Beholding Wonder
(Reflected Morning by János Kerekes/Flickr) |
“Any kind of hectic activity, even in religious affairs, is
utterly alien to the New Testament picture of man. We always overestimate
ourselves when we imagine we are completely indispensable and that the world or
the Church depends on our frantic activity. Often it will be an act of real
humility and creaturely honesty to stop what we are doing, to acknowledge our
limits, to take time to draw breath and rest—as the creature, man, is designed
to do. I am not suggesting that sloth is a good thing, but I do want to suggest
that we revise our catalog of virtue, as it has developed in the Western world,
where activity alone is regarded as valid and where the attitudes of beholding,
wonder, recollection and quiet are of no account, or at least are felt to need
some justification. This causes the atrophy of certain essential human
faculties.”
~Joseph Ratzinger (Benedict XVI)
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