“Lord, You know the burden of my
sorrow.” God
is faithful and God can be trusted! Do
you believe that? St. Teresa of Jesus
prayed:
“Let nothing trouble you/
Let nothing frighten you
Everything passes/
God
never changes
Patience/ Obtains all
Whoever has God/
Wants
for nothing
God alone is enough.”
In the General Introduction to the Order
of Christian Funerals, # 8, “If one member suffers in the body of
Christ which is the Church, all the members suffer with that member.” (1 Cor. 12:26)
For this reason, those who are baptized into Christ and
nourished at the same table of the Lord are responsible for one another. When Christians are sick, their brothers and
sisters share a ministry of mutually charity and “do all that they can to help
the sick return to health by showing love for the sick, and by celebrating the
sacraments with them.” So too, when a
member of Christ’s Body dies, the faithful are called to a ministry of consolation
to those who have suffered the loss of one who they love. Christian
consolation is rooted in that hope that comes from faith in the saving death and
resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ…. The
Church calls each member of Christ’s Body—priest, deacon, laity—to participate
in the ministry of consolation: to care for the dying to pray for the dead, to
comfort those who mourn.
Why do we Pray and why is
there Suffering?
I sent this response to
someone who wrote me about suffering and prayer.
Dear_____,
Thank you for your
questions, which I think, can be summed up in two.
1. Why do people suffer,
and 2. Why do we pray?
These may appear to be
simple questions on the surface, but they are quite profound. The first thing you want to consider is why
you pray?
Do you pray to get what
you want?
Do you pray to know what
God wants?
Do you pray to build and
strengthen your relationship with God?
I suggest the primary purpose
of praying should be to build and strengthen your relationship with God, so you
can discover His will for your life and follow it.
The question about
suffering is at its essence a mystery; we can know something about suffering,
but not the entire picture.
A Bishop in Ireland asked
a question at Confirmation about the Trinity.
A young lad responded the Trinity is 3 in 1 and 1 in 3. The Bishop said to him, “I don’t understand”
The young lad said, “You not supposed to, it’s a mystery!”
The best explanation I
have found for why we suffer is a story about a Rabbi teaching his students
about 400 years before Christ. He was teaching 4 or 5 of his students just
outside their village. As they looked
down on their village, they saw foreign troops invading the village.
They heard the screaming, the yelling and
saw the fires. Finally, the rabbi looked
up to heaven and screamed, “If only I were God!” One of his students asked him, “What would you
do differently if you were God.”
The rabbi answered, “I would do nothing
differently, but I would understand!”
We don’t understand why
there is pain and suffering in the world, but Jesus taught us what to do with
our pain and suffering. Offer it to God,
the Father and ask Him to bless it and have good come from it. It is what we do with our suffering that helps us grow or
stumble on our road here.
Let me share excerpts
from Psalm 18, “I love you, Lord, my
strength, my rock, my fortress, my savior.
My God is the rock where I take refuge; my shield, my mighty help, my
stronghold.”
St. Francis de Sales gave us this insight, “Let God gather what He has
planted in His garden, He takes nothing out of season.”
In God’s season, we find our ultimate
hope! That is the land of the living.
St. Francis de Sales
taught us, “Do not look forward to the changes and chances of this
life with fear; rather look upon them with strong hope that, as they arise,
God, whose child you are, will deliver you from them.” Begin each day TRUSTING in God, live each
moment in that TRUST, and allow
TRUSTING God’s WILL to RUN your life and
then you will live as a child of God. Easy to write, easy to say, but very hard to live.
St. Joseph pray for us.
St. Andre Bessette
intercede for us.
May God Be Praised!