Home
Catholic News
Seasonal
Saints
Special Reports
Movies
Social Media
Shopping
Donate
Catholic News
Top Catholic News
Electing a New Pope
Pope Benedict XVI
Economic Justice
War and Peace
Health Care
Middle East
Politics
Saints in the News
Bioethics
Evolution/Creationism
Respect Life
Vocations
Ecology
Religious Intolerance
Immigration
Interfaith Relations
Sexual Abuse
Death Penalty
Homosexuality
Seasonal Features
Lent
Easter/Pentecost
St. Patrick's Day
Earth Day
Mother's Day
Father's Day
Back to School
St. Nicholas
St. Francis
Halloween
All Saints Day
Thanksgiving
Advent
Christmas to Epiphany
Christian Unity Week
Valentine's Day
Saints
Saint of the Day
Mary
St. Francis
St. Clare
St. Anthony
St. Patrick
Mother Teresa
Patron Saints
Saints by Date
Saints by Name
Saints in the News
FAQs
Special Reports
Pope John Paul II
Middle East Christians
Food, Family, Faith
Sacraments
Pope Benedict's US Visit
Movies
New Movies
On Faith and Media
Movies by title
Shopping
Audiobooks
Books
Buy at Audible
E-cards
ACO iPhone App
Saint of the Day iPhone App
Magazine Subscription
Parish Handouts
Video
Share:
Daily Features
St. Anthony Messenger
Books
Catholic e-Greetings
Parish Newsletters/Services
E-Newsletters
Shopping
Media Productions
Living Your Faith
Update Your Faith
Español
Contact Us
About Us
Donate
Advertise
Site Map
Daily Features
Saint of the Day
Minute Meditations
Daily Catholic Question
Top Catholic News
Catholic Community Speaks
St. Anthony Messenger
Current Issue
Archive
Subscribe
Books
Catalog
Franciscan Media Books
Servant Books
Submit Proposal
Writer's Guidelines
Parish Newsletters/Services
Catholic Update
Every Day Catholic
Bringing Home the Word
Homily Helps
Faith Formation Update
I Believe
E-Newsletters
Saint of the Day
Minute Meditations
Catholic Greetings
Franciscan Media E-News
Friar Jack's E-spirations
Catholic SAMPler
AmericanCatholic Connections
Faith Formation Update
Media Productions
American Catholic Radio
Online Event
Sunday Soundbites
Lenten Radio Retreats
Advent Radio Retreats
Sharing the Word
Living Your Faith
Post Prayer Requests
Once Catholic
Pledge Peace
Update Your Faith
Sunday Supplements
Catholic Church FAQs
Rosary
Sacraments
Sacramentals
Stations of the Cross
Saints FAQs
Pet Blessings
Contact Us
Directory
Permissions
Privacy Policy
Submit Proposal
Writers' Guidelines
Employment
Website Resources
advertisement
advertisement
top catholic news
View Comments
Priest-composer Sees Faith With New Eyes
By
Julie Carroll
Source:
Catholic News Service
Published:
Monday, May 24, 2010
Email
|
Print
|
Size:
A
A
|
ST. PAUL, Minn. (CNS)—One of the duties of a priest is to minister to the sick and suffering. But when Guillain-Barre syndrome paralyzed Father Jan Michael Joncas and brought him close to death in 2003, the well-known liturgical music composer suddenly found himself on the receiving end of a ministry he knew well.
Father Joncas, an associate professor at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul and composer of the well-known hymn "On Eagle's Wings," spent months in the hospital recovering the use of his arms and legs
During that time, he said he gained insight into suffering and dependence on God and others.
"I learned that you don't solve the problem of suffering," Father Joncas said. "You enter into the mystery of suffering. And it does change you, and it changes your world."
Father Joncas said he still lives with nerve pain in his hands and feet. He can no longer play the guitar, and when he's tired he sometimes stumbles. He also occasionally experiences unpredictable waves of fatigue. But, he said, he is 95 percent back to normal and busier than ever.
Since his recovery, Father Joncas told The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, he has had an "explosion" of musical creativity.
In the past two years, he has recorded three collections of liturgical music. Currently, he is writing settings of every responsorial psalm for the three-year Sunday Mass cycle and a hymn text for every Sunday and solemnity, in addition to other projects he has been commissioned to do. He has found that his newer works mostly revolve around themes of rescue, hope and thanksgiving. "That's the stuff that's coming out of the suffering," he said.
Asked what he learned from his suffering, Father Joncas replied: "I didn't know (my faith) would be as strong as it was. Because I live as a university professor and a theologian, an intellectual, I spend a lot of my time pondering God under lots and lots of headings and using all the tools of reason I can think of to deal with it, and this changed all that. I mean, I still do all that, but now I can talk about an experience of a God of rescue, which is very different."
Father Joncas said the experience also rounded out some of the sharper aspects of his personality. "Once you look death in the face, a lot of stuff just doesn't matter that much," he realized.
He finds himself more attentive to people, he said. "I'm much less concerned about my agenda and much less worrying about whether I get feedback from them, and much more able to just kind of enter into their world and be with them, even if it just means being present and silent."
Father Joncas said family, friends and chaplains all helped him get through a difficult time in his life. Particularly memorable was when a priest friend celebrated the sacrament of anointing of the sick with him, which Father Joncas described as "shatteringly beautiful."
"I'd done that for years," he said. "But then to hear those prayers being applied to me was a whole new world."
Another experience that touched him deeply was the first time he was wheeled on a gurney to attend Mass at the hospital chapel surrounded by other patients on gurneys, in wheelchairs and using walkers.
Although feeding tubes prevented him from receiving Communion that day, he said, "It was just so wonderful to finally be back praying in community —but unlike a lot of parish communities, realizing how broken most of us were."
Today, Father Joncas celebrates life and health with new eyes, he said. He continues to ponder what God was trying to teach him through his suffering.
"I am a middle-aged, Caucasian male in this culture, and that means that we highly prize independence, autonomy, being in charge, being in control. And I had none of that. I had to completely rely on other people to do even the most basic things for me," he said.
"What I say now is I wouldn't wish this on anybody. But I also think for me it was a great blessing," Father Joncas said. He believes it was God's way of telling him, "You aren't in charge, you aren't in control. Let go."
More on Year for Priests >>
More Top Catholic News >>
Please enable JavaScript to view the
comments powered by Disqus.
blog comments powered by
Disqus
MORE NEWS SECTIONS
Top Catholic News
Bioethics and the Catholic Church
Christians in the Middle East
Death Penalty
Ecology and Faith
Economic Justice
Electing a New Pope
Franciscans
Haiti Earthquake 2010
Homosexuality, Gay Marriage and the Catholic Church
Lent/Easter
Marriage
Politics and The Church
Pope Benedict XVI
Religious Intolerance
Respect Life
Saints in the News
The Church and Immigration
The Church and Interfaith Relations
The Church and Sexual Abuse
The Church, Evolution and Creation
Vocations
War and Peace
Year for Priests