The Holy Martyrs Menas, Victor and Vincent (138-61); Our Venerable Father and Confessor Theodore the Studite (826)
Read
1 Thessalonians 1:1-5; Luke 10:22-24
Verses preceding today’s Gospel tell us of a prerequisite for reception of divine revelation. Jesus calls his disciples and us “childlike”: “Although you have hidden these things from the wise and the learned you have revealed them to the childlike.” How so? Children don’t know how to dissemble, how to be one way and act another. “Kids say the darnedest things,” because they don’t know how to hide the truth of their reactions.
In this, they are like stars or flowers or animals, things that are what they are, unambiguously. The challenge of the spiritual life is to realize what God wants us to be and thereby come to the same simplicity and directness in our existence, to find out what is in line with the deepest grain of our being.
Let me put this another way: children haven’t yet learned how to look at themselves. Why can a child immerse himself so eagerly and thoroughly in what he is doing? Because he can lose himself; because he is not looking at himself, conscious of the reactions, expectations, and approval of those around him. The best moments in life occur when we lose the ego, lose ourselves in the world, and just are as God wants us to be.