Showing posts with label service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label service. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2011

To Serve God

We pass through each days observing yet not always seeing, loving yet not always touching. Each Christian contains prayers not prayed, questions not asked. We have opinions, dreams, desires, daydreams. Life engulfs us, splashes against us, taunts us, haunts us. We seek salvation, entrance to the Kingdom of heaven. Our actions often make us pause, our actions make us wonder if we are truly worthy.

  Columbia Road  1285

We often create all types of signs, find all types of reasons to stop, to not seek that which God wants us to seek. If the purpose of all Christian lives is to serve God, then the decision is already made for us and all we have to do is allow ourselves to serve God with charity, humility, and obedience.


Columbia Road  1286 As Christians we are encouraged to behave as God's children, as God's flock of sheep. I often wondered why we are not ever encouraged to act like a flock of pigeons. Birds are not docile creatures. Birds are not always easily controlled. Birds have a winged individualism much like the human rugged individualism. Birds can be part of a group yet be concerned only for themselves.

Birds are very interesting to observe as they go about their lives searching for food and flying. Depending upon the moment birds are great metaphorical or great allegorical creatures.

  Columbia Road  1287

Sooner or later we all make a mistake. Life is filled with grammatical and typographical errors. How we deal with our mistakes, with our sins is important. Is "repent" part of our vocabulary? Is "penance" an action, a chore, or simply avoided? Do we accept our mistakes or simply walk away hoping to forget, hoping others will forget.

We forget so many things. We misplace so many things. So many bits and pieces of our actions wait to be discovered by others, wait to be uncovered by others. Secrets only exist within our minds. In reality things are often lost, often left behind like keys on a park bench.

  Columbia Road  1288

We are members of different communities. We are asked to become team players, to do things for the good of the team. This is not always easy. This can create stress, anxiety, bad Hollywood movies.

As Christians being a team player is an interesting proposition. We are asked to believe and to follow the footsteps of Jesus Christ. We are asked to join others both living and dead in serving the Lord. God wants us to be loyal, loving servants who have freely chosen to do his work, to sacrifice our lives. It is using our free will, using our minds to make choices, hopefully the good choices which will help ourselves and others become closer to God.

Being part of a team makes serving God a little easier, makes seeking goodness, holiness, and kindness a little easier.


Columbia Road  1289

It is always good to remember how God sees us, how we are encouraged to treat each other. God sees us as children, as his adopted children. That is very important, very instructive. Although we are created in the image of God we are not created as equals of God. We spend our entire lives learning about ourselves, about God.

Prayer is an essential element in developing a loving relationship with God.

As Christians we are asked to put our faith in God's hands, in the hands of other Christians, and in our hands. Depending on the moment, we are taking big steps or small toddler steps.

Hopefully as Christians our legs carry us toward God, toward salvation. Hopefully help and prayers are there when we need them.


Columbia Road  1290

Sometimes a picture of a squirrel on a fence is just a squirrel on a fence other times it is a metaphor for how we relate to our world, to God, to each other. Assigning meaning, making choices, accepting consequences these are things which we do every day. As Christians a purpose for our lives has been given to us. It is our responsibility to accept it.


Columbia Road  1291

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

influenced

We live in era easily influenced by all types conspiracy theories, real and make-believe. We live in a time that challenges authority, reduces personal responsibility. Old trusted friends are easily forgotten and discarded. How easy it is for modern society to set traps and wait for the mistakes of our neighbors, our former leaders, former heroes. How similar modern life with all of our technology to life in ancient Judah. There was unrest. Some people wanted a change of leadership. Some people wanted the visible parts of the society to remain the same. How easy it is for some people to discard others, how easy it is to decide that someone is no longer needed, no longer worthy. How dangerous people are when they are governed by lust, greed, or any emotion that is not loving, not nurturing, not leading them to faithful service of God.

How patient these people are! How they want their victim to destroy himself, with his own words. Isn't it amazing that this plot is designed not to disrupt life, not to change the daily routine of the people of Judah and Jerusalem.

