And so, let us reflect on the two poles of our Christian
life: Prayer and Action.
In the Gospel of Mark 6:30, Jesus’ Apostles had completed
their first successful missionary work.
They preached repentance; they cast out many demons, and anointed sick
with and healed them. Now they returned
enthusiastically and exhaustingly to report their progress. And how does Christ respond when his
missionaries return from their exciting and busy adventure? He takes them aside to rest, to be with him
again in the quiet intimacy of their small community. To be with Jesus, means talking to Jesus and
talking to Jesus means prayer. The
lesson is clear, we need to work and we also need to pray.
We who are energetically and enthusiastically occupied in
evangelizing the world around us, need to balance our activity with
contemplation, with time spent in personal conversation with the Lord. After all HE is the master and WORK is
not the master that should dictate us.
Sometimes we can wonder why we get so emotionally and
spiritually exhausted by the busyness of our lives. It’s because we aren’t recharging our
spiritual batteries. Stress,
discouragement, and other crippling emotions can bring us down if we aren’t
daily reinforcing our loving conversation with Jesus. Only our friendship with Christ can supply us
with the grace, wisdom and strength we need to be truly successful, successful
not just in the roles we play, but in who we are beneath those roles.
But even though both are equally important for our spiritual
maturity, in today’s world one of them is harder than the other. “It is easier said than done” as they put
it. Today’s society is so focused on
getting things done, on task lists and action points and bottom lines, that
many people have actually lost sight of which things are really worthwhile
doing and why. The fast and superficial
pace of life in the digital world makes prayer harder and harder, because
prayer requires internal discipline and depth.
And God will certainly help us, if we just give him the
chance. And one way to do that is to
make a commitment to a regular prayer life, not one that shifts with our moods. We need to pray daily, to have a daily quiet
time when we can speak to Christ, pray for our loved ones, reflect on the
scriptures, or read some good, solid spiritual book. That means carving out the time. It doesn’t have to be a lot of time but it
has to be consistent, and that means self-discipline.
We must remember that without prayer, study, and moments of
being alone with God, our well will soon run dry, we will have nothing
substantial to offer others. On the
other hand without action, without giving freely to others what we have freely
received from God, our spiritual waters will become sluggish, dormant,
stagnant, and lifeless like a salty lake with no outlet. Contemplation and action, prayer and work, such
was the way of Jesus, so every Christian’s should follow that way.
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