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Last Updated: Wednesday - 08/22/2007Week of August 27, 2007Comedian Judy Savoy tackles 'Love one another' theme
By DEBORAH GYAPONG
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"Anger is the child of fear."- Judy Savoy |
She found great success in school and in her career but experienced inner emptiness. Though she had grown up Catholic, she read existential philosophers and was not searching for Jesus or for meaning within the faith. Instead, she was searching for love.
Working in television with a budding career as a weather personality and writer/broadcaster for the CBC, she found she was meeting people who had something about them that she wanted. They were Christians.
That made her go into her walk-in closet one day and say, "Jesus, if you're real, I want you."
She said she went outside and the grass seemed greener and the sky seemed bluer, even though she "hadn't smoked anything."
Savoy eventually married a man who became an Anglican minister. But her patterns of trying to earn approval continued. She felt that if she were "not the best at everything then I won't be loved."
Her husband eventually told her he didn't love her anymore and they divorced. She said she hit bottom after this devastating blow and had to choose whether to allow God to lift her up or to "just run away."
She chose to trust God. The first step in her journey was to forgive her husband and the woman he later married.
"Forgiveness is not a suggestion; it's a command," she said. "Because it is a command, God will give you the power to forgive."
Using a garden metaphor, Savoy talked about how we need to cultivate the soil of our spiritual life and make sure weeds do not choke it out. She said fear is one of the worst weeds and it can come in many forms: fear of rejection, fear of death, fear of life, and "fear of wearing the wrong shoes with that outfit."
"Anger is the child of fear," she said, asking those present at the convention to examine what they are afraid of when they are angry.
Perfect love exists and is embodied in the person of Jesus Christ, she said. "If you believe with your head and your heart that he loves you, you will not be afraid."
Savoy returned to the Catholic faith after her divorce. She said she finds in Catholicism a "depth greater than in any other denominations I have experienced."
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