I knew a priest one time who was rather unusual. He
loved to take all the church services and he knew every
detail of Matins, Vespers and Divine Liturgy, every
rubric, every rule for any occasion. He could tell you
what to do if Annunciation falls on Easter during a
solar eclipse, when the pope is in town and you only
have two sub-deacons. He was great at all that stuff. He
was also good with visiting the sick and with people at
funerals. But other than those qualities he didn’t seem
to have any idea of how to be a real pastor, or how to
run a parish. Things that nearly all priests understand
as being part of the job of being a pastor didn’t seem
to register with him. He simply couldn’t see how his
actions, and often his lack of action was crippling his
parish. He couldn’t see how badly he was failing. One
person said, “It’s like he lives in his own world and
that is the only reality he can acknowledge.” And I
thought that was a very accurate way of describing the
situation. He lived in his own world. He couldn’t see or
understand the real world, because then he would have
realized how badly he was serving his parish.
But lately I have come to think that I too am living in
my own world. It’s a world that I have created, the
world in which I live my life. This world is not the
result of mental illness (or at least two of my three
psychiatrists would agree with that.) It’s not totally
disconnected from the real world. I shop at Costco and
pay my taxes. Yet, it’s not a world that corresponds to
reality 100%.
In my world Christ is King, but not all the time. There
are times when my rules, my decisions, my desires win
out over what the King would like me to do, which I
guess then makes me the king of my world when I chose it
to be so. But that doesn’t correspond to reality. How
can there be two kings? But I think I can make it work.
In my world I sometimes live as though this is all there
is. As though this current physical reality, people,
places, things, is the sum of my existence. Yes, I know
there is a heaven, that there is a spiritual existence,
that I have a soul created by God Who has no beginning
and will never have an ending. I know I have an
invitation to eternal happiness. But right here, right
now, this world, these people, these things—they can
just seem so much more important than the things you
cannot eat, or drink, or wear, or touch, or use for my
own satisfaction. The world I can manipulate, or try to
manipulate, seems so preferable to the world I should
surrender myself to. So I am often more motivated by the
limited, physical, ever-changing and double-dealing
world than I am by the promise of the Kingdom of God.
Does that sound a little crazy? Welcome to my world.
In my world it can be difficult to find time to pray,
but easy to find time for entertainment. I am shocked,
on a regular basis, by the bad actions of other people,
but find it rather easy to forgive myself. Indeed, it’s
not hard to see the faults in other people. I’ve
practiced judging other people all my life and that’s
why I am so good at it. And speaking of good, I often
want to do what is good and even to be good, but I am so
very tempted by the power of “good enough for now” and
“good enough for me” that I convince myself that truly
being good is a goal I can never achieve, so why bother
trying?
In my world I am, for the most part, just a normal
person, and so I am afraid to put my life more
completely in God’s hands because He would push me out
of the range of “normal person” to a place where I’m not
sure what might happen. So I resist, because I’m afraid.
I can be more obedient to my fears than I am to my God,
Who offers me nothing but His love.
And what about death in my world? What does it tell me
about life? MY life? There is the world that does not
care much about the Resurrection. Not concerned with
Christ’s victory over death. Not looking forward to that
same resurrection with any hope or confidence. Not
paying much attention to the One who conquered death.
And yet, at the same time, so fearful of death that it
pushes it out of its conscious thoughts and lives just
for today in a way that suggests endless tomorrows.
There is that world, and it’s all around us. It is easy
to conform to that way of living, to embrace the style
of life that the so called “normal world” expects us to
choose. If everybody is living like that, how can it be
wrong?
My friends, I confess I am spiritually schizophrenic. In
Greek “schizophrenia” literally means “having two minds”
or having a “split mind” and that’s how I often find
myself. Split between two worlds: my own world and the
real world. Christ calls me to the real world, where He
is King and the Conqueror over the power of death. He
calls me to the real world where He invites me to be
with Him, and His Heavenly Father, and the Holy Spirit.
He calls me to the real world, the only place where my
soul can truly find rest, and not just for today but for
eternity. He calls me to the real world where His love
forgives sins and grants life to all who seek it.
Today is the opportunity to move past the border of my
own world and live more deeply in the beauty of the real
world, where people truly rejoice to say, “Christ is
risen!”