IF Christ had
to empty himself if only to be like us and
with us, should we not also try to reciprocate the same
process of
emptying ourselves so that we can be like him and be with
him?
St. Paul
precisely had this in mind when he clearly said
in his Letter to the Philippians: “Have this mind among
yourselves,
which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the
form of God,
did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped,
but emptied
himself, taking the form of a servant, being born in the
likeness of
men...” (2,5-7)
To empty
ourselves the way Christ emptied himself is not
anymore an optional thing. It is a necessity if we truly
want to
follow Christ, if we truly believe in him and love him,
and if we show
that love by loving everybody else also.
There’s no
other way. Because of our unavoidable tendency
to fill ourselves with our own egos, no matter how good
we feel we
are, we need to go through this process of self-emptying.
We can be so
full of ourselves, helplessly cocooned in our
own world, completely at the mercy of our social, economic,
political
and other human conditionings, that we practically cut
ourselves off
from God, and then from others.
Thus, Christ
himself commanded us that: “Whoever wants to
be my disciple must deny himself and take up his cross daily
and
follow me.” (Lk 9,23) This self-denial is precisely the
self-emptying
that we need to go through.
Everyday we
need to have clear instances of practising
this self-denial and self-emptying. No day should pass
without doing
some self-denial and self-emptying. We can never say that
we can have
some good days when we can remain good without having to
do some
self-denial and self-emptying. That just is not possible,
given the
way we are.
This truth
should be clear to everyone. Self-denial and
self-emptying should be an integral part of our day. Our
life will not
be a Christian life, or a life with Christ, if we do not
practice some
self-denial and self-emptying.
We surely will
fail to develop our spiritual and
supernatural life with Christ without some self-denial
and
self-emptying. We would be at the mercy of the erratic
impulses of our
flesh, the deceptive allures of the world and the wiles
of the devil
if we fail to have some self-denial and self-emptying.
We need to
learn how to deny and empty ourselves in order
to fill ourselves with God and with his love which is the
only
authentic love that we can have. And this concern will be
a
never-ending affair in our whole lifetime, because our
heart will
always be an arena of the lifelong struggle between God
and ourselves.
To be sure,
this self-emptying in order to be filled with
God’s love is not a matter of running away from our
earthly affairs,
which will always be in need of material resources. It’s
rather a
matter of making sure that our earthly and temporal
affairs do not
convert into our end and god themselves, but rather as
means to
develop our love for God, and with that love, also our
love for
others.
Christ assures
us that if we have the proper priorities in
life, everything will just be fine. “Seek first the
kingdom of God and
his righteousness,” he said, “and all these things will
be given to
you as well.” (Mt 6,33)
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