Transparent World 
Father Tony’s Midweek 
      Message 
November 21, 2012 
      
People who say that they 
      somehow do not believe in God usually mean they do not believe in a 
      guy (always a male, usually with a white beard) “out there” 
      somewhere who interferes on occasion with matters and demands our love and 
      worship.  (“He is, after all, 
      a ‘jealous’ one, he!”)  This 
      is, however, a petty caricature of the living, creating Ground of Being 
      and Love Itself.  God is not 
      “out there” somewhere.  God is 
      beneath and behind all.  Luke 
      describes St. Paul speaking to the Athenians and saying of God “In him we 
      live and move and have our 
      being” (Acts 17:28).  
      
This is an important idea, 
      since otherwise, God is diminished and we are left with reducing the 
      object of our worship to a kind of supernatural wacky great uncle or an 
      imaginary friend with super powers.  
      Such a god is not really God, but a sort of demiurge or 
      daemon.  When we feel hurt or 
      anguish, it is easy to feel betrayed by such a Deity.  God thus diminished is far removed 
      from the good we see all about us, all of which comes from God 
      directly.  
“Life 
      is this simple: We are living in a world that is absolutely transparent 
      and God is shining through it all the time. This is not just a fable or a 
      nice story. It is true. If we abandon ourselves to God and forget 
      ourselves, we see it sometimes, and we see it maybe frequently. God shows 
      [God’s] self everywhere, in everything - in people and in things and in 
      nature and in events. It becomes very obvious that He is everywhere and in 
      everything and we cannot be without [God].  It's impossible. It's simply 
      impossible. The only thing is that we don't see it.”  --Thomas Merton (in remarks to 
      monastic novices).  
Faith 
      is trust in this Ground of Being, who is not less than personal.  Indeed, the doctrine of the Holy 
      Trinity teaches us that God is 
      more than personal, and includes the social as well.    
I 
      think that gratitude is the 
      emotion that best connects us with God.  Trust is a close second.  Both of these are in fact 
      expressions of love.  And God 
      is, in fact, Love Itself. Love, trust, and gratitude give us eyes to see 
      God.  
In 
      prayer and meditation, try to reflect on the Beauty of God’s Holiness 
      while feeling this love.  It 
      helps.    Peace and 
      Grace,   Fr. Tony+ 
      


 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

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