photo credit: Aaron Springston |
I play keyboards for a Catholic mass on Saturday afternoon. Today’s homily started out with the priest telling us that in order to get into heaven, you will need a letter of recommendation from the poor. He then spoke at length about charity. Then I came home and heard Marianne Williamson tell a revised version of the Good Samaritan story. The Samaritan was walking down the road and came upon a beggar, whom he gave alms. This happened a number of times, until he asked himself, Why are there so many beggars? This I feel is the question — don’t you? Why, in the richest country in the world, do we have so many people in need? It’s time for a deep, meaningful, course correction in our nation. It is time for all thinking people to ask the important questions and insist on answers. We must ask ourselves how we have been complicit in world problems. Whether I am concerned with environment, government, religion, whatever societal sickness is in my face, it is time for a moral awakening. And it begins with me.
“Forgiveness paints a picture of a world where suffering is over, loss becomes impossible and anger makes no sense...The world becomes a place of joy, abundance, charity and endless giving. It is now so like to Heaven that it quickly is transformed into the light that it reflects.” A Course in Miracles