I
talked to a woman on the phone recently who explained to me how her
heart breaks for people—for people suffering knowingly or unknowingly,
physically, emotionally, spiritually, for people alone and overly
burdened, lost or hopeless, people addicted and helpless—and I believed
her. I believed her strongly, because her voice crawled
through the telephone wire like a child through a dark tunnel uncertain
whether or not she had to be brave. She spoke with
frustration as if, unruly, her breaking heart merely wished to afflict
her, as though it were unfairly painful to her, but I don’t think it
was. So I said in response, “you know, it’s not a bad thing that your heart should break. This is good. There’s no need for resilience here; just let it break.” I said it because I learned it. It was one of the biggest lessons my time in Nicaragua taught me.
I
remember clearly rounding the first mountain pass out of Matagalpa in
our white pick-up truck shifting gears in my frustration, recalling a
teenage girl speak of how she was introduced to pornography at a young
age and its ensuing effects. I learned in that moment that the pain I felt—and didn’t like feeling—was a good pain. God
taught me that in the breaking of my heart other hearts would be
healed, and indeed, that for certain hearts to heal mine would have to
break. And somehow on that road from Matagalpa I now loved
that little girl not for the pain I felt but I loved her in the midst
of that pain and despite the pain and that can be a powerful love.
Sometimes,
I think, the Lord’s heart must have been in a constant state of
“breaking”—certainly in an evident way at his Agony and in a literal way
after his death on the cross. His wounded heart is a
great mystery and perhaps has meanings only accessible to angels and
saints, but what we can affirm is that by its breaking—the tearing and
rending of the Divine Man’s heart—our hearts might be healed. So
I say to those, like the woman who called, whose hearts know too well
the sorrow of brokenness, don’t be afraid to just let them break, so
that those whose hearts are too hard to break for themselves, may, by
your merits, be healed.
+ Br. Joseph Michael Fino, CFR
Paterson, NJ
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Mother Mary said at Fatima: "My Immaculate Heart will be your refuge and the sure way which will lead you to God." St. Thomas Aquinas said: "The things we love tell us who we are!" With that in mind, I will try to post each day something about Our Blessed Lady, items about the Holy Roman Catholic Church, and public domain Catholic books too! I pray you enjoy my ministry! Below are two albums of pictures that I created: 1. Our grand daughter Adrianna. 2. Tears of Mary!
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
From the Friars eLetter: Love in a Time of Brokenness
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