We
live here only momentarily. What are we
to do with our brief time here, then, precious as it is? Nothing.
Nothing beyond what our instincts have us do, that is, which is to
procreate, to perpetuate the species.
Eat and procreate. That’s what we
are to do. It is what all living things
do.
We
humans, though, believe that we are here to do additional things. We are, for instance, to find God. But this, as with all the other things that
we decide are important to do, is merely an idea.
Or
is it? If we accept that, like the
perpetuation of the species, finding God is also an instinct, then our view of finding
God changes.
We
cannot, of course, deny that we have instincts and that they influence us. The only thing about them that we have
control over is whether or not we act on them.
Just because we feel the urge to procreate, for example, does not mean
that we actually will. Some will, some will
not.
So,
too, with our instinct to find God. We may act on it or we may not. It is only when the instinct is felt
especially intensely, as it is with monks, nuns, and priests, that acting on it
is certain. For the rest of us, though, it is
doubtful, given all the distractions that we face everyday, family, job,
education, etc.
When
we, on the other hand, are reminded of how briefly we are alive, the
importance of our discovering God while here is heightened.
Meister Eckhart, the eminent Christian mystic
of the 13th Century, wrote that when we take one step toward God,
God takes one hundred steps toward us. And it was Jesus who said, the kingdom of God is within; it is not
that far to go, and it only takes a moment.
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