Goodbye Mom. And thank you! 11/05/2010
![]() “Reading will always accompany the meals of the brothers, The reader should not be the one who just picks up the book, but someone who will read for a whole week . . . Brothers will read and sing not according to rank, but according to their ability to benefit their hearers.” - Rule of St. Benedict: Chapter 38. This has been a year filled with both high, and low level grief for me. Grief began with my mother’s death almost a year ago. It continued through the year, mostly at a lower level. This week, grief crescendoed again with the interment of Mom’s ashes last Tuesday. The harsh sound of earth hitting her metal urn made the stark reality clear to me. Her body is now at rest beside my father, my brother Michael, and many others of the family who have gone before us. The selection of the above chapter from the Rule may seem out of touch with the subject of Mom’s death and my grief. In fact, is directly in touch with the many wonderful gifts she passed on to me. Above all, Mom loved to read. She could be found at almost any hour of any day, curled up in a comfortable chair with a book in her hands. She would read almost everything. And the books she really loved, she read over and over. In fact she read them so many times that she would note the proof-reader’s mistakes in her books margins. During the time of her declining health I asked her what she would most love to be able to do again. The answer was simple, “I want to be able to read again.” Mom began to pass this love for reading to me when I was very young. My childhood evenings where spent with her arm curled around me while she helped me learn to read and to read well. She did this so well, that I too can be very often found with a book in my hand. I actually seem to go into a type of withdrawal when I haven’t been reading for awhile. I start to get restless, realize what I am missing, curl up in comfortable chair, with a cat in my lap, and open a favorite book. If I could have one last day with her here on earth, I think I would choose a day with some quiet conversation about all she’s meant to me, but there would also be time for both of us to curl up in our chairs and read together, while the loving atmosphere of home surrounds us. Mom gifted me with so many other things it is almost impossible to count them: a clear, strong, and true voice and a love of singing; a strong love for pets, especially the little people in cat suits that frequent my house; the knowledge that all people of what ever race, creed, nationality, gender or sexuality are God’s people and should be treated with the love Christ showed us; a deep love for the church; a deeper love for God. Those last two gifts were the most wonderful of all. She and my father raised us in the Christian faith, not with overt preaching, but with the quiet example of their own faith and their own lives. Going to church on Sunday was not optional. But there never was a struggle about that as they raised us to know Sunday was the Lord’s day, and Sunday morning was to be devoted to worship and learning about our Lord and Savior. It was no accident that two of her sons became pastors. I like to think if my oldest brother, Larry, had survived he would have been pastor too. That love, combined with the love of reading combined to make me pick up a different book one day; the Rule of St. Benedict.” So in a very real sense I my presence in my Benedictine community is also Mom’s gift to me. At Mom’s committal service I was moved to read a poem written by Joan Sauro in Weaving magazine. It describes a woman’s connection to her mother and to God. In many ways it parallels my own connections. "I was born connected to my mother. She diverted the rivers and streams from her body into my body. And my body remembers. It remembers my mother’s singing in the rivers and streams. It remembers how she walked in a good, quick step, and how she rested, with her hands laid gently across her body and mine.“ ”One day I was pulled kicking and screaming from the body of my mother. The long, swooping cord connecting us was cut. But no matter. The deed was done. I am flesh of my mother’s flesh, bone of my mother’s bone, made according to the design that she and my father planned together. “She fashioned my large, dark eyes. He made the deep and endless space behind my eyes. She took her hand and made my lips, and my wide, bright smile. My father’s hand made my tongue and laid poems and stories there, and clear, true singing. When he had finished, my mother made the tip of my tongue, for wit and plain speaking. Then she put a little wave in my hair to remind her of the sea at Bristol where she was born. And my father painted just the slightest trace of red in the wave to remind him of his red-haired mother who died when he was born.” “And so it was that my father and my mother made me, according to the design that they worked out together. But I am flesh of my mother’s flesh, bone of my mother’s bone. I was born connected. I was connected before I was born. Before my mother and father were born, and their mothers and fathers, before the earth was born, and time, long, long before then, I was connected to the Spirit of God so that there never was a time when I did not exist. And my spirit remembers the Spirit of God. It remembers how God diverted rivers and streams into my spirit. It remembers the humming of God in the rivers and streams, and how the waves rose and curled in the humming. My spirit remembers the warm breath of God over the rivers, and the name of God that rose and fell in the warm breath.” “One day the Spirit of God made me a tongue and wrote the name Jesus there, in remembrance of God’s first born Son. In my eyes the Spirit of God put darkness and light, evening and morning, birds, fish, every kind of wild beast and tame, the very image of God, and my eyes remember.” “So does my hand. It remembers the hand of God and how it is to make darkness and light, evening and morning, to create birds and flowers and the image of God out of the word of God written on my tongue. Every time I hear the words ‘Do this, and remember me,’ my spirit remembers the name of God which is Jesus, remembers the supper, the body and the blood, the kiss in the garden, and long before when the garden was created, and long, long before that. My spirit remembers the Spirit of God and how I was connected long before I was born.” “One day God who put the breath in me will call the breath back. On that day my body will lie down next to the body of my mother. There will be two times carved in stone over me - the time when I began and the time when I ended. “ ”Do not believe it!” There never was a time when I did not exist. I have always been connected to God. Sometimes I feel the cord coming out of my center connecting me to God. Then I remember how I always was connected to God and how I always will be. Mostly I remember how I cannot live without God.