An Unexpected Encounter

Image: Unsplash/Matt Collamer

This is a story of a friend and his wife who have taken a chance in their town to reach out to the homeless community.  Upon finding there were 20 folks who camped in the subway station each evening seeking warmth and shelter, they decided that they would purchase Tim Hortons gift cards and give them out each morning, so the folks are able to purchase a hot breakfast.  As they continued their morning ritual over many months, the folks began to talk with them, and one gentleman asked about getting a Bible and inquired about seeing a Priest. 

Image: Steve Knutson/Unsplash

My friend obliged on both counts, giving his new friend a Bible, and inviting him to his parish and arranging a time that the gentleman could talk with the Priest.  There was a comfortableness growing between both parties and each morning they looked for each other so they could greet them and wish their new friends ‘a good day’ knowing they would meet again the following morning.  This had become a pattern for my friend and his wife and getting up at 4 am was not a hardship for them.

Feeling more comfortable the gentleman made his way to the Parish and spoke with the Priest a couple more times.  An unexpected thing happened for my friends.  On a morning as usual they went to the subway station ‘cards in hand’ only to be told their friend died in the night.  There was not any further information given.  Imagine the sadness of my friends and the shock they are continuing to live with.

As my friends told me this story, I couldn’t help but think ‘you took a chance with a stranger” and it changed your lives.  This homeless man had received respect and concern from them, and they granted his last wishes for a Bible and a meeting with the Priest.  There is a mystery here of God working within us if we but take a chance and engage with folks we meet on our streets each day.

I read a recent quote from Mirabai Starr:

Our task is to mend our broken world.  We do this through acts of loving kindness, generosity and hospitality. Our actions count, but our loving thoughts make a difference.  They help mend the world.
— Adapted from Living School Symposium, Albuquerque NW Center for Action and Contemplation

-Sister Ann MacDonald, CSJ

World Day of the Sick

“It is not good that man should be alone—Healing the Sick by Healing Relationships,” is the theme of Pope Francis' message for the 2024 commemoration of the World Day of the Sick, held on 11 February.

February 11 also coincides with the Feast Day of Our Lady of Lourdes.  It is the anniversary of when Our Blessed Mother appeared to St. Bernadette Soubirous in Lourdes, France.  Our Blessed Mother's many visitations to St. Bernadette resulted in the miraculous waters from the springs at Lourdes where thousands of faith-filled sick have been healed. 

World Day of the Sick is held every year on this date and as a theme for this year, Pope Francis uses the words from Genesis that God spoke after creating the first human, "It is not good that man should be alone." 

Unsplash: Laura Vinck

We are encouraged to seek healing by healing relationships—something our world needs to heed when so many wars are the result of humans not believing that we can live peacefully, together on Earth. 

The operative word is LOVE; not like, or tolerate, or endure, or accept but LOVE where one's focus is on the good of the other.

To learn more about this year's theme you can read or listen to the message from Rome here. 

-Sister Elaine Cole, csj

And now abide faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is LOVE.
— 1 Corinthians 13:13