REDEMPTION AS GOD’S POSSESSION
The
pastoral counselor Merle Jordan writes that the important question to
ask clients who want to grow is not so much “Who are you?” as “Who do
you belong to?” As a pastoral counselor myself, I have found this to be
sound advice that has many and far-ranging repercussions. The one thing
or person or idea that captures our waking and sleeping thoughts, that
which fills our minds and hearts a great deal of the time, is the one
that wields power over us. And whatever fills our hearts is the one that
ultimately controls us.
We
all are familiar with the story of Ebenezer Scrooge. He started out as a
fine, promising young boy who enjoyed the same things other boys did.
But he developed into the world’s most notorious miser. On account of
the many little choices he made all through the course of his life, with
possessions and profit occupying most of his time, Scrooge became the
hated miser of an employer that he was. Soon, possessions possessed him.
Money became his idol, and idol is defined as some kind of a false god.
We
all have our own little false gods. These are the idols that we turn
into demi-gods — every idea, object, or material possession or person
that ultimately controls us. They define not so much who we are, as who
or what we really belong to.
St.
Paul today takes care we get this very important point. We belong to
God. We are God’s precious and beloved possessions. He reminds us how
we “were chosen,” and that “we exist for the praise of God’s glory.”
One
of the applications in the social networking site, Facebook, would
allow us to know how many hours one spent, or how many posts one has
done, from day one. Many of my “friends” boasted so many thousands of
hours and so many postings since they joined. What they missed is the
blatant fact that Facebook has literally become their idol. It has
effectively controlled their daily lives. They have become Facebook’s
possession. This is a good time as any to remind ourselves: we are
called to “redemption as God’s possession, to the praise of His glory.”Fr. Chito
Dimaranan, SDB
REFLECTION QUESTIONS: What possesses you? What is that one thing, idea or person that fills your waking hours?
Lord
Jesus, I surrender to You my false gods or idols. Instead of spending
so much of my time and resources on them, may I learn to use them in
building Your Kingdom on earth. Amen.
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