Thinking this morning of Julian of Norwich, a 14th century nun who thought she was dying when she had a series of visions for 12 hours, in which Jesus revealed to her secrets of heaven and of His own heart. Indeed, she did not die, but spent the next 40 years reflecting on and writing about what she had seen and heard in her visions.
One of the most remarkable secrets God revealed to her was what she called "the hospitality of God." She reflected on the sweet kindness of God, Who welcomes the worst of us into his heart and home. As a parent who is most tender and solicitous with the child who is sick, weak, or disabled in some way, she saw God as most welcoming of the sinner. Indeed, Jesus said that the angels in heaven rejoiced more over a sinner who repents than over the 99 who have no need of repentence. And in the story of the woman caught in adultery, we see Jesus turning away the "righteous" ones who want to condemn the sinner --- we see the Face of God!
After my experience with the baptism of the Holy Spirit in 1977, I began to have a series of visions also -- unlike Julian of Norwich, I had only 3 or 4 of them over a period of a few years. But now, almost 50 years later, I realize that those few visions have guided me all the rest of my life. I have never thought about revealing those visions to any but a very small number of people in my life, but thinking about Julian today and the impact of her visions on me, I'm thinking about writing them down. I don't know that they will mean anything to anyone else, but I have found that the gifts of God are never given for us alone. The graces we have been given are always meant to be shared.
In the first -- and longest -- vision I had, I saw myself in a cloud looking down at the top of a mountain. I could see the top of the mountain, and I could see multiple paths leading to the top. There were people on all of the paths; some of them had wandered off their path and were lost in the trees, not even knowing they were lost. As I watched them, I asked Jesus, "Can I help them?" "NO," he said; "on their journey, they come to know their Guide, and you are not the Guide." I was completely satisfied with that answer, for some reason, knowing that He would take care of the ones I was worried about.
Suddenly, though, I realized that I myself was at the base of an invisible mountain in the cloud, one that I could not see at all. And He spoke again: You will not know whether you are going up or down, backwards or forwards; you will know only the One Who guides you. And once again, I was completely satisfied and content with His words. I knew that I did not have to worry about where I was going, if only He was taking care of me.
Then I saw in front of me what looked like a library table with four small drawers. I opened the first drawer and saw what appeared to be bookmarks, and for some reason, I understood those to be the Ten Commandments. The next drawer also held small bookmarks, and these seemed to be the Beatitudes. The contents of the third drawer were (occasionally) the secrets of men's hearts. The fourth drawer, however, would open only a couple of inches, much like a kitchen drawer stuck half-way by some tool blocking the pathway. I could see it held a scroll, which I squeezed my hand in far enough to draw out. As I unrolled the scroll, it seemed to be blank; intuitively, I knew there was something written on it, but I could not see it! As I watched, the scroll continued to unroll itself upwards, even to heaven.
I understood the vision immediately: From childhood, it had been given to me to know the Commandments, the Beatitudes, and even sometimes the secrets of other's hearts. What I could not know and did not know, was what was written on my own heart! I understood the words, "If you allow Me to reveal to you what is written on your own heart, it will lead you to heaven!"
And then I saw the first (and as it turned out to be, the only) three words I would ever see: Purity of Heart, Humility, and Truth.
Now, almost 50 years after that experience, I realize that these words were not "virtues" that had been given to me from the beginning, but they were instead guideposts that would lead me to heaven. They were paths that I would need to learn to walk on the way, and from which I would occasionally, if not often, depart. But they would inevitably draw me back to the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
I am, and always have been, profoundly grateful for this vision. As a visual learner, I have always needed to "see" rather than "hear" things in order to retain them in memory. I tend to forget what I hear -- sometimes after 10 minutes! But I always remember the things I see. And here's the point: God, as the Master Teacher, honors and accommodates His Voice, His teachings, to our strengths rather than to our weakness. In his hospitality, according to Julian, He bends low that He might raise us up!