I wish each of you a very happy, hopeful and brave New Year! Why do I add the word 'brave' to the list? Well, it seems to me that we are on a new journey, and for that we need most of all, courage! They say that even the longest journey starts with the first step, and it is that first, tentative step into the unknown that requires courage. The second thing we need for our journey into 2013 is support - people around us whom we can trust, companions who will be there for us and see us through the bad times and laugh with us in the good times. Together we can do great things. I believe that, don't you?
To be an optimist is not usually to be naive, although of course it may be, but essentially it is to look at the reality of our situation and find a path through it that is possible to traverse safely. Optimists look at possibilities and take risks. Pessimists see only the negative side and are afraid to risk being wrong!
We need role models don't we, leaders who have the courage to take the first step on a new, untried road, and beckon us to follow.
There are many role models we can take through this New Year, many saints, many people in our own lives, perhaps. I'm going to ask you to take a fictional character, a figment of a gifted writer's imagination, if you like. And when I tell you who he is, don't say "But he isn't a real person!" He is an intrinsic part of an allegory, and allegories are very important in showing us something about ourselves. Jesus used that device in his teaching - we call them parables.
JRR Tolkien |
Have you seen "The Hobbit"? If you haven't, do try to do so The film version of Tolkien's "Unexpected Journey" is really three stories intertwined and focuses on one character in its title, a hobbit. Let me tell you how a genius's mind works. This genius was a lecturer at Oxford. He was correcting some student's essays. When he got to the last one in the pile, he found that there was a blank page at the end of the examination paper, which this particular student had not filled in. Absent-mindedly, Tolkien scribbled something on the paper. When he looked at it, he realised that it had nothing whatever to do with the essay he was supposed to be marking. He had written:
In the earth was a hole and a hobbit lived in it...
He looked at it, bemused. But, being Tolkien, he wondered "Hole?" "Where is it?" And he proceeded to find out what a hobbit was, and where he lived. He peopled his world with amazing characters - dwarves, wizards, magicians, the stuff of fantasy. But he gave us Middle Earth, The Lord of the Rings, and now this Unexpected Journey we call The Hobbit for screen purposes. You may not like fantasy films, I don't think I like them usually, but this one, like the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe series, says something important, especially for us facing a new beginning, an adventure if you like.
The Hobbit |
The main character is called Bilbo Baggins, who is the hobbit. He lives in Bag End, and he loves nothing more than to sit by his fire quietly enjoying his solitude or entertaining his friends. He was shy and not very charismatic, if you know what I mean. Then one night, he is visited by thirteen noisy and demanding dwarves, and Gandalf, who asks him to go on a journey with the dwarves to regain their lost kingdom. He is an unexpected hero, yet the story is about his finding in himself the ability to lead and to find the lost home of the dwarves, and also to fight the dragon who guards it. He is a hopeless fighter, and in the beginning has no confidence in himself. Yet he succeeds. One might say that he was naive. Yes he was, but what he had was a sense of adventure and a growing belief in his mission. As well as that, he had unselfishness. After all, he had a home which he loved, and didn't want to leave, but he felt sorry for the dwarves who had lost theirs, and he wanted to help them to regain it.
He also held on to his beliefs. He arrived at the end, battered and bruised, almost dead, but he held on to the ring. Maybe Tolkien saw that ring as not good. I don't know. But if we are looking for an allegorical meaning, then we can say that, to be faithful to what we believe in is good, and to hold on to what we have been given to guard is life-giving for us. Tolkien was a devout Catholic, and he too believed that faith is very important, and without it we live a half-life. Little Bilbo Baggins believed that someone was helping him to keep going on a journey that was well-nigh impossible, and he clutched the ring as a talisman.
In our Congregation we have what we call our charism which is the spirit and values which our Founder, Mother Magdalen lived by and passed on to us. We try to pass them on to others as Good News. To be faithful to them is our challenge. We are Christ-bearers to the people of our time, being asked to bring Christ to every situation, especially where there is conflict or lack of forgiveness. In his own way, little Bilbo did the same, although he would not realise what he was doing.
The Hobbit is also something of an allegory of leadership. Perhaps we are reading too much into it, but I can see what people mean when they say that. No one with any judgement would choose Bilbo Baggins as a leader, still less would they have confidence in his ability to lead others through hard times, and show them the way forward. Yet he did it where others failed.
So this New Year is about facing whatever comes with courage, even with a spirit of adventure, like Bilbo. It is about helping others on the journey and finding enough courage within ourselves to pick ourselves up when things go wrong, and start again. Those are New Year challenges!
I wish each of you once more a lovely 2013 and a special Year of Faith. Think of Bilbo. He set out on a journey of adventure, probably found it terribly hard, but kept on, didn't turn back and came to the end of his journey stronger, more in tune with himself and others, and more at peace! I wish the same for each one of you and for myself and each member of my Congregation. See you next year!
Happy New Year.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
I find the blogpost very inspiring. Thanks Sr. Brenda!
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