“In my distress, I called upon the Lord, and he heard my voice.” Distress is defined as extreme anxiety, sorrow, or pain in some dictionary excerpts. Human life encounters distress throughout the experience that we engage while on earth, and the Lord knows that we must be ready and fully equipped to face whatever we must to grow and become a new creation in Christ. In fact, in a very poignant and real way, it is the only way we will become transformed into that new existence.
“Jesus answered them, ‘I have shown you many good works from my Father. For which of these are you trying to stone me?'” However, not a small number of people do not accept the call of grace to see things in life with the eyes of faith and then, in turn, blame God for every ill and problem under the sun. Because of spiritual blindness and a faithless approach to reality, they seem to attack God just as Jesus was in today’s Gospel. Our stance, especially throughout these days of the Lenten Journey, must be entirely different: “Sing to the LORD, praise the LORD, For he has rescued the life of the poor from the power of the wicked!” Imagine singing to God when life is hard and burdensome. Yet, that is exactly the remedy!
“Tell your heart that the fear of suffering is worse than the suffering itself. And that no heart has ever suffered when it goes in search of its dreams, because every second of the search is a second’s encounter with God and with eternity.” Paulo Coelho