“All Christian life is meant to be at the same time profoundly contemplative and rich in active work. . . .It is true that we are called to create a better world. But we first of all are called to a more immediate and more exalted task: that of creating our own lives. In doing this, we act as co-workers with God. We take our place in the great work of mankind, since in effect the creation of our own destiny, in God, is impossible in pure isolation. Each one of us work out his own destiny in inseparable union with all those others with whom God has willed us to live. We share with one another the creative work of living in the world. And it is through our struggle with material reality, with nature, that we help one another create at the same time our own destiny and a new world for our descendants. This work of man, which is his peculiar and inescapable vocation, is a prolongation of the creative work of God Himself. Failure to measure up to this challenge and to meet this creative responsibility is to fail in that response to life which is required of us by the will of our Father and Creator. . . . This active response, this fidelity to life itself and to God Who gives Himself to us through our daily contacts with the material world, is the first and most essential duty of man.“
Thomas Merton. Love and Living. Naomi Burton Stone and Brother Patrick Hart, editors. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1979: 159.
emphasis mine


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July 29, 2008 at 9:14 am
Tomas
While reading your post, I understood I am a sinner- my mournings were my disobedience to God. If I would live in far medieval times, I would be dead already many years ago, but current medicine makes the miracles – the disabled are forced to wait for the meeting with their heavenly Father for a long and many fail the test. I too forgot that my active response is living in gratitude and step in the world of the healthy where the problems were much harder then I could bear. These confusions reminded me my place and … dear Helen, Thank you for the glimpse into the life of those who live and can to do much more than just to muse what it would be if I would be not I but … what is it?
July 29, 2008 at 12:27 pm
helenl
Hi Tomas, Glad you dropped by and that you liked Merton’s words.