
To Blossom Is Our Vocation 
One day Saint Francis of Assisi was going
through the streets singing and inviting
everyone to sing along with him. He came
upon an almond tree and he spoke to her,
"Brother Almond, speak to me of God."
And the almond tree blossomed!
All of us are called to blossom. St. Basil
puts it like this: "The human being
is an animal who has received the vocation
to become God." There is nothing to
stop us except ourselves.
As I wrote in my book God Is A Feast, God "is a Lover who is kind and caring,
always dreaming of passion and tenderness.
He is not interested in laws and precepts.
My God is pleased when we love him, not when
we obey him. We are not androids…We are persons
who have a heart beating!"
"If a soul seeks God, even more so does
the Bridegroom seek her; if she sends him
her wishes of love, He sends her his inspirations
and his divine touches. God's wish is to
make her ready for more, even higher delicate
graces, which bring her closer to His divine
nature. Thus she obtains such a pure attitude
that she will be worthy of union with God
and complete transformation into him ...
Whoever builds a relationship with God finds
his life moving gradually towards a feast
full of music!"
Becoming God is the journey. As St. Paul
said, "Not that I have already attained,
or am already perfect; but ... I press toward
the goal".
When a young artist won the maximum award
that one could possibly obtain, he gently
told his friend that, "The truth is
that this is not my best painting!"
"Oh!" said the friend, "why
then did you not exhibit your best?"
Smiling, he answered, "Because my best
painting is yet to come…"
In his book Twelve Ordinary Men, John MacArthur
calls Peter 'the Apostle with the foot-shaped
mouth', because whenever he opens his mouth,
he puts his foot in it!
He walks on the water - but then panics and
starts to sink. He makes a wonderful profession
of faith - and moments later he censures
Jesus, forcing the latter to call him 'Satan'.
He refuses to be washed and then, when the
purpose is explained to him, demands to be
washed all over. And of course, he betrays
his master soon after having been warned
that he will and he, having sworn that he
will not!
Jesus knew all this and yet He chose him
to be the first Pope! The reason is simple.
After gazing at Simon intently, Jesus said,
"You are ... but you shall become."
That's the way God looks at you and me.
He looked at Moses, a fugitive, and saw him
as the leader of his people. He looked at
David, a shepherd boy and sees in him a king.
He looks at us and sees the icon of Jesus
Christ in us! God knows us now and knows
also what we can become! He is not discouraged
when he witnesses the chasm between the actual
and the potential!
We may be defeated, degraded, soiled, enslaved
by our passions and yet Christ keeps believing
that He can transform us and cleanse us and
cloth us with the beauty of his holiness.
The risks to avoid are two. Either to think
that we are already there. The moment we
become like the Pharisee and say, "I
am where I am supposed to be. I thank God
I am not like the others" at that point
we become stagnant and stagnation in the
spiritual life is condemnation.
The other risk is to be discouraged or scandalized
at ourselves. Only God has arrived. We are
becoming. Someone asked a boy, "Who
made you, Luis?" And the boy replied,
"To tell you the truth, sir, I ain't
done yet." Stop demanding perfection
from yourself!
There is an inspirational poem going around,
written Carol Wimmer that articulates this
very clearly. "When I say I am a Christian,
I am not trying to be strong. I am just professing
that I am weak and pray for strength to carry
on… When I say I am a Christian, I am not
claiming to be perfect. My flaws are far
too visible but God believes I am worth it!"
The great saints knew that no one is 'born
again' just once. Their life was a daily
conversion. Daily they fell and daily they
rose. How well I understand this…
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
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its original state, if this copyright
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