This reflection byΒ Laura, Companion in MissionΒ (CiM)
first appeared in the CiM Newsletter.
I donβt often thirst for committee work. Nor, after 10 years of being a CiM does the theme of I ThirstΒ thrill my soul. Moreover, I am in a season of spiritual greyness and feel as flat as the Canadian prairies. I dutifully read the words oο¬ered in the morning and evening prayer but rarely do they lead me to an honest conversation with God. Then how is it that I find myself on the annual CiM retreat committee with the theme of I Thirst? Never doubt the power of the Spirit working in a reluctant soul.
Huddled around Sr. Susan’s computer, Skyping with pioneer CiM Dolores in Calgary, I am excited in spite of myself. As we begin brain storming and exchanging material about the I ThirstΒ theme, the Spirit let me know, in no uncertain terms that I had barely scratched the surface.
O God, you are my Beloved, and I long for You, my soul thirsts for You.
All that is within me thirsts,
as in a dry and barren land with no water.
So I have called you in my heart, sensing your power and your glory.
from Psalm 63 in Psalms for PrayingΒ by Nan C. Merrill
Psalm 63 invites me to honestly identify for what or who I am thirsting. Digging deeper, I ask myself about the nature of that thirst. Is it a little scratchy dryness which I can largely ignore or completely forget about in the busyness of life? Is it one of those desperate βIβm dying of thirstβ that one might feel after an hour of exercise on a hot day? Am I easily distracted from my thirst by social media or am I running on empty? My answer? I am parched without even a drop of saliva in my mouth. It is as if I forgot to take the jar to the well and I am standing in a stupor under the midday, July sun. I am so dry I could hardly call out to God. And what will I call out? I wish it was something amazingly spiritual, pleading for a closer union with God or total surrender to his will. The truth is I want God to give me back my familiar, comfortable life. And while he is at it, he might as well renovate a few of its features, a more reliable memory and a couple of new knees would be welcome. And if not that, God could at least make what he is oο¬ering me more tolerable.
Like a sponge,
dried up and brittle
I wait, longing to be soaked, softened and
made heavy by Godβs eternal reservoir……
ever longing to be filled and swelled by God in me.
from the poem DrynessΒ in Growing into GodΒ by Edwina Gateley
Edwina Gateley describes well how I am feeling and for what Jesus would invite me to thirst. However, it is still all about MY thirst and what LAURA needs. The Spirit is not through with me yet. When Sr. Susan mentions Apostolic Thirst, the thirst to go beyond myself to others, my reaction is; βThat is definitely not what I thirst for right now. I am just trying to survive. I am too busy, too tired, too worried, too committed to too many people to even think about it. But two lines of Scripture wake me up:
Jesus stood up and said in a loud voice. βWhoever is thirsty should come to me and drink. As scripture says, βwhoever believes in me, streams of life-giving water will pour from their hearts.βΒ
John 7: 37-38.
Back to the retreat. Once again to my dismay, I find myself volunteering to talk about apostolic thirst! It is the week of the retreat, my mind is still blank, and I am just short of panic. The Spirit looks kindly on me this time. In the middle of the night, Jesusβ voice wakes me up. Believe me, this almost happens in my life. He asks: What did I do on the cross? Who were my neighbours? Even when my life blood was pouring out, I became the life-giving water. I oο¬ered forgiveness and salvation to the Good Thief and a home for my widowed mother, kneeling at the foot of the cross.
Jesusβ words convert me. The Spirit reminds me, βJesus did not heal every leper in Israel and donβt forget about that mustard seed.β Now each time I go into a store I use the cashierβs name and try to make a personal connection. I phone a few people who I know are lonely but avoid because they talk so long my ear gets numb. I make a coο¬ee date with a troubled friend that I am sure I donβt have enough energy for. Small things but a start. And so it is that in the midst of my greyness when all I know is the βpoor meβ thirst, I become a fountain of life giving water. Now I pray with Mary Oliver that
I wake with thirst for goodness I do not haveβ but know that the Spirit can provide.
Mary Oliver, βThirstβ
Photo credit:Β Great Tit quenching its thirst near outskirts of Bangalore, attribΒ Krsnarao2006Β [CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)]