Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Be always in awe


IT may sound unrealistic and impracticable, but it happens
to be the ideal condition for all of us to be in. If we truly believe
in God, if we live fully by our faith, we would know that we have a
tremendous treasure in our life and that the only proper way to
correspond to that reality is to be always in awe.
   
            Yes, we have to do our part in what we may call the game
or the drama of our life, and it’s true that our part is no laughing
matter. It is horribly serious! It would require of us nothing less
than total detachment from earthly things, even from our very own
life.
  
            But then again, if we manage to do our part and place our
life entirely in God’s hands, we have no reason whatsoever to fear or
to worry. In fact, we have every reason to be cheerful, confident and
in awe.
  
            God has taken care of everything that can happen to us in
this life. We just have to go along with his will and ways as revealed
to us fully in Christ and as executed for us even up to now and till
the end of time via the many instrumentalities that the Church now
provides.
   
            We have been left with God’s word, with the sacraments,
with the ever moving testimonies of the heroic lives of saints. Every
situation in our life, whether considered humanly speaking as good or
bad, is given a way of how it can sanctified, of how it can be a means
and an occasion to be with God, to give glory to him, to be occasions
to develop and to show love.
  
            God gives us his grace, a participation of his divine life
even while we are still here. He is not sparing in giving that grace.
Whenever we commit a mistake or even a grave sin, he is quick to
forgive. As St. Paul once said, “Where sin has abounded, grace has
abounded even more.” (Rom 5,20)
   
            We, of course, have to live this awe with naturalness. We
should not flaunt it. The genuine awe that is based on our vital union
with God will always be expressed in humility. And it is very much
compatible with human suffering and that attitude of wanting to serve
and not to be served. It is never arrogant, vain and self-absorbed.
   
            Very seldom would it manifest itself in some extraordinary
ways as in those cases of ecstasy, levitation, bilocation,
transfiguration and the like that some saints experienced. Ordinarily,
it is lived without grabbing attention from anyone. But definitely, it
would be observed and seen by others one way or another.
  
            We need to study and know more about what our faith tells
us about God and us with the view of acquiring that conviction that
God loves us so much as to effect in us that state of joy and awe.
  
            When we notice that we are easily affected by the problems
and difficulties we encounter in life, or when we seem to be always
bored and feeling dry, it is a clear sign that we not living our
faith, maybe because we have not studied it well and embodied it in
our life adequately. The true life of piety is not yet developed. The
state of joy, peace and awe is not yet achieved.
  
            We have to realize that to be always in awe would enable
us to have the proper attitude toward God and others. We would be
thankful to God and we would show it by doing a lot of good without
counting the cost nor expecting any reward. We would also be generous
in our self-giving to others.
  
            Let’s see to it that we are striving to attain this state
of awe, joy and peace in our life.


No comments: