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Daily reflections for Lenten Easter, written by Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI.

We don’t pray to make God present to us. God is always present everywhere. We pray to make ourselves present to God.

God, as Sheila Cassidy colorfully puts it, “is no more present in church than in a drinking bar. But we generally are more present to God in church than we are in a drinking bar.”

The problem of presence is not with God, but with us. Sadly, this is also true for our presence to the richness of our own lives. Too often we are not present to the beauty, love and grace that brim within the ordinary moments of our lives.

Bounty is there, but we aren’t because of restlessness, tiredness, obsession, haste, whatever. Too often we’re not enough inside of ourselves to appreciate what the moments of our own lives hold.

Viktor Frankl, the author of Man’s Search for Meaning, was lucky. He was revived by doctors after being clinically dead for four minutes. When he returned to his ordinary life, suddenly everything became very rich.

He wrote, “one very important aspect of post mortem life is that everything gets precious, gets piercingly important. You get stabbed by things, by flowers and by babies and by beautiful things. Just the very act of living, of walking and breathing and eating and having friends and chatting, one gets the much intensified sense of miracles.”

The secret to prayer is not to try to make God present, but to make ourselves present to God. The secret to finding beauty and love in life is the same. Like God, they are already present.

The trick is to make ourselves present to them.

About the author: Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI

Fr. Ronald Rolheiser, OMI, is a Roman Catholic priest and member of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. He is a community-builder, lecturer, and writer. His books are popular throughout the English-speaking world and have now been translated into many languages. His weekly column is carried by many newspapers worldwide. Before this present position, he taught theology and philosophy at Newman Theological College in Edmonton, Alberta, for 16 years, served as Provincial Superior of his Oblate Province for six years, and served on the General Council for the Oblates in Rome for six years. From 2005 – 2020, Fr. Ron served as President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, Texas.

View other works by Fr. Rolheiser, OMI: Books / Videos

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