Home in God: A Hecker Reflection

August 12, 2013

Servant of God, Father Isaac Thomas Hecker CSP is the founder of the Paulist Fathers. The following reflection is taken from his spiritual notebook from 1854.

 

undefinedHome In God

The soul is at home in God as a man under his own roof, or a babe is in the arms of its mother. The French have no word equivalent to our word “home,” but a phrase which explains it: chez soi (at home). It is so true that man is not himself till he has found his home: in God. Mother Juliana (of Norwich) wrote: “Highly are we to enjoy that God dwells in our soul; and more highly are we to enjoy that our soul dwells in God. Our soul is made to be God’s dwelling place: and the dwelling of our soul is God, which is unmade. It is a high understanding to inwardly see and know that God, who is our Maker dwells in our soul, and it is a higher understanding to more inwardly see and know that our soul which is created, dwells in God’s substance; and so we are what we are, by God.”

(Mother Julianna writes) “The cause for which we battle and suffer is the unknowing of love. For some believe God is almighty and may do all; and that God is all wisdom and can do all; but here is where we fail, not believing that God is all love and will do all. This unknowing is the greatest obstacle to God’s lovers.”

Quotes from “Showings of Divine Love,” Julian of Norwich (1342-1416)

 

A Response from Father Paul Robichaud, CSP

In today’s passage from Servant of God Isaac Hecker, we have one mystic reading another mystic. Father Hecker, whose spirituality was grounded in his belief in the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, cites Julian of Norwich’s Showings. Julian writes that through the Holy Spirit present in the soul, God the Trinity finds a dwelling place in each of us. That the very being of God sits within our created being. But she is not content with the fact that God dwells within us. Because God has found a dwelling place in our souls, we have within us extraordinary possibility. Because we dwell in the very substance of God, within each of us is the door, the gateway to God. Father Hecker, filled with hope and believing in extraordinary possibility, must have loved reading Julian’s words, “We are what we are by God.” God continues the process of creating us and bringing us to fulfillment.

Father Hecker cites a second text from Julian. For Julian the problem of sin and evil comes from lack of knowledge, what she calls “unknowing.” Julian writes about the feminine as well as the masculine attributes of God. God as father has power and goodness and God as mother has wisdom and love, drawn from the courtly culture of the high Middle Ages. The greatest obstacle to faith is not the “knowing” of God’s power but the “knowing” of God’s love. If we are to use the gateway to God within our being, we need to be lovers as well as doers in order to grow closer to God. Here the mystic side of Julian and Hecker serves as a basis of acting in faith; letting the world “know” that God is love.

 

About this series

Father Paul Robichaud, CSP, is historian of the Paulist Fathers and postulator of the Cause of Father Hecker. Publishing and disseminating the writing of Servant of God Isaac Hecker is the work of the Office for Hecker’s Cause. If you have asked Father Hecker to pray for you or another person who is ill, and you believe something miraculous has happened, please phone Father Robichaud at 202-269-2538.

 

If you would like to contribute to Father Hecker’s cause for canonization, please click here.