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Mk 10:2-16
And Pharisees came up and in order to test him asked, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?” He answered them, “What did Moses command you?” They said, “Moses allowed a man to write a certificate of divorce, and to put her away.” But Jesus said to them, “For your hardness of heart he wrote you this commandment. But from the beginning of creation, ‘God made them male and female.’ ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one.’w So they are no longer two but one. What therefore God has joined together, let not man put asunder.” And in the house the disciples asked him again about this matter. And he said to them, “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another, commits adultery against her; and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits adultery.” And they were bringing children to him, that he might touch them; and the disciples rebuked them. But when Jesus saw it he was indignant, and said to them, “Let the children come to me, do not hinder them; for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.” And he took them in his arms and blessed them, laying his hands upon them.
Readings are taken from Dynamic Catholic’s Bible: RSV Catholic Edition.
It’s time to take back your life.
It’s time to slow down to the speed of joy.
All revolutions have a moment when they begin. This is your moment.
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The Truth about Marriage
For this reason, a man
shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become
one. So they are no longer two but one. What does that mean? It reminds me of Carlton
and Maggie. They met almost 100 years ago in a little town in the Ozarks. Carlton's
family was a farming family, sharecroppers, farming somebody else's land. They were dirt
and even desperately poor. And Carlton still remembers the day when he was 9 years old
and he first saw Maggie the very first time. His dad came in and woke up the kids and
said, "Put on your good clothes. We're going into town. We're going to a funeral today."
Carlton still remembered going and arriving there at the church. And standing in front
of the church was little 7-year-old Maggie and her sister and their mom. And Carlton
realized that Maggie's dad had passed away. That day, in his mind, Carlton made a note,
and he said, "Growing up without a dad is going to be tough on Maggie, and so I'm going
to check on her as we get older." And so pretty soon, they were part of the same pack of
kids that hung out together and played together and walked to school together. And as
they got a little bit older, Carlton began to notice Maggie and began to take an
interest in her. As in Georgia, we would say he took a shining tour. But Carlton had to
drop out of school after the eighth grade. His dad said, "Son, we can't afford for you
not to be working here on the farm. I need all the sets of hands I can get. You got to
give up school." And Carlton told Maggie, "I'm going to stay in touch with you. I want
us to continue to be friends." As they got a little bit older, they began to date. They
began to court. And pretty soon, Carlton realized that Maggie was the one for him, but
he didn't want a sharecropper's life. And he said, "Maggie, I'm going to move across the
river to Granite City, Illinois. And I'm going to go over there. And I'm going to get a
job in the steel mill. And I'm going to save up money until I can give us a nest egg so
we can start our life together. And I want to come back, and I want us to get married."
And Maggie said, "That'd be great."
So she continued to finish
school, and Carlton worked in that steel mill, starting as a shoveler of coal. And he
slowly worked his way up until he had enough money. And he came back. And he and Maggie
went, and they met with Father Davis. And Father Davis presided at their wedding, and he
said, "Now, Carlton, when we get to the end of the wedding mass, I'm going to say a
blessing. I'm going to pronounce a blessing over you and Maggie. And when I do that, I
want you to take hold of her hand, and I want you to squeeze it, and I want you to never
let go." Carlton did that. When they came to the end and Father Davis was pronouncing
that blessing, Carlton took Maggie's hand, and he squeezed it. And he said, "Lord, I
love her so much. We've been waiting for this moment for so many years. I promise you,
I'll never let go. Lord, help us." And so they moved pretty quickly over back to Granite
City and set up their home. And Carlton went back to work. And before you know it,
Maggie became pregnant. And she was about seven and a half, eight months along when one
day they were having breakfast. And as she got up from the table, she collapsed in pain
and fell over, doubled over onto the floor. And Carlton was a big, strong guy. And so he
scooped her up, and he rushed her to the hospital. And they took her back into the
emergency room. And for the next three or four hours, Carlton paced back and forth in
that emergency room. He held his rosary, and he prayed to God. And he said, "God, I love
Maggie so much. She's my wife. She's my lover. She's my friend. She's my soulmate.
Please don't take her. Please don't let her die."
He paced
frantically back and forth, back and forth until the doctors came out. And they said,
"Carlton, the news is mostly good." Carlton said, "Well, share it with me." They said,
"Your wife, Maggie, she's going to be okay, but it's been hard." He said, "Good. How's
my baby?" And they said, "Well, you have a baby son." Carlton said, "Great. Is he okay?"
And they said, "Yeah, he's okay. But he was born breech. And in being born breech, there
was a lot of damage done inside of Maggie's body. And so this is the only child that the
two of you are going to be able to have together biologically." And Carlton said, "My
wife is okay. My son is okay. Praise be to God." And so a few weeks passed, and they
were able to take little Eddie, their son, home. And they raised him like most American
families do. They took him to church and took him to first communion, and he made his
confirmation. And he played baseball. And he played trumpet in the band. And when he
graduated from high school, he enlisted in the Air Force. He was stationed a couple
different places before he finally landed in northern California. And he met a young
woman there, and they got married. And a few years later, they had a daughter, and then
they had another daughter. Meanwhile, back in Illinois, Carlton retired from the steel
mill. And he and Maggie were talking one day, and they said, "Why do we live here when
our grandkids are out there?" And so they sold their house and they packed up their
stuff and they moved out to northern California to be near those grandkids and to watch
those two granddaughters also make their first communion and make their confirmation and
go to the ballet and graduate from high school.
