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THE SACRAMENTS - 2
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For many people, a really good movie is one that pulls them out of
their chairs in the theater, right into the story line and the action
of the film itself. For ninety minutes or so, we are fly fishing the
northwest rivers in "A River Runs Through It," or coming to
self-knowledge with "(Good) Will Hunting." Or we're rejoicing
with Andy Dufresne and Red in "The Shawshank Redemption";
with them we learn that struggle, if rooted in hope, really does bring
new life. When we go to a movie, many of us like the movie to draw us
into the life of the characters, the emotions and actions that make
up the movie. We tend not to be mere spectators, and we really don't
like it when someone talks to us during the movie, because that reminds
us that actually we are just sitting in a theater watching a film. Please,
just let us be carried up into the magic of the film!
We must learn to think of sacraments in this same way. Sacraments make
present to us now the mystery of Jesus' life and death as these were
present in the very life of Jesus. Sacraments are certainly not magic,
but they are indeed mystery. And that is the wonder of them; they present
to us now the saving deeds of Jesus. The healing, the forgiving, the
nourishing, and all the countless other ways in which Jesus gave life
are made available to us through water, oil, bread, wine, and symbolic
gestures.
In the sacraments we are brought into the realm of kingdom life-life
as it will be in the end. In the sacraments I am united with all of
God's Church in the common life of grace that we share. These marvelous
actions whisk us out of this time and place and bring us into the timelessness
and space of God. Please do not let the efficiency of time or the practicality
of space interrupt these marvelous opportunities to be taken up into
mystery. Always give thanks to God for the incarnation-Jesus' immersion
into humanity out of which eventually comes our infusion into the divine.
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