Reflections On Call
- We Say Yes Prayer by Kate Walsh
- What do you plan to do with your one, wild and precious life?
- A Reflection on Easter - by Yolanda Rodriguez
- A Reflection on Lent - by Joe Quane
- "I also have to do something" - A Reflection from a Christian Base Community in Nicaragua
- "They have no wine!" - A Reflection on Cana and Haiti
- The Mystery of Christmas
- Advent: The Season of Hope
- Discernment as a Means to Life - My CoC Experience
- One Year Later - Memories of a Catholics on Call Participant
- Reflection on the Catholics on Call June 2009 Conference
- Karl Rahner on the Sacred Heart of Jesus
- Ecclesial Movements and New Communities in the Catholic Church
- Silence - A Lenten Reflection
- The Florida Retreat: A Vocational Booster Shot
- Reflections of a newly-minted Youth Minister
- Humanity, as flawed as it may be, is beautiful
- A Christmas Meditation
- “Our Future is behind Us and Our Past ahead of Us”
- Speak, Lord, Your Servant is Listening
- Reflection on my First Year as a Pastoral Associate
- What is an Apostolically Oriented Spirituality?
- Words of Wisdom from the Young Adults Conference
- Discernment: What should I do with my one and only life?
- "Here I am!" Call in the Old Testament
- Taking Up the Cross: A Volunteer’s Reflection
- "Yes, Lord": A Young Adult's Response to God's Call
- What is Lay Ecclesial Ministry?
- Risking Commitment in the Age of Relativism: Let Us Wake Up
- Sister Laurie Brink, OP: Uncovering the hard, gritty yet beautiful Truth
- A Science Student's Musings on Young Adult Spirituality
- Rachel Hart: Getting Paid for Something She Loves
- Dorothy Day: Building a Dwelling Place for God's People
- A Reflection on the Vatican Statement about Homosexuality and the Priesthood
- God's Call in the Life of John Paul II
- Becoming A Person of Prayer: Part III
- Becoming A Person of Prayer: Part II
- Becoming A Person of Prayer: Part I
- Free -- For What?
We Say Yes Prayer
I wrote this prayer and reflection for work. We are a group of many religious faiths, coming together to move our collective work of striving for a just and sustainable world.
“The real job is to lay the groundwork for a deep change of heart on the part of the whole nation so that one day it can really go through the metanoia we need for a peaceful world” – Thomas Merton
Peace begins with action, an action within ourselves. The action is simply to love- not the passive, easily forgotten in a busy day kind, but rather the attentive, trying, striving, challenging kind that forces us to change our words, our notions our beliefs our movements our days and our weeks.
What we came here with today let us lay it down. Let us be most free. Let us be most fully present, most fully holy and most fully loving.
Anthony de Mello stated that “peace is only found in yes”. Yes, and there is more than that. Peace is only found in yes comma and.
Our religious beliefs tell us to say yes, and. Christianity calls us to love our neighbor as ourselves; saying yes and, to others. Taoism instructs us to go with the flow, saying yes and to the movement of life. Buddhism tells us to heighten awareness, a yes and to being in the moment.
Yes and means I accept the challenge, I accept this created reality for what it is in this moment, even if I seek to change it. Yes and means I honor you and your beliefs as much as I honor mine. Yes and means being present in the moment. Yes and mean finding positive and constructive ways to say no. Yes and means moving the scene of life forward and adding to it. Yes and means our will unites with our action.
Yes and brings us in peace and love filled action.
As we rejoice in this gathering, we bring these ideas into our holy space and to our work in creating a more just and sustainable world.
Peace is only found in yes:
All : We say Yes
To the call to be today’s preachers and prophets, servants and leaders
We say Yes:
To the hardships that are our pathways to peace
We say Yes:
To the trials and challenges of our work
We say Yes:
To the victories, both great and small
We say Yes:
To our historic past
We say Yes:
To our creatable future
We say Yes:
To our brothers and sisters
We say Yes:
To each other
We say Yes:
To the Journey
We say Yes:
To the Dream
Lord, it is our yes that brings us here today and that unites us in the Spirit. As we enter into conversation, help each one of us to not only hear the way that we are being called to continually say yes but to the many ways you meet us with the answer of yes and…
Amen
by Kate Walsh
(Kate is a 2010 Catholics on Call alumna. She is a graduate from Fairfield University, majoring in Managment in Politics. She currently works for the Tri-State Coalition for Responsible Investment. You can find this and other reflections on her blog: Say Yes! Change Things.)
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