Sunday, November 25, 2018

Greatest Pics

View from the Acropolis in Athens
I had a wonderful pilgrimage to Greece and Turkey, in the Footsteps of St. Paul. Here are some of the photo highlights along with some thoughts from the trip.

The Erechtheum on the Acropolis

As our ship approaches Kusadasi, Turkey
John, our guide in Turkey, said we should do our best and than pray.

The island of Patmos where John wrote the book of Revelation.



The Basilica of St. Mark with the lion fountain in Heraklion, the largest city on the island of Crete
I was so surprised to find this Basilica de San Marcos, with the lion fountain (the lion being the symbol for the evangelist St. Mark) in Crete. It's important to be open to God's surprises and his plan. In Peter Walker's In the Steps of Saint Paul, a book I read to prepare for the trip, Walker writes:
Travelling with Paul was evidently a matter of constant prayer, trying to discern God's will at each moment. Much of the time this small group simply did not know what they were doing from one day to the next. They had to be ready for the unexpected.

On the Celestyal Olympia
This was a fun afternoon, soaking up the rays, and talking about what we would do if we won the lottery. Somehow in the course of the conversation, Peggy got the nickname St. Peggy of Wauconda!

Approaching Santorini, the most beautiful of the Greek islands.
In one of his homilies, Father Michael talked about conditional peace, the peace we have when things are going our way, when God is doing what we tell him to do! This is not the unconditional peace of God.

What looks like snow is the famous white-washed Greek houses.


Santorini

We prayed the Rosary most days of the pilgrimage. After one decade, Fr. Michael asked for the grace to balance action with trust.

Fira, Santorini

Temple of Apollo at Delphi



The Oracle of Delphi
One of our spiritual guides, Father Bob, gave us a beautiful novena called, "O Jesus, I surrender myself to you." Here is part of the prayer:

Surrender to me does not mean to fret, to be upset, or to lose hope, nor does it mean offering to me a worried prayer asking me to follow you and change your worry into prayer. It is against this surrender, deeply against it, to worry, to be nervous and to desire to think about the consequences of anything. It is like the confusion that children feel when they ask their mother to see to their needs, and then try to take care of those needs for themselves so that their childlike efforts get in their mother's way.

The Monasteries in Meteora

Tom is really close to the edge!
This is as close as I want to get.
A panoramic view of some of the monasteries.
Mosaic at the Altar of St. Paul in Berea
Paul is a fascinating figure. Known as Saul, he was a Jewish Roman citizen from Tarsus, in present day Turkey, who was a Pharisee, a teacher of the law. After  the death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus Christ, Paul, who must have seen Christianity as a threat to Judaism, spent much of his time persecuting Christians, having them arrested and in some cases, as with St. Stephen, the first martyr, encouraging their murder.

Then came the road to Damascus. The light flashed around Paul and he was knocked to the ground. "Saul! Saul! Why are you persecuting me?" said a voice. "Who are you?" asked Paul. "I am Jesus whom you are persecuting." Paul did a 180 and became a fervent evangelizer for Christianity and one of the main reasons the religion spread beyond Palestine.

Three steps from where St. Paul preached in Berea
Sometimes I have wished for a road to Damascus moment in my own life: an encounter with God that is so strong, undeniable, and penetrating that it would cause me to reform my life in the ways it needs to be reformed, as it did with Paul. An event that transforms the heart and leaves you really no choice but to follow God's will.

God doesn't usually work in the dramatic fashion that he did with Paul. But in my own experience, he gets our attention if we pay attention. Recently, he did that with my brother's suffering and death.


At the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Thessaloniki
Having Mass at this church was so special to me because my brother Jim was born on the Feast Day of the Immaculate Conception, December 8. During the Communion meditation, Father Michael asked God for the grace for us to more fully live our vocations. After Jim died, this is what I wanted to recommit myself to, living my vocation, being a better version of myself. Our vocations can change over the course of a lifetime, but I do think there is a universal vocation: to love God with all our hearts, souls, and minds and our neighbor as ourselves.

Father Michael has a contemplative moment in the theater at Philippi
At the beginning of our time in Greece, Father Michael told us that this pilgrimage was not just for us, who were on it, but also for those at home. How can we in some way have this pilgrimage benefit the people we love?
Kavala, formerly Neapolis, the port town where Paul first came to Europe.
We were so busy on the pilgrimage that it was hard to find the time to reflect. My friend Peggy said in that way it is like life. We are so busy with our daily activities, we were so busy visiting the sites of our pilgrimage. We need to take time somehow to reflect. That is what this blog has been for me.
Our guide Alexandra
Alexandra, our tour guide, did a great job keeping us on schedule, which involved, out of necessity, issuing a lot of instructions. She told us a story. One time Alexandra was leading a group and her four-year-old niece was with the group. After observing Alexandra's actions for awhile, the little girl said to her, "Auntie, why are you always telling those people what to do?"

2 comments:

  1. Maria, I smiled my way through this first part of your blog and my heart expanded. Thank you for sharing this special journey with me. Thank you for this opportunity to reflect back and cherish this gift and to see this pilgrimage through your eyes, my friend! So looking forward to reading more. Love, Peggy

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  2. Thanks Peggy for reading and for being a fellow pilgrim1

    ReplyDelete

Greatest Pics

View from the Acropolis in Athens I had a wonderful pilgrimage to Greece and Turkey, in the Footsteps of St. Paul. Here are some of the ...