Who would have imagined?

In this issue, we are introducing something which can be done only in an online magazine – videos. Let the videos draw you into the article!

The deadly pandemic seems to have cured people who could never look beyond the borders of their own countries. It showed them that what happens in a far-away country can very quickly affect them. They saw for themselves that the virus which originated in China could kill people in every part of the globe.

Jesuits and all those who share their spirituality did not need a pandemic to realize that we live in a global village. Wherever we might have been born, since all humans are God’s children, we can’t be anyone else than global citizens. Therefore a tragedy that strikes a country – any country – should bother us all.

This is why, feeling overwhelmed by what happened on 24 February 2022, I used my regular column in the New Leader to express all that I thought and felt. In the article titled, ‘Just when the world heaved a sigh of relief…’ I wrote: 

“Who would have imagined that just when the world was beginning to heave a sigh of relief over the gradual decline of the pandemic, Russia’s strong man, Vladimir Putin, would come up with something that would plunge the world back into shock, sorrow, worry and fear?    

“Most people believed that, after having witnessed the manifold horrors of war in the two World Wars, no sane leader will ever initiate a war, whatever may be their grievances. Successive Popes had expressed the hope that humans will never again choose the path of war, as it does not lead us anywhere, as it does not solve any problem, in spite of the deaths and destruction it causes. But the world had not taken into account the mindset of the man who now rules Russia.

“What are the reasons Putin proffers for his invasion? He says Russia’s security is under threat, because Ukraine wants to join NATO. Why does Ukraine want to join NATO and the European Union? Because of Russia’s attitude and actions. In 2014 Russia brazenly attacked and annexed Crimea, which was a part of Ukraine. Russia keeps arming the separatists in Ukraine’s two Russian-speaking regions.  What will you do when a powerful bully wants to control you and keeps interfering in your own affairs? You will ask for help from someone who could protect you from the bully, won’t you?  

“After Ukraine broke free from the erstwhile Soviet Union, it became a democracy and its people had come to cherish the freedoms they enjoyed in a democracy. Putin, on the other hand, brooks no rivals, no opponents in Russia. Anyone who dares to criticize him is jailed. This is why thousands of Russian people who protest against this war are arrested.

“Putin has called the collapse of the Soviet Union “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the twentieth century”. He has been open about his nostalgia for the Soviet Union that had around it satellite nations of Eastern Europe that were all totalitarian Communist States.  When these countries became free, many of them opted for democracy. Those who know Putin say that since the Soviet Union cannot be brought back, he longs to reinvent ‘Ancient Rus’ – a vast empire comprising Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. But do your longings justify an invasion and its aftermath? And what about the longings of the Ukrainian people? Don’t they have the right to choose their leaders and allies, the political system of their country?

“Therefore can anyone justify this invasion? Can this war ever be a just war? If any war can be termed as a ‘Just War’ it is only the war imposed on the victim nation that is forced to protect itself against the unjust aggressor. In an editorial, The Tablet said, “Democracy, the desire of a people to be governed by those they have freely elected –government of the people, by the people, for the people, in Lincoln’s famous phrase – is, in the modern age, not negotiable. Defending it is the ultimate just cause.”

“That is exactly what the brave Ukrainians are engaged in, although they are outmanned and outgunned. Before Putin sent his army, they were fighting the deadly Covid virus for two years. Before Covid began its rampage, Ukraine had to deal with an outbreak of polio across the country. 

“It was heartrending to see Ukranian women bidding a tearful farewell to their sons or husbands, who chose to stay and defend their country, and carrying their children and huddling in underground shelters or crowding into buses and trains, hoping to seek refugee in a neighbouring country. The U.N. Agency for Refugees says that already 3 million Ukrainians have become refugees.

“Pope Francis has shown how everyone should respond to this war. He called upon Catholics all over the world to fast and pray on Ash Wednesday for an immediate end to the war. In an unprecedented departure from diplomatic protocol, he visited the Russian embassy to the Vatican to convey his shock, sorrow and concern. In his Angelus message a few days later, he made a heart-felt plea once again to stop the war that has given rise to “rivers of blood and tears.” He sent two Cardinals to Ukraine’s capital, Kiev, saying their presence among the suffering people will signify that he, all the Christians in the world and all who agree that war is madness are present with them.

“Some have recalled that the Blessed Virgin, when she appeared to three children in Fatima, asked all to pray for the conversion of Russia. The Russian people did not want this war. We should pray for the conversion of Putin and his cohorts who did.”

As I write, the war is still on. The number of the dead and the wounded keeps going up and several buildings, including hospitals, theatres, nurseries and apartments, seem to have been reduced to rubble. Leaders of Israel, Turkey and France have tried to speak to Putin, but their efforts have yielded nothing.

The U.N.’s resolutions have been utterly futile. Pope Francis’ repeated pleas have fallen on deaf ears. Ukraine’s courage and resistance have surprised the world, but we don’t know what the wounded ego of the Russian dictator may provoke him to.

Yet another shock is the deep economic crisis Sri Lanka has plunged into and the sufferings its people are subjected to. Like Russia, Sri Lanka reveals what the misguided policies of misguided leaders can bring to their people. Authoritarianism, racism and linguistic chauvinism may help unscrupulous politicians win an election, but soon the gullible people who voted for them pay a heavy price. We have a lot, therefore, to pray for during the Holy Week this year. May Easter this year bring to our wounded world what the Risen Lord wished for those to whom he appeared – peace!

In this issue, we are introducing something which can be done only in an online magazine – videos. Let the videos draw you into the article!

– M.A. Joe Antony, SJ

 

Challenges in Becoming a Synodal Church

Emmanuel Akilan, SJ, describes the three challenges the Church faces in becoming a synodal Church.

By Emmanuel Akilan, SJ

Introduction

A synodal Church is not just a dream of Pope Francis.  It must be a dream of God and Christ, the head of the Church.  Won’t they dream of a Church characterized by communion, participation, and mission?  

But if this dream has to be realized, we need to understand the challenges and decide to meet them.  Communion and participation require mutual listening. Listening involves patience, being open to the other, and love for the person who speaks one’s heart to the other without a tinge of fear of being judged. Therefore this is not going to be easy. What will be the major challenges?

Clericalism

Clericalism will be the first challenge to be faced. It is a “thorn in the flesh” of the Church. Merriam Webster defines clericalism as “a policy of maintaining or increasing the power of a religious hierarchy”. Clericalism is so deeply rooted in our structures and way of thinking that we almost cannot imagine how things could be otherwise.

In 2018, in “Letter to the People of God,” Pope Francis condemned the sin of sexual abuse of children and adolescents by the clergy. He said that this happened because of the abuse of power in the Church and linked this evil to clericalism. He said firmly, “To say no to abuse is to say an emphatic no to all forms of clericalism”. Clericalism has given rise to a lot of evils that keep tormenting the Church and shaking the very foundation of our faith.

Clericalism is so deeply rooted in our structures and way of thinking that we almost cannot imagine how things could be otherwise.

The laity must keep on encouraging their priests to free themselves from the grip of clericalism. The laity, the Religious and the clergy should ensure that this long-delayed reformation of becoming a synodal Church where clericalism has no place. This attitude of clericalism stems from one of the most dearly held value of the church, being conservative, which has lost its sheer value in this techno-driven fast changing world.

Ideology

What prevents many people from doing what is needed to becoming a synodal Church is being slaves to an ideology. Their servitude to ideology makes them rigid, ultra conservative, doctrinal, and dogmatic. Jesus said that pouring old wine in the new wine skin may prove disastrous but yet a number of people cling to views and attitudes that belong to another era and no longer help us serve people today. Pope Francis has brought in a kind of revolution within the Church, yet in many parts it remains the same. Some bishops, priests and religious are still basking in the old attitudes and are unable to abandon them. They still feel reluctant to embrace the changes brought in not merely by Pope Francis but even Vatican II.

