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Nine One One, 01

Fr. John Cusick

So much of life is pursuing dreams. "What do you want to be when you grow up?" Though we might have answered with a job or career: nurse, firefighter, teacher, priest, nun, police officer; it was all about being the best person we could be someday.

Will I be married? How many kids would I like to have? Call it want you want - dreams, goals, plans, ends, objectives. It has been a journey in each of our lives to try and make happen what we have deemed important.

It wasn't surprising when she asked if we could have breakfast and talk. We had done that many times. For me, the breakfast conversation was always rich and fulfilling. She asked many questions. She was a seeker of other people's ideas and the wisdom to help her stay on track and keep making her dreams real.

This time - from beginning to end - it would be a different kind of breakfast. It still was a breakfast centered on dreams, but this time it was all about not letting three very different dreams die.

Dream One: Helping Others
Beside her dreams for herself and her career, she is one of those thirty-somethings who had a dream about helping others. She believes that education is a way out of poverty and hopelessness for young people. With another friend, she has developed a scholarship program among her peers that is putting sixty young people through private high school this year. What a thrill it must be to see that happen: to see so many friends, peers, classmates, and colleagues answering the financial call to sponsor a teenager through four years of high school. What a commitment and what an amazing amount of money that takes today!

Dream Two: Being Your Best
This time she wanted to talk about not letting this wonderful scholarship program die. She needed help and money to hire someone to run it. She could not do it much longer without a staff. She invited a friend to join us at breakfast. He and his wife were supporting one of these teens. As the three of us spoke and planned, the conversation moved to the work world and the economy that was making both of their jobs more risky than ever. He was fearful that his dream would die. He was still working for a dot com business. With some other thirty-somethings, they were determined not to give up and not to give in.

He mentioned that their (read "your") generation had really never had a bad day. Oh, there were some ups and downs in personal lives and with family, but in the world of work and opportunity, they both agreed that life was very, very good for their generation. Immediately following that agreed upon reflection, a man walked by our breakfast table and announced that a plane has just struck the World Trade Center. As horrible as that sounded, the three of us presumed it was a terrible accident. We could hear the television being turned on in the restaurant and turned to witness the second plane hitting the second tower. "I guess we are having our first bad day," was his immediate response.

Dream Three: Our Way of Life
Now the third dream was at risk: our American way of life. Suddenly trying to help teens succeed in this world, and trying to keep a job during shaky economic conditions did not seem very important. The fear and shock of what we were seeing gripped us.

Sometimes you don't appreciate what you have until it is at risk or gone. Everything seems different now than it did on nine one one, 01. If nothing else, each one of us has been thrown back inside ourselves to inventory our values and dreams. What do we really believe? What do we really want? What is most important?

What made the actions of 9/11/01 even more horrific was that they were reportedly done in the name of God. Can you imagine God willing violence, fear, terror and death on people? Absolutely not! Not our God. Not the God of Jesus Christ!

The Greatest Dream: God's Dream
In this time of fear and uncertainty about the future, let's do what we do best. Let's do what we have been doing all our lives: dreaming about what can be. Let's dream in God's name of respecting all people, and do it. Let's dream as Jesus did about bringing people together, then go out and break down the barriers of suspicion, hatred, and discrimination. Let us dream about being in communion with God and one another. Let us frequently receive Holy Communion and bring God's love and care to those we encounter every day.

In these difficult times, remember this great spiritual strategy: fear constrains; love releases. As some people released fear into God's world on 9/11, we will release God's love into God's world each day. We will never stop believing in Jesus Christ's great dream for the world: the Kingdom of God. Some day God will reign in this world. There will be respect for all people. The barriers that divide will become bridges that connect. Some day we will live in peace and in profound respect for one another. Right now, we can do our part to show others in our world what can be.

Eileen, keep dreaming about getting teens a great education. Scott, be the best worker and dot com-er in the world. You may have experienced your first "bad day" as an American generation on 9.11. Remember this: Fear and violence will never stop us from living out God's dream in our country and in this, God's world. Watch us!

 

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