WINDSTORMS
AND VIOLINS
September
1st 2002 Homily
Fr.
George Smiga
Gospel:
Matthew 16:21-28
Life
is difficult! This is the opening sentence of Scott Peck's
book, The Road Less Traveled, and I think there would
be few of us here today who would argue with the truth of
that statement. Even when our lives are well grounded, even
when things are going smoothly, it does not take long before
something challenges us, something attacks us, something
causes us pain.
As Roseann-Roseannadana used to say on the old Saturday
Night Live, "It's always something; if it's not one
thing, it's another." Each one of us has a cross to
carry, and carrying that cross makes life difficult.
The hope that comes from today's Gospel is this: that which
is difficult can also be good. When Jesus says to his disciples
that they must take up their cross and follow him, he is
not assigning them a punishment. He is offering the assurance
that when they take up a difficult part of life and carry
it as a cross after Jesus, it need not destroy them. In
fact it can have the power to strengthen them and open them
more to life.
A
famous Italian violin maker was known to carefully select
the wood for his violins from the north side of the tree
trunk. When people questioned him about this, he pointed
out that it was the north side of the tree that faced the
brunt of the storm. It was that side of the tree that was
buffeted by the wind and the rain. As a result, the wood
on that side was stronger and more resilient. He found that
if he shaped his violins from the wood on the north side
of the tree, both the tone and the timbre of those instruments
would be richer. Therefore, when the winds came and the
rains struck, one could hear the trees of the forest groan
under the violence of the storm. But the violin maker would
only smile and say, "I love that sound, for it's the
sound of trees learning to be violins."
When
Jesus says, in today's Gospel, that we must take up our
cross and follow him, he is pointing to a similar truth.
As difficult as it can be to bear the burdens of life, they
have the possibility of deepening us, teaching us, and allowing
us to grow. It is often in times of stress or trouble that
we make progress, that we hear things that otherwise we
would not have the time or the patience to hear. C. S. Lewis
says that "God whispers to us in our pleasures; God
speaks to us in our conscience; but God shouts to us in
our pain. Pain is the megaphone that God uses to rouse a
deafened world." Pain certainly seizes our attention.
Now
we need to be careful here because to say that good can
come from pain is not the same as saying pain is good. Sickness,
suffering and death are evils and we should do all that
we can to avoid them. But when evils must be faced, when
they cannot be avoided, we are called to take them up as
crosses to follow after Christ. When we do that, they have
the potential to deepen us and to open us more to life.
I
know this to be true because I have heard it from the testimony
of so many people. I've spoken to a woman dying of cancer,
who told me that through God's help, she is more alive today
than in any other moment of her life. I've talked to a young
college student who shared with me of how his girl friend
dropped him after a three year relationship, and after he
made his way through the pain , with God's help, he realized
that he was a stronger person then he ever imagined himself
to be. I've spoken with a young mother who lost her daughter
in crib death, and who witnessed to me that once she worked
through the sorrow, with God's help, it was turned into
energy for ministry to other mothers who lose their children
in similar circumstances. I've spoken to a young married
couple, who after their first major argument and all the
hurt and pain and healing that it involved, could say that
with God's help, their relationship today is deeper and
more real than it was before. I've had lunch with an unemployed
steel worker who shared with me that it was not until he
lost his job that he began to realize how valuable his family
was.
Life
is difficult. Each one of us has a cross to bear. But the
good news is that our cross is not a punishment but an opportunity
So when evil strikes, when pain begins, do not be afraid
or despair. If we can take up our cross and carry it in
Jesus' name, it need not paralyze us or destroy us.
If
wind storms can change trees into violins, then certainly
the crosses we carry in Jesus' name, can transform us into
genuine daughters and sons of God!