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Wasting Your Life for God

Wasting Your Life for God

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This powerful and moving conference addresses the spiritual fatigue and mediocrity that can settle into a person's life. Bishop Sheen presents a compelling argument that the path to renewed spiritual energy and deep fulfillment lies not in self-preservation, but in the seemingly paradoxical act of "wasting" one's life for God. For anyone who feels their love and service has become calculated or lukewarm, this talk offers a liberating invitation to embrace a life of total, uncalculated, and joyful self-giving, revealing that it is only in losing our lives that we truly find them.

Sheen begins by diagnosing a spiritual apathy in the modern world, where people carefully measure out their love and service, a condition the Middle Ages called acedia. He contrasts this timid approach with the "divine waste" exemplified by key figures in scripture and history. He reflects on the woman who broke her alabaster jar to anoint Jesus, an act Judas condemned as "waste" but which Christ defended as a "beautiful thing." This, Sheen explains, is the logic of love, which does not count the cost. He further illustrates this with the powerful story of King David, who, upon receiving water fetched at the risk of his men's lives, poured it out as an offering to God, deeming it too precious to drink.

Ultimately, Bishop Sheen's message is a passionate plea to escape the "barnyard" of a safe and mediocre existence. Citing a poem about a "tame old duck" that has forgotten how to fly, he warns that a life held in reserve is a life that loses its purpose and vitality. The sermon is a profound call to reject a faith of minimal investment and instead embrace the "ecstasy of surrender." By pouring ourselves out completely in love and service—wasting our time in prayer, our energy in charity, and our hearts in love for God—we participate in the beautiful and life-giving logic of the Cross.

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