It’s all about friendship with God
Monday, April 10, 2023
*Emily Chaffins
One afternoon, I was one of many people sitting in the adoration chapel. Truth be told, I was not trying very hard to fight off distractions. Glancing at the wall clock, I wondered how on earth I was going to make it through the hour.
Just then, my attention was drawn to a little boy beside his mother on the front kneeler, close to Jesus in the Eucharist. I watched as he reached for a paper from the stack lying atop the intentions box and grabbed a pen.
What he did next floored me. He drew hearts all over the page and placed the paper inside the intentions box.
J.R.R. Tolkien, author of The Lord of the Rings books, said that the Eucharist was “the one great thing to love on earth.”
Jesus is here in the tabernacles and adoration chapels of Miami. But I’m sure I’m not alone in taking this for granted much of the time.
The key is awakening the wonder. When we understand with our hearts as well as our heads that Jesus is here with us, then we’ll see life as an adventure – an epic story of friendship with God.
How can we rediscover, or perhaps discover for the first time, the wonder of the Eucharist?
First, let’s look at prayer through heaven’s perspective. Did you know that Jesus sees talking with you as a hangout? Jesus told Gabrielle Bossis, an ordinary Frenchwoman who heard Jesus speaking to her, “Keep me company more and more. You can never know what it means to me to be treated as an intimate friend. It is so rare. I delight in this as a human being.” (Bossis, Gabrielle. “He and I.” Translated and condensed by Evelyn M. Brown, Pauline Books & Media, 2013.)
It’s all about friendship with God – and, as with any friendship, you have to commit. God never stops being friends with you. He loves you the same, whether you are making choices that bring you closer or farther from him. If you aren’t talking with God, though, how can you grow in love for him?
We don’t always feel like going to adoration. And we shouldn’t feel bad if we feel this way. It doesn’t mean we’re doing something wrong. Just persevere in going.
Years ago, when I saw the boy drawing hearts on the paper for Jesus, I was moved to the core. Here was this little boy who was simply being with Jesus. He placed his heart inside that intention box. In bringing his heart, he brought his whole life and the lives of others to God – even the life of a stranger.
Jesus told Gabrielle Bossis: “For some I am unknown. For others, a stranger, a severe master, or an accuser. Few people come to me as to one of a loved family. And yet my love is there, waiting for them. So tell them to come, to enter in, to give themselves up to love just as they are... I’ll restore. I’ll transform them. And they will know a joy they have never known before. I alone can give that joy.”
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