CALLED TO BE WITNESSES TO RADICAL HOPE
			
			Sr. Brenda Walsh, Racine Dominican 
			
			
			 
			
			We use the word “witness” a lot in writing 
			and conversation. Jesus said: “Go forth and be my witnesses to the 
			ends of the earth.” What does it mean to be a witness? How am I to 
			understand it? “Witness means giving the whole of my life, the whole 
			of our lives as a faith community. It is not a nice coat or suit we 
			wear on Sundays or special occasions. It is the whole thing – who we 
			are and what we are about. It means to know, to experience someone 
			or something in a personal way and to give testimony to that 
			experience by my speaking, my acting, my caring and loving. When I 
			experience life and goodness, I am compelled to share it. In a sense 
			that experience never leaves me alone. 
			
			 
			
			Gustavo Gutierrez, in his book “We Drink 
			from our own Wells”. speaks about the experience this way.: “We are 
			on a journey where we have already met the one we are searching 
			for..”  So the meeting is not just a one time event. It is ongoing.”
			
			
			 
			
			“In “Jesus the Stranger”,  Joseph Donders 
			reminds us:  “ To be a witness is not something we do all by 
			ourselves. The initiative comes from God, the success belongs to God 
			and the credit goes to God.” God speaks to you and me in the 
			ordinary, everyday events of our lives. How do I know it is the 
			real, authentic voice of God?  We will know the answer deep within 
			ourselves. There are different ways God speaks to us. That reminder 
			of Joseph Donders comes to my mind often when I am involved in a 
			challenging endeavor – The reminder that the initiative comes from 
			God, success belongs to God and the credit goes to God. It keeps 
			things in perspective. 
			
			 
			
			In Nature: Take a few moments to look at 
			and enjoy the beauty  around you. We are told that  “The heavens 
			declare the glory of God.” This beauty is available locally and 
			globally. It calls us to take care of the earth, to enjoy it and 
			pass it on without abuse to future generations. George Manley 
			Hopkins reminds us the “world is filled with the grandeur of God.” 
			That kind of speaking and listening can nurture us day by day.
			
			
			 
			
			God speaks through the people and events 
			in our lives. God spoke to Mary and she had complete trust that God 
			would accomplish what was promised. Abraham heard God’s voice: “Get 
			up. Leave your country and go into a land that I will show you. I 
			will make you the father of many nations. Sara, your wife will bear 
			a child even in her old age.” Abraham and Sara put their future in 
			God’s hands and the promise was fulfilled. 
			
			 
			
			Can you think of a time when God spoke in 
			a challenging way to you? I recall one that happened several years 
			ago. It was a Sunday afternoon at the parish where I worked in 
			downtown Racine. I had just finished arranging all the program for 
			children and adults for the Fall. We were all set to go. The phone 
			rang: “Brenda, will you consider having your name placed in 
			nomination for community leadership? You have 30 minutes to get out 
			here and share your values and insights and hopes for the 
			community?” After a time of prayer and  struggle with the question, 
			I said “Yes.” It was a challenge. The day by day “Yes” to the call 
			over the years was also a challenge to keep the response fresh and 
			generous. I’m sure many of the readers can give examples of how God 
			spoke forcefully to you and topsy-turvied your life as mine was.
			
			 
			
			Sometimes the voice of God comes gently 
			and sometimes loud and clearly. God is willing to be put in a 
			vulnerable position, depending on our response. It is up to you and 
			me to be listening continually and not let God’s word fall on deaf 
			ears. My ears and eyes and hearts must be open to hearing the voice 
			of God in the cries and pain of the poor and powerless, the hurting, 
			marginalized and weary. I am called to be present to them in the 
			same way God is willing to be present to me. I cannot impose my 
			timeline, my manner of responding, my expectations or standards on 
			them. Neither can I give up on any person. Everyone is called to 
			life and goodness and wholeness just like I am. I need to remind 
			myself that success comes from God and the credit for any good 
			response goes to God. 
			
			 
			
			The invitation to us is to be a witness to 
			radical hope. We are living in a time 
			
			of great threat to our very existence, 
			nuclear threat, war and famine, lack of health care and more. Yet in 
			the midst of this we are hearing of great creativity especially 
			among the young. Many are taking responsibility for creative 
			solutions to the problems and pushing to the brink of a new way of 
			thinking, relating, living and acting. 
			
			 
			
			Where have you witnessed radical hope? I 
			saw it in India. There were crowds, staggering numbers of people 
			everywhere teeming with hope. They had simple hopes … bread on the 
			table, that most of their children would live, that they might be 
			able to learn to read or write and more. I also saw hope driving 
			with a friend a few years ago, through a town devastated by a 
			tornado. The people were out with a bulldozer going through the 
			town, ready to build again. Radical hope! I saw it in a woman who 
			had kidney failure, both legs amputated and other major health 
			problems. I asked here one day how she was doing: She started with a 
			long litany: “Oh I am so blessed, I have good caregivers, a great 
			family, faith and more. I am so blessed.  Radical hope!
			
			 
			
			Gutierrez also said, we must be distilled 
			by suffering if we are to be authentic witnesses .When I look back, 
			pain and suffering has helped me keep the emphasis on the right 
			things. The challenge is to see pain as a friend and not an enemy  
			Another challenge is not doing something for the poor but with the 
			poor. I walk with them, stand with them, and together push back the 
			boundaries in both of our lives. 
			
 
			
			We give thanks that we live in this time 
			of pain and challenge and great grace. We are called to hope as 
			people have never hoped before, to struggle and pray and work for 
			God’s outcome and always remember that the call comes from God, the 
			success belongs to God and the credit goes to God. We pray that 
			God’s plan will prevail and not ours. We know that love is stronger 
			than destruction and death in our own lives, in our communities, our 
			church and our world. We are all called to be witnesses to radical 
			hope.