Too often, in the hustle and bustle of to-do items to be crossed off,
projects completed, and calendar spaces to be filled, I can miss the Holy
humming quietly in my life. For the last
week and a half, I have invited you to listen to your life for the holy
mystery/symphony/unfolding and unfinished story it is. As Karl Rahner wrote, "In the torment of
the insufficiency of everything attainable, we come to realize that, in this
life, all symphonies must remain unfinished." Pause with me. Re-read that quote, both its rough edges and
beautiful invitations. Rahner reminds us
that life has a quality of feeling like not enough or that there is more to
life that we are not tasting, seeing, or experiencing. The insufficiency Rahner writes about is the
constant desiring of more, and this can leave us with the frustrating
incompleteness of what is. You buy a
pair of shoes you love, only to find another pair you love more on sale the
next time you are at the store. You go on
a retreat, there in that place, you have what you think is a life-changing
experience, only four months later, to fall back into the ruts and routines of
life before you went. The
not-enough-ness of our lives is what marketing and social media and streaming
platforms bank on. We are continually shown
new products being rolled out, and we are being rolled over by the steady
stream of more/more/more every day. The
market is flooded not only politically, but also in our consumeristic culture.
Okay, philosophical soapbox sermon over.
(I hear your sigh of relief). My
point is that your holy summer homework project of listening to your shy soul
sing might feel like one more thing to do.
I pray it isn’t. Today, I encourage
you to breathe in the beauty of God, who is still authoring your story. The beauty of stars that shine in the deepest
ink-spilled night skies. The beauty of
places where the dust beneath the soles of your feet has sunk into your soul. The beauty of people who linger in your
imagination, even if their presence is to remind you what you don’t want to
be. Look at what you have on the paper
before you. Rectangles drawn with places
named. Circles of people who included
you, embraced and enfolded you, and perhaps people who have heartbreakingly
excluded you. You’ve added stars of
moments and memories that left dust in your life. Your masterpiece of life doesn’t need to be
finished and handed in for a grade, although I would love to talk to you about
what you are discovering or discerning in listening to your life. Today, sit quietly with the incompleteness of
what you’ve done so far, especially if you have had to cross things out or
scribble over names or add one more star to an already cramped and crowded
space. Your life doesn’t need to be a
Picasso-winning art; rather, your life is the beautiful unfinished symphony of
God. Amen.



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