Over southern France
			Our cabin is starting to buzz again after most everyone had  a few hours of shuteye.  Unfortunately, I  was not one of them.  I ordinarily have a  difficult time sleeping on airplanes.  My  current seat, on an aisle, made it more difficult, with people walking by  usually brushing up against me.  I have a  feeling that I’ll really be dragging later on today.
			For here, it’s a little after 7 a.m.  Back where we started, it’s around 1 a.m.
			So, in a way, I’ve been keeping vigil over the past few  hours.  I watched a monitor in our cabin  matter-of-factly tell me that we were traveling more than 600 mph and that the  temperature just a matter of feet away from me outside of the plane was a mere  -67 degrees Fahrenheit.
			The monitor also tracked our course across the Atlantic.  When I  gave up hope of sleeping, I noticed we were tracking along the south coast of Ireland, the  home of my fathers’ ancestors.  Soon  thereafter, we were flying along the south coast of Brittany, the region of  France in which Blessed Mother Theodore Guerin was born in 1798 and from which,  as a religious sister, she came in 1840 as a missionary to the fledgling  Diocese of Vincennes on the American frontier.
			Mother Theodore’s voyages across the Atlantic  were long and often treacherous, the ships on which she rode often being tossed  about by storms.  Along the way, she was  known in especially dire situations to turn to her provident God in  prayer.  A book of the Psalms that she  used in these trans-Atlantic trips is on now on display at Saint  Mary-of-the-Woods. A photo of it and  other examples of her personal articles can be seen on this website. 
			My own flight has been not been like Mother Theodore’s  passages.  The airplane on which I’ve  been riding has only experienced some very minor turbulence.
			But the soon-to-be-saint’s voyages and that of my own got me  thinking of an ancient image of the Church—that of the ship, the barque of  Peter.
			This has been a powerful ecclesial metaphor for most of the  history of the Church since those who traveled by ship could easily connect the  protection a ship gave to its passengers from the storms that raged on the seas  with the spiritual defense the Church gave its children against the snares of  the Devil.
			Could a jetliner be a modern updating of this image?  Perhaps.   Somehow, almost miraculously, the airplane’s powerful engines allow us  to sit peacefully 35,000 above the earth, protected from the bitter cold just  outside the thin windows along its fuselage.
			The Church, with its spiritual treasures, gives us the  opportunity to fly to spiritual heights and to find the warmth of God’s love  when we have been in the dark coldness of this broken world.
			Yes, this updated analogy might just work.  But, as St. Thomas Aquinas once wrote, all  analogies limp.  And I suppose I  experienced the shortcomings of the Church as jetliner after giving up my  attempts at slumber.
			Using a control panel that came out of an armrest, I played  a video game displayed on a small screen on the back of the seat in front of  me.  I think it would be a stretch of  one’s spiritual sensibilities to fit that into the image of Church as jetliner…
			Posted by Sean Gallagher at 3:10 p.m. on Thursday, October 12, 2006