Sr. Maura Clarke: "The endurance of the poor and their faith through this terrible pain is constantly pulling me to a deeper faith response. My fear of death is being challenged constantly as children and old people are being shot... I want to stay on now. I believe that God is present in His seeming absence."
Jean Donovan: "I think that the hardships one endures maybe is God’s way of taking you out into the desert to prepare you to meet and love Him more fully."
Sr. Ita Ford: "Am I willing to suffer with the people here, the powerless? Can I say to my neighbors, ‘I have no solutions to this situation; I don’t know the answers, but I will walk with you, be with you? Can I let myself be evangelized by this opportunity?’"
Sr. Dorothy Kazel: "El Salvador is a country writhing in pain—a country that daily faces the loss of so many of its people—and yet a country that is waiting, hoping, and yearning for peace."
Maura. ¡Presente!
Jean. ¡Presente!
Ita. ¡Presente!
Dorothy. ¡Presente!
Loving and Compassionate God, make us prophets of your word. Open our ears and our hearts to hear the words of your prophets, our sisters Ita Ford, Maura Clark, Dorothy Kazel and Jean Donovan, as they challenge us to take you at your word, to feel within us your urgent cry for justice in our world. May we take that cry as our own and become instruments of your justice and peace as we pray together the prayer that Jesus taught us.
Our Father....
For all the saints, who from their labors rest,
Who Thee by faith before the world confessed,
Thy Name, O Jesus, be forever blessed.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
Thou wast their Rock, their Fortress and their Might;
Thou, Lord, their Captain in the well fought fight;
Thou, in the darkness drear, their one true Light.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
For Martyrs, who with rapture kindled eye,
Saw the bright crown descending from the sky,
And seeing, grasped it, Thee we glorify.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
O blest communion, fellowship divine!
We feebly struggle, they in glory shine;
All are one in Thee, for all are Thine.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
Photo of the martyrs via JaneR combined with a December sunset in Berkeley.
Words of the martyrs and concluding collect from a service found here.
Biographies of the four women may be found here.
6 comments:
This is so beautiful and such a fitting tribute to these women, whom I revere for their faith and their courage.
Thank you for this BB. It is a living prayer for those who have gone before us.
Also- I use firefox for my browser. Every now and then, I freeze when I open your blog, but usually if I go out and back in again, it works.
Today it would not - even after rebooting. I am here via safari. Just thought I would mention it. This is not really a comment as you can see, but a note to you!
Pax brother!
I am only passing on the work of others but it is a joy to remember the saints from whom we draw courage.
Sigh. I know what you are talking about Fran. I am on Safari for most things but cannot publish in blogger without Firefox and it freezes on me when sometimes when I try to scroll down. I have not identified why this happens and it frustrates me no end.
It usually happens on the same photos each time and I have only had this problem for roughly the last month.
Perhaps some savvy blogger who uses Firefox can help us know why. I have no problem viewing with Safari, just can't publish with photos and formatting in it.
Any clever folks out there able to help us?
Tried Firefox, didn't like it, moved to IE 7 (which freezes more often than an ice-cream maker). I'm on a PC anyway, so no help. Sorry!
But thank you for doing this, and that leaf photo is gorgeous too.
My admiration for these women of God knows no bounds.
May a portion of the same Spirit of the living God, which inflamed the hearts of these holy women to love and stand with the poor, come to rest upon each of us.
It is not that the strong among us are not afraid, because they often are. It is that they move forward to do the work of God despite the fear.
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