The Hour Glass Revisited

 

As an explanation of the Form and Content of our beautiful and beloved Catholicism; the Holy Spirit gives us the hour glass as a working model. What does this mean?

Consider the hour glass, unmistakable in its form, design and purpose. It’s immediately recognizable; in its symmetry, its functionality and in its simplicity, no other structure is like it, no other structure can take its place. It is the Form. It is the way that it is, because it is the only way it can be. This is the Church.

The sand; each grain is exquisitely unique.  Distinctively faceted, a shade apart from the rest, fashioned by God and honed by nature. This is the Content. Bathed in paradox, because the only element each grain truly shares is that each is different. Yet taken in their entirety, each is uniform, locked in perfect harmony with the rest. This is the Body.

We realize the Form can not be changed, rearranged or altered in any way. And nothing can be added or taken away from the content. Not even the most beautiful diamond among the sand, for nothing else belongs there. There can be no substitutes; there are no equivalents, for only a genuine and measured amount will work.

Simply put, the “Hour Glass” provides the best example of the Church. Without the Form the Content fulfills no purpose.  Without the Content the Form has no function.

         Free From Suffering

 

As Christians, we are familiar with a world view which simply states; we are “in” the world, not “of” it. Can we apply a similar concept to our present-day sufferings and the life events which have wounded us? What would this look like?

Could we contrast our sufferings as being free “of” them or free “from” them? If we have made creditable observations, then one conclusion would be that it makes sense to say; I am free “of” them. That those events from the past and today’s worries do not define me.  I have recognized the impact the past has had on my life, as well as the time and calories I am burning to deal with today’s troubles. I am free “of” them, but not free “from” them. If this is a viable conclusion and I think it is; then the next step would be to realize I never would want to be free “from” them. In part, who I am is a product of how well I navigated those troubled waters. My achievements then and now are in some respects a testimony of how well I managed my life, the good and wrongful decisions which were made at the time and the benefits I enjoy today because of those experiences.

Saint Joseph

Let’s consider St. Joseph; the first saint in the New Testament, perhaps the greatest saint in the Bible, arguably the greatest saint in the first century. In his silence, there is a clarity and purity which can only be imagined. There is no clutter, no confusion; only the purity of pre-conceived notions. St. Joseph is a person without strife or conflict, unblemished, without fault and beyond reproach. He did everything and claims nothing. So, for us in our ego driven world, he is bigger than life, he is for us, 21st century admirers, a super hero. He is our Clark Kent without the pretentious costume; ever watchful, always faithful, ready and willing to defend the innocent. In truth he is vulnerable and not invincible which makes his story that much more amazing.