Last summer during our annual retreat I wrote about my delight in 
watching mother and father mourning doves prepare for and take 
care of their babies. The nest was in a tree whose limbs brush 
against my window so I had a box seat.
To my wonderment this year a mother robin chose almost that 
spot to build her much more carefully constructed nest, piece by 
piece. Then she settled down to warm and protect her beautiful blue 
eggs. In blazing St. Louis sun that sifted through the leaves or in the 
heavy rains amid thunder and lightning, she spread out her 
protecting wings and braved the storm.
After a week or two  of patient sitting, I noticed that she had to 
perch on the edge of the nest for lack of room and that three pink 
in each one. Day by day the baby robins grew in feathers, size, and 
rambunctiousness. Mother Robin was unfailingly patient first with 
the babies and then with the “teenage” behavior of her brood. Again 
when the heavy rains came, they all four seemed to hunker down 
in the nest, and she was still able to spread her wings over the bulges 
below and protect them.
Gradually the three little birds spent their time flapping their wings, 
pushing each other aside, and even teetering to a near-by branch, 
only to hop right back into the nest.
I had hoped to see their departure. They were all still there one 
morning, but when I came back after lunch, the nest was completely 
empty. Neither the mother or babies returned.
Throughout this drama, I was ever aware of the parallel of God’s 
nurturing, faithful care for us in sunshine and storm. I thought often 
of Paul Claudel’s observation: “Jesus did not come to explain away 
suffering or remove it. He came to fill it with his presence.”
Please click on the link below and watch this video of a mother
robin feeding her chicks.
http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=9479342&server=vimeo.com&show_title=0&show_byline=0&show_portrait=0&color=00ADEF&fullscreen=1
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