The obvious reason for this reluctance to change is insecurity, because change always comes with risks. Changes demand that we get out of our comfort zones. This is why it is easy and tempting to cling blindly to an ideology and pretend that it is done to protect the Church and safeguard one’s faith.

This is why it is easy and tempting to cling blindly to an ideology and pretend that it is done to protect the Church and safeguard one’s faith.

What may help us become a synodal Church is to train the youth who join our seminaries and novitiates to be open and flexible. They should be helped to read the signs of times and prepare themselves to serve effectively today’s and tomorrow’s generations – not the people of the past. They have to be taught to be dynamic, to think out of the box and to break the old stereotypes in their being and becoming. Instead of bombarding them with rules and regulations, and insisting that they just obey the orders of their superiors, they should be given the freedom to form themselves and even to bend a few rules and regulations for the good of the others.

Self-Obsession

Shortly after he had been elected, St. Pope John XXIII said he wanted to “open the windows” to let fresh air into a Church that stood alone and untouched by the world it had to serve. This paved the way for the the Second Vatican Council that ushered in significant changes in our Church. I feel that in the subsequent years we have closed our windows again. We have failed to see, understand and the struggles of various sections of our people.

This may be the third challenge that we face in becoming a synodal Church. We have become so obsessed with our own lives and our own power struggles that we have failed to see what happened outside the walls of our institutions – like the painful problems of Indian farmers that led to mass suicides, those of the Adivasis when they had to face the might of corporates and the apathy of the government, the sufferings of the social activists when they were falsely accused and arrested.

When we are able to join the marginalized in their struggles, then we will easily be able to listen to one another within the Church and speak to them from our hearts words that give life. When we are able to do that, our Church will be a synodal Church.

He is with us

Though the Church is facing difficult challenges in becoming synodal, there is still a ray of hope because the Church is not a man-made institution, but willed by our Lord Jesus Christ. When He is by our side, we need not worry that a synodal Church is unreachable. He will never let us down. Any challenge can be faced when we really fall in love, stay in love with Jesus Christ who strengthens, leads, guides and protects us every moment of our lives. If a synodal Church is his wish and dream, he will bless our efforts with success.  

 

Emmanuel Akilan, SJ, (MDU) is a student of philosophy at Jnana Deepa Institute of Philosophy and Theology, Pune. Before becoming a Jesuit, he completed his B.Sc. in Hospitality and Hotel Administration.

Sweetest songs & saddest thought

M.A. Joe Antony, SJ, narrates the story of an interesting film about a heartrending disaster in Wales, U.K. that took place in 1966. He explains why the last scene of this film has stayed with him.

By M.A. Joe Antony, SJ

I still remember the last scene of this film. Whenever I listen to inspiring hymns I recall the powerful, touching scene: A tear drop slowly emerges from the left eye of the Queen and travels down her smooth cheek. That drop of tear proves to her and to us, the viewers, that nothing is wrong with the Queen, that the strong, stoic woman is as human as the rest of us.

You must have heard of the much-acclaimed drama series called ‘The Crown’ released by Netflix in November 2016. ‘The Crown’ highlights major events in the life of Queen Elizabeth II, Queen of England. It starts from her wedding in 1947 and goes on to depict major events in her life till the first decade of this century. It sincerely tries to be true to what really happened but, at the same time, does not hesitate to take creative liberties for the sake of dramatic effect. Brilliantly written and masterfully directed, the series has managed to rope in a number of actors with extraordinary talent. It is not a surprise, therefore, that ‘The Crown’ won for Netflix seven Emmy awards in September 2021, including the awards for the Outstanding Drama Series, writing and directing.

‘The Crown’ has had four seasons so far, with each season featuring 6 – 10 episodes. Season 3, released by Netflix on 17 November 2019, had ten episodes and covered the period between 1964 and 1977. The film whose story I want to share with you is the third episode in Season 3. It is called ‘Aberfan’.

Aberfan is the name of a mining village in South Wales, U.K., struck by a heart-rending disaster in the year 1966. It was home to about 8,000 miners and their families. It had a chapel called Bethania Chapel. A school called Pentglas Junior School had 240 students, most of whom were the children of miners. Close to the school was a ‘spoil tip’ – called ‘tip 7’ in the film. It was a massive pile of accumulated coal waste that is routinely removed during mining. Quite a few perceptive people were concerned that this giant pile of coal waste stood so close to the school. Many years earlier the local Council had contacted the National Coal Board, which ran the mine, and expressed their concern.

In 1963 an engineer, after visiting the site, wrote to the National Coal Board, saying, “I regard it as extremely serious as the slurry is so fluid and the gradient so steep that it could not possibly stay in position in the winter time or during periods of heavy rain.” But the National Coal Board not merely ignored these complaints and warnings but went on to threaten to close the mine and thus deprive the locals of their livelihood.

As the film begins, you see what happened on the day prior to the tragedy. It is raining heavily and parents, holding umbrellas, try to shepherd their children to the Pentglas Junior School.

As the film begins, you see what happened on the day prior to the tragedy. It is raining heavily and parents, holding umbrellas, try to shepherd their children to the Pentglas Junior School. When the classes get over, the class teacher asks the boys and girls in his class to memorize the hymn, ‘All things bright and beautiful,’ as they have to sing it the next day at the school assembly. After the assembly the school would close for half-term holidays. You see some children singing the song enthusiastically on their way home and to their parents later that evening. “All things bright and beautiful/ All creatures great and small/ All things wise and wonderful/ “’Twas God that made them all…”

Early in the morning the next day the workers who go for repairs notice that tip 7 is beginning to slide and run to warn the supervisor.

In spite of the continuing rain, classes begin at Pentglas Junior School. When the teacher reads out the names of students, they respond, saying, ‘Sir!” An enthusiastic boy, instead of saying, ‘Sir!’, starts singing, ‘All things bright and beautiful…’ While other children laugh, the teacher tells him to wait and sing it at the school assembly to be convened in minutes.

Hearing a rumble, the class teacher looks out the window and sees the coal tip sliding down at great speed. He shouts to the students to take shelter beneath their desks, but he keeps standing, probably paralyzed by shock and fear, staring at the 30 foot tsunami of sludge, as it races down the hill at a speed of more than 80 miles per hour and crashes into his class room.

He shouts to the students to take shelter beneath their desks, but he keeps standing, probably paralyzed by shock and fear, staring at the 30 foot tsunami of sludge.

The Prime Minister, Mr. Harold Wilson, is speaking at a function to inaugurate a ‘hyper market’ and his wife interrupts him and whispers the shocking news of the calamity. He asks to be excused and leaves. His office requests the Queen to lend him a plane to rush to Wales. When he reaches the school in Aberfan, he sees the miners who used to dig for coal now digging for their children buried in the sludge. The bodies of children who perished in the disaster are brought to the makeshift morgue at the Bethania Chapel. Nurses and volunteers search the pockets and bags of the dead children for something that could help their parents identify their children’s bodies.

The country gasps when the final count is revealed: 144 died, of whom 116 were children aged between 7 and 11. Among the 28 adults who were killed, there were 5 teachers. Twenty three men and women were in houses near the school engulfed by the coal sludge.

The Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, on his return to London, tries to persuade the Queen to go to Aberfan and comfort the grieving families. The Queen replies, “One of the most unfortunate things about being a Sovereign is that you paralyze any situation you walk into. The very last thing that emergency and relief workers need is for the Queen to turn up.” Wilson says he doesn’t agree. “Children have died. The community is devastated.”

