Length, meaning & direction

Length, meaning & direction

Today’s long Gospel reading reminds us that Christian faith is not about speed, short-cuts or anesthesia. In truth, it is about length, patience, pain and suffering.

We now live in a world where pain and waiting are to be avoided at all cost. We have acquired a mentality that has a very low tolerance for anything that involves errors, mistakes and suffering. Our waiting has been reduced by super-fast procedures: computers, ATMs, fast food, instant messages, instant coffee and sometimes, instant marriages. Our threshold for pain and suffering has been minimized by so-called miracles of medical science, like Advil, Tylenol Forte or the abortion pill.

Even our relationships have been adversely affected by what we call a “computer” mentality which rejects human error and waiting time. Such mentality disposes us to seek quick solutions to long-term problems, especially in human relationships including marriage and family life. We have developed a passion for painlessness and velocity. And we have lost our sense of direction and meaning.

Besides being person-oriented, Christian life is process-oriented. Resurrection comes only after passion and death. Christianity does not take away our problems and fears. It gives us the strength to face and endure them. It gives us a sense of Christian purpose and meaning. It makes us understand the meaning of our struggle for sanity.

Amidst this protracted pandemic, we find too much time for reflection, to re-discover our sense of direction and meaning. Let us re-learn our sense of Christian purpose, which is rooted in the mysteries we celebrate these days. We have to hold on together with our common Christian purpose, if we don’t want to be lost in this time of historical uncertainty.