MANY years ago when I was an associate pastor, there was a young man named Nick who spoke boldly in front of hundreds of his fellow youth about his Christian faith. He was filled joy, passion and courage as he shared his faith and personal relationship with Jesus Christ. He spoke with genuine concern for his peers, convincing them to turn their hearts to God who loves them unconditionally.
“The longest journey in life is the journey of the heart,” he proclaimed these words, referring to his conversion. These were words that got stuck in my mind and heart. And I have often wondered how a young man like him got this wisdom.
It’s true — the longest journey is the journey of the heart. I see this more now that I am involved in the field of teaching. Many times the movement of the mind to the heart is hard for students to practice. It’s not even easy for many professors and leaders to practice it because it requires inwardness, honesty, vulnerability, humility, selflessness, and ultimately conversion.
Parker J. Palmer attests to this human condition in his book, The Courage To Teach: “Many of us became teachers for reasons of the heart, animated by a passion for some subject and for helping people learn. But many of us lose heart as the years of teaching go by. How can we take heart in teaching once more so that we can, as good teachers always do, give heart to our students?”
Palmer contends that it is the journey of the heart that would bring salvation not only to each person but also to the society. He alludes to the wisdom of Vaclav Havel, poet, and man of practical affairs and leader in the Velvet Revolution that liberated Czechoslovakia from Soviet rule. Havel says: “The…experience I’m talking about has given me one certainty:…the salvation of this human world lies nowhere else than in the human heart, in the human power to reflect, in human meekness and human responsibility. Without a global revolution in human consciousness, nothing will change for the better, and the catastrophe toward which this world is headed…will be unavoidable.”
Indeed, not too many people are not listening to and discerning the movement of their hearts. The technical world mesmerizes them than the inward world. If they would only look deeply into their hearts—what God is telling them to do to bring freedom, justice, and well-being to others, to their countries and their lives, then their lives would become more peaceful and fulfilling.
In the Christian world, Easter season is a journey of mystagogy —the period in which the Church explains the meaning of the Sacraments to those who have newly received them. May this season be also a journey of mystagogy for all us, when we take the journey of mind to heart to receive the truth of our faith and of ourselves, destined to be partners with God in bringing life and light into this world!
May the power of the Holy Spirit during this Pentecost Sunday illumine our hearts to advocate against all forms of violence, warm, and terrorism to that all people will live in peace!
* * *
From a Filipino immigrant family, Reverend Rodel G. Balagtas was ordained to the priesthood from St. John’s Seminary in 1991. He served as Associate Pastor at St. Augustine, Culver City (1991-1993); St. Martha, Valinda (1993-1999); and St. Joseph the Worker, Canoga Park (1999-2001). In 2001, he served as Administrator Pro Tem of St. John Neumann in Santa Maria, CA, until his appointment as pastor of ImmAaculate Heart of Mary, Los Angeles, in 2002, which lasted 12 years. His term as Associate Director of Pastoral Field Education at St. John’s Seminary began in July 2014.