Thursday, February 25, 2016

ODE Omnes Donum Est - A rEReflection on Suffering


This title of this blog is a Latin phrase that translates, “All is Gift.” It has become a personal motto for me and the title of this blog. It carries great meaning for me and has meant different things for me at different times of my life. I first came up with the phrase for my solemn profession in 2000. At that time it referred to the great joy I was feeling to make my perpetual vows with the Friars Minor. A double fulfilling; the fulfilling of God's promise to me and my promise to God. At the time I knew it meant a great deal more for me. Since that time the idea that all is gift has come to reflect God's history or providence in my life. It is a witness to the fact that God has been present to me at all times, especially in difficult and mournful times. I believe that God does not send sorrow, pain and suffering. As it says in the Gospel of Matthew (Mt 7:9)

”Is there a man among you who would hand his son a stone when he asked for bread?...If you who are evil, know how to give your children what it good, how much more will your Father in heaven give good things to those who ask him!”

Pain is inevitable but suffering is optional. Pain cannot be avoided in this life but suffering is something I choose. We will have sickness and death, loss and grief. A part of living is occasionally losing. Part of joy is sorrow and a part of peace is conflict. One cannot have one without the other. Granted life, joy and peace is preferred to loss, sorrow and conflict. I can hold on to life has hard as I can but eventually my life will be over, regardless of what I may try to prevent it. No one has yet come up with a way to defeat death, except Jesus. Which is my point in Omnes Donum Est. God is always present to turn my loss into life. When this earthly life is ended God is ready to show me eternal life, in which there is no fear or sorrow again. But God's gift is even more present than a future life in heaven. After all, we are still here on this earth and our pain is still present, all around us as it seems sometimes. How does God gift us in our present pain?

I believe that the answer lies in God's readiness to come to our aid. He wants to be of assistance to help us transform pain into joy. At daily prayers we pray, “Lord come to our aid.” Paul tells us,

“We know that by turning everything to their good God co-operates with all those who love him” (Romans 8:28)

Through faith God turns everything to our good. We must, however, have faith and ask for help. We may not know what to ask for except to ease our pain. That is enough. The Spirit knows what we cannot express or what we cannot know to express. That is enough. That is all God needs from us to believe that he turns all things to good for those who believe in him. I am sure that most or even all of you have been through some very difficult times in your life. At the time of a trial I have asked myself, “How am I going to get through this?” And it was true, I did not know at the time. Yet, I continued to believe in the love of God for me. I have asked God, “Why did you let this happen?” I did not at the time connect God with help. It was only after a time that I saw God's action in my life by looking back at the past. How I managed to get thorough some hard times was by the loving presence of God and my final cry of, “HELP” when all other prayers seemingly went unanswered , this prayer was heard. I see that now. For a long time I sought answers to questions that could not be answered.

God gave us, a result of Adam's fall from grace, free will. Our grief and suffering is sometimes our own fault, sometimes it is inflicted upon us from others. Either way, a loving God does not send pain. A loving God cries with us in our pain. A loving God stands ready to lead us through our sorrow. God knows us because of the pain and death of his Son, Jesus Christ. It is because of Jesus God knows how to help. It is because of Jesus we have a God with flesh and who knows what all fleshy beings experience, our joys and pains. So cast your cares upon Jesus because he knows our troubles and is ever ready to be there for us.

I look back on my life and I see how some truly marvelous things have happened as a result of God acting in my life. My father died when I was 8. It was hard growing up without a father. It was not common at that time to be a single parent family. So there was nobody for me to relate to who had a similar circumstance. I felt very much alone. Things became more difficult over the next four years, with abuse and poverty as additional factors along with my grief. I continued to go to church and receive the sacraments again not realizing the connection between the ease of my pain and the benefit of my prayers and belief. As an adult, I see now that through my simple faith, God kept me going and growing. I look back and I see that the person I am today is a direct result of the pain I went through. The suffering I went through was because I did not trust in God to take care of me, to come to my aid, to ease my pain.

So whatever problem or difficulty you are facing this Lent. Turn your face toward Jesus for he knows what is going on within you. He knows the pain and as you gaze upon his tortured body know that there is help, there is solace, there is a remedy. He will soothe anxiety and provide answers for tor the perplexed. There is help in Jesus for those who believe in him and his love and that All is Gift.


Remembering gives birth to belief and when I trust in my belief I have faith. I look back to help me understand and accept the present which in turns moves me with trust and faith into the future. God's time works for those who can see, for those who feel the rain and remember. There is goodness in floods, there is a benefit in hurricanes. Snow covers the ground and readies the earth to accept the new birth of spring as the dry and dusty earth drinks in the new rain. All is Gift, all from God is good. We must have eyes to see and a memory to see where we have been in order to see where we are going.

I presented this reflection to the Novices here in Uganda.  At the end I olayed a song, I Rember, I Believe by a called Sweet Honey in the Rock.  Here is a link to that song
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUAbHhlOYhE.  Enjoy OED

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