Monday, August 1, 2011

“Man is a Parable”

                                                    

We‘ve been instructed that man and woman were created in the likeness of God. To understand this more fully, we can say we are fables, or stories with more than the most obvious meaning or plot. I'd like to think we are more than beings with merely a spiritual component that mimics our heavenly Father’s. God has fathomless depth of being, imagination, intelligence and will.  Our depths are more easy to plumb.

For example, here's the story of one man:  Paul is born, grows through childhood and becomes an adult. He is handsome, strong and healthy. However, Paul graduates college and becomes a life insurance salesman, then climbs the corporate ladder to attain CEO status. His company sells policies with inflated prices that make the company stocks climb. The policies have lots of "small print" that many holders don't understand and therefore end up reaping negligible benefit from them at their most vulnerable times - after the death of a spouse, child, or parent. Moreover, Paul's aim is to use his prosperity to fund a program that will eradicate poverty from the world, but not for the good of the world; he only hopes to gain a lasting legacy.

Paul, then, has four levels:
   -his outward, physical beauty = the soul we are given to begin life on earth
   -the business sense he acquires = the spirit which resides with our soul
   -the program he dreams of funding = the holiness we attempt (or don’t attempt) to attain with our lives
   -his proposed legacy = the ineffable spirit that we receive when we transcend this life for the next.    

Paul is a fine specimen of a man and many will only go this far in viewing his life. Paul’s business dealings may be how some know his character, though he may go on to learn from his mistakes. Paul may find, later in life, that the best way to attain riches is not to victimize the powerless, but to work diligently for honest profits instead. Others may ultimately see his story in that context. Paul may also learn that he is not truly in control of the world, no matter how rich and powerful he becomes, and that his dreamed-of legacy is a vain one. Ultimately, Paul will attain spiritual enlightenment and the world and heaven will both gain; or he will not and the world and heaven will both lose.

Each one of us has the same type of story as Paul’s to play out. We all have these same levels to work with and to work on. It is no wonder Jesus taught in parables; He wanted us to realize that what we see is not all there is. There is more to a person than meets the eye. There is life beyond the soul, beyond the mundane, beyond this world. We need to live life on all levels. We need to accept and cultivate the gifts we are born with. God works with what we have and what we offer to, miraculously, turn it into enough and more. Like the miracle of the 5 loaves and 2 fishes, we are turned from a deficit to a surplus when we use what we have to do His will.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Look up and see.: Look up and see.: Look Up

Look up and see.: Look up and see.: Look Up: "Look up and see.: Look Up: 'Look up, look up and see. I see everything - Nothing occurs without My hand and My Word - I urge you to look up..."


Too many of us spend major amounts of time looking down, seeing the worst side of things, feeding negativity rather than trying to uplift not only ourselves but others. The good news is that we can change our outlooks instantaneously! All we have to do is turn negative thoughts on their heads. On my way to work in the morning, instead of thinking about how badly I'd been treated at home or at work, I stop momentarily, then say aloud the exact opposite of my last negative thought. Here's an example : "My boss is such a jerk, he never appreciates anything I do." Stop - then say, "My boss is the best, he loves everything I do." Or - "I am so angry at being put upon at home; I am being taken for granted." vs "I'm happy to be able to work as hard as I do, I'm appreciated by my husband and family." Don't worry that you think the latter thought may be an exaggeration, chances are the former ones are, too. Try it, you'll feel lifted up immediately.
This technique is not a permanent fix, however. Since negativity can be so ingrained, it will take practice to overcome. You'll have to remind yourself to do it constantly, at first, but, after a few weeks, it will become second nature to stop negative thoughts, turn them upside down, and make them positive. The physiologic effects alone make it something you will enjoy. The lasting psychological benefits will, in the long term, reward you beyond measure. Sociologically, your positivity will endow the psyches of your family and co-workers with the light you radiate. Without exaggeration, changing your own thoughts from negative to positive can change the world for the better.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Look up and see.: Look Up

Look up and see.: Look Up: "Look up, look up and see. I see everything - Nothing occurs without My hand and My Word - I urge you to look up! Things fall upon you ..."

Look Up

Look up, look up and see.
 I see everything -
Nothing occurs without My hand and My Word -
I urge you to look up!
Things fall upon you and you see not why
Because you look down.
Look up, look up and see!