Friday, February 7, 2020

From prose to verse


THIS is the constant challenge we have to tackle. How
should we convert the prose of everyday into a verse that can
penetrate eternity, the forever? The secret, of course, is love. The
love that comes from God, is energized by him and is directed to him.
It has to be patterned after the love of Christ, the fullness of God’s
revelation to us. He was the one who commanded us to love as he
himself has loved us. (cfr. Jn 13,34)

            We have to be wary of our tendency to only take care of
the technicalities of our daily routine if only to achieve some
earthly goal. Nothing wrong with that. Except that if not inspired by
God’s love, such tendency would just be an exercise in futility since
it would not bring us to our eternal goal. It would just keep us in
the temporal and material world, not the forever.

            To convert the prose of our daily life to a wonderful,
love-inspired verse, we need to realize that we have to start
everything with God and end it with him also. We need to refer
everything to God.

            This may be awkward at the beginning. But if we spend some
time to meditate on the whole reality of our daily routine, we cannot
help but realize that God ought to be the beginning and end of it all,
the Alpha and the Omega. (cfr. Rev 22,13)

            Everything comes from him and everything belongs to him.
In our case as human beings with intelligence and will, we ought to
realize that we not only come from him and belong to him. We are meant
to share in the very life and nature of God, since we have been
created in God’s image and likeness.

            We are much more than just any ordinary creature. We,
together with the angels, are God’s masterpiece in the entirety of his
creation. This is how our Catechism describes this truth of our faith:

            “Of all visible creatures only man is ‘able to know and
love his creator.’ He is the ‘only creature on earth that God has
willed for its own sake,’ and he alone is called to share, by
knowledge and love, in God’s own life…” (356)

            It is good, of course, to know who we really are, so we
also would know how to behave in a manner proper to our objective
dignity. Our life—and everything in it, including our daily
routine—cannot but be a life meant to know and love God. Even while
here on earth, immersed in our temporal and earthly affairs, we are
meant to be with God and with all things out of love for God.

            Of course, the conversion of our daily prosaic and banal
routine into something special that can only be driven by love does
not exempt us from attending to the technicalities of our tasks. In
fact, love would urge us to attend to them with utmost attention. But
love would make the whole operation lovable and meaningful. Even in
our tedious work, we can experience a lightness of heart.

            Again, the secret is to be constantly aware of who we are
and of how much God loves us. In other words, our life is always a
life with God. In that way, we would always realize that our daily
activities, no matter how prosaic, can and should have eternal value.

            In this regard, we cannot overemphasize the need for us to
develop a contemplative spirit and to maintain our spiritual and
supernatural bearing all the time. We should not allow ourselves to be
swallowed up only by temporal and earthly goals which, while having
their legitimate value, only have a relative role to play as means,
occasions and reasons to love God.

            Let us help one another to learn how to turn the prose of
our daily life into a meaningful and beautiful verse, dripping with
love.


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