
which embraces the cross as the mystery of God changing us; a jumping
imagination which senses God present and in a posture of revealing Himself; an
enlarging heart, which feels a oneness with all of the creation, especially
those parts of creation groaning because of suffering. Something common to conversion moments or processes is the void, darkness,
shipwreck, pain. Whether it is a physical ailment, or a psychological struggle,
a relational difficulty, a job stress, or a moral dilemma, conversion usually
involved a human experience of break-down. But the paradox of conversion is that
in the break-down, there is a break-through -- to a new experience of God and
the human family. The fuel or energy for merging into the new experience is
trust, or surrender, letting go into the mystery of God and God's love. How is it that some people have void or shipwreck experiences, and they
become break-throughs, while other people fall rather into atheism or
agnosticism. I think the direction that a struggle experience takes us in is
largely influenced by the environment around us. I recently changed ministries, from full-time work with the Archdiocese of
Chicago, to full-time work with the Institute of Pastoral Studies, Loyola
University of Chicago. I received a nice plaque and controlled my emotions until
after I began my new ministry. But in the first days of the new role, I felt
terribly frightened, and I was grieving the old role that I had, the comfortable
things that I used to do, and the people that I had grown so accustomed to. I
can be a terrible Lone Ranger, handling my problems myself, placing myself, as I
said before, at the center. But this last time, I tried to approach things
differently. I went to God in prayer and said, "I'm hurting, please heal
me." And with the repetitive prayers for healing, a feeling of reassurance
came. I also picked up the phone and called a friend. I asked her if she would
walk with me, talk with me, pray with me. She did. The faithful influence of
that friend helped me to reframe, to see things in a renewed way. I said ouch!
help me! to God and other people; and God and people were there for me. The
presence of other people of faith are vital if human experiences are to become
conversion. It is very hard to make that jump to God alone. We need the context,
the social context of other loving, faithful people. Conversion, in other words,
needs community. In community we can pastor and shepherd each other. This is an area in which I feel the mainline Christian churches are not doing
what they can do, that is, provide the necessary community and pastoring that
help in conversion. A recent survey said that 75% of most congregations are not
even involved in worship. Only 25% worship; only 5% experience genuine community
or ministry. As Scott Peck says in A Different Drum, we are in pseudo-community,
afraid of the vulnerability needed for true community. A recent article by a
Msgr. Robert Fuller said: Our parishes are failing. Never before have we had so
many programs, so many volunteers; never have staff members worked harder. But,
he contends, our parishes are failing. Our parishes are failing if we agree that
the role of parishes and congregations is to foster conversion. In too many
congregations we have baptized unconverted Christians, sacramentalized,
unconverted Catholics. This is largely due to the fact that there is no genuine
pastoring community, the first which has to be the domestic church or family. I live in a parish of over 4,000 units or living situations representing tens
of thousands of people. In no way can one clergyman and a few other staff pastor
and shepherd such great numbers so that more and more of them experience their
break-downs as break-throughs. No, that can only happen when a typical parish or
congregation re-imagines all of God's people as shepherds, pastors to each
other. All off us, whether clergy or lay, are the same. We are God's
missionaries. A person suffering from bi-polar or manic-depression, gave me a ride to the
airport out of town recently. She spoke of the terribly painful mood swings that
she goes through and how life at times seems unbearable to her. I asked her who
helped her the most during these periods, and she said without hesitancy, not
the counselor, or her clergyman, but rather her husband. Then she used a
beautiful image to describe her husband. She said, "He is God's mercy for
me." The patience and kindness of the woman's husband, in the face of
others' intolerance and misunderstanding, were and are for the woman, an
incarnation, an enfleshment of the mercy of God. That husband is an example of
what I mean by people pastoring or shepherding each other. I was struck recently by the story of Bill Linder. Bill is 55 years old, has
a doctorate in sociology -- and is a monsignor in the Catholic Church. That
means he has established himself not only as a good priest, but also a priest of
special renown. Bill has been granted a share in the MacArthur Foundation.
Through it, he has access to hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, in
recognition of his humanitarian service over the years of his priesthood. He
accepts only about $9,000 for his salary from this grant. He donates the rest to
the low-income housing, housing for the homeless, day-care center, nursing
facility, security force, and the myriad of other services that constitute the
"New Community Foundation," a community organization that he has begun
in one of the poorest sections of Newark, New Jersey. If there are any funds
left after the end of the fiscal year, he shared the remanent of the funds with
other organizations in financial need. He does this to bear witness to his
community of the poor of the importance of sharing resources. Bill Linder is a man with a mission. Obviously having experienced profound
conversion experiences, he has been led into mission, into sharing his gifts,
his experiences with the neediest of the needy. He is truly a man with a
mission. We all ought to be people with a mission. What a difference there would
be in society if more people approached each other with a sense of mission and
service. What if spouses approached spouses, family members approached other
family members, friends approached friends, co-workers approached co-workers,
strangers approached strangers, and enemies approached enemies with a sense of
mission and service. The tonality of the world would indeed change. Conversion
is never self-contained. It explodes in a person's life, seeking to spread
spiritual richness to as many as possible. One of the tenets of Twelve Step
spirituality is that one stays in, indeed deepens one's recovery by reaching out
to help another in trouble. In the same way, any of us on the journey of
redemption, salvation, conversion deepens our own journey by trying to be
present in simple ways to other people on a journey similar to our own. Interview with Patrick Brennan
Lydia Talbot: Your message earlier,
Patrick, touched on those mood swings in your own personal case as an
obsessive-compulsive to "hitting the wall," as you say. How do you
keep God in the picture? Patrick Brennan: I am struck by the work
of Keith Miller in his reflection on Twelve Step Spirituality. He says that the
essence of all sin is self-centeredness. Then he puts a spin on
self-centeredness. He says that it is not necessarily greed. It is placing
yourself at the center and having to be in charge and having to be in control.
What we do is elbow God out of His job. I guess what I was reflecting on in
those stories and my own story regarding conversion is allowing God to be in the
center. When we allow that and when we practice that, I think a lot of chaos is
eliminated and peace enters. Talbot: When you talk about conversion,
you raise that sense of receptivity, that special openness that one must bring
to a transforming, revelatory experience. There aren't many people who can learn
that or do that. Is there a prescription? Brennan: I think, as James Loder
says in his book The Transforming Moment, there is no definite
prescription. Usually a life experience causes the shipwreck or the void in your
life and you have to surrender. There is no other option. Loder says that when
it has happened once, you learn to trust the process. Ten years later if another
experience comes your way, you don't resist God as much as you once did. You
say, "Hey, this is a transforming moment." Talbot: In thirty seconds, does that
characterize your own journey with the priesthood? Brennan: Very much with the priesthood
and my own humanity. Talbot: There must be resistance all the
way through. Brennan: There is. Talbot: How do you overcome that? Brennan: There is resistance in the
psychotherapeutic process; there is resistance in conversion. I think pain is a
great teacher. I think when we are trying to be in charge and in control, we
cause a great deal of pain for ourselves. When we surrender, some of the pain
ceases. Talbot: There is a peace that I sense in
your affirmation of that. Thank you, Patrick. |
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