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By Gretchen Keiser
Hundreds of people were drawn together Saturday in the archdiocese
in the oneness of their need for the healing love of Jesus Christ.
Two services held at the gymnasium of the Marist School by Father
Edward McDonough brought together people who were seeking physical, emotional
and spiritual healing. A Redemptorist priest from Boston, Father McDonough has
a particular gift and ministry in healing and has conducted healing services
throughout the United States and in his home church, Mission Church in Boston,
over the last eight years.
His visit to Atlanta, sponsored by the Archdiocesan Servants
Committee of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, was his first trip to the
southern United States with his healing ministry, Father McDonough said. He had
served as a pastor of a Redemptorist parish in Virginia before becoming
involved in the charismatic renewal in 1974.
Some 600 to 650 people came to a 2 p.m. Catholic liturgy
celebrated by Father McDonough on Saturday and concelebrated by seven priests
from the archdiocese and the monastery in Conyers. Within the liturgy, Father
McDonough spoke about healing and particularly invited those suffering from
crippling physical ailments to come forward to receive prayers for healing.
The invitation drew a cluster of people to the front of the
gymnasium around Father McDonough, including young mothers with babies and
children in their arms, and elderly people moving hesitantly with the aid of
canes or the stronger arm of ushers assisting them. Father McDonough prayed
individually with a number of people and blessed groups of people with holy
water. Afterward a number of people came forward saying they had experienced
relief from pain and healing of ailments. Three women who had been walking with
canes lifted them and said that they no longer had need for them.
At 7:30 p.m. Saturday night, approximately 1,000 people gathered
again at the gymnasium for an ecumenical healing and restoration
service conducted by Father McDonough. The service included simple music
focusing upon Jesus healing love, prayers led by Father McDonough and
talks given by him and by his sister, Sister Priscilla McDonough, who assists
him in his ministry. During the evening service, Father McDonough prayed
individually with many people and also walked throughout the gymnasium and into
the bleachers, again blessing those gathered with holy water.
In his talks and in an interview, Father McDonough emphasized that
it is the Lord Jesus who heals through His people, the mystical Body of Christ,
in the same way that He healed when He walked the earth 2,000 years ago. Father
McDonough believes that the healing ministry is a form or structure through
which the healing love of God flows and that he and those who work with him are
simply instruments of God. He also emphasized that all who came needed to place
their particular needs before God and to be open to the healing that He had in
mind for them. While people may seek a particular healing, such as a physical
healing, he said, God knows what the deepest need is, which could be a need to
be healed spiritually or emotionally.
If you focus on the good things that come from Jesus (such
as physical healing) you could ignore Jesus, he said. He emphasized that
Jesus wants to take care of all needs, including daily problems, family
difficulties, broken relationships and heartache. While people see physical
needs for healing, God sees more, he said. Maybe arthritis is the least
thing you need to be healed of, he said.
After the service, people expressed a wide variety of reactions.
Some had experienced immediate physical relief from suffering and illness and
others said that they had gained deep spiritual insights into their suffering
and that of others as well as spiritual consolations. Several people said they
had experienced a share in the sorrow and suffering of those around them.
Dozens of people touched by Father McDonough or by the blessed holy water fell
briefly into a restful state in the arms of ushers or on the floor.
Those who had organized the visit were deeply moved also.
Coordinator Paul Grutsch, who with many others had been planning the day for
about a year, said, It was well worth a years preparation for this.
It was well worth it.
Noting that God cannot be outdone in generosity, he
said, God certainly blessed us with a lot more than we put into it.
(Next week: An interview with Father Edward McDonough on the
charism of healing.) |