Goodness often is rewarded with evil. The ruling passions of many men are often cloaked in darkness. Fear, envy, greed lead men to do evil things which can be rationalized and justified with fire and brimstone singed rhetoric, concealing the true evil of the actions, concealing the true evil of the motives, concealing the true evil of the consequences.

Goodness, true goodness remains steady, does not tremble. Goodness provides confidence. What is the reward for goodness, for service to others, for asking for mercy for others?

Each day in the life of each Christian someone is plotting, someone contriving to find a way to obstruct or detour your journey to God.

From Becoming A Devout Disciple

Saturday, December 25, 2010

ABUNDANT JOY AND GREAT REJOICING - December 25, 2010

training us to reject godless ways and worldly desires and to live temperately, justly, and devoutly in this age Titus 2:12

It was a time of warmheartedness, a time of tenderheartedness surrounded by hope. There were thick white candles with delicate orange flames reaching toward the ceiling, dancing toward heaven.

How easy it is to forget the journey, to allow the moment, this minute to dominate the mind, the imagination. Life does not stop. Each minute flows into the next. Minutes flow into hours; hours flow into days. The journey continues whether we are prepared or not, whether we are able to upgrade or not. There is always motion, always a need for patience.

And here is a moment of delicate welcome, the lingering embrace of remembrance and forgiveness which recalls yesterday's hope, yesterday's love.

This is a moment of familiar songs, familiar sayings. For this instance the thick white candles offer reassurance, offer hope, offer continuity and faith. Here in this instance each individual is fine and dandy, each individual cannot complain. Here is a moment when good is allowed to triumph!

This is a moment of red and white and green leaves. This is a moment of soft lighting. This is a time to remember to be moral, to remember the Church's moral code. How romantic and perfect this night appears with the white lights on the evergreen trees. What a great moment to reflect upon personal morals. Each Christian is asked to live a morally-sound life of goodness, kindness, holiness; of charity, humility, and service to God. Each day provides opportunities for moralistic evaluations and decisions. Each day provides opportunities for honor, good character. Remember that each candle has one purpose: to provide light. High ideals are great companions to have as we walk on the right road, following the footsteps of Jesus Christ.

Sharing love and hope freely, gently is always a boon. Each day we are given an opportunity to exalt the goodness, the mercy, the presence of God in our lives. We constantly make choices. We must remember to do what is productive for God, what is beneficial to God. As Christians, God must always be an active part of our individual decision making process.

The candles stand guard, patiently sacrifice their wax to provide light. Allow each Mass to be a pilgrimage, an expedition to holiness, to love universal and unconditional.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

A Quick Thought

Beloved: Please remember that as Christians we are part of the living, growing, hoping, loving visible Church; let this give peace; please remember that the foundation was made by Our Lord Jesus Christ with his supreme sacrifice; may this provide guidance and comfort. The death of Our Lord Jesus Christ gives each of us eternal life. We believe that we are members of the apostolic Church; allow this to give you hope. We believe the Sacraments connect us with God, are both opportunity and obligation for service to God; allow this to teach you how to love.

