THAT’S what
Christ wants us to be. Simple but not naïve.
In fact, he wants us to very clever and shrewd. “Be as
cunning as
serpents and as innocent as doves,” he said. (Mt 10,16)
He addressed
these words first to his apostles in the
context of their very tricky mission in the world where
they would be
like sheep in the midst of wolves. Try to imagine that
scene of a
sheep in the midst of wolves and we cannot help but think
there’s no
way a sheep has any chance of survival.
But these words
are actually meant also for all of us who
want to follow Christ consistently. We also live in a
very complicated
world where the spiritual and supernatural values seem to
be
systematically put out of place. It indeed would appear
impossible for
us to be consistent with Christ while in this world of
ours. We
definitely would feel helpless.
But these two
qualities simply have to be cultivated, as
commanded by Christ. But how? I believe the answer can
only be when we
don’t lose sight of the example of Christ himself. More
importantly,
the only possibility is when we identify ourselves fully
with him.
Christ himself
lived these two contrasting qualities. He
was simple, innocent, meek and humble, like a lamb. And
ultimately he
allowed himself to die on the cross, like a sacrificial
lamb that bore
all the sins of men.
But that
apparent helplessness and defeat, as regarded in
human standards, proved to be the smartest and shrewdest
act of all,
since it accomplished the full repayment for our sins and
offenses
against God, and achieved our own reconciliation with
God, our own
redemption.
This is the
most precious lesson we should learn by heart.
Only when we allow ourselves, with Christ and in Christ,
to be
helpless and to suffer whatever pain and sorrow we can
encounter in
this life can we also take part in that cleverest act of
Christ!
The cleverness
of Christ is not of the kind that simply
reflects the cleverness of our own flesh, or of the world
and of the
devil. It’s not of the tit-for-tat type that would simply
make us
resemble the enemies of our soul, and destroy the
simplicity and
innocence proper to us. Let’s be most wary, since
nowadays many are
provocations we can encounter and would tempt us to
respond in the
manner of eye for an eye.
It is the
cleverness and cunning of God who is full of
love and mercy, patience and compassion, eager to assume
all the sins,
faults and mistakes of men. It is the cleverness that
does not repay
evil with evil, but rather repays evil with good.
That is how
such cleverness can sit well with simplicity
and innocence. With our vital union with Christ, we can
manage to be
full of love and mercy also, full of patience and
compassion. We would
be willing to assume the sins, faults and mistakes of
others.
With that
cleverness, we would destroy the last bastion of
our pride that hates to suffer for others, that always
wants to be
correct and righteous all the time, never mind how the
others are.
It’s the kind of pride that hates to follow Christ’s
example of
becoming like sin without committing sin for the sake of
the others.
It’s that kind that wants to be holy and saintly without
any concern
for the others.
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