God is Watching

Aside

God Is Watching

With a disgruntled look on her face, the sister observed, “Mom knows everything; she is always watching us. She knew that I have been seeing Johnny.” Her brother defensively declared, “I did not tell her.” The sister replied, “I know, I know, but how she knew is bewildering. Johnny and I were so careful about the meeting places we selected.” Her brother commented, “Mom must have eyes in the back of her head and a special intuition. She confronted me about the amount of time I have been spending playing the video games and searching the Internet. She even knew that I was not using the Internet for class activities. Mom is always watching us; she senses everything we do.”

Mothers and some fathers possess an innate ability to observe their children, even when it appears to be impossible for them to watch over their children’s particular activities. A mother’s love for her children seems to transcend all physical limitations; at all times, her loving concern for her offspring appears to be able to overcome every obstacle. A mother is ever watchful, caring, instructing, and, occasionally, chastising to her children.  While in our youth, we often resented our mother’s intrusions in our lives, but as we aged and gained a degree of wisdom, we would gratefully proclaim, “Thank heaven for our mothers and their watchfulness.”

It is true that our mothers possess a second sense and intuitiveness about the activities of their children, which at times in our lives we wished they did not possess. Though on hindsight, we generally are thankful for our mothers’ concern and watchfulness. Oh, the troubles mothers have their saved their children by their caring attentiveness, advise, and correction. (OK, not correction, just a good old fashion scolding.) Mothers are observant to the extent that they could occasionally even penetrate into the depths of our hearts. But there are limits to even a mother’s power of observation.

With God, there are no limits to His ability to observe each one of us. Like our mothers, He knows and watches our activities, but His knowledge and understanding also penetrates into the deepest recesses of our hearts and minds. He knows us to a degree that is beyond our own knowledge of ourselves. Nothing can be hidden from Him. We all should be screaming to God in heaven, “Thank you for your intrusion into my very self.” It is God’s caring watchfulness and His loving corrections that lead us along paths he has created for us.

One person observed that many saints seemed to have “blundered into sainthood.” One wonders if the blundering was really God adjusting the course for saints as they traveled paths that could have led to destruction. Will we allow God to help us blunder our way to heaven? Will we appreciate His watchfulness and invite His intrusion into our lives? Invite Him to be watchful and then listen to Him. He will help us to “blunder our way to Him.”

Remember God is always watching us. Hopefully we will accept and follow his course corrections. If we do not, when the time comes for Him to dispense His justice, then we will suffer the consequences. St. Augustine reminds us, “Remember, we must all present ourselves before the judgment seat of Christ.”  God is always watching us….always.

Trees

Aside

Trees

Walking along a path through the forest, the father and his young daughter were admiring the majestic sequoia trees, when the 8 year old girl glanced up at her father asking, “Where did all these trees come from”? Her father explained that each tree started as a tiny seed, then blossomed into a small growth, and over a long time eventually grew into the giants they are today. After digesting her father’s explanation, the thoughtful girl asked, “Ok, but where did the seeds come from”? The father commented that the seeds came from existing trees. She inquired further, “Well, where did the existing trees with the seeds come from?” More answers were followed by more questions, which the father patiently answered. The daughter finally asked, “Where did all this begin? Where was the first seed of the first tree”? Her father answered without hesitation, “Well, the origin of all the trees and of everything in the universe is God. He is the beginning, the creator. God has existed for all eternity and is the cause of all things.” The young girl trusted her father and accepted his explanation though she did not fully understand it, yet she instinctively knew that there must be a cause from which all things began.

The young girl’s curiosity about the existence of trees and of all things, including her own existence is common to all people in every age. Why are we here? Where did we come from? Where are we going? When and where did existence begin? Is there an endless chain of causes and effects? The questions seem to be never ending and the answers are often unsatisfying.

The most basic issue behind all questions regarding existence is the question of the origin of all things, including humans. What caused existence in the first place? A few will claim that existence just happened….by chance. They profess that in an extremely complicated, but orderly universe, chance is the answer to the most fundamental question facing humanity about existence. However, for most people in all ages, the theory of chance as the answer to issue of existence is unsatisfying and, upon investigation, has been rejected as untenable.

Thus we return to the issue of the source of existence. In the book of Genesis, when Moses asks God for His name, God’s reply is “I Am Who AM.” God is defining Himself as pure existence, the essence of existence, from which all existence flows. Nothing can exist without God’s approval. He is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. St. Thomas Aquinas noted, “There is something that is the cause of existing in all things in that this thing is existence only. Otherwise, we would have to go to infinity in causes, for everything that is not existence alone has a cause of its existence ….and have existence from the first being, which is existence alone, and this is the first cause, which is God.” (St. Thomas Aquinas: 
On Being and Essence (Kindle Location 251).

The little girl’s father was correct when he advised that the ultimate source of the trees’ existence is God, the essence of existence.  The One to whom we all are accountable.

Suggested Reading:

“Fundamentals of the Faith” by Peter Kreeft, Ignatius Press, Chapter 3

“Thomas Aquinas”, by G.K. Chesterton, Originally published by Sheed and Ward, Dover Publications

“Summa Theologica”, Thomas Aquinas  Treatise on God, Question 2, Articles 1,2,3