Experience Making a Difference

Experience Making a Difference

Burning Hearts

by | May 6, 2014

Sometimes, when working one-on-one with a prisoner or an immigrant or an unlettered, needy person, one gets a sense of… what is it…? Beneficence, charity, giving of oneself, which comes pretty close to a feeling of superiority. “I have something you need, so I will now give it to you.”

At certain moments, however, such a relationship can change radically. One senses a spark of genuine connection, almost a breakthrough to a different level of vision, a recognition of real rapport. The other person is no longer a beneficiary of my charity but has become someone on the same plane, maybe even now a friend to be cherished.

Such thoughts are provoked by one of the Easter gospels (Luke 24), the one about the appearance of the Risen Jesus to the dejected disciples on their way back to Emmaus. There they are moseying along, sharing their disappointment about dashed hopes and dreams, when this stranger shows up and gives them a fresh take on the very Bible passages they had cherished.

He accepts their invitation to share a meal. They “break bread” and at that very moment their relationship with the stranger changes: They recognize who he is… but he vanishes. Then they race back to Jerusalem with the news only to discover that their peers there already know that Jesus lives and they have themselves recognized him, felt his company again.

But it is that electric moment of the breaking of the bread, that spark of recognition, which lies at the heart of our Eucharist. Indeed, this Emmaus event was an early Eucharist laid bare. We have since elaborated on it with so many accoutrements that it is sometimes hardly recognizable: candles, vestments, incense, music, and all those things we use to enhance it.

Those two disciples (how I envy them!) had that face-to-face “eureka!” moment when they realized who their guest was. They were never the same again. If we could find our way to such a person-to-person recognition of Jesus at our Eucharist, if we could pierce through all those accumulated enhancements to a personal rapport with Him, what an Easter that would be for us.

It might almost be like connecting with a prisoner or an immigrant or an unlettered, needy person… a breakthrough to a new vision, to real personal rapport. Who knows? Our hearts might even burn within us….

 

Simon (Si) E. Smith, S.J is a New England Jesuit with a broad background and varied international experience.  He taught at different levels in Baghdad College, Iraq, Boston College, Weston Jesuit School of Theology, Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley and Nativity schools in Boston and Worcester. His major and preferred areas of instruction are Scripture and liturgy.  He is known as an organizer and administrator, having spent a dozen years based in Washington, as Executive of Jesuit Missions for the U.S. and Canada. Si has published widely, is a popular lecturer, is fluent in French, Spanish and German and has traveled & worked extensively in the third world. And we are grateful that he also serves IVC as a Spiritual Reflector.