Pondering The Precious, Spirit-Filled Moments
This past
year, before all of the Covid-19 mayhem began, some of us were sitting around
the staff room at lunchtime one day.
Somehow the stars had aligned and there was a bigger group of us than
usual. As can sometimes happen in a
Catholic school, the conversation turned to the topic of religion and God, and
while I can’t remember the details of what we talked about, I do remember that
a sense of sacred space grew between all of us.
As we talked and shared our thoughts, the presence of the Spirit seemed
tangible. When the bell went at the end
of the lunch hour, someone said, “That was great!” We left feeling alive and ready to enter into
the rest of the day.
A lot has
been written about the value of Catholic Education but, in this reflection, I
am choosing to focus on what some might call a more selfish end: how working in Catholic Schools has fed me as
a Teacher/ Chaplain. I grew up in
Winnipeg, where my parents couldn’t afford to send me to the private Catholic girls’
school. It wasn’t until I began teaching
that I had any knowledge of the inner workings of Catholic School Districts and
it was only when I came to Edmonton Catholic as a Religious Sister that I
really appreciated the opportunities that we have as Catholic educators.
The fact
that staff-room chitchat can quickly turn into beautiful discussions about God
is just one of the ways that I often find myself spiritually nourished in my
work. Every now and then, students will
write or say something that makes my heart smile as I relish the wisdom of
their insights. For a Religion
assignment, one student wrote: “God for
me is not just a person, He is everything.
God is love, hope, faith. I am
happy and proud to believe in God.”
Another printed: “God is in my
heart. I would be just a human without
God in my life, but now I’m a human of God with Him in me.” A “human of God”: I love that turn of phrase! And a third from a student who was born in
South Sudan: “What I drew here is what
God looks like to me. It is a face with
no eyes, mouth or lips. Just a face full
of colour: different colours.” What
a joy to see the Holy Spirit alive and flowing through our young people today!
And the
most profound conversations about God seem to happen in the most unexpected of
places. Returning from a field trip last
year I sat with a group of students that I didn’t know very well. A question came up about whether or not God
used natural disasters to punish people.
A thoughtful discussion ensued and I remember thinking how strange and
wonderful it was for that discourse to happen on a school bus of all
places. And yet, it’s often been outside
the classroom where students have turned to me and suddenly asked about my life
as a Religious Sister and what it’s like to live in a church (which we don’t,
by the way.)
In the
course of our daily school routines throughout the year, there are many other
moments that will suddenly bring our minds, and perhaps our hearts, back to God: watching a student pause in the chapel
doorway to make the sign of the Cross, another sharing about the peace that
came into her heart during a class prayer, a grandson requesting that we pray
for an ill grandparent. Do I remember to
stop and recognize these events as the precious gems that they are? I hope, at least sometimes, that I do.
Cardinal
Bishop Luis Tagle has referred to teenagers as our unconventional prophets and
evangelizers. It is time well spent to make the space every so often to sit and
ponder how God is nourishing us through the students and staff that we meet in
our Catholic Schools. What a gift to
meet the Lord each day in buildings where God is actively welcomed. Let us pray that we will never lose sight of
the varied ways God continues to bless us!
This reflection was originally written for the Catholic Dimension, a publication of the ACSTA for the occasion of Catholic Education Week in Alberta.
This reflection was originally written for the Catholic Dimension, a publication of the ACSTA for the occasion of Catholic Education Week in Alberta.
Michelle Langlois, fcJ
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