“I HAVE come to set the earth on
fire, and how I wish it
were already blazing!” (Lk 12,49)
With these words, Christ expresses the consuming passion
and zeal he has to carry out his mission on earth. It’s the same
passion and zeal that we should try our best to cultivate and keep.
It’s what is proper to us. We are meant to be passionate,
because we simply have passions that need to be used to the hilt. They
just cannot be left idle and open to anything. They need to be
properly grounded and oriented.
Reflecting Christ’s passionate character is what orders
and integrates into an organic whole all the other passions we will
always have, at one point or another, with respect to our human and
earthly affairs and concerns.
This is the passion for holiness and apostolate that
actually is the be-all and end-all of our life here on earth. Let’s
never forget what God told Moses: “Speak to the whole Israelite
community and tell them, Be holy, for I, the Lord your God, am holy.”
(Lev 19,1)
Christ reiterated the same message when he clearly said:
“Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect,” (Mt 5,48)
understanding ‘perfect’ as loving everyone with nothing less than the
love of God for us as lived and shown to us by Christ.
In other words, the passion that we should develop should
be the passion and zeal for holiness and apostolate. This pair can
never be separated, since holiness by definition involves not only
loving God but also loving others with God’s love. Holiness will
always be apostolic. It necessarily involves entering into the lives
of others for God.
And before we get some strange ideas about this truth of
our faith, like, it is too fantastic, undoable, if not inhuman, etc.,
we need to reassure ourselves that this is the passion that would
actually make us fully human, fully Christian, children of God,
perfect image and likeness of God.
As to its practicability, we cannot have any doubt about
it, since God, for his part, is giving us everything for it to take
place. He has sent his Son who became man to us. And this God-man,
Jesus, died on the cross in his supreme act of self-giving to us.
Nothing is spared to make us to be what we ought to be.
On our part, we have been wired and equipped for this
passion for holiness and apostolate. With our intelligence and will,
and always activated by God’s grace, we can enter into the life of God
himself, and the lives of others.
While we retain our individual and personal identity, we
can get identified too with God and with others. This is the
tremendous wonder of our life—that in spite of our weakness, mistakes
and sins, we are still, as St. Augustine would put it, “capax Dei,”
capable of God. And if we are capable of loving God, then we too must
be capable of loving others.
We just have to know how to integrate in that passion for
holiness and apostolate the indispensable role of the cross of Christ.
That cross is the necessary cure for our weaknesses and what would
make up for our mistakes, failures and sins. That cross is where we
can truly find Christ.
When Christ said that he is the “way, the truth and the
life,” he must have the cross in mind, since in another part of the
gospel, he clearly said: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny
themselves and take up their cross and follow me.” (Mt 16,24)
We have to learn to make the cross, in whatever form it
comes, an integral and essential part of our daily life. We should not
wait for it to come. We have to look for it everyday, and in every
circumstance. We actually need it more than we need air.
And when it comes without our looking for it, let’s be
quick to identify it with the Cross of Christ. Let’s not waste time
suffering our life’s crosses purely on our own. We need to suffer them
with Christ. Everything needs to be referred to Christ on the cross.
Then there would be nothing in our life that would prevent
us from pursuing holiness and apostolate with passion. Not even our
sins can weaken that passion. When referred to Christ’s cross, our
mistakes, failures and sins can become tremendous spurs to get us
closer to God and to others.
But we also need to live this passion with naturalness…
were already blazing!” (Lk 12,49)
With these words, Christ expresses the consuming passion
and zeal he has to carry out his mission on earth. It’s the same
passion and zeal that we should try our best to cultivate and keep.
It’s what is proper to us. We are meant to be passionate,
because we simply have passions that need to be used to the hilt. They
just cannot be left idle and open to anything. They need to be
properly grounded and oriented.
Reflecting Christ’s passionate character is what orders
and integrates into an organic whole all the other passions we will
always have, at one point or another, with respect to our human and
earthly affairs and concerns.
This is the passion for holiness and apostolate that
actually is the be-all and end-all of our life here on earth. Let’s
never forget what God told Moses: “Speak to the whole Israelite
community and tell them, Be holy, for I, the Lord your God, am holy.”
(Lev 19,1)
Christ reiterated the same message when he clearly said:
“Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect,” (Mt 5,48)
understanding ‘perfect’ as loving everyone with nothing less than the
love of God for us as lived and shown to us by Christ.
In other words, the passion that we should develop should
be the passion and zeal for holiness and apostolate. This pair can
never be separated, since holiness by definition involves not only
loving God but also loving others with God’s love. Holiness will
always be apostolic. It necessarily involves entering into the lives
of others for God.
And before we get some strange ideas about this truth of
our faith, like, it is too fantastic, undoable, if not inhuman, etc.,
we need to reassure ourselves that this is the passion that would
actually make us fully human, fully Christian, children of God,
perfect image and likeness of God.
As to its practicability, we cannot have any doubt about
it, since God, for his part, is giving us everything for it to take
place. He has sent his Son who became man to us. And this God-man,
Jesus, died on the cross in his supreme act of self-giving to us.
Nothing is spared to make us to be what we ought to be.
On our part, we have been wired and equipped for this
passion for holiness and apostolate. With our intelligence and will,
and always activated by God’s grace, we can enter into the life of God
himself, and the lives of others.
While we retain our individual and personal identity, we
can get identified too with God and with others. This is the
tremendous wonder of our life—that in spite of our weakness, mistakes
and sins, we are still, as St. Augustine would put it, “capax Dei,”
capable of God. And if we are capable of loving God, then we too must
be capable of loving others.
We just have to know how to integrate in that passion for
holiness and apostolate the indispensable role of the cross of Christ.
That cross is the necessary cure for our weaknesses and what would
make up for our mistakes, failures and sins. That cross is where we
can truly find Christ.
When Christ said that he is the “way, the truth and the
life,” he must have the cross in mind, since in another part of the
gospel, he clearly said: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny
themselves and take up their cross and follow me.” (Mt 16,24)
We have to learn to make the cross, in whatever form it
comes, an integral and essential part of our daily life. We should not
wait for it to come. We have to look for it everyday, and in every
circumstance. We actually need it more than we need air.
And when it comes without our looking for it, let’s be
quick to identify it with the Cross of Christ. Let’s not waste time
suffering our life’s crosses purely on our own. We need to suffer them
with Christ. Everything needs to be referred to Christ on the cross.
Then there would be nothing in our life that would prevent
us from pursuing holiness and apostolate with passion. Not even our
sins can weaken that passion. When referred to Christ’s cross, our
mistakes, failures and sins can become tremendous spurs to get us
closer to God and to others.
But we also need to live this passion with naturalness…
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