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“All the Time Love”

When Dorothy Day was 8 years old, she lived with her family in Oakland, California. On April 18, 1906, the infamous San Francisco earthquake devastated the city—just across the bay from Dorothy’s home. Over 3,000 people died from the earthquake and the fire that blazed for 3 days. That week, 8-year-old Dorothy watched the people of Oakland help those who needed help…and she watched them help the people of SF who were coming across the bay in boats. Many of the people fleeing SF lost everything they owned. More than half of the population of San Francisco became homeless on that day.

The response of the people of Oakland had a profound impact on young Dorothy—an impact that informed the rest of her life. She watched people act very differently than she had ever seen them act before: they were going out of their way to help others, sometimes experiencing great sacrifice, personal discomfort, and sometimes even personal pain. And she thought, Somehow people had “known in their being how to do this all along.” People inherently know how to show great compassion and will naturally do it under the right circumstances. And she asked, “Why can’t we live this way all the time?”

The author Paul Elie, who wrote about Dorothy Day, said that she lived by a conviction that it’s not merely great crisis moments that call forth compassion in us. She recognized that, at any given moment, someone somewhere is having a crisis of the magnitude of the San Francisco earthquake… “and you have to be there when the person is having is or her crisis, and not wait for the city to burn down.”

I shared this with the congregation on Sunday and reminded them that someone today has recently lost their home, or is suffering physically more than they ever thought they could bear, or has cancer and they don’t know if they will survive, or just found out that someone they love has died.

Dorothy Day took the words of Jesus seriously. “Abide in my love,” he said to his disciples. His life, his words, his teaching all answered Dorothy Day’s question. “Why can’t we live like this all the time?” We can, Jesus showed us and taught us! We can always keep our eyes open to notice those around us who are suffering. We can always keep our hearts open to show compassion and mercy. We can love all the time. I am so glad to be part of a church that believes this, and demonstrates it over and over and over again!

Aloha nui!

Kahu Alan Akana

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Our Kahu (Pastor) offers a weekly message in church most Sundays during the year. Click HERE to see a video of his sermon from this past Sunday. You may see the Koloa Union Church YouTube channel to see many of his past messages and subscribe in order be notified when a new message is posted. Please share these videos with friends and invite them to church. Please feel free to “Like” any of the videos you see and share them on social media, such as Facebook, so that others will notice them.

“A Message from Kahu Alan Akana” is provided most weeks by the Kahu (Pastor) of Koloa Union Church, a congregation of the United Church of Christ (UCC), a member of the Kauai Association and Hawaii Conference.