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Mar 15, 2017 1707 Jerome Kiley
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Let the Letters Unfold

Some time ago, I was a volunteer at the Italian Home for Children, a last-chance home for children who either have no family or have been taken out of their families for any of a number of reasons. I would come on Wednesdays to spend time with the children, and then there would be a Bible lesson in the chapel afterwards. Other volunteers would come, too, and children would be matched up with a volunteer for the chapel time. Someone would lead the lesson, either the in-house Franciscan sister, Sister Margaret, or one of the volunteers.

In one class, in early November, there was a woman from a nearby church teaching the class. She asked the children, “There is a big holiday coming up soon—what’s it called?” To my amazement, no one knew! After a pause, I leaned over to the girl next to me and whispered, “It begins with a ‘T’.” Well, the boy behind us heard the whisper and his hand shot up. “Oh! Oh! Oh!” he began. The teacher looked at him with relief and said, “Okay, what is it?” And the boy blurted out with all the enthusiasm that clear, unfettered certainty can convey: “TOMORROW!”

He had the first letter and thought he knew the whole word!

A while back there was a YouTube video that went viral around the Internet. It was about a woman on the TV gameshow “Wheel of Fortune” who was able to guess a whole phrase when she only knew one letter. The video went viral because it is almost impossible to guess a whole phrase when you only have one letter! In reality, you have to let the letters unfold until you get that certain “Aha!”

One day, about fifteen years ago, I went for the first time into one particular church in Boston with the conviction in my mind that I would find my life-long love in that very Mass. That day, the priest preached a homily unlike anything I had ever heard. I then thought, “I want to do that!” And a word came to my mind: priest. I thought that God had just shown me that I am called to be a Catholic priest. But that never really sat well with me. Well, you know the problem: I only had the first letter whispered to me and I thought I knew the whole word!

When God called Abraham, He basically said: leave your land and go to a place that I will show you. Abraham had no idea his name would change in the process, he had no idea what the journey would be like or how long it would take, he had no idea how he would have descendants, or where he was going to end up. God only gave him the first step to take. Abraham had to let the steps unfold.

When the time comes for God to call you and reveal what your life-long love is, you will not know where you are going to end up. You do not know the whole word at the start—you only get one letter at a time. You have to reach a point where you really get an authentic “Aha!” of light. For that, there is only one thing to do.

Let the letters unfold.

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Jerome Kiley

Jerome Kiley is a lay missionary who lives in Boston and Ecuador. A former engineer and basketball coach who was won over by the mercy of Jesus, Jerome dedicated himself to a broad array of lay pastoral and outreach ministries in the Catholic Church before reaching Ecuador in 2010. He loves the people of Ecuador and is happy living the Gospel and sharing it. You can find his reflections at www.ALivingmonstrance.wordpress.com and you can discover more about his mission to Ecuador at www.barriers2bridges.com.

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