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PRACTICING RESURRECTION Author Nora Gallagher's memoir on Work, Doubt, Discernment, and Moments of Grace In mid-November of 1995, during the church season of ordinary time, my brother's radiologist told him he had "zero percent" chance of recovery from the cancer diagnosed only a year earlier. Our family went into a kind of free-fall, and my religious faith took a series of unexpected turns. Practicing Resurrection is the story of my life at a crossroads, discerning what to do and how to live after my brother's death. The life I led before Kit died no longer made sense. Stretched between meetings, always ten minutes late, increasingly without surprise or humor, I realized I'd lost more than Kit. I'd lost my "own wild life," and a sense of the sacred in the world. I set out
to find "a new way to spend" myself. Practicing Resurrection
describes the often unsettling, sometimes comic and finally redemptive
process of discovery as I met regularly with a discernment committee to
"bet on the irrational" and examine my possible call to priesthood
and explore the natural world for profound meaning. The exploration extended
to my marriage, to my work as a writer and to the full meaning of life
after a death. We spend so much time in the Church "believing" in the resurrection or "not believing," (six impossible things before breakfast) that we may lose the point. What if the resurrection is not about the appearances of Jesus alone but also about what those appearances point to, what they ask. And it is finally what we do with them that matters; make them into superstitions or use them as stepping stones to new life. We have to practice resurrection. Excerpt from the memoir Practicing Resurrection Link to Nora Gallagher's web site
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