WE have to
understand that our life here on earth is meant
to be a life with Christ. And that’s simply because, as
Christ himself
said, he is “the way, the truth and the life.” (Jn 14,6)
He said that
no one goes to the Father, no one can go to God, from
whom we come and
to whom we belong, except through him.
life. It is by definition a life with Christ who is the
pattern of our
humanity and the savior of our damaged humanity. And even
if one is
not a Christian believer, he somehow knows that his life
is not just
his own. There are at least many ‘stakeholders’ or
persons unavoidably
involved in his life—his parents, siblings, friends,
colleagues,
society in general, etc.
Christian
believers should realize that we have to
continually keep company with Christ whom we have to
know, love, serve
and identify ourselves with. And one way of knowing him,
the first
step before we can love, serve and identify ourselves
with him, is to
read and meditate on the gospel, or the whole of Sacred
Scripture,
that contains the life and teachings of Christ.
But there is
just one important qualification in this
business of reading and meditating on the gospel. We
should not just
read and approach it as if we are just reading a book, a
novel, a
play, a historical document.
our whole being, and not just our intellect or feelings.
It has to
involve our whole being that includes the whole gamut of
the spiritual
dimension and the supernatural destination of our life.
I remember Opus
Dei founder St. Josemaria Escriva saying
that in reading and meditating on the gospel, one has to
make himself
as one more character in any episode of Christ’s life as
narrated in
the gospel.
to be physically present in a particular episode. This
attitude would
simply confine us at best to a historical and cultural
impression of
Christ that is by definition limited in scope and
relevance. We would
miss the living Christ.
by faith, so that we can have not only a certain nearness
to Christ
but also can manage to discern the spirit of Christ which
will always
be relevant whatever period and situation we may be in
the timeline of
the world.
Let’s remember
that Christ’s words and teachings as
contained in the gospel are living and eternal words. Not
only do they
have a universal scope insofar as our life and salvation
is concerned,
but also have particular and unique messages for each one
of us.
Thus, the
letter to the Hebrews describes God’s word as
revealed by Christ as “living and active, sharper than
any two-edged
sword, piercing to the division of soul and spirit, of
joints and
marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the
heart.”
(4,12)
Reading and
meditating on the gospel with faith would
truly enable us to live our life with Christ irrespective
of the
historical, cultural differences, etc. between his
earthly life and
ours. It validates what the Catechism says about how our
life can be a
life with Christ. The Catechism says:
“Christ enables
us to live in him all that he himself
lived, and he lives it in us…We are called only to become
one with
him, for he enables us as the members of his Body to
share in what he
lived for us in his flesh as our model.” (521)
The Catechism
continues: “We must continue to accomplish
in ourselves the stages of Jesus’ life and his mysteries
and often to
beg him to perfect and realize them in us and in his
whole Church…”
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