If
it stays here, it also changes here, and is dissolved into its proper parts,
which are elements of the Universe and of yourself.
And
these too change, and they murmur not.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
When I was
little, I worried about whether I was going to Heaven or Hell. Fire scared me. I
had the benefit of a fine man, an uncle who was a priest, who reminded me that
the love of God was never about a balance sheet, and that if God is Love, no
person, not any person, who truly wishes to be happy shall ever be denied that
wish.
“God will give
you exactly what you need. Ask, and ask with all sincerity, and you shall
receive.”
Years later,
people who thought they were better told me that my uncle was completely wrong.
I was told I needed to follow this specific rule or that, and that any
transgression meant instant damnation. I had to go to this Mass, and not
another. I had to cross myself one way, and not another. I had to receive the
Blessed Sacrament in one way, and not another. I should never, above all else,
have anything to do with any of those terrible heretics. They were all damned.
“But isn’t God
Love?” I asked.
“Of course
you’d say that, because you’re a modernist.” I can still recall the smug look
on the spiteful fellow who said that to me. He wanted me to fight him,
intellectually at least, but I was smart enough that time to turn away. A
broken jaw might have done him good, but a sense of temperance did me much
better.
Fine. Send me
to your Hell, because I refuse to believe in a Heaven where kindness and respect
are trumped by stuffy and narrow arrogance.
I am still
completely committed to living a good life, but I now worry less about where I am
going to go, and more about who I am, right here and now.
I know there
is a God, and I know there is a right and wrong in the order of all things,
the design of Providence. Now what will become of me?
Let Providence
decide that, and let me simply be the best man I can possibly be. I know, from
reason alone, that I will continue in some way. What will that be? It is hardly
for me to decide. Let God decide.
God, in
whatever way we might wish to understand Him, has told me, simply by making me
as I am, about how I should live. There is no mystery there.
What happens to
me when I die? I can worry, I can fret, I can pray myself stupid, but it will happen
exactly as it should. Nothing in Nature dies, as everything in Nature is
constantly reborn. Nothing ceases to be, as everything that is simply takes on
a new form.
Yes, there is a
mystery there. I don’t know at all what that form will be. I leave that to God.
I will become something else. Perhaps I may be a saint in Heaven, or perhaps
just be fertilizer for a tree. I remind myself that if I think the difference
matters, I’m not doing it right at all, because then the good that I do is all
about some mercenary reward.
Nothing hurts
religion, which should be about our trust in what is greater than us, than
people who tell us that they are greater than us. No more of that for me.
Nothing ever
really dies. Everything is reborn. How will that happen? Let Providence work
that out. How arrogant of me to think I know how that might go.
My uncle prayed
with simple folk, and taught at a high school, and climbed mountains, and told
me about human decency. I have no place for men who flaunt their superiority,
and strut about in their bow ties, and mix fancy cocktails, and tell me that I
am going to Hell.
Written in 3/2008
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