Someone asked me the other day, what was the best thing that
happened to me during 2013. It was my
first year-end question of the season.
It won’t be the last. Everybody
does it. The New York Times posted their
list of the ten best books of 2013 today.
Various media outlets will follow this week with the ten best movies,
the ten biggest news stories, the one hundred best photographs, and on and on. Time magazine already made public their
“person of the year” (regrettably, not me or you).
The year-end is a time for rating, summing-up and ranking so
many things that happened in the past year.
We seem to have this natural impulse to use the turning of the calendar
for making judgments about all kinds of things in our culture and in our lives. Was the year a success? Did we accomplish anything? Did we follow through on any of the
resolutions that we made last year at this time (in my case the answer is
“no”)? What were the high points and the
low points? Even though the assigning of
the new year to January 1 is completely arbitrary, it still provokes this
assessment time.
The assessment process, or course, is not just fun, but an
important thing. It is one of the ways
in which we sort through the million events and experiences of the year and
figure out which ones were important and memorable and which ones were
not. We literally decide what we will
remember. The vast majority of things
that happened during the year will be soon forgotten, in our culture’s life and
our personal lives. We need to sort
through all of it to find the gems, the high points, the meaningful things that
didn’t just happen, but have helped to shape our lives, because it is those
things that we need to hang on to and remember.
This is part of how we make sense of our lives and of who we are. It is how we turn the chaos of a million,
often random, experiences into a narrative that has some meaningful
progression. We take an unshaped list of
happenings and find the connections, the contours, the high points, the things
that have affected us enough to make us different.
This doesn’t just happen at the New Year, of course. It is an ongoing process. Sometimes we know immediately when something
happens to us that it is a big deal and that we will never be quite the same
again. But often times, things sneak up
on us. Something happens or we meet
someone or we read some book and it doesn’t stand out from the rest of what’s
going on, but in retrospect we begin to realize that it has worked on us and become
a part of some sort of transformation.
And sometimes, we have to stop for a moment and reflect back and figure
out what those things were that have given new shape to our lives.
This process is not just true of the outer realities and
experiences of our lives, but the inner ones as well. Our spiritual life has contours too. Our relationship to our inner selves, our
relationship to the universe as a whole, our relationship to that reality
within and without us that we call God, is moved and shaped and transformed by
a million influences, thoughts, insights and revelations during the course of
each year. But because our spiritual
lives are so often vague and difficult to articulate or conceive, those
spiritual lives can sometimes remain unreflective and unshaped. Here too, however, the process of finding and
contours of the narrative is crucial. It
is important to take stock; to sort out what this year has meant, how is has
changed your spiritual life and why.
So along with your personal list of best books or best
movies, along with your list of high points and low ones, try to spend a few
moments reflecting on how your spiritual lives have changed this year. What were the insights you stumbled on this
year and where did they come from? What
do you believe today that is different from last year or the year before and
why? Are you closer to being the kind of
person you feel called to be and what has held you back? Are you feeling more connected to the things
and people that matter? Are your prayers
deeper or richer than before? Think
through your spiritual development like a story and recognize the way in which
it has unfolded to bring you to where you are today.
There is one other year–end ritual that our culture goes
through. I watched it this morning on
the Today Show as they flashed through a couple of dozen photographs of famous
people who have passed away in 2013.
Sometimes we need to reflect on our losses as well. At First Parish we’ve had a lot this year. But in each of our personal lives, we’ve had
a few. Take a moment to remember those
you’ve lost this year and reflect on what gifts they gave you and left behind
them when they died. This can leave you
in awe of how rich your life has been made by the amazing gifts of other lives
that touch us and move us every day.
Have a happy and blessed New Year.

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