Thursday, December 5, 2019

God’s mercy and our effort


GOD wants us to be like him, holy, merciful, perfect.
While he will do everything to achieve that goal and give us all the
means, he cannot force us to be like him.
  
            That’s because, like him, we are supposed to freely choose
to be like him. And given our wounded and weakened condition, a
consequence of the abuse of our freedom, we now need to exert an
all-out effort to correspond to his loving designs for us.
  
            We need to learn how to blend God’s mercy and the
all-effort we need to exert to achieve our ultimate goal and win our
definitive status as God’s image and likeness, children of his and
sharers of his divine nature.
   
            What we have to avoid is to rely simply on God’s mercy
without exerting any effort, or the other way around—to think that we
can achieve our goal with our effort alone without God’s mercy.
  
            The former position can be described as falling under the
heretical belief called ‘gnosticism,’ while the latter can be the
expression of another heresy called ‘Pelagianism.’

            Pope Francis, in his document “Gaudete et exsultate,”
exposed the dangers of these two heresies that still hold sway over
many good people who want to be holy as they should.
  
            It’s true that God is all merciful. He has the last word
on how we are to be judged. It’s he who will complete and perfect
everything in us, because in the first place he began a good work with
us. (cfr. Phil 1,6)
  
            Thus, no matter how much we have strayed from his will, he
will do everything to bring us back to him. “God did not send his Son
into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through
Him.” (Jn 3,17)
  
            Remember that episode when the disciples were astonished
at what Christ said that it was easier for a camel to enter the eye of
a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. (cfr. Mt
19,24ff) The disciples asked him, “Who then can be saved?”

              Christ’s response precisely reassures us that he will do
everything to save us. “With man this is impossible,” he said, “but
with God all things are possible.” (Mt 19,26) And St. Paul reiterates
this point when he said, “I can do all things through Christ who gives
me strength.” (Phil 4,13)
  
            We therefore should not be afraid to do things that would
seem impossible for us. We just have to go to Christ, following him
very closely, and the impossible becomes possible.
  
            Following Christ, of course, demands that we put to action
his indications for us. Like, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must
deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.” (Mt 16,24) We
cannot overemphasize this need for self-denial since our first enemy
are our own selves, and specifically our flesh that simply wants to be
ruled by animal instincts rather than by reason that is inspired
faith, hope and charity.
  
            Christ also wants us to enter by the narrow gate (cfr. Mt
7,13), since our tendency is simply to give in to the delights of our
flesh without any thought about the need for sacrifice,
self-discipline and the like.
  
            Christ wants us to give our all in loving God and
everybody else. In fact, he wants that we love one another the way he
has loved us. This, of course, means that we, like Christ, should be
willing to give up our life out of love for God and others.
  
            Indeed, God has the last word. He is the one that makes
the impossible possible for us. He is the one who will complete and
perfect everything for us. But we also need to do our part, willing to
follow as closely as possible the example of Christ who is “the way,
the truth and the life” for us.


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