drawing deeply from the well

Image of el monasterio de la Encarnación in Ávila, España by Julie Vieira (August 17, 2023)

Memorial of Saint Teresa of Jesus, virgin and doctor of the church
Romans 8:14-17, 26-27
Psalm 33:2-3, 10-11, 18-19
John 4:5-15

Dear Sisters, Brothers, and Siblings — Happy Feast Day.

In August, I had the great delight and honor to visit la ciudad de Ávila in España. Each day I was there, I visited my favorite place, el monasterio de la Encarnación. I’d walk from the old town of Ávila down the fortified hill, and a few blocks through a neighborhood toward the monastery. Once I reached the street, Calle de la Encarnación, I could see a couple blocks away the magnificent statue of Teresa – you know the one, where she stands tall, walking staff in hand.

I would enter el patio de la Encarnación, an outdoor terrace just within the monastery walls. From where I sat on stone bench, I could see the very door through which Teresa entered the Carmelite Order in 1535. Each day, I sat there and wrote, eager to encounter Teresa and the God who so enraptured her heart. I waited and listened. I listened and waited. And then I waited some more. I figured, what better place than for divine inspiration?! I waited and listened. Nothing.

Finally, I gave up. I figured that if Teresa was going to be silent, so would I. I put away my notebook and pencil and walked out. But I couldn’t leave. So I started to wander around outside, down the street past the main entrance of the monastery. I followed the outer walls of Encarnacion, curious about the space that Encarnación occupied. It was not a short walk. The property was much more extensive than I ever imagined. I was getting tired, and the heat of the day was relieved only by the coolness radiating from the stones of the massive walls.

After what seemed like an impossible number of left-hand turns, I started to recognize things again, and up ahead I could see Calle de la Encarnación again. As I neared the crossroads, ready to take my final left to get back to the main entrance, I saw a sign. That’s right, a sign. A STOP sign to be exact. Below it were the words, “Convento de San José (Las Madres) Primero Fundación de Santa Teresa de Jesús”. Next to the words was an arrow. The arrow, slight though it was, pointed in the opposite direction of Encarnación.

It is then that I remembered. Teresa left. She left Encarnación. She left and she set out. She left what had been her home and her local community of many years. Familiar walls, familiar faces, familiar routine, familiar spaces to encounter God. She left. The statue that we love so much and that is replete with emotion and intensity and meaning. With walking staff in hand, Teresa is setting out to re-found the Carmelite order. Her back is to Encarnación, and her face is set like flint, heading towards San José, the first convent of the Carmelite reform.

The woman from today’s gospel is no different. She encountered Jesus not in a monastery but in a familiar place — Jacob’s well. The well dated back nearly 2 millennia to the time of Jacob in the land of Samaria, in the town of Sychar, “near the plot of land that Jacob had given to his son Joseph” (John 4:5). It was familiar not only to the woman but to her ancestors who day after day, year after year, came to draw water.

Jesus presented the woman with a crossroads. He asked her to let go of the familiar and to draw water not from this spring that had served her and her people for years, but to draw living water, that is, water flowing from God’s endless spring of Wisdom. It is the Wisdom we hear about in our first reading, “I loved Her more than health and beauty; I preferred Her to the light of day, for Her countenance shone unceasingly.” (Wisdom 7:10)

The woman couldn’t believe what she was hearing from Jesus. “Who do you think you are?” she says to Jesus. (John 4:12). Perhaps she even wondered to herself, “Who do I think I am to receive this water?” Still, she waited and listened, longing for more.

And then she gets it.

She leaves her water jar behind and sets out. Her faith is being refounded – what it looks like, she’s not sure – but she sets out to live that refounding and share it with others.

Are we not at this same place? Are we not at a crossroads and being invited to leave the familiar and to set out for the new?

Even when the signs are clear, we don’t always know what to do or how to take a next step. When I stood at the crossroads – Encarnación to my left and the refoundation of San Jose on my right – I’m proud to say that I took the road most traveled. I turned left to Encarnación.

You see I love everything that Encarnación stands for. I love the peace and calm I feel. I love the cast-iron handle that I can grasp and pull open just as Teresa did some years ago. But I still had to go. I’d like to say that I set my face like flint and headed for San Jose, but instead I went into town, and sat in la plaza, surrounded by the night life of Ávila. I resigned myself to peanuts and beer.

It is then that Teresa came and sat down beside me. Her presence is as unmistakable to me as our communion of IHM saints “dwelling now in light yet ever near”.

“Go,” she said. From Encarnación to San Jose. Go. From the walls to the city, to the fields to the rock-strewn paths and the sun-scorched plains. Go.”

For Teresa to go, for the woman at the well to go, and for us to go, we must draw richly from the well of living water. We must leave behind the familiar, leave behind even the water jug that has served us so well. What does this look like?

I’m reminded of a few stories I heard over the past few days:

  • the couple in their 60s who overnight find themselves to be parents and grandparents as they adopt a young woman and her child as their own
  • the school board who chooses to welcome with open arms a student who is transgendered
  • the religious sister who places her body literally in the crossfire of warring nations in order to ensure peace and safety for all
  • the middle-aged mechanic who in the midst of anxiety and depression, chooses not to give up on themselves

This is what it looks like to have living water flowing through you – to be open to and to live into God’s invitation to life, even when it seems unfamiliar, absurd, unpopular, or terrifying.

