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Feb 09, 2022 1849 Father John Harris OP
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What Makes Us Fully Alive?

It’s time to wake up, show up and shine!

Saint Pope John Paul II exhorted all of us to open the door of our heart to Christ. He was inviting us to experience the fruitfulness of living our lives in the presence of God. But in today’s world, the idea of having God in your life feels like an imposition. The world takes the biblical image of God as a liberator, the one who sets us free, and distorts it into an image of someone who is against our freedom, our enjoyment and hope. But that is complete distortion.

To be fully human and to be fully alive means having God in our lives. When God is in our lives, we experience the fruits of His presence—the fruits of peace, love, joy, gentleness, and kindness—all these make us more human and alive.

The Way to Live

Jesus said “I have come that you may have life and have it to the full.” Very often in my journey with younger people, I see the pressure they experience in their lives. They work hard to get into college or university, or find a career. They have little time to live life. Life turns into a process of getting things and having things. Life is about being somewhere else. That is no way to live your life.

The way to live your life is to invite God into the midst of your life and allow Him to help you be your true self. God made us to be fully human and He delights in our humanity. God does not expect us to be spirits or angels. Jesus came into our world that is broken, full of sinners, people with sickness; a world that needs God, needs love, peace, and joy. And the fact is that we cannot have those things without God in our lives. It’s impossible for me to think of my life without God.

Unexpected Call

I was once contacted by a woman who asked if I would go and be with her husband who was in hospital. Let’s call him Peter. She was worried about how he would react to the news that his test results indicated he had only a few months to live.

I went to be with Peter. As we sat and prayed, the doctor entered. He shared the dire news and there was silence. I had prayed hard for God to be with us in this moment. Peter looked at me and asked, “Father isn’t God in this?” 

“Of course He’s in this,” I said.

“Well…” he said, “If God is in this, I can face it.”When Jesus became man and entered the reality of our world, He experienced the joys and trials of being human. He went to many of the difficult places we all go to in life. So no matter where we go, Jesus is there just ahead of us. Peter understood this. He knew Jesus was there accompanying him. No matter what he was about to go through, even death, Jesus would be with him. Jesus would understand his trial because He had gone through the worst in the garden of Gethsemane.

The Great Transition

Peter told me that he would live his last months, his last weeks with Jesus, his wife, and his children. It seemed that when he came face to face with death, he came face to face with life. Convinced that Jesus was beside him, he said, “I can now live this life, I can live the sickness, I can live the prognosis, I can live with my family.”

His wife and I entered Peter’s room that day worried about how we were going to help him. But in the end, it was he who helped us by showing us how to live life, to cherish life, and to know that wherever Jesus is, there is fullness of life. There’s nothing in our lives that cannot be touched by Jesus. There’s no place we can go, even our temptations and our weaknesses, where Jesus will not walk beside us, because he has been there, too. When you sit quietly and wonder, “Does anybody hear my thoughts? Does anybody see my tears? Does anybody really understand me and what I’m trying to achieve in life?” rest assured: the answer is yes. There is someone who understands and cares for you. 

Made to Enjoy

Your tears are not lost; your sadness is not forgotten. There’s a great phrase in the Book of Genesis. After creating Adam, God says, “It’s not good that man should be alone” (Genesis 1:18). God was talking about the need to find a companion for Adam. But I think He also was talking about something much deeper. He was talking about—our need for God’s presence in our own lives. God wants to be in your life, and it’s not good that man or woman or child be alone. We are made for communion. We are made for friendship. We are made to enjoy life together.

Saint Teresa of Avila had a vision of hell in which she saw men sitting alone in their own private prison cells, their backs to the doorway, their heads in their hands, thinking about themselves and profoundly sad. God did not create us to be alone and sad. He made us for communion with each other and fundamentally with Himself. We can be fully human only if we know we are loved. We don’t find God by going on a pilgrimage to the highest mountain or the lowest sea. We must find Him in our own souls, in our own hearts. And when we find Him there, we discover that He has come bearing fruit of joy and peace. Jesus comes to stand with us right in the midst of our lives. He comes into the brokenness, the need and poverty of our lives. All we have to do is say,

“Lord wherever I am and whatever is going on in my life, I want You to be with me. I ask that Your presence and the power of the Spirit in me make my life fruitful. I want to live life to the full. Because fullness of life is what You want for me. Amen.”

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Father John Harris OP

Father John Harris OP is the Prior Provincial of the Irish Province of the Dominicans.

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