18 Dec 2017

May the peace of Christ disturb us!

Last Friday the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse was handed down after 5 years of painful and painstaking work. The focus has called many people to reflect on how they have been affected by this abuse. This has not just focused on what are appropriate ways of responding to people who live with the pain of the abuse but also the trauma of reporting that abuse and not being believed by the very people who they believed would act in their best interests. The pain has been deep and in some cases soul destroying where people have struggled to recover and trust again. To trust themselves, to trust others and in many cases to trust God would be present to the deep wounds that this abuse has left. We can no longer ignore the pain or tiptoe lightly around our responses both as institutions and as individuals. We are called to be people who reflect on what the Commission has recommended and consider how we will live in a way which responds in a way which brings life and hope not just in words but in deeds.
Over the last week the story which receives most publicity shines the spotlight on confession and celibacy. How do we seek forgiveness and how do we seek to live? The call of confession is not to produce a list of our sins but rather to carefully examine how our lives reflect God's life in our own. This is to notice those times when we have tried to live our lives on our own terms without reference to the core of our identity. We are made in God's image and likeness but that does not make us God. Confession is not about cheap grace but looking at ways in which we do seek to make restitution for the harm we have caused. Seeking forgiveness is not just rediscovering a warm inner glow but a profound surrender to a way of life that brings healing and reconciliation to others. There is a penitential element which recognizes that we are not the center of the universe but that we are part of that universe and need to respond appropriately.
This may all seem to be overwhelming especially as we prepare for Christmas. Yet we gather in Churches and in communities around a crib which shows the vulnerability of God in coming among us as a little child. This is not just about sentiment or feeling good about ourselves but being profoundly moved that God changes our focus. We are called to gaze upon the child and be transformed. This is especially true when we notice the first visitors at the crib: Shepherds who were considered to be at the margins of society and the wise men who came from the East to offer homage. I think that as we gather this Christmas we are called to see how God calls us to recognize that same vulnerability within ourselves. I believe it is from this place of poverty, humility and powerlessness that we recognize that God changes the axis of our world. It calls us to be communities which listen to the voice of the voiceless and centre our hearts on the needs of the most vulnerable. The strength of a society is found in how we treat the most marginalized and weakest by placing them at the centre of our reflections and action not just in words but in deeds.

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