Saints alive

We tend to place saints on a pedestal as paragons of virtue way beyond the rest of us, whereas in fact all of us, saints as well as common mortals, begin as a mass of imperfections which gradually we weave into a whole, becoming ever more integrated as human beings.

A perfect example is Dorothy Day. After much promiscuity and drifting in her early life she went on to found the Catholic Worker Movement, setting up houses all across America where members could live for free, and providing services for drop-outs, alcoholics and vagrant people. In this way she put into practice Jesus’ command to love her neighbour as herself, and became fully realised as an individual in the process.

Holiness is wholeness.

Dorothy Day (Milwaukee 1968), Jim Forest via Flickr

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The pearl of great price

Jesus speaks of ‘the pearl of great price’ and exhorts us to seek it. We do not, however, find it through obedience to a prescribed set of ethics: ‘Do this. Don’t do that.’ Rather, we are called to be free, and freedom involves discovery. Each of us is a unique person and our task is to fulfil our particular destiny. We can only do this through suffering and joy, disillusion and fulfilment. Thus we find the pearl of great price and learn that the kingdom of heaven lies within us. At the end of our lives we should be able to say, like Jesus, ‘Abba, I have done the work which you gave me to do.’

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