But if we have the proper understanding of what beauty
really is, then we will realize that beauty can always be found
everywhere. Yes, even in situations where in our human estimation we
consider as ugly, beauty can still be found.
The secret is to peg our quest for beauty on God. With
him, everything is beautiful, or at worst, can be made beautiful.
Without him, even what we consider in our human estimation as
beautiful is actually not so. Beauty is where God is. And since God is
everywhere, beauty can also be found everywhere. That is, if we know
how to look for God.
Our problem is that we often separate beauty from God. And
because of such separation, beauty has transformed, in the words of
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, “into a path that leads to the ephemeral,
into banal and superficial appearances, or even a flight toward
artificial paradises, which disguise and hide interior emptiness and
inconsistencies.”
It’s a sense of beauty that is pegged merely on us, who in
our limited and wounded nature, cannot find beauty everywhere,
especially when some pain and suffering are involved.
We need to expand our understanding and appreciation of
beauty. If by beauty we mean only the physical beauty of a scenic
landscape, the romantic hue of a sunset, or a Miss Universe, then we
are missing not only a lot of things but also the one thing that is
most necessary to us.
There is beauty in persons, things and situations that
otherwise are regarded as unbeautiful or ugly if seen only in the
physical or strictly human and natural level. It is the beauty that
comes straight from God who offered his son on the cross as a ransom
for our salvation.
We need to expand our understanding and appreciation of
beauty by including the most important element of beauty. And that is
the love for God, and because of that love, it is also the love for
others.
If we truly love God, then we should reflect his love and
his attributes that can only be described, in the least, as beautiful.
If out of his love for us, he sent his Son to us, and the Son had to
become man and to suffer death on the cross, then we can say that
there must be beauty in suffering and in death.
We need to understand and appreciate beauty from the point
of view of our faith, more than simply from the point of view of our
senses and our intelligence. To be sure, our faith does not reject the
standards of beauty that go along the lines of the senses and the
intelligence, but it goes beyond them.
That’s why we have to learn to be quick to discern the
elements of beauty in what otherwise are considered as ugly when seen
in purely human terms. Physical pains, sicknesses, problems,
difficulties, deaths, etc., while truly unattractive and worthy of
avoidance, can possess a certain beauty if seen with the eyes of
faith.
Again, the secret is to peg our sense of beauty on God.
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