Life is typically hectic for most of the people that I know. Very few in our culture live a life of what I would call "peace" and/or "contentment." We are forever moving and striving for more and greater, especially in our "American Dream" culture and society. Not that these things are always bad necessarily, but on occasion we slow down or sometimes are stopped, long enough to recognize that the activity has left us empty.
When we discover that emptiness, we inherently try to fill it, often with more activity, sometimes with friends or family, sometimes with habits or addictions. Rarely do we allow the time to explore the shape of our emptiness. There is a bible verse where God says to "be still and know that I am God." What a challenge for most of us. Stillness is so foreign to our lives that it usually takes an "act of God" to slow us down; a disaster that uproots us, a disease that diminishes us, a job loss or a family loss. Yet in our times of loss and disaster, we tend to find that we have a center. Perhaps we call on God for help. Perhaps in the "grinding halt" we discover a purpose - a reason for it: God's desire to know us and for us to know him.
It's not that God doesn't know us, he does! All too well. Thus the need to get our attention from time to time - to allow suffering to encroach as it naturally does in all our lives because of fallenness in our world; to allow our brokenness to overtake us in some way. God in his mercy, uses the bad things in life to take us by the face with both hands and get us to look into his eyes - into the face of Jesus. When we do we find compassion, we find help, we find mercy, we find a strength we did not have before - but most of all we find a God of love. And we find our center.
Take time to find your Jesus-shaped center. Stop long enough to listen. Close your outward eyes and open your inward eyes - or at least take time to ask God to help you in this endeavor. In this way, you will take the small steps that are needed to be Willing, Available & Obedient to God today.
Padre Phil+
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