Sunday, April 15, 2018

Saints also committed sins


THAT is one thing for sure. Never think that to be a
saint, one has to be spotlessly clean from beginning to end. We need
to disabuse ourselves from this false idea of holiness.
  
            In fact, the opposite is quite true. To be a saint, one
has to be prepared to be hounded by all sorts of temptations and to be
buffeted by all kinds of weaknesses. And yes, from time to time, he
might fall and commit even a grave sin. But he also knows how to
bounce back.
  
            This is the real secret of becoming a saint—his capacity
to begin and begin again, never allowing himself to get discouraged by
his defects and sins, always quick to go back to God asking for
forgiveness and for more grace, and also fast to learn precious
lessons from his mistakes and sins.
  
            In fact, in a certain way, his defects, the temptations
around, and the sins he may commit would constitute as a strong urge
to go back to God as quickly as possible. He does not allow them to
separate him from his Father God.
  
            And on the part of God, we can be sure that he would be
filled with tremendous joy when we come back to him after we fall.
This is what we can conclude from those very consoling parables of the
lost sheep, the lost coin and the prodigal son.

            Pope Francis, in his latest Apostolic Exhortation, Gaudete
et exsultate, echoed the same truth. “Not everything a saint says is
completely faithful to the Gospel,” he said. “Not everything he or she
does is authentic or perfect. What we need to contemplate is the
totality of their life, their entire journey of growth in holiness,
the reflection of Jesus Christ that emerges when we grasp their
overall meaning as a person.” (22)
   
            On our part, we should try our best to be very faithful.
But it is also understood that our best efforts can sometimes fail us.
We can still commit errors and even grave ones. But there’s always
hope. God does not abandon us. He is willing to go through the
complicated process of becoming man and dying for us on the cross and
remaining with us for all time in the Church and with the sacraments
just to bring us back to him.
  
            This truth of faith should fill us with joy and
confidence, and instead of mainly worrying about how to avoid sin, we
should be more interested in doing what is good, what God wants us to
do and to accomplish in this world. True sanctity is not so much a
matter of being too concerned about sin as of doing the will of God.
Sanctity is more joy than worry, more action than caution, although
the latter have their role to play.
   
            Let us remember that God wants all men to be saved. (cfr.
1 Tim 2,4) He created us for that purpose, to be like him and to be
with him for all eternity. And even if we spoiled the original design
God had for us, he has repaired so well that we can say that we are
better off this time after sin than before sin.
  
            That’s because with our sin, God became man and gave us a
better deal of how to be with him in spite of our tendency to go
against him. Somehow our dignity as children of God enjoys a greater
status since by becoming man God shares our nature so we can more
intimately share with his divine nature.
  
            It goes without saying that we should not trivialize our
tendency to sin. We should fight it as much as we can. But that
reality should not undermine God’s will that he is bent on saving
us—of course, with our cooperation also.



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