We always have a choice.
Even in the most extreme situations, we have a choice. In the reading from 1st
Samuel, David and Abishai search for Saul at night. Saul takes 3,000 men into
the wilderness where they plot against David’s life, but David finds Saul
first. David makes a choice to spare his adversary Saul, who is vulnerable in
his sleep. He takes the King’s spear to let him know that he had an opportunity
to do in Saul, but he chose not to lay a hand on the Lord’s anointed. Wow! He
let his enemy live, which therefore changed the actions of others. He remains
righteous and faithful. His good action changes the fate of the two men. We
always have a choice, and our positive choices create new possibilities for a
bright future.
We always have a choice. Even in the most extreme situations, we have a choice. In the reading from 1st Samuel, David and Abishai search for Saul at night. Saul takes 3,000 men into the wilderness where they plot against David’s life, but David finds Saul first. David makes a choice to spare his adversary Saul, who is vulnerable in his sleep. He takes the King’s spear to let him know that he had an opportunity to do in Saul, but he chose not to lay a hand on the Lord’s anointed. Wow! He let his enemy live, which therefore changed the actions of others. He remains righteous and faithful. His good action changes the fate of the two men. We always have a choice, and our positive choices create new possibilities for a bright future.
We always have a choice. Even in the most extreme situations, we have a choice. In the reading from 1st Samuel, David and Abishai search for Saul at night. Saul takes 3,000 men into the wilderness where they plot against David’s life, but David finds Saul first. David makes a choice to spare his adversary Saul, who is vulnerable in his sleep. He takes the King’s spear to let him know that he had an opportunity to do in Saul, but he chose not to lay a hand on the Lord’s anointed. Wow! He let his enemy live, which therefore changed the actions of others. He remains righteous and faithful. His good action changes the fate of the two men. We always have a choice, and our positive choices create new possibilities for a bright future.
The Gospel tells us to love our enemies and to be good no
matter the circumstances. It doesn’t read, “we have to like, or tolerate, or
endure, but to love.” This is hard to do when we can’t even love our friends
and family well. Sometimes we don’t even like ourselves. Loving another is out
of the question. We first need an experience of being loved by God – to liberate
us to the core before we can love another. We then need to love God in return when
we are transformed by God’s love beyond our most far-reaching dreams. When we
accept God’s love of us, we can then more fully love those who are closest to
us. When we accept their love, we have the courage, experience, and compassion
to love even our enemies. To love another requires an eduring commitment to the
other person. It is daily hard work where we stretch ourselves and make
ourselves vulnerable. Growing in love means that we learn to love in
incremental steps because loving is risky and it makes vulnerable. We have to
trust that vulnerability.
A loving practice is to say something good about a person
even when you are mad at him or her without being dishonest to your experience.
You want to acknowledge your feelings and make prudential judgments, but you do
not need to act out of your anger. The Psalm tells us that God is slow to anger
and abounding in kindness. Our faith asks us to imitate God. Address the
behavior that causes your anger as immediately as you can and directly to the
person who upsets you. It does you no good to talk behind someone’s back
because your negativity continues to grow – producing nothing that is good.
Feeding
into your anger means that you will not give yourself a chance to reconcile and
it keeps you enslaved to your narrowing world. Being nice to your enemy creates
opportunities for you and your adversary to come together and talk about your
feelings. It may stretch us to be nice to a person when our anger is intense,
but it settles us down very quietly. The behaviors of others are far beyond our
control. Being kind to our adversary goes against everything we feel and it is
the last thing we want to do, but we can be kind to the person, not because he
or she is kind, but because we are kind. Somehow the world is suddenly
different and we are at peace with our outward, hopeful actions.
Jesus
begins his Gospel address to his disciples with these words, “To those of you
who hear.” Listen to one another with attention and reverence, especially when
you are angry with someone. Especially then. Listening is key to understanding
and most times when we argue, it is because we have closed down our ability to
listen. We fail to grow when we don’t hear someone else’s statements. Seek to
profit by the words of your adversaries. Do not let the precious words of your
adversaries fall unheeded but receive them into your heart. Understanding leads
to enrichment. This is being like God who is slow to anger and abounding in
kindness. Listening opens our mind, heart, and imagination to the exciting
possibilities. You give yourself and others a great gift. Listening offers the
world peace where we all grow in wisdom and holiness. Love yourself enough to
love your enemies.
ReplyDeleteShukran Father!:) You saved me from taking every detail of the contents in shorthand! I used to fail to do it.
I'll try hard to apply what you're saying today into every real-life situation.
Father, actually, For me, my worst, real and ultimate enemy is actually myself.
Laziness, weak convictions about world peace and harmony, underestimating the humanity of the humans, a weak faith in my own powers in front of difficulties, making excuses, not enough courage to fight for justice, doubts if something is feasible at all..
These kind of thoughts sometimes make me lethargic.
The most painful thing is that I feel shame to think like that because I believe the Lord at the same time.
I think I might have a very shallow faith.
What can I do sometimes when I think like that?
How can I defeat the enemy, exactly myself?
Thank you very much all the time for giving me the wisdom of Solomon!:)
I'm glad the posting saved you time in writing and translating.
DeleteWe are our worst enemies. We see all our shortcomings, but not our strengths. We put pressure on ourselves that don't benefit anyone else or us. We stop our potential when we focus on our deficits. Let it go.
Let yourself enjoy the presence of the risen Jesus in prayer. Over time, he'll take care of everything.