‘I have come that you may have life and
have it to the full.’  Jn 10: 10

As we enter the month of November every year we are invited to ponder two feasts, All Saints and All Souls. Through these feasts in particular and indeed during the whole of November we are invited to remember our deceased brothers and sisters.

This year we have been conscious that many sisters have been bereaved with the loss of family members and we have also to date this year experienced the deaths of nine of our sisters, some expected and some that have sent us into shock, all of whom we miss deeply. We are mindful too of all who have died in the many conflicts around the world, in acts of violence, in famine, in accidents and natural disasters.

In faith we know that our deceased family members and our sisters are still very much with us and part of us yet we are caught into a profound mystery. As autumn is letting go to winter in the Northern hemisphere we have spring opening up to summer in the Southern hemisphere. We also know that in some countries there are only two seasons, wet and dry. This is the mystery of life.

Death confronts us with mystery, it challenges our assumptions and precipitates us into a new place every time we meet it. We can think of death as our final freedom or it can imprison us in fear. Loss through the death of a loved one can take us into a desert space. It is like being in a familiar place but it is, as if, someone has sneaked in overnight and changed all the signposts. We can feel disorientated because we have not been given the new map. Somehow we have to navigate our way around and find new ways of making the journey through life. In faith we know that God will not abandon us even if we must live with uncertainty and unknowing.

When we listen carefully to our restless hearts, we may start to sense that in the midst of sadness there is joy, in the midst of our fears there is peace, in the midst of our longings there is compassion and that in the midst of our loneliness there is the beginning of quiet solitude.

So fall in love with living
Wrestling with the pain and the chaos
Within yourself and within the world
Join the experience of life
Dancing with the angels and the clowns
And may the God of peace and joy
Who is continually making all things new
Embrace you as a partner in the Divine Creating.

We bless ourselves with love
We bless one another with strength
We bless the world with joy

Let us go forward on the journey, rejoicing in all that we have and open in trust and faithfulness to all that is to come. In the film ‘Shadowlands’ based on the life of CS Lewis, there is a line in the script which says: “We read to know we are not alone.”  During this month of November let accompany one another, reach out to one another and support one another in prayer and in person.

We believe that death is the gateway to new life and grief too can open us up to new horizons, we can discover hidden resources: A little reflection called Transformation may connect you to your inner possibilities:

“As I passed the old cherry tree in February, it had a bare and forlorn look about it. It contained no shred of beauty. In fact, it required no small act of faith to believe it was still alive. I passed the tree again in April. When I looked at it I could scarcely believe my eyes so great was the transformation. It was now decked out in a robe of brilliant blossoms, which filled the air with fragrance and caused the surrounding scene to explode with colour. Two months ago it was lifeless, now it is an elegant witness to life.

From where has all this beauty come, I ask myself.
Could it by chance have fallen out of the sky and alighted on the tree? Or has someone waved a magic wand over it? Nothing of the kind. All this newness, freshness and fragrance; all these buds, blossoms, shoots had come from within the tree itself! On looking at it back in February, when it was still in the grip of winter, who could have believed it contained all this?”

Let’s always be open to life and to newness and possibility!