WE often think
of heaven or of the kingdom of God as so
inaccessible here on earth that we think it only exists
in our dreams,
in our fantasies or in our desires. It cannot be here and
now.
And because of
that, we often fail to consider it in our
thoughts, words and deeds when in fact it is a very
important and
indispensable parameter in the way we live our life here
on earth.
Truth to tell,
heaven is and should be a constant element
to consider so we would know if we are still doing right,
if we are
still on the right track. We should never ignore heaven
in any way,
because that is the final destination for all of us.
Yet in all the
supposed ineffableness of heaven, Christ
described it in very down-to-earth terms. In Chapter 13
of the Gospel
of St. Matthew, we are given a series of parables that
Christ said to
describe the kingdom of heaven.
In these
parables, Christ compared the kingdom of heaven:
- with the man sowing seeds on
different kinds of ground;
- with the man who sowed good seeds
of wheat only for his enemy
to sow weeds also;
- with the mustard seed that is small
and yet grows into a big tree;
- with a leaven that a woman took and
hid in three measures of
flour till it was all leavened;
- with a 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;
- with a merchant in search of fine
pearls and finding one of
great value, went and sold all that he had and bought it;
- with a net which was thrown into the
sea and gathered fish of
every kind. When it was full, men drew it ashore and sat
down and
sorted the good into vessels, but threw away the bad.
Hardly anything can be more down-to-earth,
matter-of-fact, realistic
and practical than these descriptions of heaven. And the lessons they
impart are
actually simple. They are no rocket-science lessons,
though we have to
admit that to live these lessons we need nothing less
than God’s grace
and our all-out effort.
We have to overcome
our tendency to think of heaven as
unobtainable. It is not far from us. It is, in fact, in
us already.
Christ said so. When asked by the Pharisees when the
kingdom of God
was coming, he answered: “The kingdom of God is not
coming with signs
to be observed; nor will they say, ‘Lo, here it is!’ or
‘There!’ for
behold, the kingdom of God is in the midst of you.” (Lk
17,20-21)
Every time we
follow Christ, every time we do good things
out of love for God, we are establishing and already
living in the
kingdom of God. Of course, the definitive kingdom will
take place
after our death when we truly become God’s image and
likeness as he
wants us to be.
But for as long
as we try to follow and identify ourselves
with Christ here on earth, we are already living in the
kingdom of
God. The elements of heaven would already be with us,
though the
fullness of heaven is yet to come.
Of course, the
seeds of the kingdom here on earth would
include some suffering, the need for patience, for faith,
hope and
charity. The seeds of the kingdom would include our
effort for our
personal sanctification with its inseparable duty to do
apostolate, to
continue the redeeming work of Christ.
The bliss and
the indescribable joy associated with heaven
can only take place after our death when we truly become
one with
Christ. But while we are still a work in progress in the
hands of God
here on earth, we have to expect some suffering and
ultimately death.
But we are assured of the resurrection.
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