Always rejoice, pray, and give thanks.

Advent III
In his First Letter to the Thessalonians, St. Paul exhorts Christians to be people who always rejoice, always pray, and always give thanks.  How in the world does one go about living such a life?  It is a very important question to ponder since, as St. Paul says, it is God's will for us.

To rejoice does not mean simply to adopt a positive attitude, cheer up, or have a nice disposition.  To rejoice means to be centered in the joy that comes from having been joined to Christ in the waters of Baptism and thus in his ultimate victory.  That joy in our lives is born of the awareness that no darkness can ever overcome the Light to whom we belong.  In every circumstance, this is all the reason we need to rejoice!

To pray without ceasing does not mean to spend our days on our knees with our nose in the Book of Common Prayer.  Prayer on our knees, alone or together, using the prayer book is an essential part of the life we are called to live.  Those prayers are extended as we grow in conscious contact with God during our routine daily activities.  Brother Lawrence called it "practicing the presence of God."  In this conscious, constant dialogue with the Divine, our offering of all that we see, do, and think encounters God who is constantly giving himself to us.  God is with us.  We are never alone.  In every circumstance, this is all the reason we need to pray!

To give thanks in all circumstances does not mean to give thanks FOR all circumstances.  Not every circumstance is a cause for thanksgiving.  Many circumstances are not God's doing.  But no circumstance is beyond God's reach.  When we know that, we look more carefully to discern God's hand at work for good, God's power at work to overcome evil, God's mercy at work to heal and transform.  What we see is not all that is there and gratitude opens our eyes to see what God wants us to see.  In every circumstance, this all the reason we need to give thanks!

So, rejoicing, praying, and giving thanks always are expressions of a life that is conscious of God and conscious of the circumstances in which we live our lives moment by moment, breath by breath.  This is an especially helpful insight at this particular time on Galveston Island in the wake of  Hurricane Ike.  The other day, someone observed that life here right now in these circumstances is an emotional roller coaster.  One day, you make a little progress toward normalcy; the next day you have a setback.  St. Paul's exhortation to always rejoice, pray, and give thanks grounds us and centers us in a normalcy that can't be conquered by the ups and downs of life. 

The truth is, the more we rejoice, pray, and give thanks, the more conscious we are of the presence and power of God at work in us leading us through the present with all its ups and downs and into a hope-filled future.  For it is not the divine will for us to draw life from the circumstances, up or down, but from our relationship with God, the Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer of all life.  Even now during these days of Advent, God is coming to us in power and might to make of us more than we can make of ourselves.  In every circumstance, that is all the reason we need to rejoice, pray, and give thanks!

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