Inside
NCR
The old blue sedan parked outside my
house early last Saturday morning made me uneasy. I live on a quiet street in
an older residential neighborhood -- so quiet in fact that a car parked on the
street (where all the homes have driveways) is noteworthy. I couldnt help
but notice that the four men in the car, in their late teens or early 20s, were
all wearing dark stocking caps. And then, although the day wasnt that
cold, I saw that at least one was pulling on gloves. Add to the mix the fact
that three of my four neighbors were out of town, and my Neighborhood Watch
(perhaps coupled with investigative reporter) genes kicked in big time. In my
fertile imagination, I was about to witness the crime of the century or at
least a garden variety burglary.
Just then an older man came walking down the hill from the corner,
carrying rakes and leaf bags. Imagine my embarrassment when the
perps (I watch too many TV crime dramas) emerged from the vehicle,
came up the walk and rang my doorbell.
I bet you gentlemen would like to make some money raking
leaves, I offered sheepishly, hoping they couldnt know what I had
been thinking just a few minutes before. But I have a lawn service and
theyre already scheduled to come.
No, maam. Its free, said one of the young
men, explaining that the group was from Heartland Community Church up the hill
on the next block. Were just doing this as a community service,
helping out our neighbors.
I tried to give them a donation, suggesting they use it for their
youth ministry, but they wouldnt hear it. Cant take it,
maam. We just want to show folks that sometimes doing a kindness is
totally free -- just as Gods love to us is free, no strings
attached.
The young man smiled and grabbed his rake to join his peers (the
other perps). Within half an hour they had raked and bagged a total
of 15 bags of leaves and left them neatly lined up curbside.
For the rest of the day, I was buoyed by the groups gesture,
especially given my initial suspicions. What a treat to be surprised by
goodness, to be the recipient of totally unexpected (and undeserved) kindness
given by strangers.
But that was the point exactly. They werent strangers.
Although I didnt know any of the more than 10 people who eventually
swarmed over my lawn, armed with rakes and determination, their view was that
were all family, all on the receiving end of Gods totally
gratuitous love. Because of that belief, there are no strangers, only
neighbors.
Not everyone had the upbeat
experience I had last weekend, I realize. But regardless of what kind of a week
weve had, the events of this mid-November call us to reflect on where
were headed as a global family. This issue of NCR debuts our first
special section dedicated to family life (Pages 29-40). As the authors point
out so well, family is the first place most of us learn about God. The
domestic church, as the family has been called, is a model that a
top-heavy, often too corporately defined institution can learn much from -- if
it chooses. For too long, spirituality was something reserved to
priests and nuns; no one talked about the family as a school of spirituality,
or the family being the locus where grace, Gods own life, breaks into the
everyday amid dishes and diapers (and even lovemaking!). Our church will only
be as healthy as our families are.
At this writing, the nations
bishops are preparing to tackle several issues at their fall meeting in
Washington Nov. 11-14, not the least of which is the Vatican-revised norms for
sexual abuse. Another item on the bishops agenda is a document urging
priority for ministry among Hispanics. This action item was already delayed,
scrapped from their June meeting agenda by the sex abuse discussions. Latinos
are the fastest growing segment of the U.S. population and could comprise more
than half of all U.S. Catholics within a dozen years. But theres no
guarantee theyll be Catholic if as a church we dont take energetic
steps now to empower Hispanic leaders, listen to Hispanic voices, and give full
expression to their unique gifts and cultures.
Last, but not least, we report this
week on the annual Call to Action conference (see Page 3), held in Milwaukee
Nov. 1-3. James Carrolls insightful essay, his plenary presentation at
the conference, offers invitations and challenges we do well to ponder as we
look to the future. As our cover asks: How large is your community?
or as the Call to Action theme asks, Who is my neighbor? The answer
we give could well determine our future -- as a global family, as a church, as
a planet.
Now its time to say
arrivederci from this space, which I happily cede to its rightful
steward, NCR editor Tom Roberts. Tom will be back in the newsroom for
the next issue.
-- Pat Morrison
My e-mail address is pmorrison@nat cath.org
National Catholic Reporter, November 15,
2002
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