The Queen, still unconvinced, asks, “Precisely what will you have me do?”

“Comfort people.”

“Put on a show? The Crown doesn’t do that”

“I didn’t say ‘Put on a show.’ I said, ‘Comfort people.’”  

Wilson is not able to persuade the Queen to visit Aberfan. But Prince Philip, Elizabeth’s husband and Duke of Edinborough, rushes to Aberfan and attends the agonizing funeral service and the burial. People gathered at the cemetery, looking at the little coffins and fighting their tears, sing a hymn. It moves Prince Philip to tears. On his return to the palace the Queen asks him if he wept. “I might have wept, yes,” he replies. “Anyone who heard that hymn would not have just wept. He’d have been broken into a thousand tiny pieces.”

In a candid conversation with Wilson, she reveals that she is unable to weep. “After the Blitz, when I visited hospitals I saw that my parents – the King and the Queen – wept. I couldn’t. When I had my first child, I didn’t weep. When my grandmother, Queen Mary, whom I loved, died, I didn’t cry.”

Finally the pressure mounts and the Queen relents and visits Aberfan. She lays a wreath at the cemetery (See picture above) and meets a few of the grieving families. But she does not weep. On her flight back home, she asks her secretary about the hymn the people of Aberfan sang on the day most children were buried – the hymn that made her husband weep. He assures her he would get a record of the hymn.

Back in the palace, when the night has fallen, when everything is quiet and she is all alone, she plays the record and listens intently to the hymn:

“Jesus, lover of my soul,
Let me to Thy bosom fly,
While the nearer waters roll,
While the tempest still is high:
Hide me, O my Savior, hide,
Till the storm of life is past;
Safe into the haven guide;
O receive my soul at last.

Other refuge have I none,
Hangs my helpless soul on Thee;
Leave, oh, leave me not alone,
Still support and comfort me.
All my trust on Thee is stayed,
All my help from Thee I bring;
Cover my defenseless head
With the shadow of Thy wing…

That is when the miracle happens.  A tear drop slowly emerges from the left eye of the Queen and travels down her smooth cheek.

What made the miracle possible is, obviously, music. Music, when it combines with sorrow and love, can melt the hardened sadness into tears. The famous English poet, P.B. Shelley said, “Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought.”

M.A. Joe Antony, SJ, is Editor of the online magazine, INI (https://inimagazine.org). Former editor of The New Leader and Jivan, he now resides at St Joseph’s College, Trichy, teaching, writing and directing retreats and seminars. He can be contacted at: majoeantony@gmail.com

The One Thing that really matters

Fr. Francis P. Xavier, SJ, this time skillfully summarizes the main points offered by Gary W. Keller and Jay Papasan in their book, ‘The ONE Thing.’

By Francis P. Xavier, SJ

G. Keller and J. Papasan, The ONE Thing, Bard Press, Austin, 2012

Success = Priority:

During a visit to the house of Martha and Mary, Jesus admonishes Martha: “You are worried and upset about many things, but few things are needed, indeed only one” (Lk 10:42-43). And what is that ONE thing? The book titled The ONE Thing by G. Keller and J. Papasan discusses it. The book begins with a Russian proverb: If you choose two rabbits, you would not catch either one. Target one rabbit and pursue it, rain or shine. All of us are looking for and working towards success in life. Success depends on our priorities. And we need to focus on these priorities. Once this is clear then we are on our way to success.

The road to success is always under construction (p.206).  As we go, we make the necessary course corrections, and we make progress. All that matters initially, during, and at the end is that we are clear about our priorities. After all, success is about doing the right thing, not about doing everything right, since doing the right thing would save you from monitoring or worrying about everything else (p.55 f).

Anatomy of the Question:

Life is often construed as a bridge between questions and answers. Asking or posing a question might be easier, but what is important is to find out the answer. But answer comes from a question. If the question is right and meaningful, we are enthused to work for it; and if the question is a wrong one, we would get the answer too wrong. If the question is most powerful, then the appropriate or relevant answer would even change the course of our life (p.104). So the authors pose this question for our consideration. “What’s the ONE Thing I can do/ such that by doing it/ everything else will be easier or unnecessary?” (p.108).

Deciphering the priorities would set in focus also the purpose of our life.

This question sets in focus our priority(s). What are the things or what is the one thing that only I could do? We could focus on what is most important and urgent and work on achieving it. Adding a timeline to our priorities also would help us do things better and with confidence. Building an effective team would be the next important phase in doing our best and most in life.

Life and Purpose:

Deciphering the priorities would set in focus also the purpose of our life. Priority in life not only gives us the purpose of life but also leads us to productivity (p.137). When you do not know where to go, any road would take you there. On the contrary, when you have a clear and definite purpose in your life, you not only search for meaning in life, but also you find clarity in life. And clarity in life ushers in conviction in your direction, accelerating faster decision to do better (p.143). Life lived for a purpose – for one’s own good and for the good of others – brings in happiness. Hence, priority in life makes clear the purpose in life. But the purpose is derived from the one question we often ask ourselves: What is the ONE thing that I need to do, which would make all other things needless? And this question is the anchor of meaningful, relevant and useful life as this right question brings in the right answer, giving the right direction in life.

Commitments in Life:

The next phase is leading a successful life. No person is an island. Everyone is an integral part of the human society. Hence, each one of us has commitments in life. Commitment envisages process, rather than outcome. A research conducted among the students indicated that the students who visualized the process performed better than those who visualized the outcome (p.152). Hence, priority is not only goal-oriented but also process-oriented. Living by priority is most essential to realize one’s life-goal(s). And if the goal is fueled by commitments in life, it is all the more long lasting and self-satisfying.

Success is about doing the right thing, not about doing everything right, since doing the right thing would save you from monitoring or worrying about everything else.

You need to ask yourself ‘What is the ONE thing I want to do in the next five years, this year, this month, this week, today, and right now?’ (p.150) This would take us through our commitment to the summit of our goal and happiness.

Four Hurdles:

In this attempt, there are four hurdles (p.191): i. Our inability or hesitancy to say ‘no’ when we cannot or do not have time; ii. Fear of chaos, which is the unknown fear about invisible obstacles. It could be also the fear of failure; iii. Poor health habits, which prevent us from being active and energetic; iv. Circumstance or surrounding that does not help us reach the goal. Against all these possible obstacles we need to fight and make progress – mentally first and physically later. Once we have the inner confidence, we are armed with the external courage to go ahead towards the goal along the path of commitment with our priorities as milestones. While this could be the formula for success, the formula for failure is to try to please everybody (p.195) and finally satisfying nobody.

Conclusion:

Asking the right question about the ONE thing necessary unlocks the energy gate within you and opens up possibilities to achieve greater things, leading to success and happiness. Keep asking yourself, ‘what is the ONE thing that matters in my life (today/now)?’ When you focus on the purpose of your life, you come to know your priorities. When you focus on your priority, then life becomes meaningful and success becomes possible.

Fr. Francis P. Xavier, SJ has been in administration as Provincial (MDU), Director (LIFE and LICET), and Vice president of Jesuit Worldwide Learning. Currently, he is the Rector of Loyola Jesuit Institutions, Chennai. An author and researcher, with several books, articles, and webinars to his credit, his research now is on ‘Religion and Science.

To be is to love, to live is to relate

Amalraj Chinnappan, SJ shares his experience of a serious illness that took him to the point of death. He also talks of the vision he repeatedly had when he was in a coma.

