Reflections Magazine Issue #67 - Winter 2008 | Page 11

Lasting Lessons Sharon Weber, OP, PhD, ’69 Sister Sharon Weber, OP, PhD, is a longtime Siena Heights faculty member who currently serves as the Vice President for Academic Affairs and the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at SHU. Jesus Is In The Boat Perhaps the most difficult aspect of this task is to identify the one most important lesson. There have been so many. And I am grateful to my family, teachers, mentors, friends, students and acquaintances who have taught me so much over the years. And so I come to this lecture with a very deep feeling of gratitude to so many individuals. However, my reflections continue to lead me back to an incident that taught me several lessons, one of which reinforced my father’s promise that if I kept my mind open I would learn something new every day. It also taught me that we can learn deep truths in the most unexpected ways. However, it is the deep truth that I learned from a first-grader named Mary that I continue to endeavor to use as my firm foundation in life. And so, the story: I began my teaching career in a first-grade classroom. I was teaching religion one day to 50 6and 7-year olds. Our religion book at that time was much like a coloring book—with large black and white pictures of Bible stories and a sentence or two at the bottom of the page. The story for this day was of Jesus calming the storm at sea. The teacher was expected to provide the details. And I thought I was doing a great job of it. I had explained how tired Jesus was and so he was able to sleep through the storm. But I described a dandy of a storm—slashing rain, howling wind, flashing lightning, clapping thunder and huge waves. As I looked around that classroom, I could tell the class was with me. They could imagine that storm! to answer that they are standing to raise their hands even higher. At a time like this, it seemed important to call on a student who does not often volunteer an answer. How could anyone not have the correct answer for this question? I called on Mary. I asked, “Mary, do you think the apostles were afraid?” She stood and said with firm conviction, “No, Sister. Jesus was in the boat.” I do not know how many of her peers would have given her same response. I do not know whether or not any of them shared my response. I do not know whether or not she noticed my hesitation—a hesitation that was like being struck dumb in the face of such simple and profound faith—a hesitation that recognized my own lack of such a faith. I responded that she was right—they should have been confident in Jesus—but instead they awakened him in their fear. Her confidence was well-placed; he did calm the storm. It is possible that Mary’s firm statement of faith in Jesus and the loving providence of God was her first lecture. I suspect she does not know it has been a challenge to me over the 40-some years that I have carried it with me through both calm and turbulent waters. I have worked in several different contexts with others to try to live Gospel values and to infuse those values into our world. In confronting issues of social injustice and my complicity in them, I have often needed to be reminded that Jesus is in the boat. I am so grateful to Mary for that clear lesson and I hope to be sure that her first lecture is integral to my last lecture. u “In confronting issues of social injustice and my complicity in them, I have often needed to be reminded that Jesus is in the boat.” — Sister Sharon Weber, OP, PhD, ’69 So, before I told the class about the apostles waking Jesus with the plea to save them from perishing, I asked, “Do you think the apostles were afraid?” Every hand in the room was up. Stretched before me was that enthusiastic scene every teacher hopes for—students so eager 2008 Annual President’s Report 11