WE have to make
sure that our piety and our devotion to
God and everything related to him has to involve both the
body and
soul. It has to involve our whole person. It just cannot
be purely
spiritual or purely material. It just cannot be only a
matter of
knowing the doctrine, quite cerebral in approach, without
some
external manifestations, or of practicing all sorts of
devotional
exercises, without knowing the doctrine of faith.
If piety has to
be authentic and consistent in all
circumstances, then it has to be lived both in our
spiritual soul
whose main faculties are our intellect and will, and in
our material
body whose link to our soul, the principle of life, are
the emotions
and passions, the memory and the imagination, our temperament
and
psychological state, etc.
When piety is
limited to one or the other essential
element of our being, to either our spiritual soul or the
material
body, then it cannot be consistent. It cannot hold out
against that
anomaly for long. It sooner or later will fall into the
tricks of
hypocrisy and self-deception.
Thus, we can
have people who can be described as solid in
their doctrinal knowledge and theological training but
suffering from
persistent sinfulness that is usually hidden. Or people
who do a lot
of devotional practices, active in parochial activities,
but
committing big sins due to ignorance or confusion with
respect to
doctrinal and moral principles.
The challenge
is how to put these two essential elements
of our body and soul together in the service of authentic
piety. We
know that due to our wounded nature, these two are many
times in some
kind of life-long conflict. St. Paul articulated this
well when he
said: “I see another law at work in my body, warring
against the law
of my mind and holding me captive to the law of sin that
dwells within
me.” (Rom 7,23)
Of course, to
tackle this predicament we should first of
all ask for the grace of God in whom nothing is
impossible. But we
also have to do our part, which is to struggle and to
train our body
to conform itself to the truth captured by our intellect
that is
enlightened by faith.
This will require
spending a lot of time meditating on the
word of God, on the life and example of Christ and all
the saints,
most especially Our Lady, so that we can develop the
appropriate
feelings, emotions and passions that serve as the link
between our
spiritual soul and our material body. Hopefully, this
will lead us to
have a strong and indestructible attachment to God, one
that no human
problem can take away.
In this regard,
it would be good to appeal to the Holy
Spirit, our sanctifier, so that we can receive his gifts
and fruits.
As our Catechism would put it, the gifts and fruits of
the Holy Spirit
help us to be docile to the workings of grace (gifts) and
to show the
effects of such grace (fruits).
It’s very
interesting to know the fruits of the Holy
Spirit because they show us what great blessing we can
have when we
finally receive them. According to the Catechism, they
are: charity,
joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, generosity, faithfulness,
modesty, self-control, chastity. (cfr. 1852)
Imagine what we
would enjoy if our piety is genuine, if it
truly involves both the body and the soul, if it comes as
a
consequence of being with God in the Holy Spirit!
I would suggest
that we should really spend time
meditating on our faith and training our body by
developing our
emotions and passions, conforming them to the truths of
our faith
rather than to the impulses of the sensible world alone.
In an authentic
piety, we materialize the spiritual and
spiritualize the material.
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