By Amalraj Chinnappan, SJ

Amalraj Chinnappan, SJ (MDU), called C. Amal by friends, is probably the best-known Jesuit in Myanmar. Before opting to work in Myanmar in the year 2007, he has worked in India and other countries, serving refugees and victims of natural disasters. Blessed with a sharp mind and a refreshing sense of humour, he has always chosen to live in challenging situations in order to work for God’s little children. Two years ago Amal fell seriously ill and was almost given up by his doctors. He was anointed twice.

In this deep, reflective sharing, he tries to answer the questions that hit him after he miraculously recovered – questions like, ‘Why did this happen?’ ‘What brought me back to life?’ ‘Why did God work this miracle?’ ‘What is the meaning of the scene that I ‘saw’ repeatedly when I was in a coma?’ etc.

As I opened my eyes, a sympathetic doctor whispered in my ears, “Your recovery is nothing less than a miracle in our hospital history.  It is 20 percent medical effort and 80 per cent the result of the relentless prayers of your people.” Lying on a hospital bed for two weeks, I tried to grasp the meaning of those words. A miracle seemed to have happened.   

As my memory struggled to sequence the events, a flashback emerged. On a trip to far off Mindat in North West Myanmar on a mission, I fell into a sickness that dragged me into a disaster. On 21 July 2019, I was brought unconscious to the hospital. They anointed me in preparation for any eventuality.  More than half of the team of doctors who took charge of me doubted if I would survive. My medical documents say my heart stopped.

They anointed me in preparation for any eventuality.  More than half of the team of doctors who took charge of me doubted if I would survive.

Food poisoning and my old pal – diabetes – colluded to choreograph a dance of death. For 13 long days, through a spiral of excruciating pain, hallucinations, induced and spontaneous coma, my life oscillated between spasms of death and streaks of hope. They were 13 days of darkness.

Hearing the news my brothers rushed from India to be with me. My body, a patient and enduring companion of six decades of reckless travel and travail, suddenly seemed to be in an indecent haste to bid farewell.  A visiting priest thought it wise to give me the last sacrament – for the second time.

The doctors waged a war. I was incubated on a mechanical ventilator in the ICU.  As three days gave way to six and then nine, the doctors faced a choice: take me off the ventilator and see if I could breathe on my own, or perform a tracheostomy, which would mean making an incision in my neck to insert a breathing tube directly into my windpipe.

On the tenth day, something unexpected happened:  I opened my eyes, my lungs purred and breathed. The doctors, who had almost given up on me, confirmed that I was alive and on the way to recovery.  The twice-anointed Jesuit was sent back to the world.   Yes.  It was a miracle.

What made the miracle possible?

The Society of Jesus, which has been my family for more than four decades, generously did everything it could. Young Jesuits, sacrificing their routine life and sleep, kept vigil.  A photo of the Cardinal of Yangon, Cardinal Charles Muang Bo blessing me, as I lay unconscious in the hospital bed with invasive tubes and other scary accessories, went viral.  That evoked a tsunami of prayers in various places of Myanmar.  Obviously, I was not aware of all these at that moment.

Later I learned that scores of men and women visited the ICU, and many broke down and cried, seeing the combat between death and faith. But deep faith, earnest prayers of hundreds of people and the persistence of the doctors triumphed eventually.

I recalled what happened twelve years ago. I arrived in Myanmar in 2007 when the beautiful country went through turbulent times. There was bloodshed in the streets. Those who cared for me repeatedly told me to return to India.  But a super cyclone that ripped the long-suffering nation apart made sure I could not return.  I was sucked into the disaster relief work of the Myanmar Church.

As Jesuits, we played a big role in the recovery and rehabilitation of thousands of families and children. What followed was a decade of loving, committed work that took me to all the corners of this nation. For ten years I worked for and with one of the most graceful people on earth. The daily encounter with Buddhism challenged me to be a better Christian. I met thousands, trained hundreds, and shared their dream of a better world. I was part of their planning, training and their celebrations.

How gratifying it was to come to know that these dear people were grateful and cried out to God to cure me, as I lay unconscious! How poignant it was to learn that, although I came from another country, they saw me as their own! It was also a heartwarming affirmation of the services Jesuits had been rendering silently to a wide spectrum of people in Myanmar.

As I slowly emerged from the rollercoaster nights of excruciating pain, nightmares and medicine-triggered hallucinations, I realized that the soothing balm of human fellowship played a big role in healing me. During the day four women were my caregivers who never left me alone. One of them was a Buddhist nun, who was once my student, another one was a Muslim. There were also Catholic nuns and staff.  I came to know that whenever I groaned uncontrollably because of severe pain, these women whispered consolation and hope in my ears, recounting how so many, including total strangers, had come during the day to show their love and concern and pray for me.

On 21 July 2021, when I completed two years after my miraculous recovery, I had to face the troubling questions:  Why was I saved?  Was this my ‘Cannon Ball Moment’? And what does the future hold? First of all, why did this happen?

Henri Nouwen says that growth happens not always through peaceful, normal events, but by ‘interruptions’ – life-changing events – like sickness and accidents. For Ignatius Loyola it was the ‘cannonball moment’.  Coming face to face with our mortality raises vital questions like: where do I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going? 

Steve Jobs, living under the threat of incurable liver cancer, gave a sensational summary of this experience in his unforgettable speech at Stanford University: “Remembering that I’ll be dead soon is the most important tool I’ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life. Because almost everything — all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure – these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important.”

Coming face to face with our mortality raises vital questions like: Where do I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going? 

And he ended his speech with one of the most memorable quotes on  human mortality: “Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life’s change agent.”

Some people came up with another question: During those days when I was in a coma, did I go to heaven?  Did I have a chance to meet Jesus?   You would have seen fundamentalist Christian groups showing off ‘people who went to heaven and came back.’  Psychologists have a trendy name for such people: NDErs = Near-Death Experiencers!

Did I experience death? When I returned to the Jesuit house, the Socius to the Provincial of Madurai, wrote to me to ask if I had any ‘spiritual’ experience during those comatose days.   Henri Nouwen, the great writer, once had a similar near-death hospital experience. Later he wrote a booklet on it and it is called, “Beyond Mirror.”  He writes movingly about how he experienced Jesus invite him soothingly, “Come, do not be afraid.”

I had no such spiritual experience. I think my brain was on lockdown because of medicines and machines.  But something else, more revealing, happened. A panorama unfurled in my mental screen. A vast, never-ending desert emerged.  And I (my mind) went all over that never-ending desert, desperately searching for a human being.   This scene came back again and again and again ad nauseam, evoking anguish.

When I regained consciousness, I reflected on this.  Why was I (my mind) searching desperately for another human being? After many days, it dawned on me.   Human beings are created to relate to one another. Humanity emerges when we relate to another human being. Our existence is defined by relationships.   No man is an island. Loneliness is hell. It is the other person who makes me human.  It is the love of fellow humans that makes me experience God’s love. “If you cannot love the brother you see, how can you love God? For God is love.”

I understood that even in those dark moments of the coma, my heart ached for relationships. Trying to reach heaven is really a call to return to humanity, to others.  That is heaven.

Martin Buber was right: There is no I without You.  When the ‘I’ was in the danger of dissolution, the mind sought ‘you’. For those who have succeeded in finding meaningful, loving relationships heaven has already begun. The only raison d’etre for human life is love. This is why they say: Fall in love, stay in love, that will determine everything.   A verse from the Song of Songs settles everything: Love is stronger than death.  ( Song of Songs: 8:6).

After my consciousness returned, a simple truth emerged: To be is to love. To live is to relate.

 

Amalraj Chinnappan, SJ, (MDU) works at Myanmar Social Outreach (See intro). He can be reached at camalraj@gmail.com.

