In today’s first reading,
Rev. 4: 1-11, we are told that there are creatures before the throne of God
who, day and night, praise God, saying: “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God
almighty, who was, and who is, and who is to come.”
The author of the book of
Revelation sits in awe of who God is. Awe
is a form of praise. It is also humility, a holy respect of self, God and the
other. Praise draws us closer to God and
God to us. Authentic praise of self and
others creates intimacy. Praise sanctifies
us, cast out negativity and fills us with positive energy (cf. The Word among Us, November 2012, p. 40).
When we genuinely praise another, it has the same effect. Praise is the antithesis of sin in us. The author of the meditation for Nov. 21,
2012 in The Word among Us, p. 40,
writes:
‘Praise is, par excellence, anti-sin. If, as St. Paul has said, the
mother-sin is impiety, that is a
refusal to glorify and thankGod, then the exact opposite to sin is not virtue but praise!....’”
It behooves us each day
to develop the art of gratitude. We might do that, at the end of each day, by
asking ourselves the following questions: for what today am I grateful? What today has
my spouse, my children, my co-workers, my fellow religious done that has been
music to my ears, put a song in my heart and lifted my spirit? Keeping a
gratitude journal, so to speak, will change your life! And, furthermore, developing the habit of looking for the good each person in your life does each day and pointing that out to them will also change the environment in which you live.
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