Graduations abound at the moment. Tonight is our 8th grade
graduation. It is the culmination of the
all of the years that the students have spent within the walls of St. Sebastian
Parish School. We write it all down on a
piece of paper and hand it to them.
Basically it says that we have given them all we’ve got, they completed
it satisfactorily, and now they don’t need this educational institution
anymore. It’s time for them to move on.
Graduation does not exist in the religious realm though
sometimes it seems as though it does.
For example, a student will spend eight or more years in our programs
learning about the faith at the end of which there is a grand ceremony at which
they are confirmed and there is a party.
It kinda feels as though you are graduating from that program and now
you are done with the course of studies.
But to think that way would be a tragedy. It would be a tragedy in this way: Two people fall in love. They learn about each other. They woo each other. (Is that really the way woo is spelled?) There is a proposal, a marriage ceremony, and
a grand party. Are they done? Now that the couple has achieved marriage
does that mean that the leaning, wooing, and growing love are now over? Absolutely not. Neither is it that when one is baptized,
eucharized, or confirmarized (I made that up) is one done learning about,
growing in, praying to, or being in the service of God. It is not a completed course of studies from
which you move on, it is a way of life into which you enter and are trusted to
keep growing more deeply in love.
You can graduate from a collected body of knowledge, you
cannot graduate from a relationship with God.
Go forth in Christ.
1 comment:
Oh, that’s right dear. I completely agree with you. I just completed my graduation and threw a stunning graduation party at the local party rental halls in Philadelphia. It was a glorious event where all my college friends and family gathered together.
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