Impact of Pornography on the Life of Clergy and Religious

Konrad Noronha, SJ, explains why an increasing number of young priests struggle with addiction to pornography and how to overcome it.

By Konrad Noronha, SJ

Pornography affects all ages, races, religions, and sexes. It is one of the 21st-century challenges faced by those who have accepted celibacy as part of their vocation to priesthood. It is extremely addictive and has a damaging influence. Because of its addictive nature, it can make chastity and, in particular, celibacy extremely difficult. Pornography is likely the most frequent misuse of the internet in seminaries, parishes and rectories for the same reasons as the general population: accessibility, affordability and anonymity. Loneliness and isolation, the lack of self-care, higher expectations of themselves, entitlement, and lack of education about the addictive nature of the internet are some of the reasons why an increasing number of priests and religious become victims of addiction to pornography.

The three reasons why pornography is a problem in seminaries, parishes and rectories are accessibility, affordability and anonymity.

Bad Effects of Pornography

Studies have demonstrated that pornographic images get locked in the brain, affect brain function and never completely leave the memory. The locked-in images can result in changed behavior, and an obsession with pornography, similar to chemical addiction. The behavioral effects of pornography have also been confirmed through various studies. Soft porn found even in many prime-time television shows can induce adolescents to adopt a view of sexual morality that contradicts the gospel teaching. Hard-core pornography is far more sinister. Studies have also shown that those exposed to certain music videos were more likely to exhibit liberal attitudes toward premarital sex than those who did not see such videos. Young men entering the seminary today have viewed countless hours of television and videos and therefore their impact would be strong.

Pornography desensitizes adolescents who are in the process of forming values and beliefs. Extensive exposure to non-aggressive and aggressive porn increased males’ sexual insensitivity toward women and children. These are hardly the kinds of values desired in a future priest, who is expected to be compassionate and merciful. The key to formation in chastity is to focus primarily on love versus sex. In his ‘Theology of the Body’ Pope John Paul II said, “The use of pornography replaces love with lust.” What leads to serious sins against chastity is the failure to love real, concrete people. A person addicted to pornography or cybersex engages in sexual activity that does not involve the complications of relating to a real person. This happens insidiously.

Studies have demonstrated that pornographic images get locked in the brain, affect brain function and never completely leave the memory.

Psychosexual Formation

Therefore what is crucial today is formation for celibacy. Inadequate formation has led to scandals, shattered lives, and crises of faith. An adequate formation, on the other hand, would bring to light those persons who lack human and sexual integration. These might be persons who might harbor psychopathologies that could lead to abuse and other deviations. Experts in addiction-disorders describe five successive and interdependent stages through which individuals progress into an addiction to internet pornography. These include: discovery, experimentation, habituation, compulsivity and hopelessness. Treatment would imply understanding at which stage the person is, and working with the person from there.

Clergy and religious are by no means immune to struggles with pornography. A deeper concern is when a priest does not seek treatment when struggling with an addiction. When a priest does not seek help, he is unable to live as he has promised to and may even contribute to the problems of others. The priest who struggles with pornography use may find it difficult to effectively guide those who come to him for help in this area. It is not enough that a priest or seminarian commits himself to a life of celibacy; it is also essential to continuously engage in celibate formation in the different seasons of life.

Skills for celibate living

Living a priestly and religious life requires skills different from that of a secular way of life. Just as much as commitment is required in the married way of life, commitment to the priestly life is important. This commitment is an ongoing process and leads to a continuous configuration with Christ. Before the seminarian enters the major seminary, he is expected to complete developmental tasks of earlier stages. Therefore, he can respond to the challenges of transcendent values and attitudes that will be proposed to him at the later stages of his priestly formation. Otherwise, his attention and efforts will be directed at dealing with his struggles, addictions, and defenses. The seminarian and priest should be motivated for a life of celibacy and should be able to sustain his commitment to the priestly life and the evangelical counsels.

Helpful Strategies

Recovery from porn addiction is not impossible but could be an uphill battle. An addict can beat the addiction, and even help others beat it. The power of God’s grace cannot be discounted. Effective strategies are necessary to strengthen priests and religious in their spiritual lives to avoid spiritual dissipation and vocational distress. Some strategies could be:

  • Formators and those in formation should realize that pornography is a growing threat to priesthood. Priests unfamiliar with the internet and its effects should educate themselves about the deceptive nature of pornography. They need to realize the impact of worldly thinking, especially attitudes about sexuality.
  • Interviews, tests, and a psychological profile could confirm the extent of a candidate’s pornography consumption. The seminarians and priests could be helped to identify events or behaviors that trigger inappropriate use of the internet, like underlying problems of anger, loneliness, grief, anxiety, loss, etc.
  • There should be an emphasis on the spiritual life to strengthen priests and seminarians in their commitment to celibacy, demonstrated by an authentic life of prayer. There should be an emphasis on the interior life from the first days of the seminary, which includes the frequent celebration of the sacrament of reconciliation,  healthy friendships with fellow seminarians, and a lifetime commitment to the evangelical counsels.
  • A person struggling with pornography use requires the assistance of someone who is both mature and informed, such as a spiritual guide, to help navigate the problem.
  • An important part of the formative process involves helping a seminarian integrate his cognitive processes with his feelings. He should consider the quality of relationships he has and how they influence the use of pornography. He should also consider how he views people in his life, and whether he tends to objectify others.
  • Those in formation must be taught accountability in their early years of formation as well as in their life of ordained ministry.
  • No one is exempt from temptation. Priests and seminarians are human and if they honestly acknowledge their weakness, they could avoid temptation. Therefore, seminary formation programs ought to facilitate candidates developing a personal conviction about their choice for celibacy. Once that conviction is deeply rooted, they will apply practical means of protection on their own accord. They must learn to set boundaries and stick to them.

Conclusion

No matter how badly priests are needed, moral integrity and resolute commitment to celibacy can never be compromised in the life of a priest. At ordination, the bishop asks the candidate publicly about his worthiness for ordination. The answer is usually in the affirmative, because of the many years of formation and evaluation. Pornography addiction is a danger for the Church, seminarians, and priests. It poses one of the greatest dangers to bringing priestly vocations to their fruition. The fundamental safeguard against sin and temptation is a deep and abiding relationship with God that is rooted in love.

Konrad Noronha, SJ, is a Professor and Director and Coordinator of the Pastoral Management Program at Jnana Deepa Pontifical Institute of Philosophy and Theology, Pune, India. He has a Masters in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Loyola University Maryland, USA and a Masters in Systematic Theology from Vidyajyoti College of Theology, Delhi. His Doctorate is in Counselor Education and Supervision from Loyola University, Maryland, USA.He is also the Director of the Center for Safeguarding and Human Formation at De Nobili College, Pune, India. He can be contacted at kjnoronha2000@gmail.com.

How do we know the truth?

In this article excerpted from his book, ‘Zen – One Way to Nirvana,’ Fr Ama Samy, SJ explains what we need to do to know the truth and reality.

By Ama Samy, SJ

The Bible says, “Know the truth and the truth will set you free.” (John 8: 32)

But our question will be what Pontius Pilate asked Jesus. “Truth? What is it?”  How will we ever come to know what is truth and what it is not?

Truth has been understood in many kinds and forms. Some even go so far as to deny that we can know the truth. They assert that we can never know the truth. So they say the truth is we can never know the truth.

Two vital questions are: First, how do we know what we know? Second, how do we know what we know is true? The first question is about knowledge. The second is about reality

But we humans have an inborn drive to know the truth. So two vital questions are: First, how do we know what we know? Second, how do we know what we know is true? The first question is about knowledge. The second is about reality.

I would like to quote from a chapter on Truth in John Haught’s perceptive book What is God. (see box)

Let me briefly explain how we come to know the truth and reality.

