Transcript of the Video Above
Daily reflections for Lenten Easter, written by Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI.
No one can truly bless another without dying. That’s what makes a blessing so powerful. Nature prescribes that.
Imagine a flower as a seedling and budding young flower. It’s essentially selfish, consumed with its own growth. And that remains true until it reaches the stage just past its bloom. At that point, it begins to die. And in that movement, it gives off its seed and is then consumed with giving itself away.
There are myriad lessons in that about mature love, mature sexuality, and mature growth. In the movement from seedling, to young plants, to bloom, to giving off seed in death, we see nature’s paradigm for maturity and generativity. In a flower when full maturity is reached, life becomes consumed in giving itself away at the cost of its own death.
You see this in blessing adults. Good mothers, fathers, teachers, clergy, mentors, uncles, aunts and friends of all kinds.
These, the generative adults, do not look like Peter Pan or Tinker Bell, who look like children. Nor do they look like movie stars or professional athletes. No, Blessing adults of, both genders are recognized by their stretch marks, their scars, their physical waning, and by the very fact that they are dying.
They are not obsessed with preserving their bloom. That is nature’s lesson. Generativity depends upon a willingness to die and to let go of our seed so that the other can bloom.
About the author: Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI

Fr. Ronald Rolheiser, OMI, is a Roman Catholic priest and member of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. He is a community-builder, lecturer, and writer. His books are popular throughout the English-speaking world and have now been translated into many languages. His weekly column is carried by many newspapers worldwide. Before this present position, he taught theology and philosophy at Newman Theological College in Edmonton, Alberta, for 16 years, served as Provincial Superior of his Oblate Province for six years, and served on the General Council for the Oblates in Rome for six years. From 2005 – 2020, Fr. Ron served as President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, Texas.
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