Monday, June 25, 2018

Our radical identity and mission


WE really should know who we really are and what our real
purpose in life is. To be sure, we are not just our own name, with so
many distinguishing marks attached to it.

            We are not just someone who was born into such and such a
family, who come from this or that place, who has such specific status
legally, economically, socially, professionally, etc. Much less are we
just our physical attributes.

            Of course, our identity includes all these categories. But
our most basic and radical identity that should permeate all these
identifying categories is that we are all creatures of God made in his
image and likeness and meant to correspond to God’s design for us as
his image and likeness and ultimately as adopted children of his.

            In other words, before we say our name and the many other
characteristics to identify ourselves, we have to acknowledge first of
all that our true identity is that we are children of God. And from
there, we can already know what our basic and ultimate mission or
purpose in life is.

            It’s important that we realize that our most fundamental
identity as God’s creatures and adopted children is not a static
phenomenon. It is something dynamic, a work in progress.

            Its completion and perfection takes place at our death and
at the end of time, when we would hopefully fully correspond to God’s
design for us as his image and likeness and his adopted children
characterized mainly by love which is the very essence of God.

            That’s simply because as created in God’s image and
likeness, we have been endowed with intelligence and will which would
enable us to correspond or not to God’s designs for us. We are a
knowing and willing creature whose creation requires our own role of
corresponding to God’s will.

            Our creation is not a simple one-way God-to-creature
affair. It is a two-way affair. Because of how God wants us to be, God
just did not create us like he did with all the material creatures,
both animate and inanimate. He created us to be like him, capable of
corresponding to his designs for us.

            Since we spoiled with our sin our first creation in Adam
and Eve who enjoyed the so-called state of original justice, God sent
his Son, the perfect image God has of himself and thus the pattern of
our humanity that is meant to be in God’s image, to recover us and
complete our creation. Christ is the redeemer of our damaged humanity.

            Our true identity that we need to aim at is for us to
become like Christ—in fact, to be another Christ. And the radical and
ultimate mission we have in this world therefore is for us to
correspond to God’s designs for us to be another Christ.

            This ideal can be described in many ways—that we be holy,
that we know how to love God and one another as Christ himself has
shown us, that like God we have to be merciful and to strive to
reflect in our lives the perfections of God—his wisdom, power,
goodness, that like Christ we have to be willing to suffer, to bear
all the sins of men, to have the basic attitude of wanting to serve
and not to be served, etc.

            We need to reinforce this very fundamental truth about our
real identity, especially today when our worldly affairs tend to
remove us from it. That’s why Christ, before ascending to heaven,
first commissioned his apostles to “go out into the whole world,
preaching the gospel and baptizing them in the name of the Father, and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.”

            It’s actually a commissioning that is meant for all of us,
to be carried out according to our possibilities. Insofar as Christ is
concerned, everything has already been given for us to carry out that
mission effectively.


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