Be attentive

The first level is experience. It is the data which comes to us through our five senses. It concerns the question of ‘What?’. This sense experience has to be grasped through the internal faculties of memory, intellect, consciousness and so on. The sense experiences are material. The action of the internal faculties is not material. The data of senses are not the same as the data of consciousness. 

Emotions can be generated by the sense experiences or even internally. Emotions are what move us. Without emotions we will not be moved to act. But if we let emotions flood us, then we will lose our reasoning capacity and end up acting irrationally or erratically. The emotions of sadness, desire, lust, fear, hunger can appear to be spontaneous – without a cause, but it is not always so.

Emotions can be distinguished from feelings. Feelings are finer and come close to the spiritual movements. Feelings are responses to the worth of things. In the Christian tradition practice of discernment helps us identify feelings.

Some take sense experiences as the truth. Sense experiences are not yet the truth, but experiences are the basic building blocks of our lives. What comes through our senses are neither true nor false. Zen takes all experiences as ‘makyos’ – illusions. The Christian apophatic spirituality also will give them no importance.

The ultimate truth is…

By John Haught

It seems that in the case of truth we are dealing once again with a ‘horizon’ that evades our efforts at intellectual control and adequate definition. If anything, truth would define us more than we would define it. The encounter with truth is more a case of our being grasped by it then of our er grasping it.The propensity for self deception is one of the most interesting and most philosophically troubling characteristics of our human nature. Why should conscious bein‌gs whose questions constantly reveal the fact of an underlying desire to know as an ineradicable aspect of their consciousness also have such a tendency to repress this desire to know when it seeks self knowledge?

At least part of the reason lies in the fact that in addition to  having an ineradicable desire to know, we also need acceptance and approval. And it appears at times that we will pay almost any price to be held in high positive regard by significant others. We will go to the point of denying even to ourselves those aspects of our lives and characters that we suspect might not be approved by others. 

When we seek knowledge of ourselves, our desire to know comes into conflict with our desire for acceptance. This divided condition makes us wonder then whether we can find truth at all without giving up our desire for approval by others. Are these two desires – the desire for acceptance and the desire for truth -condemned to perpetual mutual combat? Or is there some way in which they can be reconciled? Can our need to be loved coexist with our need to know the truth?

In the deepest depths of reality, at the ultimate horizon of our quest for freedom, beauty, and truth, there lies an acceptance, an approval, a love that is unconditional – one that places no conditions of worth upon us but offers complete acceptance regardless of whether or not we have fulfilled any criteria. 

Suppose that the ultimate environment of our lives, as distinct from our immediate social and natural habitats, is unconditional love. If there is such an ultimately loving dimension to reality, would it not make possible a resolution of our dilemma?

Direct verification of the hypothesis is not possible…We simply cannot get our limited minds around the totality whose ultimate nature we are attempting to understand and of which our minds are themselves after all only a part. So in striving to know whether the hypothesis of unconditional love corresponds with reality we have to seek an avenue other than direct verification. 

I think we have an indirect way of testing the truth status of the religious trust in unconditional acceptance…The deepest criterion of truth is fidelity to a desire to know. Thus we may each simply ask whether our trusting that the depth of reality is unconditional love  fosters a desire to know or impedes it. If this trust encourages our desire to cut through our illusions about ourselves, others and the universe then it is faithful to the desire to know. Therefore it fulfills our essential criterion of truth – which is fidelity to the desire to know.

Therefore the hypothesis of a universe grounded in unconditional love need not be viewed as a projection. Instead the ‘tragic’ view that the universe is really hostile toward us may itself be interpreted as a projection, rooted in a distorted and unrealistic perception of ourselves as ultimately unloved.

The conviction of being unconditionally loved can be called truthful, because it nurtures the one desire in us that seeks the truth. It fosters and encourages our desire to know. In the spirit of the religious conviction that perfect love casts out fear, it allows this desire to penetrate and retrieve areas of the self that had been hidden in fear. The sense of being unconditionally loved dissolves the usual terror that accompanies our desires, and it releases the human passion to seek the truth which alone brings true freedom.

This truth which is the objective of all our questioning is ultimately a ‘mysterium tremendum  et fascinans.’ As in the case of the ‘sacred’ we both hide from it and and seek it at the same time. We know that the truth hurts, but we also see that it alone can provide a firm foundation to our lives. The ultimate truth, depth, future, freedom and beauty, into whose embrace we are constantly invited, consists of an unconditional love. The ultimate truth is unconditional love. And it is perhaps this love that is the tremendum from which we flee as well as the fascinans that promises us ultimate fulfillment. Is it possible that our flight from depth, futurity, freedom, beauty, and truth is, in the final analysis, a flight from love?

edited excerpts from his book, ‘What Is God?’

Be intelligent

Once we have the experiences, we have to understand them. We have to classify and differentiate them, find the sources, causes and relationships between the experiences. It concerns the questions of ‘Why?’ and ‘How?’ It is understanding that gives us insights or ideas. But insights and ideas are not yet truth. 

One can have any number of insights. Very many people just take the insights as the truth. The philosopher, Lonergan, points out that people,  even philosophers, take truth to be what is seen or looked at. This is a great mistake of the pictorial or representational  fallacy. Ordinarily we take what we see or sense as the truth but this is a common sense reality and not truth as such. These are still sense experiences or at the most ideas and insights. We say that these are facts. But facts are not merely what is seen or heard or touched. Facts have to be verified and judged to be true or not.

Be reasonable or be realistic

It is in judgement that an experience or insight can be judged to be true or not. It is a question of ‘Whether’. Judgement needs verification and evidence. Judgement is not a physical or material reality. It is a matter of intellect and spirit. Judgements and reasoning pertain to many levels – biological, aesthetic, emotional, practical, dramatic, intellectual and so on.

In each area the requirements for judgement will vary. When all relevant questions are exhausted, then the judgement will be final. The relevant questions are framed thus: ‘If…. then…’

Only in judgement we acquire certitude.

 

Ama Samy, SJ, is the Founder-Director of Bodhi Zendo, the Zen Meditation Centre in Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu. He founded the Bodhi Sangha, the international community of his disciples in 1986. Since 1985 he has spent several months every year leading Zen retreats in Europe, Australia and the US. He can be contacted at amasamy@googlemail.com. This article is excerpted from his book, ‘Zen – A Way to Nirvana.’

 

“All my knowledge of the stars does not dim their beauty”

Exclusive interview with Br. Guy Consolmagno, SJ, Director, Vatican Observatory, in which he talks of his vocation to be a Jesuit and an astronomer.

Interview with Br Guy Consolmagno, SJ | Director, Vatican Observatory

What made you give up the prospects of a very promising career as a professor and join the Jesuits?

When I was thirty years old, I was working as a postdoctoral fellow doing scientific research at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), which is perhaps the best science and technology school in the world. But I found myself dissatisfied with a life of only doing pure research. Why put all that effort into studying the moons of Jupiter when there were people starving in the world? That is what motivated me to leave science and join the US Peace Corps.

Did the two years you spent teaching in Kenya as a member of the U.S. Peace Corps play a role in your vocation to the Society? 

Once I got to Africa as a member of U.S. Peace Corps I learned three important things.

First, I learned how much I loved teaching. My first assignment was to a good high school in Nairobi, and then I was moved to the University of Nairobi itself. In both places I experience pure joy in thinking about how to explain complicated physics and astronomy topics to my students, and in seeing how much joy in turn those students gave me as they grew in their understanding of our physical universe. I believed this is what I wanted to do more than anything else, once I returned to America.

