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Helen Weber-McReynolds, RCWP, Pastor
Maria Thornton McClain, RCWP, Retired Pastor

Anticipation

11/29/2021

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Homily,  Advent, 11/28/21
 
Jeremiah 33: 12-16
Ps. Luke 3: 4-6
1 Thessalonians 3: 6-13
Luke 1: 5-25
 
          Do you remember the song Anticipation, by Carly Simon? It starts out with the lyric, “We can never know about the days to come, but we think about them anyway.” It acknowledges that the future holds a large element of chance, so we really can’t predict it. By the end of the song, however, she has come to the conclusion that we can help create our own future by living fully in the present moment. By being present to one another in love, we use our time together the best we can, and so the song ends by repeating the beautiful line, “These are the good old days…. These are the good old days.” In other words, we shouldn’t procrastinate. We can’t wait until the perfect moment. This is the time to listen to one another and treat one another with respect and helpfulness. This is the time to love one another with all our hearts. These are the good old days.
          I think the same is true about the season of Advent. The word “Advent” is derived from the Latin word adventus, meaning “coming,” which is a translation of the Greek word parousia. It refers to arrival, waiting, preparing, anticipation. There are elements both of anticipation and memory to Advent. We treasure the memory of the birth of Jesus, God’s human presence in the world, and remember how he taught us to make God continually more present, by loving one another and working to make sure everyone shares in Creation’s riches. We also look forward to creating the Beloved Community, and come to realize that this moment now is when we can most make a difference in bringing love and justice to life. Part of life is chance. But we help create our own future, we help bring the Love of God to reality, by looking out for one another’s rights and putting aside our own selfishness, today, every day, not waiting for the perfect time to arrive. These are the good old days. We are making them the good old days by learning to listen to God and changing ourselves to love more and better. Advent gives us four weeks to think about what is still painful and missing in the world, and helps us think about making changes in our own lives to help make all our relationships more caring and just.
          Our readings help us focus on our ancestors in the faith, and their example in bringing God’s human presence to life. Today we heard about the courage and faith of Elizabeth and Zechariah, and the long wait they endured, until finally being reassured that they would play a vital role in preparing the world for a crucial moment, a time when God’s human messengers would speak truth to power. In the coming weeks, we will remember the roles their son, John the Baptist, and Joseph, and especially Mary had to play in revealing the reality of God’s love. We will recall the bravery they showed in going against social conventions to live their faith. And they will provide strong role models for us as we strive to bring God’s love to life in our everyday interactions.
          In our first reading today we heard from the prophet Jeremiah, who wrote as one of the people going through, and recovering after, the Babylonian exile. Part of his mission was to communicate hope in God to the people of Israel and Judah after Jerusalem had been destroyed. As we heard, he spoke in anticipation of the restoration of integrity and justice to the people’s land. And he spoke of God’s unending love for them, whatever happened. God still loves us, he said. Let’s make these days the good old days.
          And Paul, also, in his letter to the Thessalonians, spoke of his joy in hearing of the faith and love of the people of Thessalonia, despite the pain of their separation. You are making God’s love alive in your community, he told the Thessalonians. I am overjoyed to hear it. Jesus’ teachings are alive in you. You are working to make sure these are the good old days.
          So it comes back to us. How do we make sure these are the good old days, for everyone in our society, especially for those whom the system has been rigged against? Where can we start in our everyday lives? Can we take some time this Advent in prayer and meditation to make ourselves more aware and compassionate? Can we read and inform ourselves of ways to help correct injustices? We are called to help bring Christ to life in our individual lives. How do we help make these the good old days for ourselves and others? What do you think?
​
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Maria's Journey to Priesthood

11/9/2021

1 Comment

 
​I don’t know the real beginning of my journey to priesthood.  Maybe it was my devotion to the Eucharist and the Church Year that I had developed from grade school days.
One thing I do know is that the convent was not the right fit for me.  I stuck it out for 15 years, because I thought being a Sister of Mercy was what would fill my longing for some way to serve God and help people in need.  When I was assigned to teach fourth grade in an inner city Catholic school I thought that would was be the answer. It wasn’t! 
Besides teaching, the sisters at St. Bridget’s visited the children in the homes, including some in public housing  high rise apartments.  I chose to visit one of the girls in my class.  I had trouble holding my breath all the way up in the elevator to the eighth floor so I wouldn’t have to smell the stale urine.  The father of the student I visited sat with a long whip next to him to deal with his children when they wouldn’t obey him.  His children sat quietly in his presence.  You can imagine how they acted when he wasn’t around.
Some of the children lived in  public housing row houses.  One of my students lived in one that was across the street from where we lived.  t The police staked out the place from the front window of the row house where the sisters lived.  The police were looking for a drug dealer.
 There was never a dull moment. However at the end of the school year  I was reassigned to a school in a middle class neighborhood.  I figured I must have been a failure as an inner city fourth grade teacher.  I was very upset.
 Within a few years I was teaching high school religion but that wasn’t  really satisfying either.  I chose to leave religious life and set out on my own.  I taught high school religion and other subjects to fill up my schedule.   But life was still not satisfying.  I didn’t have the right romance either.   It was then that I saw an ad in the National Catholic Reporter for a   Director of Religious Education position in Indianapolis.  I took it.
That work was more interesting but I soon got tired of counting crayons and glue sticks.  By that time I was married and still a DRE.   I was reading in the National Catholic Reporter a lot of what was going on in the Church and was fascinated by the stories of women becoming priests in various places in the world like Czechoslovakia.  There Ludmilla Javorova was ordained a Catholic priest by her bishop so she could minister to the priests in prison for their faith. She served in the underground Church during the Communist regime until Communist rule ended in 1990.  Her courage and dedication were an  inspiration to me.   I followed her story.
 
.    About that time I attended a Call to  Action Conference and actually met a real American womanpriest.  I quizzed her about her preparation and her credentials   I went to the Roman Catholic Women Priest  booth in the Exhibit Hall, picked up literature, and went to a Mass the next day presided over by a man and woman priest.  It was beautiful and felt like this was the way it should be.   It was an ah ha moment for me.
When I got home from the conference I read one of the books about womenpriestsI had bought and found the name and contact information of a womanpriest in the United States.  I called her and asked her explain to me more about their ministry.  When I told her about myself she suggested that I get a group together of those interested in women’s call to priesthood. I did that.  It led to the celebration of the Feast of St. Mary of Magdala at a local Catholic high school in July 2009.
 Several of the people there expressed an interest in gathering again soon to pray and study together.  That group formed the beginning of St. Mary of Magdala Catholic Community in Indianapolis.  I was ordained a deacon in 2010 and a priest on April 15, 2012.  My journey was complete.   I had found a home where I belonged.  I can live out my faith and serve others for as long I am able.
Maria Thornton McClain, RCWP
2021 ​
1 Comment
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    Helen Weber-McReynolds , RCWP, Pastor
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    Maria McClain, RCWP, Retired Pastor
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    Angela N. Meyer, RCWP Brownsburg, IN community


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Helen Weber-McReynolds, Pastor
317-691-1016/ Email
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