Contemplation: Broken, Blessed, and Shared
We do not go to the poor because we are better, stronger, or more capable than they are, or to share our great wisdom, or the secrets of our success. Rather, our Rule reminds us, we go to them “aware of [our] own brokenness and need for God’s grace.” [Rule, Part I, 2.2] Blessed Frédéric was keenly aware of his own limitations, lamenting to his friend Léonce Curnier “If you knew how weak I am! How my good will is easily shattered by the shock of circumstances! How I pass from ambitious presumption to discouragement and inaction!” [97, to Curnier, 1835]
Yet, our brokenness is no cause for despair! On the contrary, it is precisely because of our brokenness that we are called to this vocation. If not for our brokenness what need would there be for us to follow this lifelong pathway to becoming whole (holy) and complete (perfect), as Christ calls us to be? Jesus calls us in our brokenness, He meets us in our brokenness. He went so far as to put on the cloak of humanity and shared in our brokenness Himself. We need not come to Him already complete, for, “God often makes use of weak and frail instruments to accomplish great deeds. One must be called to a providential mission, then strengths and weaknesses disappear to make way for the inspiration that guides.” [111, to de La Noue, 1835]
The Lord not only accepts us in our brokenness, He blesses us for it! He blesses us with all the individual gifts and talents we possess, He blesses us through the sacraments, and He blesses us with each other, a community of faith, bearing each other’s burdens, and sharing each other’s joys. We are, after all, parts of one body, and “the parts of the body that seem to be weaker are all the more necessary”.
Each blessing, each gift that we receive is given to us only to be shared, like the Eucharist broken, blessed, and shared at every Mass. When we receive the Body and Blood of Christ in Communion, it becomes our own bodies. Frédéric and his friends, that fateful spring day in 1833, were challenged to show the good of the church in the world, and they realized it is precisely this: It is that we, the living Church, the Body of Christ, are meant to be broken, blessed, and shared with all of God’s beloved children, inviting them to the table, and sharing God’s hope.
When we do this, Christ meets us there, and we quickly realize that “He who brings a loaf of bread to the home of a poor man often brings back a joyful and comforted heart. Thus, in this sweet business of charity, the expenses are low, but the returns are high.” [1361, to the Society, 1836]
Contemplate
Do I accept my brokenness, give thanks for my blessings, and share my gifts?
By Timothy Williams,
Senior Director of Formation & Leadership Development
Society of St. Vincent de Paul USA.
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