“Mommy, I can do it, trust me.” She says to me, as she is wavering on an overturned laundry basket, reaching on her tip toes to reach her mermaid costume. “I am not worried about you, hunny, but…(the potential boo-boos that might exist in a few moments). She barely got ahold of the mermaid tail and tumbles down to the ground. Yes, crying begins. And yes, mommy is sorry. I suppose this will not be the last time that I “oversee” a bad choice, a potential pitfall that is going to hurt. It isn’t that we don’t trust our children; it is that they don’t always make the best decisions, right? If the issue isn’t about trust, but about what is the right choice or wrong choice, how come we don’t interrupt? How can we be bystanders to an epic fall that will come from an overturned laundry basket turned ladder?
It got me thinking about my relationship with God and the trust He places on me, despite any metaphorical laundry basket I might be standing on. Just as I have to have a trust in Him, He in turn trusts me. He trusts me to make the right choices, yes, but more importantly to interrupt the bad ones. To interrupt or to stop the bad choices can mean that you are consciously trying to make the good ones. Looking through the lens of stewardship, we see that the good choices are commonly those involving time, talent, and treasure. Simply put, can I make a choice to spend more time with God, to serve God’s people, and to share my wealth with those who need it more than I do week after week? If I live my life through the lens of stewardship, I see that I can keep making good choices a priority, so that I don’t entertain the bad choices that come to mind.
As Gracey got up and calmed down, I had to explain that a laundry basket is not a ladder. She thought she was being creative and that practically, “it worked, mommy.” While I appreciate her cleverness, she and I both realized that sometimes we need to pause, take a step back, and ask for help…oh, and keep the laundry basket right side up.
Katie Price is the Cathedral Stewardship and Discipleship Coordinator. She can be reached at [email protected].
Due to the inexhaustible human capacity to come with excuses, I would like to begin this article by saying that there is no better time to start reading scriptures than right now. The scriptures, however intimidating they may seem, can provide for us deeper insight into the human experience and our relationship with our creator. The Holy Bible contains the story of our salvation and narratives that help us understand who God is, who we are, and the relationship between us. The parables that Jesus told to his contemporaries are just as relevant to the lives of twenty-first century Americans as they were for first century Israelites. The Bible can speak to our hearts and help us through the many experiences that life brings our way from the greatest of joys to the deepest of sorrows. For many, the question of where to begin might raise an issue when deciding to dive into the scriptures. The short answer is, anywhere, but it certainly helps if we have some more direction than that. Many people find it fruitful to begin with the Book of Genesis, or the Psalms, or the Gospels. No Matter where we begin, finding a good Catholic Study Bible can absolutely help us when we first approach scriptures. Knowing the context that each book was written, who it was written to and why it was originally written give us important details that can help us understand what the book is attempting to convey and what that means in our own lives. We must never forget however, that the scriptures don’t only let us know things about God but can truly allow us to know God. Our study of scripture should never be divorced from praying with the scriptures because prayer is the means by which we come to know our God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Asking the Lord in prayer to guide our reading of the Bible and bring us closer to him through it can absolutely enhance our experience of spending time with the scripture. This can certainly make our journey through the bible a much slower experience but that it not necessarily a bad thing. We must have patience with ourselves and understand that reading the bible is less about finishing the book and more about coming to know the story of our salvation and truly growing in our relationship with the Lord.
I was able to get away a few weeks ago for a week’s vacation. I went to England, London mostly, for a week. I first visited that grand city twenty-five years ago this past summer on a French club trip, in between my sophomore and junior year in high school. I was way too young then to truly appreciate the city, but over the past ten years or so I have become a self-taught student of Tudor history and decided it was time to go back and see what I have read so much about. That Monday, while I was eating breakfast, news started coming in real-time about the horrific shooting in Las Vegas. Since then our nation has struggled to come to grips with another senseless tragedy which resulted in the loss of so many innocent lives and so many injuries. Debates have raged, and will continue to, about guns, and laws, and rights, and so on. In the aftermath of this great tragedy we may feel adrift in darkness, but that is not so.
Part I
The Eucharist is the great sign and agent of this expansive communion of charity. “Because the loaf of bread is one, we, though many, are one body, for we all partake of the one loaf” (1 Cor 10:17). Here people enjoy a unique union with Christ and, in him, with one another. Here his love—indeed, his very self— flows into his disciples and, through them and their practice of stewardship, to the entire human race. Here Jesus renews his covenant-forming act of perfect fidelity to God, while also making it possible for us to cooperate. In the Eucharist, Christians reaffirm their participation in the New Covenant; they give thanks to God for blessings received; and they strengthen their bonds of commitment to one another as members of the covenant community Jesus forms. 