A
lady doctor was fond of letting little kids listen to their heartbeat during
their check-up. She loved seeing their face light up when they hear the thump
of their own hearts from the stethoscope. In one of those usual routine, the
question from a little boy touched the pediatrician the most. As he listened to
his heartbeat, he looked at the physician in the eye and asked: “Is that Jesus
knocking?”
Heartbeat is a sign of life. It is an
indicator that the human body is pulsating with energy. It came to me as a
surprise that it is actually electricity that makes the heart beat. The cardiac
conduction system generates a small electric current through a group of muscle
cells in the walls of the heart allowing blood to flow in one direction with
each heartbeat. About 2,000 gallons of blood energizes the human body every
day. And by the time a person reaches 70 years old, his heart has made more
than 2.5 billion heartbeats. Isn’t that amazing? Every waking day is a
continuous miracle!
Coming from the Christmas experience,
we continue to reflect on the mystery of Jesus. John’s gospel begins with this
prologue: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God.” The Word is characterized as transcendent, distant, really far.
But at one moment in time the evangelist confirms: “The Word became flesh and
dwelt among us.” The once-distant Word, through whom all things were made,
became close. John became Jesus’ friend. He saw him, heard him; he was Jesus’
witness. Yet it was all God’s own initiative.
It would be impossible for man to reach God; it is God
who reached-out to find him. He made himself known. He gave us a glimpse of his
mystery. He disclosed himself in person – in Jesus! From the letter to the
Hebrews we read: “In the past God spoke to our forefathers through the prophets
at many times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us
by his Son. When Jesus was born, God’s heart started to beat. Mary and Joseph
listened to his heart. It was the heart of a little child, small and helpless.
But that heart already contained the whole world. It was beating with
compassion. It started to hear the cry of a world lost.
Before Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger became Pope (now Benedict XVI), he addressed
the Catechists and Religion Teachers on 12 December 2000 during the Jubilee of
Catechists. He spoke about the New Evangelization: Building the Civilization of
Love. He taught that “human life cannot be realized by itself. Our life is an
open question, an incomplete project.. the unum necessarium (one thing
necessary) for man is God.”
The heartbeat of Jesus made the impossible, possible.
He was able to synchronize in his person the contradictions that existed
between God and man. He made the invisible visible while allowing the finite to
cross the boundaries of infinity. He became mortal to give us license to assume
immortality. His coming down is our stairway to heaven. This very revelation
confused the brightest of mortals. God knows how to impart learning to mere
children and hide it from the clever. Indeed, God’s foolishness is wiser than
man’s wisdom.
The fresh insight of a little boy in
the vignette gives way to faith: our heart’s heartbeat is a gentle knock from
Jesus. This symbolism has long been employed by artists. In St. Paul’s
Cathedral, London a life-size portrait hangs entitled “The Light of the World”
painted by the famous English artist William Hunt in 1853. This allegorical
painting shows Jesus preparing to knock on an overgrown and long-unopened door,
illustrating Revelation 3:20: "Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if
any man hear My voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup
with him, and he with Me".
According to Hunt: "I painted the picture with
what I thought, unworthy though I was, to be by Divine command, and not simply
as a good Subject.” The door in the painting has no handle, and can therefore
be opened only from the inside, representing "the obstinately shut
mind." Man’s folly makes the door of his heart shut. In his self-sufficiency,
he thinks he can do without God. It is only humble faith that makes his assent
to the truth that he is nothing without God. In the meantime Jesus continues to
knock like an avid lover. And every heartbeat of the human heart is a gentle
reminder of God’s power over his life
as well as His immense patience over his continued obstinacy.
(This article also appears in Cebu Daily News - January 06, 2013)
(This article also appears in Cebu Daily News - January 06, 2013)
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