What crossroads are we at today – as individuals, as families and religious congregations, as nations and an earth community? Where are the wells inside of us and around us from which we are called to draw living water?

Wait and listen.

Then go …

… from Encarnación to San Jose. Go. From the walls to the city, to the fields to the rock-strewn paths and the sun-scorched plains. Go.

image credit: julie vieira

the heart-broken tree

One has to stop doing an ideological frisk of everything, to stop pigeonholing works by their presumed ideology…. A film isn’t an affirmation, an answer to a question, just as art does not refer to something, but is a thing in itself.

Film director Lola Cuevas responding to a question at a press event
From the satirical movie Competencia oficial (2021)

Storms hit southeastern Michigan hard a couple weeks. I had barely stepped off the plane on my return from Spain when the thunder and rain started Wednesday night. Power outages, flooding, and lots of damage. Manageable compared to other disasters in the world, but still a thing to contend with.

It was a one-two punch. Whilst dealing with the damage from Wednesday night’s storm, a second one pounded the area on Thursday night. That second one was a bit too much for some of our older trees to withstand. We woke up Friday morning to find several dear trees on our land fallen to the ground.

I didn’t see them at first. I got a text message early in the morning from a nearby nun saying that her next door neighbors (also nuns) had a tree “branch” come down on their driveway. I was headed in that direction any ways to check on flooding by the river so I figured I’d stop at the house and heft that branch out of the way.

Well, that was no branch. And no amount of hefting would have budged it from its place. It was one of three trunks of a tree in the backyard of the house. It broke in the storm and fell in the narrow space between the house and the garage, with nary a scratch on either. “It was like its final gift to us,” one of the nuns marveled.

I went to the main tree still standing, quietly as if to a bereaved partner. I reached out and let my hands lightly trace the crevices etched in the bark. Though rough and weathered, the bark was also soft, still moist from its tangle with the storms of the past two days.

I listened to the silent creaking of the tree. Yes, silent creaking. The wind was still pushing against the tree, but I heard nothing. The tree was silent. There was just the sound of my expectation, the creaking in my imagination.

In the background, I could hear the nuns murmuring.

about the tree and their longtime companionship with it

about the storm damage and how we might work together on behalf of the local community

about the mystery of life and the lament of death

about what’s for lunch

I stepped back from my face-to-face communion with the tree. And that’s when I saw it. The heart of the tree.

The place where the tree had cracked was heart shaped. I could hardly believe it. “I’m gonna have a mystical moment right here, right now,” I thought. Thousands of spiritual ideas about a broken-hearted tree flooded my imagination. Oh the symbolism! Oh the cosmic oneness! This I can write about! This I can preach on!

I broke my so-called “mystical” train of mind so that I could snap a photo. I was intent on capturing the moment.

And just as quickly as I snapped that photo, I felt sick to my stomach. In my gut ⎻ in las entrañas, as Teresa de Ávila would say ⎻ something was wrong.

My mind quieted, and I saw that moment, just minutes earlier, when I first walked up to the house. One of the nuns was already outside standing by the tree. Her eyes sparkled with both tears and delight as she looked at the fallen tree. There was nothing for either of us to say. The tree was gone. Neither words nor prayers would bring it back.

Fast forward to yesterday. I stood in the kitchen with a coworker, a spray bottle of pine cleaner in one hand, a rag in the other. She told me about her friend who was killed just a few days prior in a car-jacking in our neighborhood. There was nothing for either of us to say. This young man was gone. Neither words nor prayers would bring him back.

There was no “meaning making” to be had. No mystical insight. Just sorrow and anger.

We did the only thing we could do. We started cleaning.

[An event, a happening,] isn’t an affirmation, an answer to a question, just as art does not refer to something, but is a thing in itself.

I am not one to sit restfully in silence and contemplation. It makes me uncomfortable, anxious, and restless. I used to think that that was a lack of virtue on my part, stunted spiritual maturity. But I’m slowly accepting that it is part of my makeup. And I wonder if it is not also a form of contemplation in its own right. [I’m using the word “contemplation” in a more general sense, not the more specific ways that we’d use the word in theology or in studying the works of Teresa].

As I write, I’m reminding of a website that was run by Carmelite nuns called PrayTheNews.com. It strikes me that these women knew what it meant to enter into contemplation that was messy and uncomfortable, that inspired not inner communion but anxiety and restlessness. I wrote about this years ago in an article called “Pray the Newsfeed” for Global Sisters Report though my focus then was different.

And so.

The tree is broken. The heart we see is splintered biomass, not a mystical manifesto.

We do not have to make the splintered whole, the suffering meaningful, the grotesque palatable.

We do not have to invoke God to this broken space. God is already there. This is true mysticism.

Even though my mind is still racing with spiritual thoughts, I think it’s time to take up my contemplative posture of restlessness, discomfort, and anxiety. And to pick up a spray bottle and rag and start cleaning.

A final thought from Lola Cuevas. [I’ll have to remember this next time I am tempted to go all-out manifesto on some experience!]

The fact that you see a manifesto in my film is rather reductionist, to my taste, intellectually lazy.

Film director Lola Cuevas responding to a question at a press event
From the satirical movie Competencia oficial

What is it like for you to read this? Do you too struggle with these heart-broken moments? How do you approach things?

image credit: julie vieira