Let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your heavenly Father. Matthew 5:16

We are all familiar with a refrain that echoes through many of our Christian prayers and songs, an antiphon of hope addressed to God:  Grant that we may be one with all the saints in singing your praises! But we have an over-pious notion of what that would look like. We picture ourselves spending eternity feeling grateful for having made a team whose talent level should have excluded us. But that is a fantasy, pure and simple, mostly simple.

We are one with the saints in singing God’s praises when we are one with them in the way we live our lives; when, like them, our lives are transparent, honest, grounded in personal integrity, with no skeletons in our closet.

We are one with the saints in singing God’s praises when we radiate God’s wide compassion; when we, like God, let our love embrace beyond race, creed, gender, religion, ideology, and differences of every kind. 

We are one with the saints in singing God’s praises when we tend to “widows, orphans, and strangers’, when we reach out to those most vulnerable, when we feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, visit the sick and imprisoned, when we work for justice.

We are one with the saints in singing God’s praises when we live in hope, when we ground our vision and our energies in the promise of God and in the power that God revealed in the resurrection of Jesus.

We are one with the saints in singing God’s praises when, rather than living inside of envy, resentment, bitterness, vengeance, impatience, anger, factionalism, idolatry, and sexual impatience, we live instead inside charity, joy, peace, patience, goodness, long-suffering, fidelity, mildness, and chastity.

We are one with the saints in singing God’s praises only when we live our lives as they lived theirs. [Excerpt from Ron Rolheiser’s “On Being One With the Saints in Praising God” March 2010]

Author: DV Dan

A lifelong seeker of truth and oneness with God, Daniel has journeyed through the rich and varied landscape of Christian denominations in search of a deeper understanding of what it truly means to be one with Christ. This search has been one of both heart and intellect—guided by a desire to know Christ more deeply and to live in communion with Him. Through a transformative study of the Gospel of John, particularly Chapter Six, which illuminated the mystery of the Paschal Sacrifice of Christ and revealed its living expression in the Catholic Church’s liturgical celebration of the Holy Eucharist, led to his movement from decades of Evangelical Christianity to full communion with the Catholic Church, where faith and worship converge in the sacrament of the altar. Daniel holds a Master’s Degree in Theological Studies from the University of Dallas.

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