CLOAK OF CLOUD ENFOLDING THE EARTH: Flight to Vincent's Funeral
I’m on my way
to Father Vincent Kelly’s funeral and I’m already late. Mass starts in thirty
minutes and the flight that still hasn’t taken off will take an hour and a
half. Maybe I should just go back and not travel at all. But something keeps me
moving forward and I decide that I will get a taxi directly to the cemetery.
Vincent had left instructions about who was to lead the Mass, who would preach,
who would lead the various prayers and he had named me in the mix, so I want to
honour his wishes in some way, to honour the man who inspired and brought me
into the Pallottines fifty years ago.
The Pallottines
were unknown to me in the Easter holidays of 1972 when I attended a vocations
workshop in the Redemptorist Cluan Mhuire down the road from us in Mervue. I
had always wanted to be a priest from as far back as I can remember and was
leaning towards the SMA’s or the Holy Ghost’s. The Redemptorists never
expressed any interest in me as a candidate, nor did the Augustinians with whom
I served Mass and, while part of me might say that I didn’t measure up to their
standards, the other part believes that it was God who didn’t want me joining
either congregation. He had other plans.
And I have to
credit my mother for persuading me to attend the workshop when I was getting
cold feet. My parents never ever suggested that I become a priest but during
those Easter holidays she had an instinct that said, “maybe you should go all
the same.”
The first
evening I bumped into this unfamiliar priest on the stairs, and he introduced
himself as Father Vincent Kelly. We met twice again in the exact same spot and
concluded together that we must have been meant to meet. He had exceptional
charm and a winning way.
A few weeks
later he brought me and Michael Martin from Kilconly for a weekend at the
Pallottine College in Thurles. I was swept off my feet by the experience of the
community there, fell in love with its friendly embrace. Another visit followed
in June before my Leaving Certificate, and I came home to excitedly tell my
parents that I wanted to join the Pallottines.
My mother was
not easily won over. We’ve never heard of them she argued. They could be a
sect! And then Divine Providence stepped in when she was telling a neighbour
about my plans and her fears. Amazingly the neighbour knew the Pallottines well
because two of her neighbours from Kilconly were Pallottines. A lovely order,
she assured Mam.
That set me
free to follow my heart’s desire and into the Pallottines I went in September.
There a whole new world opened up for me, a world of friendship which had been
lacking in my life, a world of music, fun and most importantly a world that
immersed me more deeply into the spiritual life of Christ.
At Stansted I
am urged on by loyalty and gratitude to the man who opened up this world to me,
so I continue to wait and not turn back. The waiting and not turning back have
their symbolic meaning, being two essential aspects of the path marked out for
us in our life in Christ. And so, I remain relaxed, even if physically weary in
the heat of the congested crowds gathered in and around Gate 44 which
eventually became gate 46.
As we lift off
up into the sky at 12.35pm I wonder what about Mass now and I remember Teilhard
de Chardin in a place and time when he was unable to celebrate Mass. He
celebrated what I think he called Mass on the Universe. It’s not the Mass, not
the Eucharist but the absence of it pushes one to consider communion.
So, my Mass in
the air is an acknowledgement of the communion that has taken place between all
of us in the hours of waiting at the airport, in brief moments of conversation,
little acts of kindness, the shared resignation of a waiting that has no power
or control in it.
As one we are
lifted up in this craft, our lives entrusted to our pilot, and I pray a prayer
of blessing for every single person on board.
And then my fantasy begins, a meditation:
The whiteness of snow all around the world belowCloak of cloud enfolding the earth
Like an altar cloth
The sun an elevated Host above us all
Brightness of Christ transfigured
The upward forward movement
Prophecy of Eternity
Blue of sky
Mantle of Mary
In attendance
United now
With all the priests of the world
No longer able to offer
The most precious mystery of our Lord Jesus
The multitude of Faithful
Deprived of the food of Angels
Sacred Banquet
Manna from Heaven
Ours is a spiritual Communion
Vast yet finite yearning
For the Infinite
May this longing please the Lord
This and every deprivation find a response
In God’s most Loving Heart.
Amen!
Only God knows the point of this journey. God alone knows and that is enough.
In the taxi from Cork airport, I was able to watch the final part of the Mass online and I was in the cemetery at least half an hour before the funeral arrived. A hard crisp foggy day. The keeper of the graves put chat on me, a very interesting man with a strong, deep, and simple faith that brought joy to my heart.
It was given to me by Derry to say the prayers at the grave and sing the Salve Regina and so it seemed appropriate that I laid to rest the man who opened up the road of life to me – endings and beginnings shared.
Without Vincent I would not be where I am now, without him the past half century would have been very different. He is central to the extraordinary mystery of God's action in my life. Thanks be to God for him. Thanks be to God.
Lovely conversations followed with fellow Pallottines and people from
Cork I have known over the years and not seen for many a long day. And a couple
of hours later I was back again in a taxi to the airport. The shortest trip to Ireland
I have ever made, a trip well worth it. Meant to be.
So sorry u have lost another dear friend Father + it was so good to share your thoughts. How patient u had to be!!
ReplyDeleteSo glad u made it at the very end. Definitely a ‘God incidence’. Judy H