
By November 7, only one
candidate will be our next president. The rest will wake up losers.
That's
human. We're a race of people who ran aground during the voyage of life. A race of losers.
Julius Caesar reached the height of power. Napoleon fought war
after war to conquer Europe. Those dreams never made it to port. Caesar was assassinated and
Napoleon died in exile.
Maybe the conquerors and warlords had it coming.
But what about those who didn't? What about the Amanda Todd's of the world? The victims. The cancer
patients who lose their last battle, or the poor who spend their last dollar. Those who never get a
shot at their dreams. Those who don't even have dreams.
What about me? Life is
an uphill fight that can have only one outcome. Death. I will die. Even if I help people, they
will die too. Doctors can't change that. Science can't change that. Philosophy can't change
that. Not even the strongest of loves can change that.
Are we doomed to be
losers?
That's the question Pope Benedict pondered yesterday. His answer is no.
We aren't losers. Even run aground, we have meaning. Because the meaning of our lives doesn't depend
only on us. It's God's gift, not ours to give or lose.
Our voyage through
life has more meaning than death or failure could ever take away. But sometimes it takes faith
to see more than an empty hulk washed up on the beach.
Read the Pope's full audience here.
This Catholic Formation Service is also available by e-mail.
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