I could not help but think of the times the Lord is
directing us and we simply ignore the Spirit’s direction and do our own thing. “With
joy,” God says, “I fostered them; but with mourning and lament I let them go.” God deeply respects our free will and does
not ever force us to embrace His will. God
lets us go to experience the emptiness,
if you will, or the frustration of not having followed the way to which God was
calling us. It may be as simple as calling a friend, reaching out to someone we
slighted and saying “I’m sorry,” spending
some leisure time in the evening with family or community members, listening
with an open mind and heart or taking time to study the Scriptures or to do some
substantive reading that nurtures our spiritual lives. Or, it may be more
serious, like not getting involved with the wrong crowd that leads us into
selfish pursuits or that leads us into violating
the rights of another person or of doing that which violates our own personal integrity. Baruch says to us, then: “As your hearts have been disposed to stray
from God turn now ten times the more to seek him; for he who has brought
disaster [frustration, emptiness, pain] upon you will, in saving you, bring you
back enduring joy.”
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Enduring Joy
In the first reading
of today’s liturgy, Baruch 4: 5-12, 27-29, Baruch tells the people not to fear but to
remember that the reason that they were conquered by other nations was that
they had abandoned the covenant God made with them. This did not happen, Baruch tells them,
because God wanted them to be destroyed, but that they had provoked God by
sacrificing to “demons, to no-gods; you forsook the Eternal God who nourished
you, and you grieved Jerusalem who fostered you.” Further on in the reading, the holy city of Jerusalem—where God dwelt, as
God dwells in our Tabernacles--says that with “joy I fostered them; but with
mourning and lament I let them go.”
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