Latest edition of Tau available online

Greetings dear brothers and sisters!

Praying that the joy of the Solemnity of Easter still permeates your minds and attitudes during this Easter Season.  Christ is Risen!  He is Risen indeed!   This is something to share.

I also have some other good news to share with you. The new TAU-USA newsletter/magazine team has produced its first digital-only issue (Issue 111). As you may recall, in August 2023, the National Fraternity Council voted to print one edition in 2024. The team plans to issue the hardcopy edition later in 2024. So, for now, enjoy your first digital-only TAU-USA.

The theme for Issue 111 is very fitting for this time of year – “Renewal.”  The full newsletter is available in English and Spanish.  Selected articles have been translated into Korean.  All may be viewed at the following links:  English   Spanish   Korean

Members of the team are:  Caroline Yandell, OFS, (St Francis Region) serves as Editor and Stan Sisson, OFS, (St. Thomas More Region) serves as Graphic Designer.  The National Executive Council thanks them for their willingness to serve in these roles.  Together with the many contributors and members who assist with translating the articles (those names will be shared in the near future), we are very blessed.

Regional Ministers are asked to forward the links to members of their regions so everyone can enjoy the current issue.  We’ll be refining the process as we go along.

Let us know your thoughts on the new look and some new features.  Please share comments with the team at: tau.usa.editor@gmail.com.

May the joy, love, and mercy of our Risen Lord be your strength and guide during this Season.

Peace and all good,

Jane DeRose-Bamman, OFS

National Minister

Secular Franciscan Order-USA

 

Latest edition of Tau available online

Placing ourselves at the common table of our Lord

“That they may all be one; even as You, Father, are in Me and I in You, that they also may be one in us.”  (John 17: 22-23)

By Donna Hollis, OFS

National Executive Committee Councilor

Our lives are not our own.  We are called to give over our lives in service to others.

Pope Francis inspires us to find ways to reach across the boundaries of all Christian faiths.  “Our borders should be windows, not barriers of division,” he challenges.

We need to create the conditions in which God can work through us by opening our hearts and minds to the awareness of the Holy Spirit living within us all.

We need to be wise and recognize and respond to the moments and seasons in our lives.  It is important to value those defining moments.

In the 13th century, Francis of Assisi traveled to Egypt during the Crusades. There he met and befriended the Sultan. Both Pope Francis and St. Francis embody peacemaking between Christians and Muslims.

“The path towards Christian unity, the road that will eventually bring all sincere Christians together into one community, is a path of conversion, personal and ecclesial, of admitting our selectiveness, of recognizing and valuing what other Churches have incarnated. We will eventually find ourselves around one common table and see each other as part of the same community.” (Fr. Ron Rolheiser, OMI)

We cannot just talk the talk but need to walk the walk. We walk with two feet of prayer and action.

Pope Francis encourages us to form deep friendships and invite warm dialogue across every denominational and interreligious line.  As we extend respect, openness, and graciousness toward those who hold different religious views from our own, we show we are one family centered in the one God of us all.

Raymond E. Brown in “Challenge to all the Churches” states: “….instead of reading the Bible to assure ourselves that we are right, we would do better to read it to discover where we have not been listening.   Then the Bible will be doing for us what Jesus did in his time, namely, convincing those who have ears to hear that all is not right, for God is asking of them more than they thought.”

Some situations require you to slow down, see clearly, and respond wisely to the moments and seasons in your life. Look carefully for those moments and listen for God’s voice of wisdom. Do not get so caught up in the minutes that you miss the moments.

The Lord is calling. We must look carefully, be wise, and know and understand God’s will.

Father John Dear once wrote, “Peace begins within each of us. It is a process of repeatedly showing mercy to ourselves, forgiving ourselves, befriending ourselves, accepting ourselves, and loving ourselves.  As we learn to appreciate ourselves and accept God’s gift of peace, we begin to radiate peace and love to others.”

Placing ourselves at the common table of our Lord

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Juan de Padilla