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Erin Franco

Rest that renews

Interior Life· Marriage

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2015 14 Mar

All too often, I feel like Sunday is just part of “the weekend” at our house. Michael and I have taken some steps in our family’s rule of life to make our weekends less busy, but I have been feeling a nudge to take a hard look at how we keep the Lord’s Day holy…or don’t.

I wonder if I speak for many people in confessing that I feel swept along by a current of busyness, such that Sunday comes around each week, and despite my best intentions, I can’t depend upon it to be a day of rest. It’s almost like a pleasant surprise if it’s a day of rest. In fact, if I’m being honest, the weekend sometimes feels like two Saturdays in a row, except we have to find a mass on Sunday morning that works with whatever events we have to go to on Sunday.

And that was tough to type. It sounds…like we’re doing it wrong somehow.

Blogger Becky Eldredge writes that our society has “lost the value of rest that renews.” What would life be like if my family lived in a way that created space every Sunday for real, true “rest that renews”? That sounds so right.

Little did I know when I woke up this morning planning to write about this topic, that St. Pope John Paul II has very helpful thoughts for us. Actually, he has an entire apostolic letter full of thoughts for us. Wouldn’t you know that I just happened to get an email about this exact topic this morning, which referenced St. Pope John Paul II’s apostolic letter Dies Domini, “On Keeping the Lord’s Day Holy“? I didn’t even know that apostolic letter existed.
Dies Domini is fairly long, and early on I started just skimming the entire thing trying to find a nice, neat list of do’s and don’ts for Sundays. But there wasn’t one. Instead, I was struck by how much time St. Pope John Paul II spends on trying to help us gain a right heart about the Lord’s Day.But there was this:

“The disciples of Christ…are asked to avoid any confusion between the celebration of Sunday, which should truly be a way of keeping the Lord’s Day holy, and the “weekend”, understood as a time of simple rest and relaxation. This will require a genuine spiritual maturity…In this way, they will be led to a deeper understanding of Sunday, with the result that, even in difficult
situations, they will be able to live it in complete docility to the Holy Spirit.”

And this:

 “when Sunday loses its fundamental meaning and becomes merely part of a “weekend”, it can happen that people stay locked within a horizon so limited that they can no longer see “the heavens.” Hence, though ready to celebrate, they are really
incapable of doing so.”

I felt like these passages were speaking directly to me.

It’s intimidating to think of what Michael and I may need to change about our lives in order to “see the heavens” and live out that authentic understanding of the Lord’s Day. But St. Pope John Paul II addresses my fear head-on:

“From the beginning of my Pontificate, I have not ceased to repeat: “Do not be afraid! Open, open wide the doors to Christ!”. In the same way, today I would strongly urge everyone to rediscover Sunday: Do not be afraid to give your time to Christ! Yes, let us open our time to Christ, that he may cast light upon it and give it direction. He is the One who knows the secret of time and the secret of eternity, and he gives us “his day” as an ever new gift of his love. The rediscovery of this day is a grace which we must implore, not only so that we may live the demands of faith to the full, but also so that we may respond concretely to the deepest human yearnings.”

I think that He wants us to rest in a way that rests in Him. I think that He wants us to give Him our time in a way that shows we know everything belongs to Him.
I wish each of you joy and rest in the Lord this weekend. And I wish you clarity and unity with your spouse in seeking rest that renews for your particular family, for the glory of God.

 “Time given to Christ is never time lost, but is rather time gained, so that our relationships and indeed our whole life may become more profoundly human.”

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2 Comments · Last Updated: June 2, 2015

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Comments

  1. Amanda says

    March 16, 2015 at 5:02 pm

    This is just wonderful. I'll be sharing it with my bible study after I finish typing this and we may just have to study that encyclical once we wrap up the book we are on. Or, at the very list add it to our list of upcoming studies. Thank you for this <3

    Reply
    • Erin Franco says

      March 17, 2015 at 2:56 am

      Yep…Michael and I have been bouncing ideas off each other since I wrote this. I think we may try to read all or parts of the letter together, and also bring ideas to the table in our upcoming monthly date we do to Talk About Stuff That We Need To Talk About. I am so ready for a change. 🙂

      Reply

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Hi there!

I'm a south Louisiana girl, Catholic wife, writer, speaker, and mother of six. Since I started my blog way back in 2009, life has been a roller coaster of babies, plot twists and a plane crash or two. I've been chronicling things here as I've been learning to love and suffer and laugh and trust in the goodness of God in the ordinary and the extraordinary--with a little espresso and a lot of Divine Mercy. Read More…

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