Friday, November 12, 2010

An Old Fashioned Paragraph

As one of those who believe that the spiritual life of an individual is important for nourishing the soul and inspiring the mind to search for ways to be pure and content among its people, I regard popular culture as a dangerous concoction of thoughts and desires presented without wisdom, prudence, or love. The secular world allows pop culture to exist as a supreme inexorable law, of cause and effect, of sequence and ascension. Pop culture attacks our individual spiritual character with all types of transient passions of the flesh. This is a material age, everything is a commodity to be bought and sold, to be used and discarded. This is an age of exhaustion. The secular world encourages our society to be selfish, wasteful. Decadence and extravagance attack our eyes from magazine covers, television screens, computer screens. We are encouraged to forget or downplay spiritual things. The secular world works to create and nurture writers who exist only to spread doubt about the viability of religion, doubt about the reality of God. The mood of our society is addled. The quest for happiness is dangerous. Happiness isn't really tangible, it isn't lasting. A diamond necklace or a Mercedes might be purchased but happiness often only encourages us to want more. The idea of happiness that the secular world mass produces a murky angst. Modern life often appears like a heathen life of excess, of extreme selfishness, of rudeness. Although filled with material items and all types of experiences, modern life can be very empty, a distempered culture of insecurity, self hatred, ignorance, bigotry. Love is casually mentioned, casually discarded in the secular world. Love is neither unconditional nor universal in the secular world. Love is a motivating factor, an argument used to rationalize and justify material purchases and all types of social behavior. Love in the secular world produces neither joy nor hope. In the secular world love is lost within the gridlock of weariness and anxiety. How anxious is modern life! How we fear dirty bombs, serial killers, aging, terrorists, having last year's gadgets. However as Catholics our faith allows each one of us to define our lives as Children of God, our faith allows us to refine our lives based upon humility, charity, and service to God. True goodness and kindness are rare. As Christians our duty is to find a way to share God's exquisite love with ourselves and our neighbors. As Christians our lives should be both a reflection and an expression of God's love. There is a vitality within hope and faith which can help us follow in the footsteps of Jesus Christ. There is a newness in life when we believe in God and when we share our faith. The golden fleece within our spirit needs to nurtured by prayer, refection, good deeds. The more we love God and share our love of God, the more precious our lives become. We must reject the fashionable wolfish lust, hiding within song lyrics and imported silk shirts. Our love for God must never be placed beneath anything. It must always be the focal point of each day. We must strive to love and serve God each day. We must strive to love our neighbors as we love ourselves each day. Allow your spirit to lead you from the corruption of the secular world. Allow your spirit to show you that the world is still beautiful. Allow your spirit to present the saintly things in modern life. Allow your spirit to show you how to believe in God. Allow your spirit to create your literature of hope, love, mercy, and service

Friday, February 5, 2010

Earthly Desires

Be mindful of the fact that the world is filled with earthly things. What is visible to the eyes, audible to the ears is not always satisfying. The senses provide both information and stimulation. Wisdom teaches mankind to live in harmony with their environment and to learn how to use the environment efficiently and intelligently to provide a renewable resource for food, clothing, shelter. Beware of the temptation to love any possession. Purity of heart and soul is the ultimate goal of all Christians who are striving for holiness. This generation is encouraged to pursue their lusts; society and the government allow adults the freedom to do all types of behaviors which God asks all Christians to avoid. Fleshly lusts when followed lead men away from God. Each Christian must live a life which protects and strengthens the relationship with God; all those things which bond a Christian to God—prayer, penance, fairness, faith, hope, love—must be employed to avoid temptation; the conscience must be developed to seek love, purity and cleanliness of spirit, goodness, and holiness. All Christians know that sin exists; each day there is a possibility that each living person will sin; Christians must allow both themselves and their consciences to learn from each sinful impulse in order to avoid sinning in the future. Each sin is a disgrace; each sin moves us away from God and God’s grace. All Christians must live lives moving toward God, being of service to God.

Both immediacy and anxiety present this current generation with endless earthly choices and fleshly possibilities. Neither the immediacy nor the anxiety are natural; both are artificial and designed by men to provoke both responses and desires. Technology provides a sense of immediacy, instant contact, instantaneous relaying of information which bombards the mind and conscience with a steady repetition of information without providing or encouraging time for contemplation. Technology provides noise; this noise can sometimes drown out God’s messages to us. Information creates anxiety. People often want to know more than they know; people often make assumptions; people often worry. In the context of daily life with cellular phones, computers, television there is so much immediacy, so much anxiety that it might be difficult to discern God’s will. Christians must allow themselves a moment of silence. Christians must avoid getting lost within the current technology, current need for instant connection, instant solutions which are suggested by immediacy.

A Christian’s conscience does not desire instant gratification, instant solutions; a Christian desires to be a humble serving of God. Goodness and holiness involve patience, silence, respect.