by Fr. Thomas Hopko –
Our hearts are made for God, St. Augustine has said, and we will be forever restless until we rest in Him.
People feel unhappy and they don’t know why. They feel that something is wrong, but they can’t put their finger on what it is.They feel uneasy in the world, confused and frustrated, alienated and estranged, and they can’t explain it.
They have everything, and yet they want more. And when they get it, they are still left empty and dissatisfied. They want happiness and peace, and nothing seems to bring it. They want fulfillment, and it never seems to come. Everything is fine, and yet everything is wrong.
In America this is almost a national disease. It is covered over by frantic activity and endless running around. It is buried in activities and events. It is drowned out by television programs and games.
And when the movement stops and the dial is turned off and everything is quiet…then the dread sets in, and the meaninglessness of it all, and the boredom, and the fear.
Why is this so? Because, the Church tell us, we are really not at home. We are in exile. We are alienated and estranged from our true country. We are not with God our Father in the land of the living. We are spiritually sick. And some of us are already dead.
Our hearts are made for God, St. Augustine has said, and we will be forever restless until we rest in Him. Our lives are made for God, and we will be unfulfilled and dissatisfied and frustrated until we go to Him.
All of God’s creatures, as Francis Thompson said in his poem The Hound of Heaven, are His “loyal betrayers.” They do not satisfy His children and cannot bring them peace. He alone can do that, because He alone is our home. And we are His.
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Excerpts from the book The Lenten Spring by Fr. Thomas Hopko. (Minor organizational edits to optimize readability and emphasize key points made by Chris Banescu.)