Read Revelation 21:1-5
It happens
to all of us: to want to start over again, to wipe the slate clean, to have a
second chance. A relationship was broken, a project didn’t succeed, some
opportunity passed us by, and there we are, torn by the regret for what could
have been and the wish we could try again.
Isn’t this
what lies behind all those resolutions we’ve made along the road of life?
Whether it be on New Year’s Day or on a birthday, whether it be when a
promotion came along or we met someone new, we promised ourselves that
everything would be fresh and new, everything would be different, this time.
Not that we
want to erase all of our past, or all of ourselves. We are all gifted one way
or another. We all cherish some moments of our histories, some aspects of our
lives. But we also realize that the inherent limitations in our beings and in
our world are like an albatross around the neck, dragging us down and tearing
us up. We can’t become all we’d like to be, all we’re meant to be.
In the
dream that Saint John
shares in the Book of Revelation, the sea is a symbol of all that drags us
down, whether within us in our personalities or outside of us in the world. The
sea is what we can’t control, the unfortunate happenstance, the negative energy
of chaos.
“Then I saw
a new heaven and a new earth,” says Saint
John , “and there was no more sea.” Imagine a world
from which all these negative forces are banished, a universe where I can truly
become myself, where my talents, my virtues and my abilities can freely
flourish. Imagine a world where each person can become everything he or she is
meant to be, where beauty, truth and freedom can really blossom.
This is the
world, says Saint John ,
that is being birthed in our midst under the care of the Holy Spirit. This is
the world that flourishes beyond death. This is the world in which God “makes
all things new,” a world where death no longer reigns.