This week in Madonna House was made up of
a backdrop of ordinary life with some un-ordinary events looming in the
foreground.
The directors’ meetings are ongoing (they
wrap up later this week), and so we all continue to enjoy having the directors
of our various mission houses around. While this is not a format in which I can
discuss the meetings themselves (I am an attendee at them), they are proving to
be a rich time of sharing our life and the work of the Holy Spirit among us in
the year 2016. God is good.
Last Thursday quite a few of us (I didn’t
get a count, but it must have been over twenty) went to the March for Life in
Ottawa to bear witness to the evil of abortion. As those who have been on this
March, or the much larger one in the States, know very well, it was a long and
very full day, but very blessed. Several of us went to the Rose Dinner in the
evening where we had the opportunity to listen to Obianuju
Ekeocha, about whom you can read at the link. She was fantastic, and gave a
strong encouragement to Canada to reclaim its moral voice in the world by
defending the human rights of its weakest and most vulnerable members.
Besides that, the other outstanding event
was the feast of Pentecost, which we celebrated with the Divine Liturgy of the
Christian East, followed by a festive brunch. We received our ‘Pentecost gifts’
at that meal—this is a very old custom at MH where each person receives a gift
and a fruit of the Holy Spirit on a nicely decorated piece of paper. I received
wisdom and peace this year, for example.
In the afternoon we had a picnic which we
try to do each year when the directors are all here, usually around our May 17
foundation day.
It was a bit amusing this year—several
people had prayed for a day without black flies, the early spring scourge of
all outdoor activities. Well, their prayers were answered all right—we had snow
instead! But if you think that prevented us from having a great picnic, then I
guess you just don’t know MH that well.
Sports were played. People sat around the
camp fire. For the less hardy, there were card games and other recreational
activities in the house. Some MH people looooooove to dance (I, uh…, am not
among them) and so there was a bit of dancing going on somewhere or other
(yeah, I am definitely not a dancer).
The picnic (which included a hamburger and
hot dog supper, and home made ice cream for dessert) went on well into the
evening with music and fun—it was basically just a great day to be together.
All of this went on against a backdrop of ordinary life—the gardens are busy, snow or no snow. The men are hard at work on the various building projects that dominate their lives right now. The women keep everyone fed and watered and clean and tidy. And we all lift up our hearts in prayer and intercession for all of you and for our troubled world in all the works of our hands.
We had snow yesterday in Michigan too. :-)
ReplyDeleteCamp fires with a dusting of snow is something Northerners can appreciate.
Wisdom and peace are much needed, what wonderful gifts.
God bless!
We had snow yesterday in Michigan too. :-)
ReplyDeleteCamp fires with a dusting of snow is something Northerners can appreciate.
Wisdom and peace are much needed, what wonderful gifts.
God bless!