‘Stand
at the Crossroads and Look…’
Wisdom from 37 Years Ago…
.
by Roger Foley
This life, this radical community living we
seek to engage, is a call of God. The importance
of this particular call gets clearer as the
environment in which we live our Christianity
gets more and more secular and at times
blatantly aggressive against things Christian.
Traditional family values are under attack, and
generations are growing up with a built in
rejection of the very Biblical basis of marriage
as held by their parents.Societal slide is
evident worldwide. What will this mean to our
communities into the future? What will this mean
in attracting new people or adding our children
in what will clearly be counter-cultural living?
What will this mean in our relationship into
wider society, the wider structures of law and
society?
Jeremiah 6:16 has some wisdom: ‘Stand at the
crossroads and look; ask for the ancient paths,
ask where the good way is, and walk in it, and
you will find rest for your souls.’ I love this
Scripture which speaks to me of a ‘path well
walked.’ And so I want to walk with you a short
path of just 37 years to the journey of a man
named Jean Vanier.
I first heard of Vanier when I managed a large
agency with responsibility for men, women and
children with developmental delay and those with
moderate to severe physical disability. In 1964
Jean a Canadian Catholic philosopher, theologian
and humanitarian, established an international
movement named ‘L'Arche’. From humble beginnings
with one integrated living household near Paris,
L’Arche’ is now established with 147
‘ecumenical’ household communities in 35
countries. They have two groups here in New
Zealand, one in Wellington, and one in
Christchurch -indeed they used to purchase our
lamington cakes in volume as a fundraiser. Great
people. In 1979, the year the Lamb of God was
established, Vanier wrote a very challenging
book entitled ‘Community and Growth’ [Society of
St Paul]. The book is readily available today
for just a few dollars and it is entirely
suitable for personal or group reflection.
Veronica and I are re-reading ‘Community and
Growth’ and even in the first few pages I am
coming across my notations and underlining of 36
years ago, as relevant today as it was to me
back then. I share with you some extracts in the
first 36 pages of 252:
- ‘A community is only a community when the
majority of its members transition from “the
community for myself” to “myself for the
community,” when each person’s heart is
opening to all the others, without any
exception.’
- ‘The mutual trust at the heart of community
is born of each day’s forgiveness and the
acceptance of our frailty and poverty. But
this trust is not developed overnight.That is
why it takes time to form a real community’.
- A community is not simply a group of people
who live together and love each another. It is
a current of life, a heart, a soul, and a
spirit. It is people who love each other a
great deal and who are all reaching towards
the same hope'
- ‘I am more and more struck by people in
community who are dissatisfied. When they live
in small communities they want to be in large
ones… when they are in large communities they
dream of small ones. Don’t we all dream of the
perfect community where we will be at peace,
in perfect harmony? The ideal doesn’t exist.
Stop looking, give yourself where you are.
Stop looking at yourself and look instead at
your brothers and sisters…’
We are blind indeed if we cannot learn from
those outside of our own community who have
‘walked the talk’ and ‘lived the life.’ To
Vanier I am grateful because his example has I
believe strengthened, not weakened, my
appreciation and engagement of this call in God
- the building of a Covenant Community.
Roger Foley is senior coordinator of the Lamb
of
God Community. He and his wife Veronica
live in Christchurch, New Zealand.
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