In addition, I learned that even people in remote villages are hungry to hear about the stars and the planets. When I would visit my other Peace Corps friends in remote places I would bring my little telescope and give astronomy talks. Everyone there was so excited to look through my telescope, and to hear about what we were learning from the space probes. That made me appreciate why, indeed, we do astronomy even when people are starving. Human beings are hungry for knowledge, for a chance to wonder about the universe and their place in it. We do not live by bread alone.

And finally, I learned that these two things — studying the cosmos and telling people about it — were where my talents lay. I did not have a talent for personal interactions, for helping people with problems or even understanding and listening in a way that could help them. My talents are deep but narrow. And it made sense to recognize my limitations as well as my talents.

When I returned to America I had four wonderful years teaching physics and astronomy at a small university-level school in Pennsylvania. I really did love teaching. But even there I wanted to recapture what was also important in the Peace Corps: to do this work while representing a reason bigger than my own career. That made me think of joining the Jesuits, since they run nearly two dozen universities in the US. 

But why did you choose to become a Brother – not a priest?

I knew I did not have the “people-talents” to be a good priest. When I prayed about this decision, I was really surprised to feel a strong calling instead to be a brother. Then it all made sense: as a Jesuit brother I could live in a religious community, stand for something bigger than my own ambition, but still contribute with the talents that I had.

You seem to have had an abiding interest in astronomy from the beginning. Where did it come from? Your family? Tell us about your family.

I was born at the beginning of the Space Age. I started school the year that Sputnik was launched, I finished high school the year that Apollo 11 landed on the Moon. My father was interested in the stars from his youth, and had learned practical navigation stars during World War 2 when he was in the Army Air Corps. So, yes, my family played an important role in my love of astronomy.

I grew up in Michigan and we spent our summers along the shores of Lake Huron, one of the Great Lakes, far from city lights. There I learned the names of the brighter stars and the constellations.

My knowledge of astronomy only adds to my human love of the sky and my appreciation of God’s creation. When I go outside at night and see the stars in a dome overhead I experience the same sense of awe as anyone else.

Both my parents were university educated. My father was a journalist and my mother a school teacher. Even my immigrant grandfather had gone to Boston University and earned a law degree. Likewise, my sister and brother (both older than me) have earned master’s degrees. So getting an education was something expected, and valued in our family, and my father supported me up until the time when NASA grants could pay for the last years of my graduate work.

This is just curiosity. Most of us – like the poets who loved nature – have romantic notions of the sky, the moon, and the stars. Would the scientific knowledge of astronomers make them think of such notions as nonsense? 

My knowledge of astronomy only adds to my human love of the sky and my appreciation of God’s creation. When I go outside at night and see the stars in a dome overhead I experience the same sense of awe as anyone else.

But then I begin to pick out old friends among the stars, stars that I have seen since I was a child. I know them by name; I know their stories, not only the stories of mythology that tie me to my ancestors but also the stories of where I was at a certain time in my life where seeing one constellation or another had a special, personal meaning. I remember my father teaching me the Summer Triangle; having my homesickness cured by seeing the constellation Leo overhead from Africa (and, later, seeing it upside-down from New Zealand). Recalling how Betelgeuse dimmed dramatically one year. So the stars have a particular personal meaning.

The problems of climate change have been obvious to us in the planetary sciences for nearly two centuries, and certainly since we understood the role that carbon dioxide plays in the climate of Venus and Mars.

Even more than that, though, I can see them as places that I have actually studied and published papers about. Jupiter and its moons as seen through a telescope are remarkable not only because they look wonderful, or because they launched Galileo’s career, but also because they were the subject of my first scientific papers. I know the Orion Nebula not only as a wonderful spot in my telescope but as the source of new stars. I see the double star Alberio and recall how my first sight of it led to me writing a whole book on how to observe the stars with a small telescope.

So you can see, all the knowledge I have about these stars does not dim their beauty but it gives that beauty an extra dimension. Not only is Orion beautiful; so are the memories it invokes, and so is the science of what I have learned about it.

How does your work as an astronomer affect your religious faith and vice versa?

How do I see these stars as a person of faith? God made them. He made them logically; and he made them beautiful. In that way I have come to know God even more, by seeing how His logic works, to see how He loves beauty. The message of Psalm 8 is only made stronger by knowing how big and how old this universe is.

What are the responsibilities and challenges of the Director of the Vatican Observatory? 

The mission of the Vatican Observatory, as stated by Pope Leo XIII when he founded the observatory in 1891, is to show the world that the Church supports science. As the director, then, I have to help our staff fulfill both roles: to do good science, and to show the world. 

I am responsible for seeing that the dozen Jesuit brothers and priests – plus our diocesan collaborators – have the resources and opportunities they need to do their work. That ranges from seeing that they have adequate office space and computer resources, to helping them organize workshops, to encouraging them to travel  – when we could, outside of Covid – to meetings and to visit with collaborators… to keeping our telescope in Arizona up and running at its best. A lot of that work means fundraising for our Vatican Observatory Foundation, which supports much of our work. Finding money is always a challenge!

I am also responsible for serving as a public face for the Observatory and its work. I do dozens of interviews every year, write articles for magazines, write the occasional book, appear on radio and television and even, sometimes, in films. I also help other members of our staff present our work in their own countries, in their own languages.

It is also my task to find and encourage young Jesuits in formation now who might be interested in joining the Observatory at some future date.

As an astronomer, how did you see the COP26 at Glasgow, Scotland on 31 October – 12 November 2021? Are you happy with what it managed to achieve? 

The problems of climate change have been obvious to us in the planetary sciences for nearly two centuries, and certainly since we understood the role that carbon dioxide plays in the climate of Venus and Mars. On the one hand, I am heartened that world leaders are finally taking this seriously. But I know that real change will only occur when everyone does their small part; that in the whole will make a much larger effect than any decree no matter how well-written.

But, as Pope Francis reminds us in Laudato Si’, the abuse of our planet is an expression of human sinfulness, and that has been with us since the Original Sin. That means that we should never expect to have this problem “solved” in the sense that we won’t have to think about it anymore. Human folly and greed are eternal.

Are other planets free from the impact of human folly and greed?

Why should they be? If there are creatures — creations of God — with intelligence on other planets, their souls will be given the same gifts of intellect and free will. Thus they will have the freedom to love God and His works, or to sin against them. That is true no matter how many eyes or tentacles they have!

Pope Francis is a fellow Jesuit who lives close to you. What do you think of him? Do you get to interact with him? Does he visit the  Vatican Observatory?  

He is a wonderful man and a great friend of the Observatory. Of course, the director before me, Fr. José Funes, was himself a Jesuit from Argentina and so he had lived in the same community as the Pope many years earlier. Pope Francis actually came and had lunch with us during his first year as Pope, and in the summer of 2019 he invited all of our staff to come and visit with him in the Vatican. We had no agenda, just a time to chat and tell stories among ourselves. 

Our menu this time

What does this issue of INI, dated January-March 2022, offer you?

Dear Friends,

We are happy to bring you this new issue of INI, dated January – March 2022. Being the first issue in the new year, this makes us think of the just-born 2022.

The entire world had a single prayer for 2022. After two extremely painful years of unprecedented hardships brought by the pandemic, many had looked forward to to a Covid-free year. But the new variant, the highly contagious Omicron, is forcing many governments to bring back the old restrictions and rules. In the U.S. and several European countries people have had to cancel their travel-plans and stay home.

The ray of hope in this gloomy scenario is the assertion of some scientists and doctors that the new variant of Omicron is highly contagious but a milder version of the deadly virus. That means it will infect many more people, but will not cause much damage or deaths as earlier variants like the Delta did. This will lead to herd immunity and make the pandemic endemic. This means that the virus is here to stay, but it will lie low most of the time and resurface periodically.

