My father grew up in a faithful Catholic family, attending
the parish school near his home from kindergarten to high school graduation. As
an altar boy, he was taught to show great reverence for Jesus in the
Eucharistic bread and wine. Only the priest could distribute communion to the
kneeling faithful. In those days, the fast before receiving the Eucharist was
also very strict, with no food or drink allowed from Saturday evening until
after Sunday Mass.
My father’s strong faith sustained him through his years of
service in World War II, where he was assigned to graves registration in
France. This grim duty consisted in recovering the dead from the battlefields,
carefully identifying each one, and building cemeteries in muddy fields far
from home to bury the fallen. During those trying times, he carried a crucifix
in his backpack and took comfort in praying the rosary. He always felt that Our
Blessed Mother watched over him during the war. Years later, he told me of
leaning down to pick up his rosary beads just as shrapnel from a bombing flew
past him, striking the very spot he had been standing a moment before.
His faith remained steadfast when he returned home, married,
and became a father to five children. We lived in the same town where my father
had grown up and attended the same church. But by the time I received my First
Communion in the 1960s, many things in the church were changing. Latin chant
was replaced by the twang of folk music, the practice of kneeling to receive
the Eucharist vanished along with the altar rails, fasting times were reduced
to an hour, and lay people served alongside the priest as Eucharistic
ministers.
The final straw for my father may have come one Thanksgiving
when I was about nine years old. On the way home from my grandmother’s house,
my father stopped by the church to give thanks to God at the tabernacle, where
the Eucharistic bread is reserved. He was stunned to find the door locked. In
those turbulent times, vandalism in some churches had resulted in locked doors
at many parishes.
Distressed that reverence for the Eucharist seemed to have
vanished and that the faithful were locked out of the sanctuary, my father
began to question all he had been taught. Eventually, he stopped going to Mass
altogether, saying he felt he was “a Catholic without a church.”
Although he never returned to church, my father’s faith in
Jesus and love for the Blessed Mother remained with him all his life. Near the
end of his life, when he became sick with cancer and had exhausted all
treatment options, he told me simply, “I am putting myself in the hands of
Jesus and Mary.”
As a “reborn Catholic,” I treasure the gift of the Eucharist
and the Mass. This spiritual nourishment is as necessary to the soul as food is
to the body. But, like my father, we also live in trying times. We grieve to
encounter locked churches, closed Eucharistic chapels, and limited access to
the sacraments and fellowship. Although Jesus is not bound by walls, we all
need to physically encounter God and one another. We should not be afraid to
seek out and attend churches that have opened their doors. Since last summer, I
have traveled to churches far and near, discovering many beautiful sanctuaries
serving their congregations in creative and safe ways.
But when that isn’t possible, it’s vitally important to
spiritually encounter God and one another. Spend time praying with scripture.
Gaze on a crucifix and enter into Christ’s passion, sharing your burdens with
Him. Pray a rosary while meditating on the mysteries of the life of Jesus and
Mary. Call a friend, check in on a family member. Hold fast to your faith.
Trust in God, placing yourself, your family, and our world into the hands of
Jesus and Mary.
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