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This
essay is not about letter-writing or a certain type of distance
learning, though I must say that what I have in mind must
be the original from which these activities sprung.
I
am referring to our constant correspondence to grace, actually
a duty that we have to be more aware of and more adept in.
It's actually a most indispensable duty without which Christian
life would practically be a sham, no matter how colorfully
we show our Christianity.
The
basis for this duty is the truth that we are God's creatures
who have been endowed with the dignity of being his children
also, sharers in his divine life.
God
is not content with creating us only. He made us very special,
making us in his very image and likeness. This he did by giving
us a spiritual nature, with our intelligence and will, that
allows us to receive supernatural grace, that in turn elevates
us above our nature to be able to participate in his life.
God's
sharing his life with us is a permanent feature of our relationship,
whether we are aware of it or not. This can only be broken
in hell, when by our own sins we produce an irremediable rupture
from him.
This
point is worth reiterating, since a common thinking is that
while it may be true that God created us, he already left
us to be on our own after our creation. This thinking is called
in philosophical circles as Deism.
Just
to be direct about it, my simple dictionary describes Deism
as "the belief, based solely on reason, in a God who
created the universe and then abandoned it, assuming no control
over life, exerting no influence on natural phenomena, and
giving no supernatural revelation."
Though
not professed formally, it is in fact the attitude many of
us have. And this has to be corrected, precisely because it
is wrong.
God's
relationship with us does not stop with creating us. While
God continues to be present in all his creatures, he is especially
present in us, and in fact he shares what he has with us.
This
is what our faith teaches.
After
considering that the Son of God became man, called Jesus Christ,
and that he offered his life for us, and through the Church
and the sacraments remains with us-all this could only mean
that he so loves so that he wants to share what he us with
us.
We
need to go back to this truth many times, to relish it and
to engrave it more deeply in our heart so that it can truly
shape the way we think, speak and act, so that it can truly
shape our life.
We
can presume that God never stops prompting us with his grace,
precisely to share his life with us. But he does not impose
himself on us. He waits for us to correspond to his grace
freely.
The
problem is that we most of the time ignore these uninterrupted
promptings. We forget him, put him at the sidelines, and use
him only as some kind of ornament.
Correspondence
to grace is our effort to do our part in this relationship
of love between God and us. It is supposed to be an existential
relationship, lived moment to moment.
We
are not meant to be alone. We are meant to be with God always.
Thus,
our intelligence and will, our spiritual faculties that open
us the possibility of being elevated to share in God's life,
should be properly focused. Their main and constant object
is God, not just anything we want to know and will.
Using
our intelligence and will to pursue only our own personal
goals would be an abuse of these faculties, and sooner or
later, disastrous consequences would start appearing.
This
is the common sickness we have at the moment, so common that
it looks like the normal thing to have. Unless focused on
God, our faculties cannot resist the lures of what are known
as the capital sins: pride, avarice, envy, wrath, lust, gluttony
and sloth.
We
always need to correspond to God's grace to the point that
we can echo what our Lord once said: "I always do what
pleases him (his Father)." Jn 8,29) That should our attitude
always.
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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
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