
Hooked For Life
One of the worst sins in life to aim too
low. Sir Francis Drake was the most renowned
seaman of the Elizabethan age. Son of a tenant
farmer, he went to sea at 13, gaining a reputation
as an outstanding seaman. He was the first
Englishman to sail the Pacific, the Indian
Ocean and the South Atlantic.
One day while attempting to recruit a number
of young men for an upcoming exploration,
he promised them sandy white beaches, juicy
fruits and priceless treasures if they came
with him. Not one of them enlisted for the
journey.
The next day a different group came out.
This time, Drake spoke of the terrifying
storms that they would encounter, the scarcity
of water and food that they will have to
endure, the constant dangers that would accompany
them. He concluded by declaring that if they
could handle these things, the joys of exploration
would exceed their wildest dreams.
Every single one of them in the group joined
Sir Francis Drake that day, some did not
even go home to say goodbye to their families.
They just boarded the boat eager for the
journey.
What made the difference? The difference
was in the message. The first spoke of rewards;
the second spoke of challenges. The first
offered comfort; the second promised suffering.
The first tempted them with things; the second
seduced them with an experience unlike any
other.
If we are presented with a challenge that
can change our life, we will be eager for
the journey. This is why Christianity when
presented in its fullness and freshness is
so appealing!
The problem is what Thomas Reeves in his
book The Empty Church describes so well.
“Christianity in modern America is, in large
part, innocuous. It tends to be easy, upbeat,
convenient, and compatible. It does not require
self-sacrifice, discipline, humility, a zeal
for souls.”
Look how much it contrasts with what this
young priest from Africa once wrote. “I’m
apart of a community of the unashamed. I
have the Holy Spirit power. The die has been
cast. I have stepped over the line. I’m a
disciple of his. I won’t look back, let up,
slow down, back away, or be still. My past
is redeemed, my present makes sense, my future
secure. I’m finished and done with low living,
sight walking, smooth knees, colorless dreams,
tamed visions, worldly talking, cheap giving
and dwarfed goals.”
“I no longer need preeminence, prosperity,
position, promotions, plaudits or popularity.
I don’t have to be first, tops, recognized,
praised, regarded or rewarded. I now live
by faith, lean in his presence, walk in patience,
am uplifted by prayer, and I labor with power.”
This young priest was later martyred for
his faith in Christ.
In a message to the youth that Pope Benedict
XVI recently wrote to the youth to gear them
towards the World Youth Day in Sydney next
year, he challenged them courageously to
dare to love!
“Everybody feels the longing to love and
to be loved. Yet, how difficult it is to
love, and how many mistakes and failures
have to be reckoned with in love! There are
those who even come to doubt that love is
possible. But if emotional delusions or lack
of affection can cause us to think that love
is utopian, an impossible dream, should we
then become resigned? No! Love is possible!”
“My dear young friends, I want to invite
you to "dare to love". Do not desire
anything less for your life than a love that
is strong and beautiful … Love is the only
force capable of changing the heart of the
human person and of all humanity.” And he
gave them the example of Mother Teresa of
Calcutta.
It was Mother Teresa who said, "Today
the Church needs saints. This calls for our
combating our attachment to comforts that
lead us to choose a comfortable and insignificant
mediocrity. Each one of us has the possibility
to be a saint, and the way to holiness is
prayer. Holiness is, for each of us, a simple
duty."
It was she who said, “I am a little pencil
in the hand of a writing God who is sending
a love letter to the world.”
It was also she who said, “I do not pray
for success, I ask for faithfulness”, adding
humorously “I know God will not give me anything
I can't handle. I just wish that He didn't
trust me so much.”
Life is beautiful if it is love filled.
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
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