“Worry is like praying for what you don't want.” - Unknown
I once saw a cartoon entitled, "mastery" that showed a man standing in the middle of a one-way street, cars whizzing past him, while he pointed in the direction that the traffic was moving. A bystander provided the caption that read, "He even controls the flow of the traffic!"
The enlightened ones are the ones who point in the direction that life moves, and in the absence of resistance discover ease and grace in the way things are. The rest of us make a stand against the flow of life, argue for what should be happening, and are run over or run through by the isness of life that we oppose.
We may know better, but we resist this wisdom. We find it hard to go with the flow and trust in this world. No matter how many admonitions and parables exhorting the value of the path of least resistance, never mind the track marks evidencing the consequences of standing against the flow, somehow our faith fails to assure us that the universe will operate without our control.
Jesus had a lot to worry about in his time, and yet he advocated, "Do not worry." I doubt Jesus had a healthy pension, or even a stocked pantry, and we know he had some serious enemies. He had some credible reasons to worry, but he did not worry. How was he able to respond to the lack of outer assurances with confidence, ease, and grace? Answer: He had a big Trust fund. He truly knew the Source of his well-being and found true security in the invisible and very real Spirit of life within him. He was identified with an indwelling Father, who knew his needs before he asked and whose pleasure it was to fulfill them.
Jesus was not in denial about the difficulties of life, and we know he had his preferences (remember the Gethsemane cup moment) but he could see beyond the appearances, and trusted more in the Greater Good than his personal will. He could see beyond a fallow field, to a harvest; beyond evil ways to calls for love; beyond death to life eternal.
You and I have the same indwelling Father to rely upon. Jesus did not have a bigger God than we do. He had a bigger faith, a bigger trust fund. The potential for us to live in trust is equal to Jesus. We can begin in small ways to release the opposition in us, to relax and let go in small things. As we let go of the wheel and discover how a GPS (God Positioning System) works (independent of us) in the minor excursions through life, we will begin to build trust for the major journeys.
As every farmer knows, the real magic in the field is beyond his control. He can plant the seed, but the earth bestows. There is a Life force that conspires for our good; that knows what makes us grow, thrive, and prosper. The more we can trust it to work through our lives the more we will witness the ease and grace of life flowing through us. This is the path of mastery.
With you in the trusting and the knowing,
Larry
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