THERE is no
doubt that cases of all kinds of addictions
and obsessions are on the rise these day. They even
affect little
children. These cases are often referred to as mental
illnesses or
emotional or psychological disorders.
Aside from the
usual addictions and obsessions of food,
drinks and drugs, we now have addictions to pornography
and other
things that our new technologies offer, like games,
social media, etc.
Oh, how much time and energy are wasted in these
addictions and
obsession, not to mention the more important loss not
only of one’s
mind but also of his spiritual life!
This phenomenon
gives us a new challenge to face and
tackle. They should not be there only for us to lament
and suffer.
They are there to elicit in us an improvement in the way
we handle
ourselves and to spur in us a greater development toward
human and
Christian maturity and dominion over the things of this
world.
Yes, we are
being challenged to be masters of our
fascinating creations, rather than to be their slaves.
And to achieve
that, it is quite clear that there has to be a tighter
union between
God our creator and us, his masterpiece creature.
This tighter
union between God should redound to a greater
coherence among the many dimensions and aspects of our
life—the
spiritual and material, the eternal and temporal, the
soul and the
body, etc.—all the way down to their finer points.
With respect to
this challenge of addictions and
obsessions, we have to learn how to make our biological
constitution,
or specifically, the management of our pleasure hormones,
conform to
the requirements of right reason, if not of our faith,
hope and
charity.
A point in the
book, The Way, by Opus Dei founder, St.
Josemaria Escriva, can give us an idea of how we need to
humanize and
Christianize our emotions, passions and the hormones that
usually
figure prominently in the development of addictions and
obsessions.
It says, “You
tell me, yes, that you want to. Very good.
But do you want to as a miser longs for gold, as a mother
loves her
child, as a worldling craves for honors, or as a wretched
sensualist
seeks his pleasure? No? Then, you don’t want to.” (316)
What it is
trying to say is that unless our love for God
and for others, for doing good, for praying and for
making sacrifices,
etc., involves our emotions, passions, and the
corresponding hormones,
then that love cannot go far. It will be overtaken by the
baser kinds
of love of the flesh, of world and of many other things
other than
God, the source of all goodness.
The challenge
now is how to make the love for God and
others and all that is truly good involve not only our
mind and our
spiritual operations but also our heart and our bodily
operations. If
our piety is mainly spiritual without involving the body,
that piety
cannot last and cannot cope with the trials and
difficulties we can
meet in this world.
We have to
learn how to spiritualize and supernaturalize
our bodily functions involved in any act that is
objectively good,
starting with our relation God and then in our relation
with others
and the things of this world.
A lot of
discipline and self-denial will obviously
involved here, since the body will always be attracted
only to what is
material and bodily pleasurable. That’s the reason Christ
told us that
if we have to follow him, we need to deny ourselves and,
in fact, to
carry the cross, that is, his cross, the cross of all our
sins and all
the evils of this world so that that cross will lead to
our
resurrection and salvation in Christ.
This is the
only way to battle addictions and obsessions.
The medicine and other therapeutic and rehab measures,
while helpful,
can only do so much. It is God who can truly overcome our
addictions
and obsessions.
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