Monday, March 11, 2013

The Present Moment - Living in the Presence of God.



Our lives are moulded and fashioned
  by all the graces we have received or refused;
by all the gestures of love as well as the acts of hatred
  or indifference;
by our successes as well as our failures.
Absolutely everything is engraved in our being.
So the experience of being loved by God
  does not change our lives completely,
yet something is changed
  when we realize that God loves us just as we are,
not as we would like to be
nor as our parents or society would have liked us to be.
God loves us today
with our gifts, our qualities, as well as our failures and our fragility.
If we have the impression people are disappointed in us
because we do not live up to their expectations;
if there seems to be a gap
  between the way in which others perceive us
  and who we really are,
between what we like to think we can do
  and what we actually can do,
we need to discover God is never disappointed in us.
God knows us;
God knows our abilities and disabilities;
God knows we are a mixture of light and darkness.
Others may be disappointed
  because they have an ideal image of Him,
  but not God, who knows me today just as I am.
God does not live in the past or the future
  but in the "now" of the present moment.
God sees me in my present reality
  as I am in each present moment.
-Jean Vanier, Befriending the Stranger

 Art: St. Margaret of Cortonna, penitent

3 comments:

  1. Oh my God, Terry, you have no idea how helpful reading this just now is for me at this particular point in time. I am sending you a hug and my assurance that my Holy Hour today will be made for you intentions. Thank you so much, even though you had no idea when you posted this that you did so for me:) Joyce

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  2. Joyce - I'm so happy the Holy Spirit intended this for you. It certainly helped me as well. God bless! And thanks for the prayers.

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  3. Anonymous7:24 AM

    Thank you so much for posting that, Terry. Jean Vanier is so very much an exceptional human that I haven't adequate words. I belonged to Vanier House in my catholic high school, and the school had Vanier come in since the prefect house was named after his father. I was forever changed by meeting him. I live up the road from the second L'Arche community, and it is a remarkable place started by a truly remarkable man.

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