Posted on 09/07/2005 3:37:26 PM PDT by sionnsar
by J. Mark Christian (posted by Fr. Stephen Freeman)
Mark Christian oftens contributes to our conversation at Pontifications as Palamite. He offered this reflection on the events in recent days in the wake of Katrina. It is worth a read and our prayers.
We live about an hour away from metropolitan New Orleans.
Helicopters are presently passing over our home in Baton Rouge, Louisiana one after the other, some military, some civilian. In the past week, the population of our adopted city has grown by over 100,000. Every main thoroughfare is clogged like a perpetual rush hour. Many of the evacuees are driving around the city, everyone seems to be on their mobile phones, frustrated by the recurring busy signals and all circuits are busy messages. Many more are in shelters: some provided by civil government, others by churches.
Many are dying. Reports from New Orleans depict corpses floating in the muckish, polluted water, others abandoned on interstate overpasses, others left in makeshift graves fashioned from tarp and bricks, marked with spray paint in the desperate hope that someone, someday will find their loved one and provide proper burial.
In The Ladder of Divine Ascent, St. John Climacus tells us that the monk has a body made holy, a tongue purified, a mind enlightened. Asleep or awake, the monk is a soul pained by the constant remembrance of death.
My body is tired, my tongue is tied, my mind is clouded by too much information, too much change, too much traffic. Yet asleep and awake, my soul is pained by the constant remembrance of death and destruction and displacement.
Many have observed that it all seems so inexplicable, so surreal. At our home we had heavy wind, a number of branches fell, power was out for just over a day. Compared to the devastation to the east, we were unscathed. My children complained because the cable TV was out for almost a week. I struggled to explain that there are worse things than missing Sponge Bob Square Pants. But I dont fault them for their complaints; I realize that its not just about Sponge Bob. They want normalcy. And everything, at varying degrees, is so utterly abnormal.
Lord have mercy, Lord have mercy, Lord have mercy.
Over thirty years ago, the novelist Walker Percy (another Louisianan by adoption) began his novel Love in the Ruins with a question that conveys the apocalyptic mood that suffuses this part of the world:
Now in these dread latter days of the old violent beloved U.S.A. and of the Christ-forgetting Christ-haunted death-dealing Western world I came to myself in a grove of young pines and the question came to me: has it happened at last?
Has it happened? Is this the way the world ends? Not with a bang or a whimper, but with wind and rain and fire and flood? For countless Louisianans, their world has ended. Will they build another one?
The church where we worship St. Basils Orthodox in Metairie is almost certainly flooded. We still dont know for sure. We went to Liturgy on Sunday in a little Greek chapel here in Baton Rouge. The place was packed: Greeks from New Orleans, Antiochians from Metairie the priest was Romanian, an IOCC representative. He celebrated in English, the cantor responded in Greek. The congregation stood in prayer, disjointed, displaced, unsure what to make of it all, some crying, some unable to enter the temple because of their grief. They stood outside, wanting to be a part of things, but overwhelmed by the fact that their life in New Orleans isnt there for them any more. As we read in the Ladder, their souls are pained by the constant reminder of death and destruction.
Months ago, I remember reading David Harts editorial in the Wall Street Journal reflecting on the tsunami that hit Southeast Asia. His words have stayed with me, perhaps so that I can remember them now how Orthodox Christians believe that we exist in the long melancholy aftermath of a primordial catastrophe, in a broken and wounded world that languishes in bondage to principalities and powers spiritual and terrestrial alien to God. And yet, the incarnate God entered His world to rescue the beauties of creation from the torments of a fallen nature. Hart reminded his readers that when we are confronted with the sheer immensity of worldly suffering, we are permitted only to hate death and waste and the imbecile forces of chance that shatter living souls. For now, we must remember that creation is in agony in its bonds, divided between two kingdoms, and that only charity will sustain us against fate. For now, Im trying to remember all of that.
Well do what we can to love in the ruins.
And well keep saying our prayers:
Crossing the waters as on dry land,
In that way escaping From the evils of Egypts land,
The Israelites cried out exclaiming:
To our Redeemer and God, now let us sing.
Most Holy Theotokos save us.
With many temptations surrounding me,
Searching for salvation,
I have hastened unto you;
O Mother of the Word, and ever Virgin,
From all distresses and dangers deliver me.
Most Holy Theotokos save us.
Assaults of the passions have shaken me,
My soul to its limits
Has been filled with much despair;
Bring peace, O Maiden, in the calmness,
Of your own Son and your God, all blameless One.
Glory to the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.
To God and the Savior youve given birth;
I ask you, O Virgin,
From the dangers deliver me;
For now I run to you for refuge,
With both my soul and my reasoning.
Now and forever, and to the ages of ages. Amen.
ping
Thank-you so much for this. It is the first news I have had of our brothers and sisters in Louisiana. This is a hard time for all of us, but as Christians, we cannot fall into despair. The Fathers and many of our holy monastics have spoken to this throughout the ages. This is a particularly difficult and dangerous time.
"When despondency seizes us, let us not give in to it. Rather, fortified and protected by the light of faith, let us with great courage say to the spirit of evil: "What are you to us, you who are cut off from God, a fugitive from Heaven, and a slave of evil? You dare not do anything to us: Christ, the Son of God, has dominion over us and over all. Leave us, you thing of bane. We are made steadfast by the uprightness of His Cross. Serpent, we trample on your head."
St. Seraphim of Sarov
Orthodox ping.
St. Seraphim of Sarov
Hallelujah! Amen!
Amen.
Thanks for the ping.
Now the question: what do we, as Orthodox do to help our suffering bretheren?
"Now the question: what do we, as Orthodox do to help our suffering bretheren?"
The GOA website has a link for contributions which are being funneled to the IOCC which is working with the Red Cross, Catholic Charities and I believe the Lutherans. I suspect the other jurisdictions have similar links. On an individual basis we can also contribute to the kits which the IOCC is putting together through our parishes. Our parish is having its festival this weekend and like many other parishes in the GOA a portion of the net will go to the IOCC.
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