As you know I often ask questions when I'm preaching.
Maybe it's because I have more questions than answers,
but I have been thinking about one question recently and
it touches on some of the thoughts our bishop mentioned
while he was here. Here is the question: How good do I
want to be? It's not a question that I particularly
like, nor is it a question that I have finally answered.
How good do I want to be? I know that the answer should
be that I want to be as good as good can be, but I'm not
so sure that would be an honest answer for me. Probably
the honest answer is that I want to be good enough.
Good enough that I don't think I'm a bad person. Good
enough so that at least some people like me and there
aren't too many people who hate me. Good enough so that
I can walk through life without feeling a sense of shame
or inferiority, at least most of the time. Good enough
so that I can do some good for other people. Good enough
so that I don't end up in jail, at least not so far. I
know that it would be best to want to be as good as good
can be, as good as I can possibly be, but I do think I'm
willing to settle most of the time, for good enough.
I don't find myself constantly striving to seek after
virtue, or excellence, or holiness or a life that is
thoroughly and completely saturated with faith. I mean
there are times when I'm very willing to have a life
like that, but they don't come very often and then don't
last very long. Why is that? I cannot say for sure, with
100% accuracy, but as I was asking myself that question,
there are some reasons I am certain are true. There is a
cost to being as good as good can be, and that is to
completely surrender yourself to God. Now in theory,
that sounds great, because why wouldn't you want your
life to be completely in God's hands? But in practice,
in actual life, that would mean having complete and
utter trust in God that my life would be good, and it's
hard to have that kind of faith. It's so much easier to
believe that if I keep control, things will turn out
better. I realize that is kind of stupid: "God is in
charge or I am in charge, which one should I pick?" But
that's a weakness for sure. "I want God to be in charge
as long as it goes my way," is not a very convincing
sort of faith.
And I guess I'm afraid because you never know what God
might ask you to do, and it might be something hard,
difficult, unpleasant, painful, something you would not
want to do or you would not choose for yourself. Like,
what if God asked me to become a priest? Oh wait, that
already happened. But what if God wants me to be a
generous, holy, self-sacrificing, ascetical,
super-prayerful, fearless and fully-faithful kind of
priest? Ooooh—doesn't that sound kind of hard and that
it would take a lot of effort and energy and dedication?
It seems it would not be that comfortable a life. What's
wrong with, "good enough?" I mean, it's still good,
isn't it?
Another thought I had was that it is probably impossible
for me to be as good as good can be because I'm just not
built for it. I'll never play in the NBA, I'll never be
the smartest man in Springfield or the greatest preacher
on Aspen St. I understand and accept that even if I had
a lot of passion and even if it was everything I ever
lived for, and even if I thought I was born to do it, I
accept that I will never be crowned the next "American
Idol," I will never win a Gold Medal in the Olympics,
and I will never receive an Academy Award. In a similar
way, I tend to think that I just could never be that
good, so why bother to try? Besides, what if people
thought I was a religious fanatic or something?
Yet I have to say that today's Gospel also gets me
thinking. There were only five loaves of bread and two
fish. That's all the apostles had. Five loaves and two
fish on the one hand, and well over 5,000 people to be
fed on the other hand, but when all is said and done,
Jesus took the little bit that the apostles had and He
allowed them to feed the multitude. They weren't
especially built for greatness, nor for goodness, same
as me, but there came a day, through their sticking with
the Lord, that they were even willing to be as good as
good can be, even willing to give up their lives as a
witness to the truth of Christ our Lord. So, I'm
thinking there is still hope for me to find a way to
want to be truly good, rather than good enough. I'm
thinking it can still happen if I stick with it and do
my part, or keep working on doing my part. If the Lord
can do so much with so very little, surely there is hope
for me too, if I stick with Him. It’s never about how
good I am in comparison to other people, but how well I
live up to the good that Christ calls me to be, the good
that I was created to live in. Good enough is never
really good enough. Not for me. Not for you.
Since I have found it to be a helpful question for me,
I'm thinking it might also be a good question for you:
How good do you want to be?