Jesus said, "If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free."

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Gambling on the Possible Life-Shaping Narratives of Human Destiny


Somewhere deep inside each of us we know that we exist as someone originally created for a specific eternal destiny in a never-ending story. Consider with me a moment where this yearning becomes manifest like one gazing across the ocean longing for something that lies just beyondthe horizon. This moment of gazing out across this sea of divine mystery into a possible eternal destiny, everything lying behind us becomes a distant memory. Within our innermost being we feel a sense of urgency that fills our soul with a hopeful yearning for something beyond what this fallen world can offer us. This hopeful yearning stretches out into the unknown, trying to grasp and retain the belief in what cannot be seen. As this yearning intensifies, a faint possibility of eternal happiness rises on the horizon. It beckons us with a promise that if we explore this ocean of mystery and entrust our future to our conviction in the actuality of this possibility, then we will find that which we have been seeking all our life without knowing what it was we sought.
Over time, this search for a greater good or higher end to live for available to us in this world has become suppressed under the weight of “reality,” because the realities of adulthood tend to stifle this childish hope of a “castle in the clouds”. Such a hope, subsequently, becomes set aside, only to be entertained as a hobby or through a work of fiction or all-together demeaned in the world of grownups. In consequence, at the close of each day of unrest has forced us to come to terms with the reality that this was a naïve hope for that which cannot be found on the shores of this world. Even still, at this present moment as we gaze out into the transcendent unknown, our gaze re-ignites the spark of the once-burning candle of eternal hope within our soul. We have experienced similar re-awakenings of this candle’s flame when we have read, listened to, or watched a story play out that reminds us of this inner longing for the possibility of some higher destiny beyond what has become the mundane everydayness of human life here in this world. But in contrast to these illusory possibilities inspired by the human imagination, at this moment a storyline appears on the horizon that presents these dreams as indeed a possible actuality. This moment gives way to a crossroads of faith that accompanies this resurrection of hope in finding lasting fulfillment for the inner yearning of our soul somewhere beyond the immediate horizons of the life of transience we now live.
While our gaze pierces the immediate horizon of our present life, hope in a blessed eternal destiny is kindled by the fires of the imagination. Although, our imagination comes along side our gaze to infuse it with the desire to act. This impulse comes to us in such a way that it feels as though some true substantiality lies at the root of what inspires us to believe that an actual possibility of eternal good actually lies available to us. This desire to act is greater than the inner promptings after fictional narratives became portrayed before our physical eye or our mind’s eye, since they clearly come to us as a momentary escape from carrying out our roles in real life. The bent towards taking action comes to us now, when it did not in relation to these works of fiction, because a part of us truly believes that what now calls out to us to real not imaginative action has always been calling out to us. Somehow we know that this same call that brings us now to an existential halt before a crossroads of destiny has rung out from a mysterious deep place ever since the awakening of our self-consciousness within our innermost being. Therefore, we believe it has not come from or has been placed in us from the outside, but rather lies innately imprinted upon our soul with a void of eternity that nothing in this world of transience can fill.
Scripture explains this human situation of inherently desiring the possibility of an eternal good, as eternity lying pre-written on the human heart (Eccl 3:11). For this reason nothing within the immediate horizons of this world of transient goods[1] permanently satisfies us human beings just as the book of Ecclesiastes makes quite clear. In contrast, the animals inhabiting this world alongside us seem to find what we humans can never find: true existential rest in spite of transience. Somewhere deep within us, we know that we were created to inhabit eternity. Accompanying the desire to act before this crossroads of faith, we inwardly feel a prompting that beckons us to begin our journey of exploring the spiritual ocean of our Creator’s self-disclosure. It beckons us to embrace the rekindled hope experienced most clearly in our childhood that trusts and believes in what cannot be seen: that out there lies all the answers to the enigma concerning our true place in the universe. This hopeful belief inspires within us a vision that appears before our mind’s eye that we can come into an eternal, not a mere transient, good as our potential destiny. Such a destiny, as we inherently know, extends beyond this present mortal life and dying world. This hope enriches our gaze with a longing expectancy, inviting us to leave everything behind to sail these waters of mystery until we find what we have been seeking since we became conscious of being discontent, restless, of not fitting in, of transient meaninglessness, of being out of place, of being homeless.