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A dream come true

by | Dec 8, 2012

One of the kids’ friends came by for a visit the other day.

“You guys sure have a lot of books!”

And the truth is, we do.

We’re a family of book lovers, I’m happy to say. I’ve been collecting great books since I was a little girl riding her bike to the downtownScottsdale library, around the corner from the police station and our parish church, Our Lady of Perpetual Help.

Back then, Scottsdale was just a sleepy little town, not the glitzy place it is these days.

One of my fondest memories of childhood is the annual used book sale at our parish school. I still have the hardback copy of “Little Women” purchased at one of those sales, where we’d usually walk away with an entire paper grocery bag full of good reads.

I still say one of the best parts of having kids is sharing all the great books I loved as a child with them. “Sam I Am.” “A Fly Went By.” “Charlotte’s Web.” “The Chronicles of Narnia.”

One of the wonderful things about reading is that no matter where you are, in your mind, you can be somewhere else. You might be sitting at the doctor’s office, waiting and waiting, or even the dreaded Motor Vehicle Department. But, when you have your book, you travel with your mind to the American South of the Civil War era, or Berlin in 1945. You might visit the future, if you’re into sci-fi. (I’m not.)

Now, when you’re a mom with five sons like me, you might not get to travel a lot. At least you can go there through the world of books, right?

But in 2012, every dream I ever had came true. I travelled to the Holy Land, saw the place where Jesus Christ was born, where He walked with the Apostles, and where He died and rose again. I went to Rome and walked through St. Peter’s Square and visited the catacombs. These were total gifts of God to me, trips I never would have been able to take except that God looked down and said, “Here. Enjoy.”  It was an amazing year of blessings.

Bethlehem, West Bank, inside the Church of the Nativity

 

 Tel Aviv on the Mediterranean, in front of a Roman aqueduct

The other dream that came true in 2012 was that I wrote my first novel, “A Martyr’s Crown.” The book is the fruit of two years’ worth of interviews and volunteer work among the Chaldean Catholics of Arizona.

I hope the book will touch many hearts and both inspire and inform. The era of martyrs is not over. Many people in the Middle East, in Africa and Asia are truly suffering because of their faith in Jesus Christ.

We here in the West must stand in solidarity with our brothers and sisters in the faith. We have much to learn from their deep faith and fidelity in spite of centuries of persecution.

 

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I looked up from the pages of the book I was engrossed in at the sound: My husband of nearly 40 years was sitting at the kitchen table drumming his fingers steadily.

“I know that sound,” I told him with a smirk. “That’s the sound you make when there’s something that needs doing, something you’d rather not have to do, BUT you’re going to get up and do it anyway. Because that’s just how you roll.” He laughed, knowing I had read his mind. At this point in our journey, I know his “tells” and he knows mine.

On that particular day, it turned out to be a problematic toilet in the kids’ bathroom — not exactly most people’s favorite DIY task. Later that day, as I smiled at the memory of our playful bantering, it got me thinking.

Be countercultural, and while you’re at it, use less plastic

Be countercultural, and while you’re at it, use less plastic

The phrase jumped out at me and set off alarm bells:
“The growing burden on this sandwich generation weakens careers and quality of life…”
The Soulful Catholic’s quiet perusal of the Sunday-morning edition of the Wall Street Journal is generally not fraught with consternation. And yet this seemingly innocuous turn of phrase had her taking screenshots for further reflection.
The article in question was examining the challenges faced by the sandwich generation, referring to those adults charged with the care of both young children and elderly parents or grandparents.
As someone who navigated that season of life not so long ago, I sympathize with the struggle. But a burden? A drag on my career? A lower quality of life?
Uh, no. Definitely no.

Our joy will attract others to faith in Christ. Outrage and vitriol? Not so much.

Our joy will attract others to faith in Christ. Outrage and vitriol? Not so much.

“Next week, don’t be the same person you were last week. Let’s start to live a more radical response to the gift of the best news ever … I beg you to respond by sharing the Gospel with confidence, by rejoicing in his love even when life is really hard.”— Chris Stefanick, National Eucharistic Congress, July 21

Of all the powerful statements that were uttered at the National Eucharistic Congress, this is the one that stays with me.

Many of us seem to have lost the sense that the Gospel is, in fact, good news. When faith becomes caught up in debate and politics and keeping score, the heart of the Gospel is lost. When we become cynics who are quick to complain, criticize and condemn, we forget to share the joy we should have from being a disciple of the Lord Jesus. We forget what Jesus told us: “I did not come to condemn the world but to save the world (John 12:47).”

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