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Faith of Our Mothers

by Elizabeth Bookser Barkley

"My worst fear is coming true—I'm becoming my mother." That's the gist of a playful caption on a friend's coffee mug. More and more lately I remind myself of my mother, but this realization brings no feelings of dread.

Our genetic links are beyond doubt—the same nose (mine once cute and "pug" now bears more of a resemblance to her less flattering "bulbous nose"), the aging hair ("greyish brown" or "brownish grey," depending on who's describing it), the body of sturdy stock ("perfect for childbearing," someone once remarked; I took it as a compliment). My only regret is that in addition to her physical traits, the faith of my mother couldn't be transmitted to me, some specific chromosome guaranteeing that I'd be the woman of God that she is.

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Hers is a private faith, not a showy display of religiosity. As in all that she does, she lives out her faith in an understated way. Her faith is simple, innocent, straight out of the Gospels. She's the living version of the works of mercy—visiting the sick, bringing food to the hungry, clothing the naked, instructing the ignorant, praying for the living and the dead—not for her own aggrandizement but for the sake of the Kingdom.

As schoolchildren we were urged to dedicate all our written work to God. On the righthand corner of our papers we'd neatly print the letters J.M.J. (Jesus, Mary and Joseph) or A.M.D.G. (for the greater glory of God). Those were routine gestures, often empty of meaning or motivation, but my mother's life is one ceaseless A.M.D.G. Now that her children are grown, she has the luxury of almost daily Mass. But even with small children, homebound to care for them, she prayed her way through the day, offering up disappointments and encouraging her children to do the same, reminding us that greater good would come of our temporary sadnesses, since not one sparrow fell to the ground without God's being mindful of it.

Today, as I watch my mother dedicating herself to her daily tasks at home—changing a grandchild's diaper, peeling vegetables for a family dinner, canning tomatoes from her garden—I hear her contentedly humming to herself (my father calls it "purring") and know that in her simple way she's at prayer. A woman happy and blessed and secure in her faith in the Lord, my mother makes her life a hymn to her creator, her soul magnifying the Lord, her spirit always rejoicing in God her savior.

From the book Loving the Everyday: Meditations for Moms

 

Elizabeth Bookser Barkley is associate professor of English at the College of Mount St. Joseph in Cincinnati, and is the mother of three teenage daughters. She has also written Woman to Woman: Seeing God in Daily Life (St. Anthony Messenger Press).

 

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