TWO of the parables of Christ can give us precious
lessons about how
we ought to prioritize things in our life. We know that
we can have
many competing interests and it’s important that we have
the proper
priorities in life. We have to be wary of the many
conditionings that
we are exposed to these days, since they can throw us
into confusion.
These are the
parables of the hidden treasure and the
pearl of great price in the Gospel of St. Matthew.
(13,44-46) “The
kingdom of heaven,” Christ said, “is like treasure hidden
in a field,
which a man found and covered up. Then in his joy he goes
and sells
all that he has and buys that field.”
Following it is
a similar parable: “The kingdom of heaven
is like a merchant in search of fine pearls, who, on
finding one pearl
of great value, went and sold all that he had and bought
it.”
These parables
find an echo in some words of St. Paul who
said: “I count everything as loss because of the
surpassing worth of
knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have
suffered the loss of
all things, and count them as refuse, in order that I may
gain
Christ…” (Phil 3,8)
How important
therefore that we realize that our first
priority should be God and our relationship with him
which should be
sustained with the constant effort to know, love and
serve him! We
should be ready to throw away everything else that can
stand in the
way.
We have to make
some adjustments in the way we order our
objective needs. We have to distinguish them from our
subjective likes
and desires that can only be the product of some personal
or social
preferences. In this we have to employ the appropriate
means, the
relevant programs and operations. We should be demanding
on ourselves
insofar as this matter is concerned.
We need God
first of all, and, in fact, all the time. He
is our most important objective need, much more and
infinitely more
than we need air, food, rest, pleasures, etc. For without
God, we are
nothing. But with him, we can have everything. That is
why, St. Teresa
Avila boldly said: “He who has God lacks nothing.
God alone is
sufficient.”
We need to
learn how to find God in everything we do or we
see, handle or get involved in. In this, we have to be
pro-active. We
should not wait for some inspiration to come or some
so-called
favourable or conducive circumstances to take place. We
have to
actively look for him or create the occasion. We can
always do this,
because God himself empowers us to do so.
For this to
happen, everyday we have to strongly set our
mind to find, love and serve God. We may have to spend
time meditating
on this most important and objective need of ours, if
only to know how
to uphold this basic need amid the many other needs and
likes that can
undermine it.
We should be
ready to detach ourselves from anything that
can prevent us from looking for God. In this, we are
expected to do
some kind of violence in the tenor of Christ’s words:
“The kingdom of
heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by
force.” (Mt 11,12)
It’s the violence of love referred to here.
But actually,
if we have the faith, we would know how to
relate everything to God, since everything is relatable
to God. They
need not be competitors of God, but rather channels to
God.
Let us ask the
Holy Spirit who is always by our side,
prompting us all the time so that we can find our way to
God through
our many and changing earthly concerns.
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