And the years passed,
and slowly but surely, Maggie's body and her health began to deteriorate. First, she had
cataracts, and she had to have surgery. And Carlton was there to care for her. And then
she developed breast cancer, and she had to have a mastectomy. And then the chemo and
the radiation, and her body was severely weakened by that. And Carlton was there all the
way through that to nurse her and to care for her and to be with her and to nourish her.
And then she developed osteoporosis. And her body became very frail, and her bones
became very brittle. And she had a tough fall, and her body became extremely weak. And
her mobility became very, very minimal. And one day, as she was getting up from the
dinner table again, this time after dinner, she collapsed in pain on the floor and was
writhing in pain. And Carleton was not a young, strong buck anymore. And so he had to
call the medics. And they came and they picked up Maggie and they took her to the
hospital.
And, again, all these decades later, she's back in the
emergency room. And Carlton's out in the waiting room pacing back and forth with his
rosary in his hand, saying, "Lord, I love Maggie so much. Please don't take her. She's
my best friend. I love her. Please don't let her die." A few hours later, the doctors
came out and they said, Carlton, "The news is not great. Maggie's got a perforated
ulcer, and her body is so weak, she's not going to be able to manage this well and so
going to need to take her and put her into a care facility because you just don't have
the physical strength, and you don't have the medical expertise to care for her the way
that she's going to need. And you're in your eighties now." And Carlton said, "If this
is what's in the best interest of my Maggie, then that's what we'll
do."
So they put her in the care facility there near the hospital.
And every day, Carlton would get up and he would drive over to the care facility, and
he'd feed Maggie breakfast, and he'd feed her lunch, and he'd feed her dinner. And the
first thing that he had done was he'd gone home and got the rocking chair that they'd
had all the way back in Illinois. And he put it right beside her bed so that he could
sit there every day between meals and just be with his Maggie. And she could hear that
familiar creaking, that rocking back and forth, back and forth to be reassured, even
when she was asleep, that Carlton was there with her. He fed her every day, every meal,
breakfast, lunch, and dinner, three times a day, seven days a week for three years.
Until one day he came into her room there at the care facility, and the doctors and the
nurses were gathered, and Carlton realized that something was not
right.
And they said, "Yeah, Maggie's contracted pneumonia, Carlton.
And we need to prepare you that we're going to do everything we can, but we're probably
approaching the end. And so we just want you to be aware of that, that things are
changing, and her body is not going to be able to overcome this pneumonia unless
something miraculous happens." And at first, Carlton was in denial, and he was just in
shock. And so he sat beside her. He couldn't believe that news. He couldn't absorb the
truth that the doctors were telling him. So he sat frantically beside her bed, and he
held her hand, and he said, "Maggie, it's me. It's Carlton. I love you. Please don't go.
Please don't go." But after a day or two, the truth began to settle in, and Carlton
began to think clearly again and he realized that they were indeed drawing near to the
end. And so he began to sit next to her each day and hold her hand and rub it gently and
say, "Maggie, it's me. It's Carlton. I love you. It's going to be okay. It's going to be
okay." Sunday came, and Eddie and his wife and the two granddaughters who were in town
because they knew that their grandmother was about to die, came by, they picked up
Carlton, and they took him to Mass. When Mass was over, the priest came with the family,
and they anointed Maggie, and they stood together and prayed together. And then they
read the words of the 23rd psalm, and then the priest left. And an hour or two later,
Eddie and his wife and the granddaughters left, and it was just Carlton. They're in the
rocking chair seated next to Maggie on that Sunday afternoon. And he held her hand as
her breathing became increasingly difficult and labored. And Carlton held her hand and
he said, "Maggie, it's me. It's Carlton. I love you. It's going to be okay. I'll see you
soon. I'll see you soon." And so Carlton was there that day, I guess, at 3:30, 3:45,
something like that, on Sunday afternoon, when Maggie breathed her last and passed away.
And he was holding her hand, just like he promised.
Two or three days
later, they had the visitation or the wake at the funeral home, and family and friends
were all gathered there to give thanks and celebrate the life of Maggie. And her body
lay there in the little casket, and she'd emaciated down to 70 or 80 pounds at that
point. And next to her body in the casket was a little box, and in that box was a
tattered pink dress. The same dress that Maggie had worn 66 years before, on the day
that they'd stood there with Father Davis and Carlton had taken hold of her hand and
promised God that he would never let go. Lived well. Marriage is a beautiful thing. It's
a holy thing. It's a God thing. For this reason, a man shall leave his father and mother
and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one. What therefore God has joined
together, let not man put asunder.