The best way to show my gratitude to God is
to accept everything, even my problems, with joy.
— Mother Teresa (1910-1997)
to accept everything, even my problems, with joy.
— Mother Teresa (1910-1997)
It is the time of year that we begin to shift in our “busy-ness” to thoughts of thankfulness and gratitude as November is the banner that has arrived on the top of the calendar. Thanksgiving brings joy and fun for many of us. Great meals, time spent with friends and family, Apple and Pumpkin pie. When we reflect on the Beauty and love of our lives, and recognize God’s loving presence in all these things it is so easy for our hearts to radiate gratitude.
But life isn’t always sunshine and flowers. There can be difficult days as well. Have you ever had one of those days that everything just seems to go wrong? When you pour the milk on your cereal it shoots across the bowl and showers the tablecloth. The news paper has been rained on. The dog escapes out the door, as you run past your car parked along the curb on the way to the neighbor’s yard to capture the escaped canine, you discover that there is a parking citation on your windshield… funny thing, when the 31st changes to the first of the month, you need to park on the same side of the street, two nights in a row. It’s barely dawn and you’ve made multiple messes and spent 40$ on a parking fine!
The aforementioned scenario, though it represents a series of unfortunate experiences that may be frustrating, does not begin to compare with some of the more severe difficulties that life confronts us with. Experiencing the Holidays with our spouse absent, going through the serious illness or loss of a child, trying to celebrate Christmas when you are unemployed and feel financially hopeless, facing a cancer diagnosis, or some other terminal disease, struggling with the darkness of clinical depression; these are far reaching situations where our sense of pain or heartbreak is sustained, or worse, feels as though it will suffocate us.
How do we have gratitude on our bad day… or joy when the difficult days have turned into months? Mother Teresa provides us with wisdom that can give us courage in troubling circumstances, or hope in our sorrow, in order to find some joy in our Thanksgiving.
The best way to show my gratitude to God is
to accept everything, even my problems, with joy.
to accept everything, even my problems, with joy.
Mother Teresa taught that what Christ brings us as Christians that the world desperately needs is Joy. According to the scripture and the catechism, Joy is a gift of the Holy Spirit. It is infused into us through God’s grace, it lifts us up enabling us to see beyond the pain and trial of here and now, allowing us to capture a glimpse of the happiness and beauty of what is yet to come. This saintly woman taught that in order for us to do this of course, we must raise our eyes above or beyond what we may be experiencing and look to Christ.
Mother Teresa taught that when we look to Christ, gazing upon him brings us joy. She taught her sisters in Calcutta and the priests that she ministered to there to look at Jesus. See in Him one who knows our every pain and sorrow. See in Him one who has suffered in every way. Finally, see in Him the glory of resurrection and hope which will be ours when we are united with him for eternity. She gave specific focal points to consider that would help us see past trial or trauma. Choosing to visualize Christ, to see certain points in His life brings to our reality graces that will bring us hope and joy because with Him as our focus we discover that we are not alone.
Mother Teresa said that as we look at Christ in the manger, shows us that God is not outside of our experience. Looking to Christ, God Incarnate, is to see the one who knows what we feel. The Jesus we see in our crèche, reminds us that the human endeavor even in its challenges, has value. All of life’s experiences can have value, when surrendered to God, our Father. Even with its unavoidable trials or heart-aches, to be human is worthwhile.
As the God of the Universe, clothes himself in humanity to come and be one of us, he experienced for the first time loss, sorrow, loneliness and isolation. His experience of poverty, sorrow, or exhaustion, could not be felt in the joy and glory of His Fathers presence in heaven. Imagine! In order to relate to us more fully, he chose to become authentically human. He was willing to leave perfection in order to be with us, to share in the joys and the pain of our human experience.
When we look to Christ on the cross, we look at the highest point of the mystery of the incarnation. Christ lays His life, with His claim to power, glory and freedom down and He suffers. Not because he deserved it, not because he had no choice, but out of Love. The prophet Isaiah (Chapter 53) describes what Mother Teresa says we will see when we gaze upon Jesus in his own hardship.
A man of suffering, knowing pain,
Like one from whom you turn your face,spurned,
and we held him in no esteem.
Yet it was our pain that he bore, our sufferings he endured.
We thought of him as stricken, struck down by God and afflicted,
But he was pierced for our sins, crushed for our iniquity.
He bore the punishment that makes us whole, by his wounds we were healed.
His Love for the Father’s Will regarding our salvation, caused him to choose pain and death. Christ was willing to face an angry crowd of judges who would condemn him, torture Him and rob him of his dignity and his very life, for love of us. To offer us eternal salvation, the payment for our sin, He was spurned and avoided by men. But the salvation is for today as well, for as we find ourselves surrounded by hopelessness or pain we discover that he too has been here, and is here. We are not alone.
Finally, She tells us to look at the hope that radiates in the beauty of Christ in His resurrection. His pierced hands out stretched to gather us into His arms, remind us that this pain while perhaps necessary, is not forever. This life gives way to a fuller, more beautiful life that lasts forever. We are on a journey, and though the way is difficult, it is only for a short time and as we look to Him, He will lead us through this dark, and bring us into the radiance of eternity with Him. All of our pain erased, our tears wiped away, our fears forgotten as we live in joy and hope with Him.
Turn your eyes upon Jesus,
Look full in His wonderful face,
And the things of earth will grow strangely dim,
In the light of His glory and grace.
Look full in His wonderful face,
And the things of earth will grow strangely dim,
In the light of His glory and grace.
If we focus on our circumstances, the pain or challenge of life makes gratitude difficult. We can’t accept our situation with Joy, when we think He is being unkind or unfair to us. If we imagine that the ease of others must mean that He must love them more leaves us resentful and sorrowful. So we look to Him as our Hope guiding us through and beyond the hard times as we love and trust Him to see us through.
It is my hope that for most of us our days are more shaped by goodness and blessing, than difficulty and trial. That we find the blessings easy to count, and that Thanksgiving is happy because of all the good that makes up our lives. But in the moments where the circumstances may be more difficult, we will require grace in order to have gratitude. If we are to accept everything, even our problems, with joy then with Mother Teresa, we need to look upon Jesus.