Saturday, June 30, 2012

Charism: A Diamond With Many Facets

Note:  Anne Walsh will be the guest presenter at our  2014 conference.  She is an associate of the Redemptorist community in St. John's Newfoundland.  Anne is currently the Director of Adult Faith Formation in the Archdiocese of St. John's.


by:  Anne Walsh


As I write these reflections, I am sitting in my sixth-floor apartment, looking out over the city of St. John’s as evening descends and falls. A few moments ago, the rays of the setting sun caught on a multi-faceted crystal in my window, one of a number of sun-catchers that I have collected over the years. For long minutes the light hung on first one facet and then another, moving and dancing on my floor and walls. I was fascinated. “That’s exactly the image that wish to convey in my writing!” I thought in grateful amazement. “Charism-- One diamond with innumerable facets.” Let’s think about that for a moment. 

How many charisms are there? That’s a trick question. We usually think of many charisms, carried and borne forth into the world by many religious communities. Each community is characterized by a unique “spirit.” For example, Sisters of Mercy speak about their charism as one of joyful service of the poor, the suffering, and the uneducated. Redemptorists speak of their charism as that of evangelizing the poor and being evangelized by the poor. These “charisms” are obviously related, though distinctively nuanced or coloured.

Let’s take a step backward. I have come to believe that there is but one charism, one Spirit. That charism is the spirit of Jesus Christ. The charism is Love, life-giving, life-enhancing, life-altering, death-transcending Love. There are many facets of that Love, and it is these facets that we are usually referring to when we speak of “charism.”

Love is like a diamond. It has as many facets as there are people, for love is always unique and new, always dancing in the mystery that is “you” and “me,” always shaped by our shared history, or by a movement of the heart-- compassion, gratitude, grief, contrition…

Given this reality, human beings share common interests and motivations. People group together for all kinds of reasons. Various people, over history, have come together around common interests, responding to a shared sense of need. Over time, people have heard the cries of the poor, the uneducated, the dying, the disenfranchised, the fearful, and have identified in their common sense of call a shared spirit, a shared sense of purpose. Evangelical “families” have been formed, each facets of the One Diamond. Once, those families encompassed professed religious. Sometimes there were priests and brothers in one evangelical family. Sometimes there were choir sisters and lay sisters. Sometimes there were a number of institutes which shared a common heritage or founder. Today, we witness the flowering of other forms of expression of charism. Many religious communities have begun to walk with “Associates,” “partners in mission,” “lay missionaries,” etc.

One image for the dynamic relationship shared by vowed religious and associates is the image of a family. These two, professed and associates, are really two elements that, together, constitute an “evangelical family.” Laurent Boisvert, in a short book that changed my life, describes these as “a community of belonging.” He writes:

                        The evangelical family constitutes a community of belonging,
                        not in the sense of a life under the same roof, but in that of
                        interdependent proximity which is rooted in the welcoming and
                        implementation of a particular aspect of the Gospel, of a certain
                        face of Jesus Christ... What drives the different ways of living
                        the privileged evangelical aspect is to witness, to participate
                        in the same mission.[1]


So, the community of belonging does not live all together under one roof, but we may nevertheless be united under the “roof” of a particular manifestation of the Holy Spirit, as it has been lived out by a particular religious community. I’ve been playing with Boisvert’s ideas, and his four characteristic dimensions of “charism,” and dhere’s what I have come up with, a few ideas to share with you.

1. Together, the members of an “evangelical family” look at the world and people through a shared lens. All share a common set of “glasses.” We see the Gospel from one particular aspect. When Redemptorists look at Jesus in the Gospels, we look for his interaction with the poor, the disenfranchised, with a particular eye to how they are changed in the encounter with the poor. For Redemptorists, evangelization is a two-way street.
·      In the case of the evangelical family to which you have been called, what would this lens be?
·      How does your “family” perceive or interpret the Gospel?
           
2. Together, in related but different ways depending on the concrete situations of our lives, the members of the evangelical family live the Gospel from this aspect. We look at people and needs and the world a little differently, and this makes a difference to how we live, the choices and commitments we make, the volunteer opportunities we choose, the partners we choose, the cause to which we give ourselves.
·      In the case of your evangelical “family,” what is distinctive about the way the members choose to live?
·      How do associates share this way of living?
           
3. Together, we experience a common sense of Mission. We bear witness to the life-changing power of the Gospel in a manner that flows directly from our gifts, talents, our way of seeing the world, our way of reading the Gospel. I started out life as a teacher, but from the start, I fell in love with the poor. They “ruined” me, as St. Paul might say, and forever after I oriented by life choices toward proclaiming Good News among the poor, whether that meant the materially poor or those rendered poor because of their age, or where they lived, or their lack of options or education. When I met the Redemptorists, with whom I felt so “at home,” I recognized that others saw things more or less the way I did. It was freeing.
·      How does the your “family” witness to the Gospel?
·      What is distinctive and life-giving about this? … for professed members? … for associates? … for those with and among whom you live and minister?

4. Together, the members of the evangelical family are Fruitful. Our common witness and work makes the world a better place, one life at a time. We build up and nurture the Reign of God through our common call, way of looking at the world and witness.
·      Do you see the development and flowering of the Professed-Associate relationship as “new life” for the community? … for the Church? … for the world?
·      How is the Professed-Associate relationship bearing fruit? What fruit do you discern is being borne?

One diamond, many facets. It is our privilege, yours and mine, to live in this exciting time, in which such possibilities are open to us. This is a time of rebirth and revitalization. God grant that we will have the courage and the perseverance to grasp the opportunity presented to us. God grant us willing hands and grateful, generous spirits to undertake the foundational work that lies before us. God grant us friends and humour to lighten the loads. God grant us days of sunshine on which we can observe and wonder at the Light that shines in and through us and our companions.



[1] Laurent Boisvert. Charism: An Evangelical Visage to Incarnate and Manifest (Québec: Éditiones Franciscaines, 1994), p. 44

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