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Being in Just One Place

THComm Blog Photos MAR2022 (Presentation (169)) (11)

(To hear this reflection, read by Soren, click below.)

The foundation of our family’s Faith LifeLevel 1, our focus in the first week of the monthis communion with God, the grace of which overflows to all our relationships. In the following, a recent column for the Arlington Catholic Herald, Soren reflects on how chronic distractions keep us from communion with God and others.  

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The other week, Ever and I went out on a date. After a hectic few weeks, our special time together had at last arrived. All around us at the restaurant were other couples, out on dates. About halfway through the dinner, I began to notice something.

One of the spouses at a nearby table would stand up to use the restroom. Almost immediately, the other spouse would take out his or her phone, and then pocket it when the spouse returned, or leave it out on the table, or even continue staring at it. If it was the latter, the other spouse would take out his or her phone, in a kind of mutually assured destruction of the date.    

How pathetic we all are, I thought to myself. We are not able to sit quietly in a restaurant — alone for one minute — without turning to our glowing rectangles. If this is how we act in public, God help us for what we’re all doing at home in front of our kids. And just as I had these profound insights, I wondered what the next morning’s weather was going to look like, and I pulled out my phone to check.

As I pondered the irony, I recalled that a few days earlier I was at Mass when, at the words of consecration, I witnessed a “first”: As the priest lifted the host above the altar, someone was texting. I see texting while driving all the time, but texting while kneeling was new. 

There we were: The choirs of angels attending, and the miracle of transubstantiation happening before our eyes. Here I am: The image of God visible before me, in my beautiful spouse, as we enjoy time together. And yet again, I succumb to the desire to be in two places at once. 

The protagonist of an Edward St. Aubyn novel might just speak for us all: “It’s the hardest addiction of all … Forget heroin. Just try giving up irony, that deep-down need to mean two things at once, to be in two places at once, not to be there for the catastrophe of a fixed meaning.” (St. Aubyn himself overcame a heroin addiction.)

Perhaps the deep-down fear of this catastrophe is what I’m glimpsing in this restaurant and at Mass. Perhaps we’re so used to being in two places at once that we can no longer bear the fixed meaning of a date, with our attention fixed only on our spouse, or Mass, with our focus only on Our Lord, or family dinner, fully present to our children.

This summer my family was blessed with the opportunity to see Pope Francis from a distance of about 10 feet, in St. Peter’s Square. Out came the phones. And right after the popemobile passed, we all looked down at our relationship inhibitors to post, tweet and text. After all, how could we submit to the fixed meaning of only being in one place, St. Peter’s Square — with our brothers and sisters gathered from the four corners of the earth — in the presence of the pope? We needed to run from that catastrophe.

All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone,” wrote philosopher Blaise Pascal in his Pensées, more than 300 years ago. But today, anyone can sit quietly in a room alone, smartphone in hand, and if they choose, evade God and one’s own conscience in the process.

With St. Aubyn’s help, allow me to suggest a revised pensée that accounts for the addictive quality of our technology: All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone, content with the fixed meaning of being in only one place. 

To be present — to God, our spouse, our children, or a friend — now seems to require that we first confess that we prefer being in two places at once; that we then beg for the grace to turn away from the heroin-like lure of our world’s escapes; that we embrace the poverty of being in only one place, and patiently receive the “fixed meaning” of the person — a resplendent image-bearer of the almighty God — before us.

The bill came. Ever and I thanked the waiter and got up to leave. My wife’s hand in mine, I glimpsed the truth — for a moment — with utter clarity: To be in one place is the most glorious thing.

>How You Can Live in the Present Moment” (National Catholic Register) includes this insight: “God could be calling us to do great things today, but we are so focused on a past hurt or future concern that we simply ignore what is happening right in front of us!”
 
> Keeping Connected with Your Spouse” (Catholic Digest) concludes with a creative list of little ways that spouses can stay connected throughout the week.
 
> In “Why Being Alone Matters” (Life Teen), Trenton Mattingly offers sound advice on taking time with the Lord in prayer.

> Big news! This week, six seminarians from Mt. St. Mary’s Seminary will begin their 2022-23 pastoral field education assignment at Trinity House Cafe! On Wednesday morning, Thursday late morning to early afternoon, and Friday afternoon, they will be volunteering with our ministry of hospitality at the corner of Church & Market. Please join us in welcoming the Diocese of Arlington’s Sean Mazary, YA (Youth Apostles), Eric McDade, YA, Jim Harbour, YA, Benjamin Haddock, and Gabe Gaudet, as well as Peter Foley from the Diocese of Lincoln! We have no doubt that their witness will be a blessing to everyone they encounter. Stop by and give them a warm Trinity House welcome in the coming weeks!

> Are you newly married or do you have friends who have recently tied the knot? We can’t wait to join Fr. John Riley, Spiritual Director at the Arlington Diocese’s San Damiano Retreat Center, as guest speakers at the Newly Married Couples Retreat he is leading on Sept 16-18. The price is $285 per couple. To learn more and save your spot, check out this page at the diocesan website.  

> Save the date! The Heaven in Your Home Gathering returns to St. John the Apostle in Leesburg on Sat., Sept. 24, with special speaker Fr. Michael Kelly from St. John’s, inviting us to take a closer look at how our families can find renewal in Sunday worship and rest. Learn more here.   

Our award-winning Trinity House Cafe + Market in the heart of old town Leesburg is hiring for barista/cook openings! Join our faith-filled, dedicated, and hard-working team, focused on serving our community with excellence. Learn more, apply online, and spread the word. 

“I love what you all are doing to lift up the sanctity of the family and the domestic church.”

– Dee Anna Garland, Humble, TX

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