Sunday, May 6, 2012

The VERBal Presence of Jesus

Having moved from St. Augustine’s parish in Oakland to return to my home state of Missouri, I found myself missing many aspects of the parish but especially the community I felt with my small faith sharing group. Several other members of the group had also moved on to their next professional or personal destination and so a few of us starting doing a Google Plus video ‘Hang Out’ once a week during Lent. We followed the same materials as the small groups gathering in Oakland but instead we were a virtual bunch, spanning four time zones to come together and share.

We didn’t know how it would work. Could faith translate across the Internet? Would it be awkward to share personal stories when you were sitting alone in your home? Would technical difficulties make the exchange feel robotic rather than intimate?
It was clear after our first session that those concerns were all unnecessary. God’s presence was as real had the group been gathered together physically. And perhaps that is because God typically reveals himself in actions. “Verbs not nouns,” as we heard Father Mark speak about last week – I had the good pleasure of being physically in Oakland for this homily but could have also experienced it over the webcast – Jesus comes to us in the breaking of the bread. In that action. In that verb. Faith is an active experience, it is not passive. Love requires action. God calls us to love others, to accept others, to appreciate others. Verb, verb, verb.
And so with the faith sharing group, God calls us to share. He does not stipulate the method or the delivery vehicle, just simply that we should commune with one another.

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