Oct 3, 2011
Recently I caught up with one of my former students. We talked a lot about the health of his family’s farm in East Texas. To date, East Texas suffers from over 24 inches less than average rainfall. “The drought is so bad,” he lamented, “that we have these two trees – been there as long as the farm itself –one dead, the other dying. If the one tree didn’t have roots next to the stream nearby, it would’ve already died like the other one.”
Let me share with you briefly how the Holy Spirit transformed this ordinary conversation about drought into an extraordinary catechetical lesson for me.
Psalm 63 flashed into my head the very moment he mentioned the tree struggling for survival near a stream. I’ve read most of the psalm innumerable times when praying the Liturgy of the Hours:
O God, you are my God – for you I long!
For you my body yearns; for you my soul thirsts,
Like a land parched, lifeless, and without water.
So I look to you in the sanctuary to see your power and glory.
For your love is better than life; my lips offer you worship.”