Thursday, March 5, 2015

Living by God’s will

 THIS, in the end, is what is most important to us. It’s
not just following our will which is, of course, indispensable to us.
Otherwise, we would be undermining our very own freedom and our
humanity itself. Whatever we do is done because we want it. It should
be a fruit of our freedom.

            But what is most important is to conform our will to God’s
will, which is even more indispensable to us. Otherwise, we sooner or
later would destroy our freedom and our humanity itself, since God is
the very author and the very lawgiver of our freedom and our humanity.

            This is a basic truth that we need to spread around more
widely and abidingly, since it is steadily and even systematically
forgotten and, nowadays, even contradicted in many instances. We need
to inculcate this truth to children as early as when they can
understand and appreciate it. Then let’s give them the example of how
it is lived.

            God’s will is the source of everything in the universe.
The whole of creation in all its existence, unity, truth, goodness and
beauty starts from God’s will and is maintained by it. The entire
range and scope of reality—be it material or spiritual, natural or
supernatural, temporal or eternal—is “contained” there, not only
theoretically but in vivo.

            It would be absurd to believe that the whole reality can
be captured by our senses and feelings alone, or by our intelligence
that is working on its own and producing the arts and the sciences
that we now have and that we continue to discover.

            It would be equally absurd to speculate that we cannot
know the origin of the universe, or that the whole cosmos just came to
be more or less spontaneously, directly contradicting a basic
principle that from nothing, nothing comes.

            Or that there may be a God who created the universe, but
after creation, we and the world are now left on our own to do
whatever we want to do or agree to do together. This is the deistic
belief that actually cannot hold water upon closer scrutiny.

            We have to realize more deeply that it is in God’s will
that everything is made to exist and is kept in existence in
accordance to his providence. Since we have been made with the
capacity to know and to will, we have to live our life knowing and
willing together with God’s knowledge and will, full of wisdom, love
and mercy.

            In other words, we have to cooperate with God’s
providence, we have to live by God’s abiding will. Thus, St. Paul
says: “Whether we live, we live unto the Lord; or whether we die, we
die unto the Lord. Therefore, whether we live or whether we die, we
are the Lord’s.” (Rom 14,8)

            We have to learn to live by God’s will that is shown to
us, thanks to God, by Christ, the fullness of divine revelation, who
left us with his word and the sacraments in the Church.

            What is God’s will for us? In general, it is to love him
and our neighbor. It is to love the way Christ himself has loved us.
God’s will is that we continually pray, so we get in contact with him
in a direct and intimate way. We have to know him more and more by
reading the gospel and following his teaching, and developing a real
love for him, complete with feelings.

            God’s will is also contained in the duties and
responsibilities attached to our state and position in life, whether
we are parents or teachers, workers or students, public officials or
private citizens, etc.

            What is also crucial in knowing God’s will and avoiding
the subtle trap of being confined to do our own will is to be immersed
in the lives of others. God’s will for us is known through the needs
that others have and that we can somehow fulfill.

            This will effectively help us from falling into the trick
of conforming God’s will to our own will, instead of the other way
around. It cannot be denied that there are people, more or less
looking holy and doing a lot of good, but doing their own will instead
of God’s, since they are unmindful of the others’ needs. They only
mind their own business.

            St. Paul tells us that we have to learn to bear each
other’s burden. (cfr Gal 6,2) This was epitomized by Christ himself
who bore all the sins of men by offering his life on the cross. This
is how we ultimately live by God’s will.

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