IT’S in
guarding our mind and heart, seeing to it that
they are welcoming and receptive to God, always giving
him priority
over all other things in our life. That’s the secret,
since our
relationship with God, insofar as our part is concerned,
starts in our
mind and heart, that is, when we correspond to him in his
presence and
his providence over us.
German priest
and intellectual, Romano Guardini, once
said: “The place where God’s governance is directly
experienced is the
inmost heart of man: in man’s free will and in his
capacity for love.”
I cannot agree
with him more. To those who question
whether it is possible for us to have any contact or
experience of
God, the answer is a big YES. But it all depends also on
us, whether
we welcome him or not.
We have the
capacity to have direct experience of God and
become contemplatives ourselves even while we are in the
middle of the
world, immersed in our mundane concerns. That’s because,
with our
mind, our heart and our will, we have been endowed with
the capacity
to know and to love him.
To top it all,
and even before we do our part, God has
already designed that we can and ought to be
contemplatives, or to
have direct contact and experience with him. And that’s
because aside
from endowing us with our spiritual faculties, he has
gratuitously
given us his grace that would enable us to go beyond the
natural so as
to enter into the supernatural world of God.
God is
everywhere. He is actually all around us and also
within us. And not only is he everywhere. His presence is
a presence
of love, of concern, of solicitude. He is actually always
intervening
in our lives. If we know how to deal with this reality, we
can see,
feel and understand God’s presence and will for each one
of us.
The problem is
us. We prefer to be on our own. We are not
receptive to God. If ever, we only give him some cameo
role in our
lives. That is why, God has to beg us to receive him. “My
son, give me
your heart and let your eyes delight in my ways,” he
practically
pleads with us. (Prov 23,26)
That is also
why Christ, when asked what the greatest
commandment was, simply said: “Love the Lord your God
with all your
heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.” (Mt
22,37)
We need to pay
utmost attention to how we use our mind,
heart and will. Do we give them all to God, unafraid that
by doing so
we are giving priority to God always and we don’t lose
anything but
rather would gain everything else that will be good for
us?
Remember Christ
saying: “Seek first his kingdom and his
righteousness, and all these things will be given to you
as well.” (Mt
6,33)
Let’s just to
it that we let these divine words become
effective in our thoughts, attitudes and desires, our
intentions,
words and deeds everyday. That’s how we can be true
contemplatives.
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