Here is the weekly "Keeping in Touch":
What is your life?
I do not want to get to the end of my life and find that I just lived the length of it. I want to have lived the width of it as well.” [Diane Ackerman, Newsweek, September 22, 1986]
The above verse from the epistle of James calls us to ponder about the meaning of our lives. It seems to me that the metaphor of vapour calls us to think about the brevity of human life. Then we can think about the uncertainty of life because so often there are complexities or complications that beset us. Too often a good man or woman is cut off or dies. In the midst of life there is death, sickness and suffering.
Sometimes when illness strikes a loved one, we are bewildered by the turn of events. With these kinds of earthy experiences, there is a sense that we need to live our life recognizing this brevity and so live with urgency. This might be a decision or determination to touch the life of another for good. Yes, we do not have to live just to the end of our lives; we can live the width of our days. Living the width of our days/lives offers greater meaning as we interface with others and impact others for good.
One way to live our lives and ensure that it is not a meaningless journey is to engage in a holy partnership with God or if you prefer with Spirit, seeking after the spiritual rather than after the material values of life. This might be expressed in tangible ways in our daily engagements by seeking to celebrate the good in each other or offering encouragement to each other as we navigate the turbulent world we are called to live in and live well.
Let us look into the eyes of our brothers and sisters and see the inner core, the soul of the person and seek to speak kindly, tenderly and inspirationally to another to support his or her quest to make sense of life. Life is too short for us to pass this way without doing good.
Let us do all the good we can, to all the people we can, just as long as we can… and we can, even as we are empowered by God’s Spirit and we seek to be different because we seek after the spiritual rather than the material values of life.
Peace,
Rev
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