Think
of the Universal Substance, of which you have a very small portion; and of
universal time, of which a short and indivisible interval has been assigned to
you; and of that which is fixed by destiny, and how small a
part of it you are.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5 (tr
Long)
Again, this isn’t about feeling
insignificant because I’m small, but about finding my significance in what is
big.
I can be both proud and humble when
I understand my part within the whole. I become arrogant or insecure when I
either reject the whole or reject my part. Who I am, and how I matter, will
only make sense to me in the context of how everything works together. If I
lose track of that measure, I will sway between thinking too much or too little
of myself.
Yes, I am only a tiny bit of
something so much bigger, a dab of paint on the canvas, a single thread in the
tapestry. But what a true work of art I am a part of! The position of the self
within the world is the only thing that can give meaning to the self.
When they first tried to teach me
something about art history, I was quite taken with a painting by Piero della
Francesca, The Flagellation of Christ.
Three figures are gathered together in the foreground, seemingly oblivious to
Jesus being scourged in the background. It made me think about what really was
big and small in this life.
Now I have heard all sorts of
theories about the artist’s intentions, about who the three figures were, and
about all sorts of hidden meaning. All I knew was that I was supposed to be
paying attention to a central event in the salvation of mankind, and all I
could look at were these three well-dressed fellows having a casual chat. I
felt a little guilty about this, somewhat selfish, for dwelling on the mundane
over the sacred.
So it is in much of life. I spend so
much of my time concerned with myself and with the things immediately
surrounding me, with all of my everyday worries, and I completely forget to look
at the whole. I make more of what is less, and less of what is more. I develop
a skewed perspective, where the nearness of something to me is confused with
its importance.
If I can begin to step back, and
take in the whole picture, I will learn to think less of myself, while at the
same time discovering everything about myself. I will find my place, and for me
that means I will be home. The great fullness of being, the vast expanse of
time, and the profound workings of Providence are the setting in which my life,
however small and humble, must embrace its purpose.
Written in 7/2006
IMAGE:
Piero della Francesca, The Flagellation of Christ (c. 1455)
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