I was asked to give a talk on how parents can nourish their children鈥檚 faith better. But how to make it more interesting and memorable?
The answer came after watching a very touching commercial video of a mother writing down her 鈥渇inal鈥 bucket-list before she died. I felt I could ask the participants to do something similar.
But what variation can I introduce to make them experience the tension, value and lessons of the realities of life, death and transmitting their faith?
Here is the simple workshop I asked them to participate in:
Materials:
鈥 Two pieces of paper, 2 inches by 2 inches in dimension.
鈥 Crayon (preferably the thick round type, any color would do)
鈥 A stopwatch or timer
Instructions:
鈥 For mothers: In the first piece of paper (for 30 seconds): as many as you can, list down the most valuable things you would like to leave behind for your children.
鈥 For fathers: In the second piece of paper (for 30 seconds): draw anything that would symbolize what you want your children to remember you for.
* * *
鈥淭ime鈥檚 up, kindly stop writing or drawing.鈥 I told the couples.
鈥淣ow,鈥 I asked the mothers, 鈥渋s anyone willing to share what she has written down?鈥
I was quite surprised that none of them, after painstakingly trying to write with a bulky piece of crayon on a very small piece of paper, wanted to share any one idea.
摆厂颈濒别苍肠别鈥
鈥淚n that case, what about the dads?鈥 I tried to break the building tension.
[Again silence鈥
鈥淲hat was going on here?鈥 I told myself.
Perhaps, they were too shy to share what they had intimately written or drawn. It seems that workshop had failed, because it didn鈥檛 elicit any sharing among the parents. But it seems I had succeeded in a few other things I didn鈥檛 expect:
i) It made them aware that this workshop was something that would eventually happen and it helped them become more realistic with life and family relationships.
ii) More than words, action 鈥搒ymbolized by what the fathers drew鈥 has a more lasting impact on their children. (e.g. a heart with a smiling face, a friendly sun, two stick figures holding hands, etc.)
iii) The eagerness in every parent to leave something for their children, but knowing that it must be something that isn鈥檛 confined to the size of a piece of paper, or the clumsy irregular lines of a crayon nor something that isn鈥檛 restricted by time.
I then imparted to them the lessons behind the very brief exercise:
a) The thirty seconds represent how short life is;
b) The small piece of paper represents how little a life can really offer materially;
c) The fat round crayon represents everything in life that we wish to use to 鈥榗ommunicate鈥 to them our love with.
Once they pondered on these points, I explained to them that it鈥檚 only natural for parents to want their children鈥檚 material well-being. This comes in the form of their health, education, and a prosperous future. All these are very noble indeed.
But given the 鈥榮mall piece of paper,鈥 the 鈥榗rayon,鈥 and the 鈥榯ime limit,鈥 we are never too sure that all our ideals for them will be truly realized. Thus, it鈥檚 important to give them something that is not bound to matter, time, and space. And this is our faith.
This is the gift and the door that we must open for them. Benedict XVI says that this door 鈥溾s always open for us, ushering us into the life of communion with God and offering entry into his Church. It is possible to cross that threshold when the word of God is proclaimed and the heart allows itself to be shaped by transforming grace. To enter through that door is to set out on a journey that lasts a lifetime. (Porta fidei, no. 1)鈥
Moreover, Benedict XVI adds, 鈥淭hrough faith, this new life shapes the whole of human existence according to the radical new reality of the resurrection. To the extent that he freely cooperates, man鈥檚 thoughts and affections, mentality and conduct are slowly purified and transformed, on a journey that is never completely finished in this life. (Ibid., no. 6)鈥
Perhaps, it may help to try out the simple workshop above and awaken ourselves to the things that are truly necessary in this life for the next, not only for ourselves but also for our children. It is then that we see the need to daily Faith Up Now!, which is the only things that truly matters.