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We
have to be more aware of our responsibilities toward our internal
world. That's the world of our thoughts, ideas, desires, plans,
ambitions, even our imagination and memory.
We
tend to take this fundamental aspect of our life for granted.
Precisely because of its hidden and invisible character, we
get most tempted to subject it to purely personal and individualistic
manipulations.
Hardly
anything else can be more dangerous than this situation. We
are meant to orient ourselves outside to others, and to God
ultimately. That's how we have been designed, wired and outfitted.
We focus on ourselves, and we'd get a short-circuit.
We
tend to simply go on automatic pilot, fully at the mercy of
whatever fancy captures our attention at the moment. Hardly
any effort to reflect is done. Hardly any running exertion
to relate facts with proper values and principles is made.
Conforming
our internal world to God's law and will, a continuing task,
is ignored. The ideal to reach, for a Christian believer,
is to say together with Christ:
'I
cannot of myself do anything. As I hear, so I judge, and my
judgment is just, because I seek not my own will, but the
will of him who sent me.' (Jn 5,30)
I
wonder whether we realize this principle in our actions, especially
in our internal world of thoughts and desires.
Forgetting
this truth leads us to be indifferent, if not averse, to our
social duties. It can easily lend itself to deceit and hypocrisy
in one's personal life. We have to be wary of these tendencies,
and be active in resisting them.
We
have to understand that our world of thoughts, desires, imagination
and memory play a very important role in our life. That's
where ideas are hatched and developed, goals set and pursued,
plans made and processed.
The
humanness of our actions is born and shaped in this internal
world of ours. And we have to see to it that our actions are
not results of mere routine, or of blind forces.
They
have to be deliberate and known as thoroughly as possible.
The
quality of our external world is actually a direct function
of the quality of our internal world. How we are inside 'in
our thoughts and desires, etc.' shapes how we are outside.
We
have to check our proclivity to act purely out of spontaneity,
or to limit our behavior on the level of instincts only. We
have to go further, deeper, wider. In fact, we have to go
toward infinity, because our mind and will are oriented toward
it.
Our
spiritual faculties not only allow us to enter into the spiritual
reality, but enable us to be lifted up to the supernatural
order which, to Christian believers, is what we have been
called to. Our life is not just purely natural human life.
It is supernatural life, a sharing in the very life of God.
This
is a point worth insisting. We tend to waste the powers of
our mind and will, our most important faculties, by using
them only for material, temporal, if not selfish ends.
Let's
remember that they are meant for endless possibilities.
But
for Christian believers, this infinity to which our mind and
will are oriented is not just anything. It has a name and
a face. And that's God who has been revealed fully by Jesus
Christ.
Infinity
is not just an empty, open space without boundaries where
we can play in any way we want. It has a certain substance
and specificity. It's not just some vague field of inexhaustible
potentials and eventualities.
It's
true that as some adage puts it, life is what you make it.
To a certain extent, it's a valid affirmation. But it should
not be made absolute. Life is both what you make it and a
matter of conforming it to some laws.
We
need to align our thoughts and desires, our imagination and
memory, to God's designs. For this we have to practice and
develop the necessary skills and virtues.
This
is the challenge we have today. We need to guard and develop
our internal world.
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Fr.
Roy Cimagala is the Chaplain of Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise
(CITE) in Talamban, Cebu City. You can email him at:Email: roycimagala@boholchronicle.com |