‟ This coming Sunday, All Saints Sunday, Mom’s name will be named in the Roll of the Saints; those who have gone before us; who now are members of the saints in light. The grief I feel now will never vanish. Over time it will lessen and interrupt my days less and less. But the gifts Mom gave me, those will blaze on as long as I live, and blaze on in my children and their children. Thank you Mom, thank you for the time I had with you and all the gifts you passed on to me. I will always love you. I will always miss you. God be with you Mom. I will see you again on the day of resurrection. Into your hands, O merciful Savior, we commend your servant Marie. Acknowledge her, we humbly pray, a sheep of your own fold, a lamb of your own flock, a sinner of your own redeeming. Receive her into the arms of your mercy, into the blessed rest of everlasting peace, and into the glorious company of the saints in light. Eternal rest grant her O Lord, and light perpetual shine upon her. Add Comment Departing on the Final Journey 11/27/2009
![]() "Let the brethren who are to be sent on a journey recommend themselves to the prayers of all the brotherhood and of the Abbot. And after the last prayer at the Work of God, let a commemoration always be made for the absent brethren." "On the day that the brethren return from the journey, let them lie prostrate on the floor of the oratory at all the Canonical Hours, when the Work of God is finished, and ask the prayers of all on account of failings, for fear that the sight of evil or the sound of frivolous speech should have surprised them on the way."- Rule of St. Benedict, Chapter 67 Thoughts of journeys have been present in my mind for several months. My current inteim pastorale is almost complete. On December 27th, it will be time to pack up my suitcase and to take up my pilgrim's staff, and be on my way. Interim's are pilgrims. While leaving those we have grown to love is always painful, the pain is balanced by the wonder of where the Spirit might next lead. My suitcase and pilgrim's staff always sit beside the pulpit. They tell the world, I am always ready to begin my journey. That journey will be accompanied by the prayers of the congregation I am leaving, the one where I am ariving, and my sister and brother Benedictines who constantly hold me in their hearts and prayers. Recently, another type of journey has penetrated my life. Two weeks ago, my mother entered her last pilgrimage, the one into what some term the "undiscovered country." For at 6:45 pm CST, on November 10th, she closed her eyes for the last time. Two days later my wife's cousin, Rev. John Bachman, left to accompany her on that journey. Unlike the journey I am always ready to begin as an interim pastor, I was ony somewhat ready for John's journey. it was expected, but it still was painful. My mother's departure was not at all expected. I would be untruthful if I told you that her departure has not deeply effected me. In fact it has occasioned grief such I have not known for years. But in the midst of my grief, there is hope. It is a hope spoken of by Mary Pickford as she described the voyage of a tall ship. "I am standing upon the seashore. A ship at my side spreads her white sails in the morning breeze and starts for the blue ocean. She is an object of beauty and strength, and I stand and watch her until at length she is only a ribbon or white cloud, just where the sea and sky come to mingle with each other.” Then someone at my side says, "There, she's gone!" “Gone where? Gone from my sight; that is all. She is just as large in mast and hull and spar as she was when she left my side and just as able to bear her load of living freight, to the place of destination. Her diminished size is in me, not in her; just at the moment when someone at my side says, "There! She's gone!" there are other voices ready to take up the glad shout, "There she comes!" And that, friends, is dying.” Grief never goes away. After awhile it penetrates one's life less and less, but it never truly disappears. Until the day when I myself board that ship, I will grieve for the death of my mother Marie, and for Pastor John. But I know their departure from this shore has been accompanied by the prayers of many of Christ's people. And on their arrival on the other side of the curtain through which we cannot see, other prayers will great their resurrections. I was not ready for the beginnings of their journeys. But through the grace of our l:ord Jesus Christ I know they are safe in the landfall of resurrection. For that, through my tears, I offer my thanks and praise. | Custom Search Pastor Frank
My name is Frank Fisher. I’m a native of a small town in Missouri, I spent my adolescence in Madison, Wisconsin, and ever since I entered college I’ve been a resident of Illinois. When I began college, I intended to enter pastoral ministry. Instead, I was diverted into a thirty year career with the Chicago Fire Department. I was ordained to an interim pastorate in the year 2000, and am now serving in my eighth interim. Many of you may wonder about the letters, "Obl OSB" that follow my name. The short explanation is that they mean I'm an Oblate of the Abbey of John the Baptist and Saint Benedict, an ecumenical Abbey located in Bartonville, Illinois. An Oblate is someone who has promised to follow the rule of Saint Benedict in their lives up to the point where their position in life makes following the rule impossible. CategoriesAll ArchivesJuly 2011 |