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Returning to Spirit
01/06/2012 Omi Lacombe

Fr. François PARADIS is very clear that his involvement in the Returning to Spirit is very much the work of an Oblate. His involvement flows from the forty years of ministry with First Nation Peoples in Western Canada. There is a very natural connection between his ministry within First Nations communities and his training and education work within Returning to Spirit.

“This is my work to reach out to the marginalized and the poor.” Within in Canada, “the residential schools have made people very poor.” This was not the original intention in the establishment of the schools but “the Gospel got twisted in the process. This ministry is repairing the damage that has been done even by very well intentioned people.

“As a priest I share the ministry of Jesus Christ. His ministry is all about reconciliation. I see my ministry as bringing faith to the healing process. It is to help people see the beauty of who they truly are. Returning to Spirit is a whole process that gets us into reconciliation. This is the healing that Jesus wants. Some of these people may return to Church but that is not the first purpose of Returning to Spirit. Its first purpose is healing and reconciliation. Through the process some people have rediscovered God.”

There is a framing of his explanation. “Some people have always gone to Church but they are full of hurt and anger. This process is very much in line with de Mazenod. This is to return them to their dignity. It is to help them live in the dignity in which they were created.”

François summed up the entire ministry and the process of Returning to Spirit. “It is returning to the spirit of who they actually are as a human being.”

François first became acquainted with Returning to Spirit when he made his first workshop in February of 2004. By January of 2006 he had received his training to be a trainer of others for this process. In July 2007 he joined the Return to Spirit team full time.

The process begins with a five day workshop that directly seeks to empower three parts of the participant’s life: empowering you to yourself, you to others and you to your own life. The first three days seek to identify what is in front of your spirit that prevents the person from being fully alive. What prevents this person from embracing their own life? What keeps them stuck into their own past? How do the negatives of the past keep showing up in the present?

The process of this five day workshop asks where have they given up their personal power? What keeps them from having personal power? How can they have personal power within their own life?

The entire week is very experiential. There are homework assignments for each evening that ask the participants to apply to their own personal situation what they have learnt during the day. The goal is to reach the point where they no longer have any stuff that remains in the space between their relationships. What are the angers, the resentments that block their relationships?

Each step of the process builds on the preceding step. It is all inter-linked with one piece building on the others pieces. The direction is to learn how to shift from enduring life and just reacting to situations to a strength where they are creating their own life. It means to move into an appreciation for their own identity and live with authentic self-expression. It from within the spirit of each person that the empowerment arises.

François is very clear that there have been wonderful changes in peoples’ lives. “There have been times of physical healing. Some people explain this as mere coincidence but this is definitely a gift from God. It is God who brings about the reconciliation that we talk about during the week. So many of these people reach a completion to their lives that was unthinkable before the process began.”

His work with Returning to Spirit comprises training with non-aboriginal peoples (priests, sisters, religious workers, lay people, social workers and educators). The other team within Returning to Spirit focuses on aboriginal peoples. Once the first workshop has been completed, the two groups (aboriginals and Church people) join together for a more intense five days of working towards reconciliation.

As he moves into the future François plans to be involved in this ministry “As long as Returning to Spirit lasts.” This was spoken with affirmation. (By Nestor GREGOIRE in www.omilacombe.ca)