A Non-Traditional Blessing

Purple and Black and Red 2Two weeks ago I posted a prayer here that I thought fitting given the senseless violence that was spreading throughout American cities. I had been familiar with versions of this prayer for many years but never knew the author. As I mentioned at the bottom of that post, there are many variations of this prayer including how people title it. Sometimes it was called “A Franciscan Blessing.” Sometimes it was called “Four-Fold Benedictine Blessing” and attributed to Sister Ruth Marlene Fox, OSB, 1985, of Sacred Heart Monastery in Richardton, ND.

As a writer attribution is important to me, as is accuracy when quoting someone or posting a poem online and correctly printing it with the original line breaks of the poet. So I did some investigation and traced the bread crumbs which indeed led me back to Sacred Heart Monastery in Richardton, North Dakota and Benedictine Sister Ruth Fox. Eureka! Alleluia!

Sister Fox kindly responded to me, sent me the original prayer (posted below), and relayed the circumstances in which it was written. Chaplain for the Catholic Students at Dickinson State College (now Dickinson State University) in the 1980’s, Sister Ruth was invited to offer a prayer at the Graduation Breakfast for the senior class. Not finding a prayer to her liking for the occasion, she set pen to paper, blessing not only a religiously diverse gathering of students some thirty years ago, but many since then with her prayer (and versions that her original prayer inspired). As she writes, “And the words of the prayer gradually came to me (given by the Holy Spirit).”

I’d like to share her prayer, her blessing, as it was originally co-written with her (holy) ghost-writer, titled, and offered aloud. We are grateful. It is a beautiful blessing.


A Non-traditiona
l Blessing 

May God bless you with discontent with easy answers, half-truths, superficial relationships, so that you will live from deep within your heart.

May God bless you with anger at injustice, oppression, abuse, and exploitation of people, so that you will work for justice, equality, and  peace.

May God bless you with tears to shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection, starvation and war, so that you will reach out your hand to comfort  them and to change their pain to joy.

May God bless you with the foolishness to think you can make a difference in this world, so that you will do the things which others tell you cannot be done.

If you have the courage to accept these blessings, then God will also bless you with:

happiness—because you will know that you have made life better for others

inner peace—because you will have worked to secure an outer peace for others

laughter—because your heart will be light

faithful friends—because they will recognize your worth as a person.

These blessings are yours—not for the asking, but for the giving—from One who wants to be your companion, our God, who lives and reigns, forever and ever. Amen.

 

Sister Ruth Fox, OSB

 

10 thoughts on “A Non-Traditional Blessing

  1. Timely idea, credit where it is due. How great you went to and heard from the source. A good story to go with a great blessing.

  2. Thank you Dan, your words wash over my spirit, a spirit weighted down with the world around us and lifting me again to hope and gratitude. Grace

  3. Thank you, Sister Ruth, for not only listening to God but, to do His will by being moved to action. Action to help your brothers and sisters, God’s children, in whatever struggles they are facing. The students and the faculty at Dickinson State were surely moved into action for others by hearing God’s words given to you.
    Now, nearly 40 years later, many of us are being encouraged and moved into action for others as your words from God are being shared through our community. Keep on, Sister Ruth Fox, as God guides you…

  4. How great to come across this posting, thanks to Google. The adapted version of Sr. Ruth’s prayer is the basis of my homily this Sunday, I am the true vine and you are the branches… and like your search on the origins, I came across this wonderful “backstory” of a blessed child of God who truly lives out her life to bring about the transforming change being rooted in the love of God. I like the original version a lot! I’m sure it was a man who edited the original and renamed it Franciscan. It adds much to my own knowledge and to share, too. Thank you.

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