What is the goal of life? God, for the religious; for the nonreligious, 
living well. Although pursuing the material comforts of life is a 
tempting goal for many, the believer knows this will not bring true 
happiness. For a Christian, the direction of our life can be summed 
up by  the familiar words of Jesus in the Beatitudes. 
The columnist writing on spirituality for the Catholic Times says the 
secret to attaining happiness is to have the proper goal in life: living
 in harmony with God's will. 
The proper goal for a Christian 
married couple should be, first and foremost, to live for the glory of 
God, and secondarily to save one's soul. In the same way, he says our students who often study hard primarily for personal success, should have as 
their primary goal the glory of God. This approach to life requires 
obedience to the will of God.
Faith needs obedience. Without 
obedience, says the columnist, we will have the temperament of migratory
 birds, and problems that are fundamentally spiritual will come to the 
surface. We can do well for a time with a fickle temperament, but then 
we flutter off to something else, when dissatisfied or in trouble. 
Obedience 
 requires that we cease being migratory, that we be steadfast in our 
pursuit of our goal, while being open in our responsiveness in meeting 
the challenges of life. If we are restricted by our thinking, the 
columnist believes that the option of choosing among multiple 
possibilities will not be available to us.  God is always there  to fill us with his word; with his 
grace, he  is moving our minds and hearts in the right direction. 
Throughout  our life God continues to move us, whether through those we 
meet in life, or through the Scriptures, the lives of the saints, or our
 reading--both of books and of nature. We have no way of knowing the  
many ways he speaks to us, so we have to be ready and open. 
This
 is not an easy path for most of us; there are many things 
that militate against this openness to God and others. Those fixated on 
 yesterday will not be open to the dawning of a new day, or be open to 
the possibility of an ever-renewing self that is responsive to our 
neighbor and to whatever situation in life comes our way. We 
contemplate 
 yesterday only to learn about living today, striving each day to be 
more in harmony 
with the will of God. To insure that we stray as little as possible from
 our good intentions, it's helpful at the end of each day to reflect 
where discord made its appearance in our life, and take note of what can
 be improved to bring us more in harmony with the will of God.
 
