When Martha said, “Lord, do you not care that my sister has
left me by myself to do the serving,” Christ clarified about the
proper priority to observe when he replied, “Martha, Martha, you are
anxious and worried about many things. There is need of only one
thing. Mary has chosen the better part and it will not be taken from
her.”
This clarification is important and quite relevant these
days as many of us are pressured, with all the challenges of our
times, to go practical at the expense of our prayer and piety.
To be realistic in our present conditions, we need to be
ready to resist this great temptation and work toward giving piety
priority over practicality. Better still, we should find a way where
the two values, in their proper order, can be put together. They need
not be at odds with each other.
This, of course, will require some deepening in our
convictions that God should be treated first before anything else in
our life. God should be the beginning and end of everything in our
life.
He is, in fact, everything to us. We need to convince
ourselves more strongly that there is nothing in life where God need
not be the center of interest, or where he can be set aside, at least
for some time. Again, God is everything to us! That is non-negotiable.
We have to understand that it’s when we pray, that is, when
we truly pray and not just going through the motions of praying, that
we would be engaging ourselves with the most important person in our
life, God himself. That’s when we can truly welcome and receive Christ
in our life. He is absolutely our everything, without whom nothing and
no one has any importance.
It’s when we pray that we manage to relate who we are, what
we have, what we do, etc. to our ultimate end which, to be sure, is
not something only natural but is also supernatural. Nothing therefore
can rival the importance of prayer. In other words, prayer is
irreplaceable, unsubstitutable, indispensable. It’s never optional,
though it has to be done freely if we want our prayer to be real
prayer.
It’s when we truly pray and when we develop an abiding and
vibrant life of piety that we can convert our work and all our other
concerns into a form of prayer also, into an act of worship and
thanksgiving to God. It can also be a way of making up for our sins
and of asking some favors from God.
We have to develop a strong sense of piety while being
immersed in the world, doing mundane things that are supposed to give
glory to God and are the raw material, so to speak, for God’s
providence to operate in the world.
We have to develop a strong sense of relating things to God,
asking ourselves questions like: Is what I am doing now what God
really wants me to do? Am I doing things with rectitude of intention?
Am I doing it right? What is God trying to tell me at this moment, in
this particular occasion? Etc.
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