chapter 28 Jonesy: So English! So Jesuit! So Insightful!

Jonesy:  So  English!  So  Jesuit !  So Insightful !

 
His name was Jones  but everyone called him  " Jonesy." He was VERY English and very  anxious  that this be known. He had a great  bullneck surrounded by an Anglican-type  clerical collar,  two sizes too large. He had a huge  bald head  which came to a kind of point on the top. He smoked a smelly pipe  which  he kept between  fashionably clenched false teeth. His eyeglasses were the thick egg shell variety surrounded by black tortoise shell rims. His casssock or soutane  was the classic  Oxford don style with  twin tails flowing off his shoulders.
 
He was exceedingly intimidating to me, a very green,very inexperienced, freshly minted little  priest just out of a hot house seminary  in Washington DC. I had just disembarked  from a 9,000 ton freighter  after a 17 day voyage on the Atlantic. I had spent 17 boring and frustrating days watching flying fish,reading,eating big meals, chipping paint, listening  to the  pained declarations of happiness of a married minister  as  he screamed all day at his children and trying to learn  French from three  Marists Brothers en route  to a difficult  and primitive mission in Rhodesia.
 
Jonesy terrified me.  Even after I saw him grovelling appropriately  before the  Irish Capuchin Bishop of Capetown, with his  " Yes, me Lord. No, me Lord",I was still scared of him.  He
was  not only a Jesuit, a factor enough to  panic  any dirty necked kid from the New York tenements like me, but he was also   ENGLISH!    As they used to say:  " If he were any more English, he couldn't speak."
 
So when the Pastor of the very swanky  seaside parish  where I was staying awaiting  transport  into the " interior", asked  two of his parishioners to take me for day tour of the beautiful Cape  of Good  Hope, I ran into  my Jonesy problem. The two parishioners were  very good looking young women, who, by happy chance, were  also VERY  wealthy.
 
Jonesy  patently  disapproved of this venture. He glared at me from his high station and muttered  in a veddy,veddy English manner:
 
                          "WELL.....I  SUPPOSE  WE ALL MUST  HAVE  OUR POUND OF HORSE  ( pronounced  " hawse" ) FLESH, DON'T  WE )
 
I was shaken. What did  this patriarchal figure mean?    Was I doing something  wrong in driving with these charming women?  Was I demeaning an older priest  by letting these two pretty gals  take me out all  day  to watch the melding of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans?
What was he telling me ? He couldn't be wrong.  He was a JESUIT!  And even more, he was ENGLISH!
 
It has taken  me decades to savor Jonesy's meaning. He was instructing a callow  and gossoon-like priest  with two basic lessons  of life.
 
1.  Every one has to deal with temptation. Not just  with concupiscience but with tendencies
to greed,laziness,deceit,inordinate ambition,envy, human respect,non-compassion,  mercilessness, unforgiveness, narcississm, over sensitivity,pride in its  disguised forms,hardness  of heart and covetousness. All of us are subnject to  Original sin. Jonesey was saying even  young priests with high flown ideals and aspirations  must be aware of their own fragility. He says, in effect, --rermember that you are human and with humility admit that if we wish to lose  " weight" we have to stay away  from the  symbolic food which could imperiously demand our adoration.
 
2. There  is no such thing as real perfection in any human being. We all have our characterologic scars  and spiritual warts  and multiple soul wrinkles. Jonesy says that it is all right to be human and to admit that one is fallible. Hurrah! And one can be reminded that in the whole history of the human race, there  have been only two perfect persons.
Jesus, Who being God, found it relatively easy and Our  Blessed Lady who  by a singular theologic exception  was without sin.
 
The gloriously liberating  emotional result of this insight was  simply:
 
" It is all right to have scars  and wrinkle and warts. Join the club of Adam and Eve." As long as  one is deeply and truly aware that Godloves him with and implacable love and that in return one tries to love God back with all one's brokenness and imperfection and even after  many regretted sins,  somehow --with the Lord--- it is all right !!!!!
 
It was to say that the Catholic Church  is not a museum for plastic saints  but a clinic  for sinners!!!!!  That  means   ----  all of us!  Many  years ago I had instructed a truly brilliant Jewish woman preparatory to Baptism. But she insisted, before entering the Church, that I declare to her that Hitler is burning in Hell. This I could not do--even tho' I,myself  am half Jewish. My religion is the religion of the second chance, the perennial font of hope, the religion of forgivenessMy religion totally believes in the POWER  of God's mercy and of the force of grace to reform and rehabilitate.
 
As sinners, we are to respect all others. We are to hurt no one deliberately. WE are to try to do unto the other asa we would have him do unto us. These  are difficult  lessons to
 implement when we understand the human nature that Jonesy trumpeted. So, it takes a lifetime even to approach  such implementation. Such is a deduction from my Jonesy  54 years ago. So,hopefully, I will meet him in heaven  and I shall cup my heavenly hands and shout  over the din of the harps and whatever  makes people  happy  " up there"
 
                        ' Hey Jonesy !     I FINALLY  GOT IT !
 
 As  someone said somewhere,   " better  late  than never..."
 
                               Right, Jonesy?

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