The
staff, mostly college students, had arrived a week prior to the opening of camp
for orientation. After a long and fairly chilly day in the refreshingly cool
Berkshires, we were all ready for hot showers before retiring to our cabins. The
showers were rather rustic, being outdoors and consisting of wooden partitions
with no roof, sited on a cement pad, with individual shower heads in each
"stall". By the end of the summer I found it quite wonderful to shower in the
moonlight with an occasional owl off in the distance to keep us company, but
that first evening was more a matter of waiting for a turn to let the abundant
hot water warm up shivering limbs. There was in fact plenty of hot water. The
difficulty was that in order to get the hot water to run, you had to hold on to
a chain. As soon as you let go of the chain, the water stopped. I quickly
grasped the essential task, and held on with my right hand, allowing the hot
water to flow down. Then I paused. I reached for my shampoo bottle with my left
hand, and could not for the life of me figure out how to open it and wash my
hair with only one hand. I tried biting the cap with my teeth, but to no avail.
And I really did not want to let go of the chain and stop the flow of hot
soothing water! But, seeing no way around it, I let go, soaped up, and then
pulled the chain and rinsed off. Well, it was camp after all.
It was a night or
two later, while showering again, that I noticed the nail in the wall.
Oh...that's how it was done. You attached the chain to the nail, and then you
could have both hands free. Another hurdle crossed.
By the time I learned when
to make the sign of the cross during Mass (by watching everyone else) and when
to bow during the creed, (my husband pointed that out) I had also figured out
that most people did not in fact genuflect, and I could relax and not worry
about tripping over myself.
I am not one to suggest that becoming a Catholic can
be reduced to learning the appropriate gestures and rituals...far from it. But a
lack of familiarity with such things does give pause to someone previously
steeped in a different tradition.
Which may not be a bad thing. It is the
"otherness" of Catholicism that is so attractive, the world previously unknown
and unexplored that lies before a newcomer and seems to beckon continually,
inviting converts into one new experience after another. It is a constant series
of surprises at first, each one more delightful than the last. It is daily Mass,
and the Easter Vigil Mass, then the season of Easter punctuated by sprinkling
water and a renewal of baptismal vows; the daily calendar of saints and
blesseds, feasts and solemnities; the statues and medals; the rosary and the
devotion to Mary; lighted candles everywhere, adoration and prayer in the real
presence of Jesus. I am still experiencing and discovering, and I see no sign
that the end is in sight.
Learning how to take an outdoor shower for an entire
summer, and indeed the other camp experiences, learning to sleep at night with a
bandanna sprinkled with a smelly substance called "Fly Dope" to keep the
mosquitoes away, being comfortable with a resident bat the girls adopted and
named Igor, hiking eight miles in the rain and then setting up camp along side a
lake, these were all new and inviting experiences also in their own way. But the
still on-going season of discovering the Catholic Church is by far the richest
and most rewarding one I have ever known. It is always in the end a discovery of
truth, of things sacred, divine, holy. I suppose it is the difference between
driving in a car across America, and riding in a rocket ship into outer space
toward infinity and beyond! Here's to the Catholic Church, to her new members as
well as her long-time faithful. May we all continue together on the journey of
discovery, the road that leads us closer to God. Deo gratias!
5 comments:
On the other hand, we converts have the benefit of seeing it all with new eyes, and so often do not take the riches of the church for granted. Rather than being jaded, we are given the joy of unwrapping a new gift.
Yes! You put it so beautifully. It is the joy of unwrapping a new gift!
Acquiring a Catholic imagination can be the toughest part of conversion.
I posted a bit on conversion from a cradlecat's viewpoint awhile back:
http://platytera.blogspot.com/2009/09/betrothed-at-birth.html
Sandy, just wanted you to know that I linked back to this post in a blogpost I wrote today called "My Favorite Sunday Snippets."
Hope that's OK!
http://naturalrelaxedhomelearning.blogspot.com/2010/05/my-favorite-sunday-snippets-1.html
God bless, Shelley
Thanks Shelley. It's always nice to have readers!
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