We live in a world of choice where many options are placed before us. This plethora of alternatives can cause us to try and be all things at all times to all people. We know deep inside that this impossible but the lure of being all present, all loving and all knowing draws us beyond ourselves. We can start to imagine that in such a world we do not need God because we have shaped our world in our own image and likeness.
We know this a distortion of the truth of the incarnation where we are made in God's image and likeness. This truth helps us to understand the dignity of our work and the dignity of being human. Our faith does not extract us from the world or the reality in which we live. It calls us to be people who listen to God's voice which calls us to not stand around idly waiting for the Kingdom to arrive. It calls us to be actively engaged in listening to the voice which calls us to be open to a God who is just and loving in all his ways.
This us brings us to the truth of what the Gospel teaches us about our lives as Christians. We are called to be prayerfully present. This is allowing ourselves to become aware of those around us and who share our daily lives in small and greater ways. We are not called to live in splendid isolation. By listening to the heartbeat of God we become aware of a creative love which sustains and renews us and the whole world.
We are called to be thoughtful people who engage our minds in discovering what it is that will assist this work of living the Gospel. We can study scripture, the writings of other Christians, we can observe what brings life to those we consider to be saints and we can examine our own environment to discover what is for the common good.
We are called to be people deeply in love with God, with others and with ourselves. As Pope Francis said at one stage we are not called to be sourpusses.Our life is called to be deeply engaged with the love that God pours into our hearts. This is not our private possession but something which overflows into the world for good.
By being prayerfully present, thoughtfully engaged and lovingly enriched we start to discover a treasure which is not our own. We discover a place which is open and welcoming of others at whatever stage they are in their journey. We do not seek to impose burdens on others by proclaiming a work which is hard but rather to discover a God who gives meaning to who we are called to be and what we are called to do. Each day we find new ways to which we are called to listen to God's voice. The Gospel is not our possession but rather an invitation to the life which brings life for the good of all.
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