MANY people
often ask about how they would be able to know
and love God. The question is understandable, since God
is and will
always be a mystery to us. No matter how much we try, we
can never
know and love him fully or enough.
And yet it is
actually easy also to know and love him, for
the simple reason that he is always around, and
everything else in
life somehow points us to him if we have the proper
disposition or
attitude. Besides, he is the most lovable being we can
ever have since
he is the fullness of goodness which is the reason for
loving.
We just have to
be wary of our tendency, often
unexpressed, of wanting to dominate God by knowing and
loving him in
such a way that we could not know and love him more.
This danger
comes about because of our tendency also to
abuse our freedom. In so many words, we actually want to
submit God to
us or, worse, to be superior to God or even to replace
him. We want to
know and love him in a way that we cannot know and love
him more.
We have to
remember that the highest level we can attain
in knowing and loving God is when we would finally be in
heaven. There
we would enjoy what is called as the beatific vision
when, as St. John
in first letter would describe, “we will be like him
(Christ), for we
will see him as he is.” (3,2)
But such state
is a dynamic one, perpetuating itself for
all eternity. It’s not static in such a way that we have
already
attained the highest level and that there could nothing
higher
anymore.
We just have to
be contented with knowing and loving God
in the many ordinary ways we have at hand. In fact,
everything in our
life, even our problems and the weaknesses, mistakes and
sins that we
commit, can and should be made use of to know and love
God. All of
these can be material and occasion for knowing and loving
God.
We can know and
love God simply by fulfilling the duties
of our state in life and of the different positions we
occupy in life.
By obeying our lawful authorities, we are actually
obeying God because
any authority here on earth is always a participation of
the authority
of God. (cfr Rom 13,1-2)
And then we
should try our best that all throughout the
day, with our spirit of prayer and contemplation, we
would somehow get
to know what God is asking of us in a given moment.
We are already
given some general ways of knowing and
loving him. We have to get to know God through Christ in
the Holy
Spirit who now inspires the Church and the many
instrumentalities in
the Church.
We are told to
follow his commandments which are already
clearly articulated. We have to remember Christ’s words
in this
regard: “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.”
(Jn 14,15) In
short, we have to know as best as we can the will of God
at every
moment. We have to be discerning of the finer points of
that will.
And so, as we
are clearly told, we have to learn to pray
without ceasing, to love our neighbor as Christ has loved
us, to love
even our enemies, to forgive others so that we may be
forgiven also,
to love the cross. We are told that we be productive and
fruitful in
life, making an accounting of what God has given us.
We have to give
special or preferential treatment to the
poor, because as Christ said, “Whatever you did for the
least of these
brothers of mine, you did for me.” (Mt 25,40)
There are
endless ways of knowing and loving God. We just
have to do any of them, one at a time!
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