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"For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them." Matthew 18:20

 

Audio from my Morning Air interview

Laura DeMaria

The audio from my conversation with Morning Air’s John Morales is up! Catch the audio here, and my portion starts at 06:55.

We talked the concept generally of creating peace, but also moved into a discussion of everyone’s calling to be with God in prayer, and discern where he is calling us. I also made a point of mentioning something from my article, Creating Peace in Your Corner of the World, which is that creating peace is not just the domain of those specifically trained diplomats working in international relations, but the purview of each one of us. I find I often talk about the job or work of a lay Catholic in pretty strong terms - as in, it is a critical part of your calling is to evangelize - because I believe it with my whole heart! And, I believe it to be true. Nothing negotiable about it.

Enjoy!

Catch me on Relevant Radio tomorrow morning at 7:10 am ET

Laura DeMaria

I’ll be joining John Morales on Morning Air radio tomorrow morning, Wednesday, April 6, at 7:10 am eastern. I’ll be discussing my latest article, Creating Peace in Your Corner of the World, and you can listen live on your mobile device or computer in the player here. You can also download the Relevant Radio app, or check your local radio station listing here. Thanks for listening!

My next article is going to be a reflection on participating as a lay leader in the current synodal listening sessions. I was the facilitator for my parish’s three sessions a couple weeks ago, and have a few observations on the preparation, the listening sessions themselves, the feedback we received, and the area I feel we overlooked. Spoiler alert: on the topic of communication, everyone agreed “The Church needs a PR person.” But, no one mentioned how lacking the Church has been in communicating to lay Catholics that by virtue of their baptism, every Catholic is called to evangelize. No exceptions!

Whereas some lament the lack of resources, I think resources are abundant. Word on Fire Institute, Catholic Answers, etc, etc. It is more that most Catholics don’t know there is something they should be doing. Why did the Church stop teaching this, or was it ever taught? Is there an answer? I do not know. But, I want to explore it.

Next week is Holy Week. Wow! I look forward to the return of all those Holy Week traditions: the feet washing, the Mass of the Lord’s supper followed by the grief and stillness of Good Friday, the hopefulness of Holy Saturday, and of course, the feast and triumph of Easter Sunday. This Sunday, look forward to holding palms - for some people, maybe the first time in two years - and praise God for his closeness to his people.

The Shadow His Wings: The True Story of Fr. Gereon Goldmann, OFM

Laura DeMaria

The Shadow His Wings: The True Story of Fr. Gereon Goldmann, OFM was first published in 1964 and I got a copy after seeing a very compelling email with a subject line, “The priest who fought Hitler.”

“We had to do it. We had to reprint this book,” the email began. “Rarely has a book had such an impact on so many of us here at Ignatius Press. It is one of the most powerful and moving books we have come across. If you can only buy one book this season, this must be the one.”

As it turns out, this book is actually as sensational as that email copy led me to believe. Much like Fr. Walter Ciszek’s With God in Russia, The Shadow is His Wings tells the story of a priest during wartime, in the belly of the enemy. Fr. Gereon Goldmann was a German seminarian when he was drafted to fight for the Nazis, rising to the ranks of the SS. He not only survives an extraordinary set of circumstances and maintains his faith in the face of the Nazis, but is even ordained a priest while living inside a prison camp. Think scenes of administering the Eucharist to dying soldiers in the middle of the battlefield, helping French peasants hide their gasoline from the Nazis, and even participating in a plot to assassinate Hitler.

it’s an incredible story, and two things in particular stood out to me: first, a central theme of this book is the power of prayer. For various reasons, both before he entered seminary, and while he was at war, entire communities of religious women were praying for Fr. Goldmann. First, that his vocation as a priest would be realized, after he expressed interest in the Franciscans in childhood, and then, that he would be ordained, and then that he would survive and minister to others during the war. The fruits of these prayers got him out of seemingly impossible situations, and into seemingly miraculous situations - like an audience with the Pope himself to beg to be ordained, just as the Little Flower begged the Pope to allow her to enter her religious community at 15.

I remembered how at the beginning of the pandemic, I realized how critical communities of pray-ers are. They are the ones who storm Heaven with their prayers and move mountains. They spend their lives in contemplation, often for years at a time, before the fruit of their prayer is realized. In Fr. Goldmann’s case, one of the communities looking out for him prayed for more than 20 years. And it was by chance he even found out about it, after the war.

The power of prayer is real. Fewer people pray now, no doubt, because we know fewer people adhere to the faith, and there are fewer women in religious communities, for example. Imagine what we are losing in the world with fewer pray-ers (I wrote an article about this a few years ago).

Another thing that stood out to me is how Fr. Gereon viewed his vocation. On the eve of his ordination, he recalls that God “called him out of all eternity” to serve this purpose. What a profound way to view one’s life and calling, particularly at a time of so much suffering. Even now, it is easy for us to wonder why we would be born at such a dysfunctional time. Fr. Gereon did not view his situation this way; he viewed it as a mission from God and that he was in the exact right time and place at the right time. This seems, to me, the proper way to view our own lives.

I recommend this book. it will restore your faith in the knowledge that God is in control, and that He hears our prayers. And, that ordinary people are called to do great things, and can do great things, with God’s help.