When will I learn?
By Bobby Neal Winters
We have moments of clarity, moments of epiphany, moments where God just drops knowledge into our heads and mental dominos that had been in the process of being set up for years just fall into place.
Sometimes you can go years between instances of this happening. Last week it happened to me twice within three days.
I will tell you about these in reverse order.
The morning of Friday, July 4, I took my brother out for an outing. He’d been visiting me in Kansas for 36 years and he’d never visited Girard before. I told him he was in for a treat.
We drove to Girard and made an orbit of the courthouse. I looked my brother over and he didn’t seem to be too worse for wear. The excitement of Girard had not been too much. So I decided to press our luck and drove over to Greenbush.
The destination I had in mind wasn’t the Educational Service Center at Greenbush. My brother has just retired as a teacher, and I did believe he would appreciate it, as it is a fine resource, but I had another destination in mind: The Old Church next door to Greenbush.
I’ve been driving past that old church for the better part of four decades. It looked interesting from the road; it looked well-kept; but I’d never stopped.
I’d never even noted its name. In my mind it was the old church next to the Greenbush Educational Service Center.
We drove the few minutes from Girard and pulled into the drive. I looked up and read it’s name Saint A******s Catholic Church. I put the *** in there, because I’ve seen the name in other places, and that is how my brain has always dealt with it. I often do this with words I don’t think I am going to use again. I get the beginning; I get the end; the rest is fuzzed out; and the whole thing becomes a hieroglyph. Sometimes I don’t learn how to pronounce the word, how to own it, until I force myself--or am forced--to break it all down.
My brother and I got out of the car and started looking around. The site is very nicely kept up. I read the legend of how the church was founded: A priest was caught in a storm and vowed to build a church on the site if he lived. He lived and kept his vow. He built the church and it was subsequently destroyed by weather related incidents twice.
I wondered whether horrible weather is perhaps not the best sign that a church should be built.
Anyway, I decided this was an interesting enough place that I ought to learn its name: Saint Aloysius. “Saint Aloy-see-us?” That didn’t seem right. “Saint Alo-y-sius?”
Then the penny dropped: Saint Al-oh-WISH-us!
I’d heard the name all my life. I’d seen it and buzzed through it for years. I’d never taken the time to walk through the name a letter at a time.
It now works for me.
Let us now go back to Wednesday, July 2. Jean and I were at the funeral of our neighbor Dan, who we’ve lived next to for the better part of four decades. We knew him to be a good man, a good neighbor.
The funeral was at Our Lady of Lourdes. We sat in the back. This has become my main strategy when I go to Catholic Churches. You watch the people in front of you: Stand when they stand; sit when they sit. You discover that either there are a lot of Protestants who sit too near the front or there are a lot of Catholics who don’t know when to stand and sit either.
The priest preached on the text: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
I’d never understood what was meant by “poor in spirit.” The phrase had never conjured up the image of an individual that our Lord would call blessed. It was a mystery to me. It was like the name Aloysius. I looked at the beginning; I looked at the end; but it had never come together for me.
Then the priest, Father Mike, I think, related poor in spirit to my neighbor Dan. I’d never thought about him in that light before.
And it was then, for the first time ever, I understood “poor in spirit.”
Dan served as a lens to better understand the Gospel.
Here we come to the hard part. While I could spend some time describing Dan, trying to convey him to you. Those would just be words. You would’ve had to know him. You probably know someone like him, but the words just haven’t slid into place.
I wish I had known him better.
I find I am always saying that to myself, especially after a funeral.
When will I learn?
Bobby Winters, a native of Harden City, Oklahoma, blogs at redneckmath.blogspot.com and okieinexile.blogspot.com. He invites you to “like” the National Association of Lawn Mowers on Facebook. Search for him by name on YouTube.