THIS is a skill we have to cultivate and practice all the time. Remember St.
Paul telling us: “If you have risen with Christ, seek the things that are
above, where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God. Mind the things that
are above, not the things that are upon the earth.” (Col 3,1-2)
This is the essence of the spirit of recollection that is meant for all of us,
since we are all supposed to live our life with God. Our life, like that of all
other creatures, cannot be without its Creator, the provider of everything that
we need. In fact, he is the ultimate and constant provision we need, more than
anything else—food, money, air, etc.
In our case, since we are humans with intelligence and will, we need to be
aware of this reality about ourselves and correspond to it knowingly and
willingly. God is actually in us always, at the very core of our life, since he
is the fundamental maintainer of our existence.
But more than keeping us in life, he is gives us everything else proper of a
creature created in his image and likeness—knowledge, wisdom, power, etc. And
since we cannot help but sin, he is also ever eager to give us his mercy, his
ultimate gift before we can fully identify ourselves with him, our goal.
This spirit of recollection means we are constantly aware of his presence,
vitally doing things with him and for him. It’s not supposed to keep us always
passive, though a certain passivity and receptivity is involved. But it’s what
supposed to give us impulse, energy and direction in our life.
This spirit of recollection can only be lived if we activate the gifts of
faith, hope and charity that God constantly and abundantly gives us. People who
are curious to know more things as well as lovers who always want to be with
their beloved can offer us the template for developing this spirit of
recollection.
We need to seek God, even if we have to deal with great difficulties. Christ
himself told us clearly: “Ask, and it shall be given you. Seek, and you shall
find. Knock, and it shall be opened to you.” (Mt 7,7)
We have to learn to discern the omnipresence of God—within us in our mind and
heart as well as around us. We have to train our senses and our spiritual
faculties of intelligence and will to go beyond the dimensions of the sensible
and intelligible world. They have to capture the inputs of faith, hope and
charity.
We should go beyond the physical, material and temporal, to enter into the
world of the spiritual, eternal and supernatural. We should go beyond the
merely practical and convenient, to be able to live the values of morality and
piety of being children of God.
We should be able to be in constant intimate relation with God—talking to him,
asking him for light, strength, etc.—by taking advantage of everything that
happens in us and around us. Everything that we see, hear, feel, learn and
know, everything that happens, whether good or bad, is always an occasion to be
with God.
We have to disabuse ourselves from our tendency to think that dealing with God
can only take place in some special moments of our life. All events and
circumstances of our life—even our worst condition of committing a grave
sin—can and should be a moment with God, praising him, thanking him, asking for
pardon, asking for help.
If we have these truths well in place in our mind and heart, then we would be
in the proper condition to develop this spirit of recollection. Of course, to
prosper in this effort, we need to constantly mortify and purify our senses.
That means dealing some kind of death to our senses, and even to our
intelligence, so that the life of faith, hope and charity can take root, grow
and blossom in us.
It does not mean to do away with our senses and faculties, since that would be
inhuman, but to mortify and purify them so as to be led and guided by faith,
hope and charity.
This effort will take time, and we should learn to be patient. We should not
forget that we are ranged against tremendous weaknesses, temptations, etc. But
there’s always hope. We just have to persevere until this spirit of recollection
becomes second nature to us, enabling us to be with God in the middle of the
world.
No comments:
Post a Comment