by Randy Hain | December 16, 2024 1:00 am
Sharing the burdens of those around us is vitally important, but so is encouraging them to remain strong in their walk of faith.
In these difficult times, it can be very challenging to think of others and not just ourselves. Our personal struggles often become obstacles to helping our brothers and sisters in Christ. If these words resonate with you, I would like to provide some encouragement to break out of this inward focus and consider our Christian obligation to love and serve one another.
Father Francis Fernandez wrote in In Conversation With God, “Our earnest determination to help others will bring us out of ourselves. It will expand our heart. We cannot excuse ourselves from serving others for lack of time, through fear of becoming involved, or because of worries of one kind or another.”
Much has been written of the earliest Christian communities and how they showed love and charity towards each other. They lived the teachings of Christ in a way that serves as a model for how we can and should live our lives today. Our problems would not seem so great if we could count on the love and help of our brothers and sisters and they, in turn, could count on us. St. Paul wrote in his letter to the Galatians, “Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ” (Gal 6:2).
Sharing the burdens of those around us is vitally important, but so is encouraging them to remain strong in their walk of faith. Often adversity can weaken a person’s relationship with Christ when these very obstacles should bring us closer to Him. He is the Great Comforter to anyone who is struggling. He offers love and a sense of peace to anyone who calls on Him for help. Jesus said, “Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart; and you will find rest for your selves. For my yoke is easy, and my burden light” (Matthew 11:28-30).
I would like to pose a challenge to all of us, myself included, to think carefully about five powerful words which will serve as a catalyst for helping others the way our early Christian predecessors did: seeking, listening, loving, prayer and charity.
We often don’t know the people in our community who need our help. Seeking them out will require us to observe more carefully and show a genuine, deeper interest in other people’s lives. Let’s transform “How are you doing?” from a surface greeting into a sincere desire to truly understand what is going in the lives of our co-workers, friends, family and fellow parishioners. Also, if we are sincere and transparent about our own challenges, we will likely see others feel more comfortable in opening up to us.
Listening is very important. When someone is willing to open up to you, don’t interrupt with solutions right away. As a man, I struggle with this one! I have personally experienced some wonderful conversations with people in need of help who were anxious to unburden themselves to someone who genuinely cared. Listening patiently and just being a friend can be a great source of comfort.
Our loving actions as Christians should always be motivated by a desire to encourage and help others and place their needs before our own. Love also precludes acting in a judgmental way towards others. Reflect on the words of Jesus in John 13:34-35: “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another; even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” In the early days of Christianity, it was observed that Christians set themselves apart by how much they loved each other. Can the same be said of us today?
Praying for others is an absolute necessity. I encourage all of us to make sure we pray daily for those in need of help and that God will work through us to provide that help. I often feel like such a novice at prayer, but I am certain that it is pleasing to God when we pray in earnest for others and their needs.
Charity is the best way to sow good all around us. It is one of the three theological virtues (along with faith and hope). The Catechism says, “The practice of all the virtues is animated and inspired by charity, which ‘binds everything together in perfect harmony’; it is the form of the virtues; it articulates and orders them among themselves; it is the source and the goal of their Christian practice. Charity upholds and purifies our human ability to love, and raises it to the supernatural perfection of divine love.” (CCC ¶1827)
As important as it is to reach out to those we see every day, it is just as important to reach out to the countless jobless, hungry, homeless, addicted, abused and faithless people who don’t live in our neighborhood, work with us or attend our parish. Giving money is important, but showing up to help is an even more priceless gift-not only to the recipient of our generosity, but to us as well. To that end, I would like to challenge all of us to sincerely attempt these 10 actions as we celebrate Advent and Christmas this year:
We should be preparing our hearts and minds for the birth of Christ. Do not succumb to the retail and media fueled materialism that is so rampant today. Buying things we can’t afford will only bring short lived happiness and more debt! Let’s all keep it simple this year: make the holidays about Christ, spend time with family and friends and absolutely expand our hearts by helping those in need wherever we may find them. In the end, the help we provide to others becomes a grace filled gift…to us.
Image credit: Photo by Rineshkumar Ghirao[1] on Unsplash[2]
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