One conga drum,
simply to keep time or to spice up the trap drum set with well placed conga
tones, delivered with a bit of creativity, indeed, will suffice.
But what beauty and depth is brought to the performance with
the addition of three more conga drums, each tuned up or down from the one
primary, wood drum, the conga. A stage set-up with four, individually tuned conga
drums, shakers, tambourines, and bells played in some order, sometimes more,
sometimes less, never overbearing, works to magnify the intensity of
"spice" a percussionist adds to an ensemble or rock group.
Everything can be
gained by praying and worshiping Jesus Christ alone, though God Himself is a
Trinity, a great spiraling and swirling love affair between a Father, a Son,
and a Holy Spirit. We learn to pray to
God through his Son, Jesus Christ.
For Catholic
believers, there's also an extra dimension if you will; beauty, efficacy, and
consolation in thinking about all the other characters and creation of the
great story of our salvation, especially Mary, the mother of God, all the
angels, and those human beings throughout history behind the growth of
Christianity, many even dying for the Christian faith, the saints.
The more I study and
adore the life of Jesus Christ the man, God having become human flesh, the more
apt I become in trying to imitate the 24/7 of his sacred humanity. Inevitably this means recognizing as a fact
Jesus Christ, from the very first day of his life on earth, interacted with and
loved ALL of his creation, but beyond measure, loved especially human kind in
ALL of its dimensions. Jesus prayed to
the Father every chance he had but he also interacted with ALL of creation to
teach, pray, and make known the Kingdom of God.
The Bible account of
Jesus' birth illustrates this grandly.
Mother Mary, Saint Joseph and the Holy family have a Son, Jesus Christ
born in a manger with a donkey, a cow, and a host of visitors from poor
shepherds to rich and generous Kings. In our own families we have a mother, a father, brothers, and
sisters. ALL there to love and to ask
things. A family might even bring in a
dog to love or a cat to love. Oh, don't
forget about one's uncles, aunts, cousins and best friends; you can love and
ask them things too. Ask what? How do I look today? Can I borrow some money? Will you cook me something? How does this sound? Can we visit? Will you pray
for me? Just like Jesus did, the One all
Christians are called to imitate.
And there's
more. We learn about (and try to
imitate) the great love for and obedience Jesus showed his mother and his
friends growing up into adulthood. We
witness the help his apostles gave him, we witness the intercessory pleas he
responded to from people representing other people who couldn't quite reach
him. We see his love and concern for
family members of the deceased.
I'm telling you,
Jesus, in all of his sacred humanity, just wouldn't be satisfied with one
wooden conga!
Fast forward. Creation, His and ours, speaks of diversity
too. We have incredible choices of foods, wines, paintings, music, careers,
automobiles, and homes to enjoy. Many
different houses of worship too: the Lutherans on the corner, the Methodists
down the road, the Baptists across town, the Catholics downtown, etc., ALL
having a fervent devotion to Jesus Christ.
And many more, ALL worshiping a transcendental God. And still more, All believing in multiple
gods, and another group, All believing in no god what-so-ever.
There's not just one
bird, one cat; but scores and scores of bird species and house-cats, bobcats,
cheetahs, leopards, lions, tigers, jaguars, etc.
Creation shouts
loudly regarding depth and diversity and God calls it ALL good.
I feel the tide of
finger pointing and cries of "relativist" beginning to descend upon
me and so I will remind the reader once again our primary Christian goal, the
caveat: the imitation of Christ.
I believe we all
benefit when we can contemplate ALL of Christ, using our God given imagination,
imploring the Holy Spirit, the traditions of our fathers, the Bible, church
teaching, etc. Coming to know ALL
dimensions of Jesus Christ's sacred humanity rather than merely confining one's
perspective to something sterile and wooden, perhaps defined by a view narrowly
drawn from a strictly literal interpretation of the Bible. It's like playing one wooden conga instead of
four melodic conga drums, beautifully tuned, played proportionately and at
proper volume levels. Sure, it can be
done, even to some benefit and profit, when space constraints exist, but
there's a cost in beauty and depth.
Diversity magnifies
the Lord, Mother Mary tells us: My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in
God my Savior. (Luke 1:44)
"The
virtue of humility, so evident in Our Lady's life, is truth, (cf St. Teresa of
Avila, Sixth Mansion, ch 106) the true recognition of what we are and are worth
in the eyes of God and of our fellow men.
It is also an emptying of ourselves to allow God to work in us with his
grace. It is the rejection of appearances and
of superficiality; it is the expression of the depth of the human spirit; it is
a condition for its greatness (John Paul II, Angelus, 4 March 1979).
….[W]e come before God as debtors who do
not know how to discharge our debts, (cf Matt 18:23-35) and for this
reason we go to Mary as the Mediatrix of all graces, to the Mother of mercy and
tenderness to whom no one has had recourse in vain." (In Conversation with God, Volume One, Advent
and Christmastide, Francis Fernandez)
God isn't
myopic. We discover great diversity in
this, the whole entire economy of salvation that God has revealed to us: in
tradition, in scripture, and in nature.
"The written law kills, but the Spirit gives life" says St.
Paul in his letter to the Corinthians (2 Corinthians 3:6). "The letter kills." repeats St.
Ambrose "it is the Spirit which gives life" a spiritual a reflection
of reality, of what is observed all around us.
Yes, one can play
with just one wooden conga but the voices, the melodic possibilities off all
four played together is much more pleasing and robust. I'll make the extra work to show up with all
four drums any day. Real life is much
more interesting, full of depth, meaning, and unfathomable diversity,
accordingly, this is the way God created it.
Following the real
life of Jesus Christ, shouldn't our faith and prayer life be equally deep and
robust?
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