Bishop Varden has made quite a splash across Catholic media, especially since he was selected to deliver the Lenten retreat to Pope Leo, and his homilies were posted for all to absorb. The Pillar has gushed about him, and other media sources are finding his words like the Living Water we hear about in this weekend's scrutiny. This interview has some gems:
"The decision to ask to be received into the Church came entirely naturally. It never felt like a rupture; it was a matter of coming into my own, in every sense of that phrase, while I was conscious, at the same time, of encountering an utter otherness beckoning hospitably to me."
"That is why I like to insist on the pontifical, that is, bridge-building mission of Catholics. The biblical narrative, and later the history of the Church, is the account of the coming into being of a people out of scattered individuals oriented by conscience and grace towards a shared goal, infinitely attractive. Pursuit of that goal presupposes self-transcendence; at the same time, it enables entry into communion."
"When I grew up in the 80s, most people thought they knew what Christianity was. That is so no longer; and there is no embarrassment associated with ignorance.This is a cultural loss. At the same time it is an advantage for evangelization. For it is possible, now, to present the Gospel in its newness and for it to be perceived as new, fresh. We have a great task on our hands, an exacting and joyful task."
"A Christocentric approach to sexuality is conscious of Christ as the Alpha and Omega of the human condition. It will remember that we are made in God’s image in order to become like God; that our immediate, embodied, sensual, and affective desires are sparks of a more essential flame drawing us towards communion with uncreated Light, to 'the full Godhead’s burning,' as Elizabeth Barrett Browning put it in an ardent poem. No other categories are sufficient to account for the intensity of longing that inhabits men and women aspiring to be fully alive. Our secular establishment has no access to these categories. Therefore, we, as Christians, have a responsibility to represent them responsibly and well."
Here is his website, so much more than a blog, it is an immersion: Life Illumined
https://coramfratribus.com/life-illumined/on-consideration/
where you can find, among so much else, the homilies he delivered to Pope Leo, including this reflection on Christ's wounds:
Two contradictory tendencies mark contemporary efforts to deal with wounds. On the one hand, people readily display acquired, inherited, or imagined wounds as markers of identity. They may have good reasons, causes based on calls for justice. But as we have heard Bernard explain, motivational prospect is lost to us if we root our sense of self in attachment to a wound. We risk being mired in anger, a passion that displaces aspirations to healing with affirmations of self-righteousness. Anger and its reflection, bitterness, can lock us in perversely self-satisfied despair.
On the other hand there are efforts to airbrush wounds. We hear it insinuated that wounds should not exist and that, if they do, sick limbs should be removed. In societies become transactional, unproductive or unlovely elements have no place. They are seen as freak occurrences, met with harshness. This attitude is evident in ongoing controversies about abortion and euthanasia, as in recurrent talk about eugenics. It is seen in dystopic dreams of relieving societies of undesirables, whom certain politicians would confine in reservations or drop off the edge of a cliff.
One can interpret this development in different ways. It seems hard to deny that the eclipse in public consciousness of the figure of the Crucified, the Wounded-yet-Unovercome, has something to do with it. A civilisation that, at some level, seeks its measure in an image that affirms the stature of patience and redemptive suffering is changed. It may learn empathy, which is not spontaneous to fallen humankind.
Christ’s Passion lets us lament without rage. It opens us to compassion, which is an epistemological category apt to prepare a graced insight like Job’s: ‘I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, now my eye sees you.’ We may call out to the Crucified-and-Risen-One: ‘My Lord and my God!’ The Gospel states that Christ’s wounds, after his rising, were not done away with, but rendered glorious. The world’s wounds can be, too, when Christ’s oil and wine are poured upon them.
It would seem my favorite blogger Amy Welborn also found this segment on woundedness as entrancing as I did.


