Is it not to share
your bread with the hungry, and bring the homeless poor into your house; when
you see the naked, to cover them, and not to hide yourself from your own kin?
—Isaiah 58:7
—Isaiah 58:7
We
can sometimes become so enmeshed in the affairs of our own lives that we
actually forget that we share this earthly life with others. Then, at the most
inopportune moment, one of those “others” wants to share their hunger with us,
or lament the poverty of their spirit, or be supported because they are
drooping with weakness, and we just want them to go away.
It
happens when we are rushing our children to daycare, or trying to make an early
morning meeting, or answering an important call on our cell phone, or sitting
on a bench in silence because we have lost someone we love. We have enough
going on in our own lives we tell ourselves; we can't possibly stretch in one
more direction.
Surprisingly,
that interruption from the hungry, the poor, and the vulnerable can be a great
gift to us. It jolts us out of our own self-absorption, and we are forced to
recognize that we are not the center of the universe. In fact, our pain is the
pain of others, our weakness is the weakness of others, our hunger and poverty
are the hunger and poverty of others. We are together in this enterprise of
life.
The
abrupt and unwelcome interruption helps us realize that we cannot hide
ourselves from those who share life with us. We begin to see how important it
is for us to step aside from the struggles that consume us and enter into the
struggle of all humanity.
No comments:
Post a Comment