Posted on 07/31/2017 7:59:53 AM PDT by Salvation
There is a tendency today to forget that Heaven is an acquired taste; not everyone wants what God offers. While everyone wants to be happy, often happiness is conceived of in an egocentric way. Heaven is thought of as a personally designed paradise where we will be happy on our own terms.
But that is not what Heaven is. Heaven is the Kingdom of God in all its fullness. Its values and qualities are manifold but include many things that are not immediately desirable to those who live with hearts and minds that are worldly and sinful. The Kingdom of God features ideas that are often unpopular: love of ones enemies, generosity, love of the poor, and chastity. Heaven features God and His teachings at the center, not me and what I think. Yes, Heaven is a place where every aspect of Gods law is perfectly manifested. Yet many find some of these things not only undesirable but downright obnoxious; some even call them hateful and intolerant. To those in darkness, the light seems harsh.
Yes, Heaven is an acquired taste. This helps to explain that the existence of Hell is not due to a mean God trying to remove people whom He doesnt like from His presence. It is a respectful acceptance by God of the free decision made by those who do not want what He is offering. They do not want to think differently or even be told what to think. They do not want to give up their favorite sins or have their hearts purified of unruly or disordered appetites. In the end, God will not force us to love what and whom He loves. He will not force us to live in His Kingdom.
In his book The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis makes this very point. In it, many people come to tour Heaven, some of whom do not like what they find. Some struggle to adjust, others are resentful and say, in effect, No thanks. If you have not read it, I strongly encourage you to do so; it is an important book to read and ponder.
In yesterdays Gospel, the Lord inquires after our hearts by giving us the images of buried treasure and a pearl of great price. The one who finds them goes and sells all he has in order to obtain them. Does this describe your heart? Does it describe the hearts of our family, friends, and compatriots? Often, the answer is no. Most people are not will to give up everything for the Kingdom of Heaven. Our hearts are disordered. We easily desire things that are sinful and harmful, and not so much those that are good, holy, and lasting. We prefer apparent goods to true goods. If we are faithful, the Lord can get us to that disposition of heartbut it takes time. At least grant Him your willingness to get to that place!
In yesterdays Gospel the Lord also speaks of a dragnet. While he uses it as an image for the final judgment, that final judgement ultimately depends on the myriad judgments we make in our daily life. As you haul the net of your life ashore, what do you keep, finding it valuable, and what do you discard? Do you value what God is offering and retain it or do you more highly value other things in the net? What do you keep and what do you discard? The answers to questions like these points to your place in the net at the last judgment. God will gather into His Kingdom those who have desired it, not those who have rejected it.
Give the Lord your heart. Open when He knocks. Let Him create a desire in you for the very things He is offering. In the end, Heaven is an acquired taste, more so than we commonly imagine. Let God give you a taste for better and higher things.
This song says, Im trying to make heaven my home!
But she said that although she flirted, Herb was her one and only.
It was a different time. I wonder if poor Herb pined away ...
First thing I want to do is have a word with Shakespeare about a couple of missing works . . .
Don’t know if Herb did . . . he vanishes from the chronicles . . . of course he’s all over the dratted fanfiction . . . those people should be keelhauled, none of them can write worth a tinker’s dam . . .
I plan a long talk with Louis L’Amour, all those holes in the Sackett chronology and dangling sequels when he went and died.
I have missed out on Anne fanfiction, whew.
Actual inscription on an ancient tombstone in England:
‘I think that Heaven shall never Heaven be
unless my cats are there to welcome me’.
In heaven, the cats won’t spew.
Or pee on your pillow.
I wound up in the fanfiction trying to find out what happened to Herb . . . phew, what a load of trash. Far more people THINK they can write than can actually do so . . . maybe my standards are too high because I write for a living, but I don’t think so.
Ew, mine never did that. I agree about people who think they can write. Even published work is full of homophone howlers these days.
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