Follow me
It’s
by far the hardest thing I’ve ever done
To
be so in love with you and so alone
Follow me where I go
what I do and who I know
Make it part of you
Make it part of you
to be a part of me
Follow me up and down
Follow me up and down
all the way and all around
Take my hand
Take my hand
and say you’ll follow me
It’s long been on my mind
You know it’s been a long, long time
I’ve tried to find the way that I can make
you understand
The way I feel about you and just how
much I need you
To be there where I can talk to you
When there’s no one else around
Follow me where I go what I do and
who I know
Make it part of you to be a part of me
Follow me up and down all the way and
all around
Take my hand and say you’ll follow me
You see I’d like to share my life with you
And show you things I’ve seen
Places that I’m going to places where
I’ve been
To have you there beside me and never
be alone
And all the time that you’re with me
We will be at home
Follow me where I go what I do and
who I know
Make it part of you to be a part of me
Follow me up and down all the way
Take my hand and I will follow you
John Denver
The Third Sunday of July is the
Feast of the Most Holy Redeemer: the official title of the Order of the
Redemptoristines and the Congregation of the Redemptorists. It is always a day of celebration. And music is always part of the celebration. Recently
I heard the John Denver song, ‘Follow Me’ on the radio. I love that song. It
took me back to my younger days. I found
myself humming it the next few days.
When I reflected on why it touched me so, I realized the refrain of the
song: ‘Follow me, where I go, what I do,
and who I know, make it part of you to be a part of me. Follow me up and down
all the way and all around. Take my hand
and say you’ll follow me,’ was an invitation to follow Jesus.
Also touching is the introduction
to that song. He sings, ‘It is by far the hardest thing I’ve ever
done, to be so in love with you and so alone.’
I always thought he was saying,
‘for so long.’ But either way it gave me pause because it
speaks to me of the call to fidelity in life. When I reflected on the song as a whole it
seemed it could be a dialogue between two lovers. Which one is ‘so alone’?
To me, it sounds like both; it is
hard for each one to be in love and longing for the other, wanting to ‘make it part of you to be a part of me’
and trying to figure out how, despite difficulties, to find a way to be together.
The last line of the song resolves the situation by one surrendering to the
other. Before, one was saying to the
other ‘take my hand and say you’ll follow
me’ but now the one says, ‘Take my
hand and I will follow you.’
The invitation to follow in any relationship,
including our relationship with God, always comes with a call to
surrender. Even Jesus, the Man-God,
surrendered his life to the Father – think of Jesus in the Garden saying, ‘Not
as I will but as you will.’ Lk 22: 42 Jesus gave his all for love – love for God and
love for you and me.
Being visual person, an image
came to my mind to illustrate this invitation to follow Jesus. The statue in front of our monastery in
Foggia, Italy is entitled, ‘The Wayfarer;’ one of Blessed Celeste’s favorite
titles for our Holy Redeemer. The statue
of the Wayfarer portrays Jesus standing there with arms outstretched. What does his stance say to me, to you?
To me it looks like he is about
to place his hands around my shoulder, and on the shoulder of who ever is on
the other side: you, you, you…each one of you. That made me think of a yoke; as
in Jesus saying, ‘Come to me all who labor and are heavy burdened, and I will
give you rest, take up my yoke and learn for me, for I am gentle and humble of
heart.’ Mt. 11:28 Earlier in July we heard this Gospel read on
Sunday. From it I heard an invitation.
I reflected on the image of the
yoke. I’ve only seen pictures of a yoke of oxen. The yoke is a curved piece of
wood that fits over the shoulders of two draft animals so they can work
together. That is what Jesus is like: He
is the yoke that holds us together and guides our lives in a
gentle manner; not by force but by love and an invitation to go with him, follow
him.
Jesus,
the Wayfarer was the love of Celeste’s life! She followed him in her own time
and place. Our call, as Redemptoristine Nuns, and yours, is the same. Our constitutions say, ‘The more we strive to
live the love of Christ, the more the thoughts and feelings of Christ will fill
our spirit and our heart, the more we will become His faithful images and the
more also we will be able to be true witnesses of the love of Him who is our
Beginning and our End, our Way and our Life.’
(Associate Constitutions #5)
Like
Celeste, let us each be a ‘Viva Memoria,’ the living memory of Jesus the
Wayfarer/ the Redeemer to be a participant in God’s loving plan of redemption.
Do
you hear the invitation?
Follow me where I go
What I do and who I
know;
Make it part of you to
be a part of me.
Follow me up and down
all the way
Take my hand and I will follow you.
Take my hand and I will follow you.
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