On Sunday, Fr. David spoke about how the ‘world’ seems to have decided it doesn’t need God anymore. It goes about its business -- Grand Prix, the World Cup, etc. -- thinking that God isn’t a part of it at all. Life is fine just the way it is: a solitary individual or group or team going about their business for their own benefit, and nothing more.
It’s when you’re really down, when you really hit rock-bottom, that you know God is with you. Fr. David reminded us of the story of Joseph, who was sold into slavery by his own brothers and ended up in prison after being accused of a crime he didn’t commit. All that time, God was with him, and God had a plan. Joseph wasn’t in it alone.
How many times in our own lives have we felt God’s presence beneath layers of setback and hardship? Feeling like we have nowhere else to turn really does awaken a knowledge of God’s presence in a person’s heart. We come to know, in our difficulties, that God has a plan for us in our lives and will not abandon us to ourselves. For some reason, God is always easiest to see against starkness and barrenness. From within comfort and extravagance, He often can seem absent.
It’s important to remember that God is with us in our successes as well as our failures. God’s plan for Joseph wasn’t only that he would suffer but that he would rise to greatness, and someday use that power for the good of others -- even those who had brought harm to him in the first place.
God raises us up, and we always need him. The ‘world’ is wrong to think that God is dead or unnecessary, because the whole world, in all its aspects, is held within God’s eternal plan. It is important that we, as Christians, do not forget our dependence on God, or we may become caught up in a world bent on living without Him. Our God is with us both in sickness and in health, in abundance and drought.
In what ways do we, as a community and as people, acknowledge our dependence on God’s saving help?
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
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