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Shower of Roses

A Corner of the Veil

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on December 2, 2009 · 16 comments

Gordon MacRae, Falsely Accused Priest, Dwight Longenecker, Standing on My Head Blog, Shower of Roses, Man in the Mirror, Maximilian Kolbe, Newfoundland, Avalon Peninsula, Passion of the Christ, Mel Gibson, Weird Things Happen, This Rock, Shakespeare, Undiscovered Country,

. . . Then the other prisoner was back! “This was in the book,” he said as he propped a photograph against my small TV screen. It was the photo of my mother and Frances that I had lost four years earlier – the photo I searched for in vain when my mother died. Just as Mass began on my mother’s birthday – at the very moment I was offering the Mass for her and her sister – their last photograph together found me. An accident? Mere coincidence? It’s a greater leap of faith to dismiss such events as coincidence than to accept them for what they are: personally miraculous gifts of actual grace. When I looked at the photograph, it was as though someone had lifted a tiny corner of the veil between life and death. I saw something in the photo I hadn’t noticed before. The two sisters stood side by side – my mother on the right – on the shore of a new life, being prepared for the Presence of God. I never saw my mother look happier. I never saw more contentment and hope in her eyes. I never felt so happy for her, so filled with promise that her journey is near its end: Home, her New Found Land. . . .

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A Shower of Roses

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on September 30, 2009 · 23 comments

Falsely Accused Priest, Gordon MacRae, Shower of Roses, Therese of Lisieux

. . . I scoffed and mocked Brother Bernard’s letter. I am in prison in the harshness of steel and concrete. Roses do not exist here. In all these years in prison, I have never seen a rose. I put Brother Bernard’s letter aside, and put this pious nonsense out of my mind.

Two days later, well before dawn on the morning on October 1st, I emerged from my cell, cup of instant coffee in hand. The cellblock was quiet and empty except for one young man sitting alone at a table. As I approached, he complained to me that he had been up all night with an attack of ADHD. A promising artist, the troubled young man had spent the night drawing a card with his treasured colored pencils. “I’ll trade you this for a cup of coffee,” he said as he handed me the card. I sat down. I had to! On the morning of the feast of St. Therese, I was holding in my hand a stunning three-dimensional sketch of a magnificent, brilliant rose. . . .

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