THE expression comes
from St Paul’s second letter to the
Corinthians (4,7). It is meant to remind us that all of
us, and
particularly those who have been gifted with special
graces and
charisms, have a God-given treasure that is kept in
delicate
containers, that is, ourselves in all our weak and
fragile condition.
Therefore we need to
be most careful about this predicament
in our life. This means that we always have to be with
God who gives
us all the strength that we need to be faithful and
generous with his
gift to us. On our own, this gift would just go to waste.
We have to
struggle always to be with him, since we tend to separate
ourselves
from him. And with him, in spite of all the trials, we
can manage to
survive.
The complete passage
goes this way: “We have this treasure
in vessels of clay to show that this all-surpassing power
is from God
and not from us. We are hard pressed on every side, but
not crushed;
perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not
abandoned; struck
down, but not destroyed.” (7-9)
These words of St.
Paul acquire current relevance these days
as we hear about that sad piece of news that in the US,
an estimated
300 Catholic priests in Pennsylvania molested more than
1000 children
since the 1940s, according to a grand jury report that
accused senior
church officials of systematically covering up
complaints.
We need to realize
that the higher or the greater or the
more special the gift of God is given to us, the more
responsible, the
more watchful, the more prudent we ought to be in keeping
it.
We really have to
remind ourselves constantly that no matter
how confident we are of our strength, physical, moral or
spiritual, we
still have feet of clay.
In the Book of Daniel,
we are told of a statue whose head
was made of fine gold, its breast and arms of silver, its
belly and
thighs of brass, its legs of iron. All impressive! But
its feet were,
sadly, part iron and part clay. (cfr 2,32-33)
It took only one small
stone that struck it at its feet to
bring the whole statue crumbling down. It’s an image of
how we are—we
can be majestic in many aspects, but we’ll always have
these feet of
clay, our Achilles’ heel.
We should always be on
guard, distancing ourselves from
temptations and occasions of sins, purifying our
intentions always so
as to ward off unwelcome thoughts and desires, ever
developing an
authentic spirit of penance to cleanse and strengthen
ourselves as we
go through the adventure of life.
We need to realize
that the higher or greater or more
special the gift of God is given to us, the more
attractive we would
be to the enemies of God. We would become a favorite
target of the
many demons around. They will do everything to bring us
down.
We need to remember
that the only way to handle this
predicament is to be vitally united with Christ. This
means that like
Christ and with Christ, we should be willing to suffer
and to die,
that is, to die to our sins and weaknesses so that we can
also
resurrect with him, so that we can have the final
victory.
St. Paul explains it
this way: “We always carry around in
our body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus
may also be
revealed in our body. For we who are alive are always
being given over
to the death for Jesus’ sake, so that his life may also
be revealed in
our mortal body.” (2 Cor 4,10-11)
We all need to
understand these words well, internalizing
and assimilating them into our system!
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