May this prediction come true very soon this year!

This issue of INI brings you articles that will bring you hope and joy, clarity and focus, enlightenment and encouragement.

The first feature is a heartwarming interview with one of the best astronomers in the world today – Br. Guy Consolmagno, SJ, Director, Vatican Observatory. I felt deeply moved when I read some of his responses. Read carefully what he has to say on how he became interested in astronomy, what took him to Kenya, why he became a Jesuit, what made him choose to be a Jesuit brother and not a Jesuit priest, how his knowledge of the heavens affects his faith, what he does as the Director of the Vatican Observatory etc. Once you get to know his views you are sure to gaze at the stars with more awe and delight than ever before.

The second in our menu this time is an article by the well-known Indian Zen Master, Fr Ama Samy, SJ. In fact, he is the only Indian officially approved as a Zen master, who is authorized to teach zen. A voracious reader and an excellent writer, he keeps writing and teaching. When the lockdown forced him to cancel his annual zen programmes in Europe, he sat down and wrote six books in these two years! The article here is excerpted from one of these books, titled, Zen – One Way to Nirvana. The article explains what we need to do to know the truth and reality.

The third article, by Fr. Konrad Noronha, SJ, Professor, De Nobili College, Pune, is on another virus that is making an increasing number of young priests and seminarians sick – addiction to pornography. A young, perceptive friend in Australia, shocked by what she learnt while trying to help married couples, asked if INI could come up with an article on this highly addictive and extremely dangerous problem. The retreats I have guided for priests recently reveal that this menace is a serious problem for our young priests and seminarians.  Let us hope that this article would help our youth and those who deal with them.

Contributing to our regular ‘Experience’ column this time is a veteran, tireless Jesuit missionary, Amalraj Chinnapan, SJ, who now works in Myanmar. Two years ago, quite unexpectedly he fell seriously ill. Most doctors gave up hope and he was anointed twice. But the four women who cared for him, one of whom was a Buddhist nun, fellow Jesuits who did whatever they could, hundreds of Myanmar Catholics, starting from his friend, Cardinal Charles Bo, who stormed the heavens with their tearful prayers and the doctors who refused to give up managed to work a miracle that finally saved him. Read his moving, poignant article to learn about an intriguing vision he had repeatedly during those days when he was in a coma and how he has come to understand it.

All those who want to know the ONE thing we need in order to find a happy, successful life should read Fr. Francis P. Xavier’s ‘Book’ column. A scientist, an educationist and an avid reader, Fr. Francis this time skillfully summarizes the main points offered by Gary W. Keller and Jay Papasan in their book, The ONE Thing.

In my ‘Film’ column this time I have shared the screen version of the real life disaster that happened in Aberfan, Wales, as shown in Episode 3 of the third season of the much-acclaimed Netflix drama series, The Crown. Last year Netflix won seven Emmy awards for this brilliantly written series on the life of Queen Elizabeth II. Read my column to find out how the very last scene of the film reveals what exactly moves the stoic Queen to tears.           

We start a new column, called ‘Youth Junction’ in this issue – meant for young Jesuits and Jesuit associates all over the world. Those who write for this column could be also Jesuit volunteers, young professors or teachers in our institutions and surely our students. The opening batsman is Fr. Emmanuel Akilan, SJ and he writes about the challenges the Church faces to becoming a synodal Church.

So have a great time. Please be sure your feedback and suggestions are always welcome.

– M.A. Joe Antony, SJ

 

Have you found the meaning of your life?

This time, Francis P. Xavier, SJ, talks of a classic that continues to sell thousands of copies every year since it was published

By Francis P. Xavier, SJ

Viktor E. Frankl, Man’s Search for Meaning, Rider, London, 2004

Man’s Search for Meaning is a highly popular book, which has sold more than 9 million copies. It is not a new book by any means. It was written in 1946 by Victor E. Frankl, who survived four Nazi concentration camps during World War II. He wrote this book in nine consecutive days.

Frankl’s conviction is that love is the ultimate and the highest goal one can aspire for. The salvation of every person is through love and in life. Love transcends this hopeless, meaningless world, when we live for others. People find their meaning in life, when they actually look for meaning in the other’s life. He would add that a sense of humour adds light to the art of mastering life.

“The ‘size’ of human suffering is absolutely relative” (p.55). But whatever be the challenges, difficulties, and obstacles, one ‘can preserve a vestige of spiritual freedom, of independence of mind, even in such terrible conditions of psychic and physical stress’ (p.74). It originates from the conviction that “if there is meaning in life at all, then there must be a meaning in suffering. Suffering is an ineradicable part of life. Without suffering and death human life cannot be complete” (p.76). To realize this and search for the meaning of our lives we need a paradigm shift or change in our attitude towards life, namely ‘it did not really matter what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us’ (p.85).

We can discover this meaning in life, according to Frankl, in three different ways.

This is possible when humans become conscious of their responsibility towards person(s) they love and understand the unfinished work they have to do for their sake. This determines their purpose in life and tells them why they should exist. At the same time they have to look for how to realize this goal in real life.

At this juncture, Frankl brings in logotherapy (idea of meaning). Logotherapy actually focuses on the future, that is to say, on the meaning to be fulfilled in one’s future life. He asserts, “Man’s search for meaning is the primary motivation in his life and not a ‘secondary rationalization’ of instinctual drives. This meaning is unique and specific in that it must and can be fulfilled by him alone; only then does it achieve a significance which will satisfy his own will to meaning” (p.105).

He cites a public-opinion poll conducted in France. According to the survey 89% admitted that man needs ‘something’ for the sake of which to live. In addition, 61% conceded that there was something, or someone, in their lives for whose sake they were even ready to die. That ‘something’ or ‘someone’ is the reason or the meaning for one’s life even amidst hardships. Another statistical survey conducted by Johns Hopkins University among 7,948 students from 48 colleges indicated that 16% of the students wanted to ‘make a lot of money’, while 78% underlined that their primary goal was ‘to find a purpose and meaning in life’ (p.105).

Hence what matters is specific meaning of a person’s life. Frankl says, “Ultimately, man should not ask what the meaning of his life is, but rather he must recognize that it is he who is asked. In a word, each man is questioned by life; and he can only answer to life by answering for his own life; to life he can only respond by being responsible. Thus, logotherapy sees in ‘responsibleness’ the very essence of human existence” (p.114).

We can discover this meaning in life, according to Frankl, in three different ways: i. by creating a work now or later or doing a good deed; ii. by experiencing something or encountering someone; and iii. by our attitude toward unavoidable and unexpected suffering. The first one could be realized by our achievements and accomplishments, while the second and third by our constant search, finding, and realization.

Most people in the world have enough to live by but nothing to live for. They have the means to live but have no meaning in life (p.142). In an existential vacuum with the feeling of emptiness and meaninglessness, one should search for meaning for life in living for others to do something beautiful and meaningful and useful to others. This is echoed in the words of St Ignatius of Loyola, “Love ought to show itself in deeds more than in words”.

When we manage to find meaning in life we begin to live our lives for the second time, but in a more effective way. Frankl ends the book with the words, ”Let us be alert – alert in a twofold sense: Since Auschwitz we know what man is capable of. And since Hiroshima we know what is at stake” (p.154).

Fr. Francis P. Xavier, SJ has been in administration as Provincial (MDU), Director (LIFE and LICET), and Vice president of Jesuit Worldwide Learning. Currently, he is the Rector of Loyola Jesuit Institutions, Chennai. An author and researcher, with several books, articles, and webinars to his credit, his research now is on ‘Religion and Science.

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