Taskmasters

Task Master

This is a reflection on the Mass readings of the day.


“Blessed is that servant whom his master on his arrival finds doing so.” Doing what? What is it that the master of the house wants to find his steward doing? Mowing the lawn? Fixing the chimney? Sand-blasting the siding? Nope, not in this particular parable. The master of the house wants to find his steward distributing food to his other servants. And conversely, the behavior cited as worthy of punishment is mistreatment of the other servants.

Sometimes we over-index on the tasks in our lives, our to-do list, which our conscience tells us is our non-negotiable responsibility set, and under-index on love. St. John of the Cross, however, tells us in his singular style, “Upon the dusk of our lives, they will examine us on our love.” It is by our love that we will be judged.

Of course, tasks are part of love. But too often, for us they take on some sort of larger-than-life meaning all their own, and our conscience obsesses with their completion rather than the welfare of the persons for whom we are completing them.

What a great pairing of readings today. In the first reading, Paul is in the very act of embodying the good steward. His letter to the Corinthians oozes with his love for the Christians of Corinth, his passion for their welfare in Christ. And He is feeding them with his encouragement and example of trust in God. When the Master of the house returned home for Paul, He found him throwing everything he had into doing that which Jesus had directly asked Simon Peter to do, and in him, all of us: “Feed my sheep.” (cf. Jn. 21:17).

Ideas for conversation with the Lord: St. John of the Cross uses the curious phrase, “they will examine us on our love.” St. Ignatius, for his part, is a big fan of daily self-examination. Thinking of that examination at the end of our lives, examine your day today, your week, your overall attitude, to discover if you are doing tasks anxiously, mindlessly, for their own sake, for a sense of completion. Or if you are actually obsessed with the happiness, first eternal, but also temporal, of those for whom you are doing the tasks. Ask the Holy Spirit to enlighten you. Then, ask Our Lord to fill your heart more with love, until this becomes your obsession, rather than the checklist.

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Reconstruction

House in ?Ruins

This is a reflection on the Mass readings of the day.


When we read the first reading, we may wonder what all this is about layering sinews upon bones, and then once the body is reconstructed, infusing spirit. There is a sense of a process of rebuilding. When we think about recovering from sin, we most often think of the cleansing/purifying aspect. We go to confession, and we are fully cleansed, fully new–we can start over.

But in the spiritual life, in addition to the point-in-time cleansing process of God’s forgiveness in the sacrament of Penance, there is also a massive rebuilding process that God undergoes with the soul. And it tends to be long and drawn out, not because He can’t do things quickly, but because He respects the limitations of our nature and does not want to overwhelm us.

When we are born into original sin, we are born with our nature in a sense in ruins. When we are baptized, our friendship with God is restored and He enters in. But all of the ruin of our nature is not suddenly restored thereby. Our being remains in spiritual blindness, coldness, darkness, and much of what we are pulls us forcefully away from God.

Through a consistently cultivated life of prayer and the sacraments, and daily effort to say “yes” to God based upon a conscious decision for Him, we partner with Him in the rebuilding process. We work with Him to allow His grace to lay sinew on bone, skin on sinew, and then increasingly to infuse the whole with His spirit. Blessed are those who consciously decide for God from a young age, for such a decision tends to be more straightforward and whole-hearted, and God can do great things in a shorter period of time.

But what is the target state of this rebuilding process? Conveniently, we find it in today’s Gospel:

“You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart,
with all your soul, and with all your mind.
This is the greatest and the first commandment.
The second is like it:
You shall love your neighbor as yourself.
The whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments.”

Perfect love–union with God and obedience to God, and profound charity to neighbor–is the target state toward which God’s process of rebuilding the human person tends. The process passes through the sometimes long and difficult phases of detachment, purification, and spiritual dryness described by the great spiritual masters. It also passes through ever deeper and more fulfilling experiences of God. So buckle up. Because this isn’t an optional challenge in the spiritual life. It’s a commandment–THE Commandment.

Ideas for conversation with God: Consider that your spiritual life may have difficult periods ahead as you paddle upriver to keep consistent in your “yes” to God, and He goes to work on your soul. Tell Him you are giving Him a blank check to fill in. Tell Him that you know He is worth it. (“To whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” Jn. 6:68) Tell Him you are committed for the full journey. Ask Him to give you the strength to persevere in this most wonderful process, for which He paid with His blood.

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