Saturday, October 3, 2020
Out of Our Comfort Zone
It is human nature to avoid or reject anything which challenges us to move out of our comfort zone. We may want to eliminate from our lives anything which makes us re-think an idea, an issue, or a long-held perception of a person. We may want to circumvent any conflict or idea that challenges the status quo or asks us to open our minds to a new concept. Peter tells us clearly that suffering can actually be good for us when we suffer according to God’s will – not according to some trial we create for ourselves out of our own stubbornness, pride or envy.
In our prayer time this weekend we might want to examine our desire to remain comfortable to determine if our trials are truly in line with Peter’s idea in verse 19: those who suffer in accord with God’s will hand their souls over to a faithful creator as they do good.
From this morning’s Liturgy of the Hours in MAGNIFICAT: God’s faithful constancy is an anchor in an ever-shifting world, where love declared today is spurned tomorrow, and all other certainties are blown away by the wind. In the end, God is all there is and all there need be.
May we find fidelity as the keystone of our relationship with our faithful creator.
May we remain constant even as we learn to shift ourselves out of our comfort zones.
May we do good today and every day as we hand our souls over to the will of God in accordance with the covenant we hold together.
Cameron, Peter John. “Prayer for the Morning.” MAGNIFICAT.14.3 (2007). Print.
A re-post from October 5, 2013 and adapted from a reflection written on March 14, 2007.
Enter the word suffering into the blog search bar and spend some time with the concept of suffering.
The quote in the image above is credited to Neale Donald Walsch, the author of the “Conversations with God” series. The image is from Breathe Out.com at: http://www.breathe-out.com/?p=306
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