What
a power man has to do nothing except what God will approve, and to accept all
that God may give him.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.11 (tr
Long)
“And
here you thought it was all about you.”
I’ve
never enjoyed it when people remind me of my vanity, of my foolish desire to
make myself supreme, but when someone once said it to me in that way, at a
certain time, under a specific set of circumstances, I had one of those
moments. You know, one of those moments where you will never be quite the same
again. Something has clicked, something that should have clicked long ago.
I cannot
relate to a version of Stoicism that begins and ends with the self, because
while Stoicism is about self-reliance, I can only understand it within the
context of the whole of Nature, under the rule of Providence, manifest through
the Divine. I would often become frustrated with people who so easily dismissed
others, or who so hastily shunned any openness to God, until I realized how my
own resentment was a symptom of the very same arrogance.
My own
power is not absolute, and even my own power over myself is subject to the
Nature of which I must necessarily be a part. My mind can reach out to infinite
being, and my heart can reach out to infinite love, but I am not the center. I
am not the measure, but a thing measured, as Fulton Sheen taught me all those
years ago.
“There
you go with your God again! You are limiting me, restricting me, telling me
what I can or cannot be!”
No, He
is not my God, He is the very order
of all being, in fact Being itself. We are talking past one another, because I
only know that there is the Absolute, and I do not claim that it insists on
borders and limitations. Quite the contrary, it transcends all borders and
limitations.
For me,
it isn’t about me against God. It is about me within God, through God, an
expression of God. When I fail to see this, I am not thinking big enough. There
is never even a “me” without the whole that contains me.
There is
nothing I can do that is somehow “outside” of such a totality, just as I must
learn how everything that happens serves its purpose within such a totality. I
am made to do what I can do, and other things are made to do what they will do.
The
peace that comes from a mastery of self must also include a joyful acceptance
of a Universe that makes that very self possible.
Written in 8/2009
To be satisfied, man only has to abide by God and do everything through God and for God.
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