By: Amy Woolam Echeverria
Sub-zero temperatures could not keep tens of thousands of people (an estimated 50,000) at home on Sunday, February 17, 2013 for a historic rally on climate change in Washington, D.C., The Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach (CCAO) was no exception. On the first Sunday in Lent Columbans were Presente! with current and former CCAO team members waving the Columban JPIC flag as we stood in solidarity with Creation and all communities that suffer due to climate change.
Joining thousands on the chilly Sunday afternoon also struck home for me the importance of communion. Having named Called to Communion as our guiding vision for the next six years at the recent General Assembly of Columban missionaries, this rally reminded me what true communion looks and feels like. It can be uncomfortable, tiring, even painful, but in our Catholic tradition, the Eucharist is not symbolic gesture, but a transformation of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ. So too we are transformed in real and concrete ways when we enter into relationships that move us out of our comfort zone.
As Columban Fr. Naill O’Brien describes, “[Eucharist], is nothing less than an act of revolution, a radical call for personal and social transformation; it challenges every unjust structure and calls to offer our lives in the struggle to change these structures.” (N.O’Brien. Island of Tears, Island of Hope).
Understanding Communion in this way gives new meaning and challenge to the Real Presence of God in the Eucharist and in our lives. We are invited and encouraged to be participants in the transformation we seek. Mystic and saint, Teresa of Avila calls us to become God’s hands and feet, eyes and hearts in the world. I would have much preferred to comfortably watch the rally on TV from my warm living room, but my faith impelled me to join the crowds and shout for environmentally sound policies until my throat was raw.
Finally, on Sunday, frozen to the bone, exhausted and zapped of energy I received a lifeline of warmth and hope. My phone rang. On the other end a Columban Sister energetically asked, “Are you there?! I can see all the people on T.V. Are you there?” I was happy to say, “We are PRESENTE!”
