From the Director – November Newsletter

Article published at: Dec 9, 2024
From the Director – November Newsletter
All Reflection Articles Article comments count: 0

Living in Hope

 

“But even the President of the United States

Sometimes must have to stand naked.”

Bob Dylan – It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)

 

It’s Alright Ma was released way back in 1965 but I’m sure it must have figured prominently in the minds of the judges who awarded Dylan the Nobel Literature prize some 50 years later in 2016. Like many, I’m always slightly mesmerised whenever I hear it. It’s not only the lyrics – there are 15 verses – there is also something of the relentless rhythm, the rhyming pattern, the ‘talking blues’ style of vocals and the extraordinary timelessness of it. It’s as relevant today as it was in the 60s – in fact, given what is happening in Dylan’s homeland at the moment, one could argue it’s even more relevant in 2024.

As I pondered (perhaps brooded) over the results of the USA Presidential election as they rolled in, the two lines I have quoted above kept entering my head. They are only 2 lines out of more than 100 in this epic poem/song, but they were resonating with me. The absolute truism that whoever we are, from the most powerful person in the world to the most marginalised and least powerful person in the world, we all come face to face with our own vulnerability at some time. It hopefully guides us more towards a disposition of humility. (Perhaps some way off yet for the new President elect of the USA)

Bringing it back to the context here, it reinforced my view of the ongoing importance of the work being undertaken here at the Hermitage and other places like it. Providing opportunities and creating spaces for learning, prayer, reflection and discernment are so critical for human flourishing. These things allow a sense of perspective and help us to realise we can’t control everything: that we are not the “Master Builders” as Oscar Romero put it. There is a freedom in knowing that and that is where faith and hope can emerge. We can remain hopeful about the future, regardless of the current circumstances. Not a delusional hope, but Christian hope. Recently my wife Jennie gave me a book called “Seeing with the Heart” by Kevin O’Brien (yes I know, apologies, yet another Jesuit author). In the chapter called Living in Hope he makes the point that this Christian hope is not the same as optimism, “which quickly glosses over reality and assumes everything will be fine.” He goes on to quote playwright and former President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Havel, who said “Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well, but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.”

 

So, hope is central to our spiritual journey. It keeps us going - though as news continues to filter through about appointments in the new administration in Washington, at times, when I’m on my own, I do find myself occasionally singing the last 3 lines of Dylan’s masterpiece …

 

And if my thought-dreams could be seen

They’d probably put my head in a guillotine

But it’s alright Ma, it’s life and life only

………………………………..

 

John Hickey

Hermitage Director

November 2024

Leave a comment

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published