Saturday, December 15, 2018

Avoid tempting God


IT was nice to learn about Blessed Bartolo Longo
(1841-1926) who, as the Wikepedia puts it, “was an Italian lawyer who
has been beatified by the Roman Catholic Church. He was a former
satanist who returned to the Christian faith and became a third order
Dominican, dedicating his life to the Rosary and the Virgin Mary.”
  
            Other sources provided some more information about him: he
was orphaned early in life, he was involved in the nationalist
movement of the time that was anti-Catholic, he became a Satanist in
his 20’s, he went into the occult, attended in séances, experimented
on drugs, participated in orgies... There’s a lot more, but let’s
spare ourselves from more unpleasant things.
  
            But since all these did not give him peace, but rather a
lot of problems including psychological and emotional ones, leading
him to depression, he sought some relief and eventually was led back
to the Catholic faith. Later, he became so deep a devotee of the Holy
Rosary that St. John Paul described him as a man of the Rosary during
his beatification.
  
            His story, for sure, will elicit very reassuring responses
from us who often wonder how we can become a saint as we should when
we are hounded always by our weaknesses, temptations and sin itself.
Sometimes, we think that to become a saint is impossible and that
stories of saints are more fantasy and fiction than real. Or at best,
saints are very special people who never went into really bad things.
  
            Somehow, his story reminds us that God and his grace can
take on anything we can mess ourselves in. There is always hope. As
St. Paul said, “where sin has abounded, the grace of God has abounded
more.” (Rom 5,20) His story calls to mind that as said in the Book of
Ezekiel, God does not take delight in the death of the wicked but in
his salvation. (33,11)
  
            The writer Oscar Wilde also put it so succinctly: “Every
saint has a past, every sinner has a future.” In other words, we
really have no reason to fear and to worry too much over our delicate
condition here in this world.
  
            But for all that, we should also be careful not to fall
into the opposite side, which is presumption, or tempting God. That is
to say, we can fall into the trick of the devil who can suggest to us
that since God is very powerfully merciful and can forgive us our sins
no matter how grave they are, then we can just go on sinning, or exert
no adequate effort to avoid sin and temptation.
  
            We have to be wary of the wiles of the devil who is good
in the rebound if at a certain moment his initial attempts to tempt us
fail. Tempting God by putting him to some test, or by presuming that
he will forgive us anyway no matter what, is a grave sin and
represents a big success for the devil.
  
            Remember the devil tempting Christ himself. “The devil
took him to the holy city and had him stand on the highest point of
the temple. ‘If you are the Son of God,’ he said, ‘throw yourself
down. For it is written: He will command his angels concerning you,
and they will life you up in their hands, so that you will not strike
your foot against a stone.’ Jesus answered him, ‘It is also written:
Do not put the Lord you God to the test.’” (Mt 4,5-7)
  
            This is what tempting God is all about. When we are
tempted by the devil, or by the world, or by our own selves, let’s
never put God to the test by rationalizing that since God is all
merciful, he will always forgive me if I fall to this temptation, or
that he will not mind if I sin.


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