For
many years, I've felt that reincarnation needs to be true because for
me it seemed reincarnation was the only afterlife scenario that would
be fair. I haven't put much time or energy into the study of
reincarnation but I couldn't reject the idea because of this: What
about all the people who are born into terrible circumstances and are
never given the chance to know love? How can they possibly experience
God's love if they never feel safe and cherished? If reincarnation
was not true, then those people would live and die (and probably
cause a lot of harm in the interim) without seeing their worth
reflected to them in another's eyes. I can't imagine a worse hell.
Cate's flowers with Bill's cross |
What
I've been thinking is that we're all granted the same amount of Grace
but not the same measures in the same time. Some of us are gifted
with plenty of God's Grace at birth when we are born to parents who
love us and nurture us and guide us. We have stability and tenderness
in our lives. Others are born into love but with less of one or more
of those other elements: perhaps we're born into a loving family but
live in poverty, or we're born into material comfort but inconsistent
love, or our parent loves us but has an illness that prevents them
from always being able to nurture us as we need or any of a million
situations. And then there are those of us who are born into
heartbreaking circumstances with no love nor nurturing at all.
If we
all get the same amount of Grace and some of us get most of it up
front, that means that some of us get it in increments throughout our
lives and maybe some of us get it in one big chunk right at the end.
And not
only that but I think maybe those of us who get a bigger helping
early in life and who have more resources and abilities as a result
have a responsibility to share our Grace with others. I think we are
supposed
to help provide those dollops of Grace so that those of who
weren't so blessed at birth get to experience love, tenderness and
stability through the actions of others. Perhaps as we live up to the
Grace given us, we're given more to share (“Live up to the Light
granted thee...”).Photo of St. Francis statue by Mary Linda |
“Pull
yourself up by your bootstraps” mentality really pisses me off. It
implies that we were all born with exact equal measures and anybody
who is not as successful (whatever that means) according to a
socially defined standard has failed through their own fault or
weakness. If Grace works the way I currently understand it, we are
all responsible for one another. I have been given a tremendous
amount of Grace and it is my responsibility to share as much as I can
with those who have less. I am called to share my love, my
acceptance, my compassion and my awareness of God's transformative
presence as well as my home, my money, and my other resources.
If
Grace is true, I don't need to hold any undefined hopes for
reincarnation. But, if Grace as I understand it is true, I am called
to a much greater level of responsibility than I have previously been
aware of. Thankfully, another way I understand grace is that God
allows us to be able to start over anew as many times as necessary
and welcomes us back each time with joy and nary a bit of impatience.
2 comments:
Every day we get another chance. That is part of grace to me.
In another setting right now, I'm noticing that one thing that is hard about passing along the Grace is that people who got shorted in the beginning are sometimes defended in ways that push me away or otherwise strike preemptively at me. That's when I need Spirit's eyes to see them as God does and turn my velcro into teflon so the hooks slide off. Your metaphor helps me with that -- seeing it as evening up the Grace takes it out of the realm of expecting mutual and reciprocal effort. I already got my share early; of course it needs to be put back where it's the thinnest! Nice!
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