WE
really have to learn how to refer everything to God.
This should be like an instinct, an urge that needs to be
corresponded. We should always remember that the constant
and ultimate
parameter of our life is God, since he is the one who
sets the final
conditions and purpose of our life. He is also the one
that takes care
of everything, including our mistakes and other
negativities that we
can encounter in life.
For
this, we really should rev up our intellect and will,
the primary faculties we have, so that they can actively
engage us
with God as we go through the different events and
situations in life.
They are the faculties that would spark and keep our
faith, hope and
charity alive and kicking. They are the ones that are
supposed to
direct the other faculties and powers we have.
Obviously, we have make full use of our other
faculties—our imagination, our memory, down to our
emotions and
passions and even our instincts—for this purpose of
engaging and
connecting us fully and constantly with God.
We
should be careful to avoid letting our human faculties
and powers to be fueled only by things of nature, like
the play of our
biological elements, or by our worldly and temporal
affairs, and much
less by our own selves, our own interests.
We
should try that they are always on the move but
properly directed, avoiding the state of idleness which
is always a
danger to us. We need to see to it that our spiritual
faculties—our
intelligence and will—are in good control of our other
faculties.
We have
to realize that God is always intervening in our
lives. We should be constantly perceptive of this reality
and figure
out how best we can go along with his will and ways.
Thus, we have to
try our best to know the intricacies of God’s will by
meditating on
the gospel regularly, by praying and always having the
attitude of
looking for God, wanting to do his will, etc.
When we
encounter situations where we do not know how to
relate them to God, the very least thing we have to do is
to pray,
making acts of faith and love. Meditating on the psalms,
for example,
can give us good insights on how to relate things to God.
Psalms
24 and 25, for example, give us an idea of what
attitude we ought to have and of how to deal with God
when we are in
the dark as to how to relate things to God.
“Who
may ascend the mountain of the Lord?,” Psalm 24 asks.
“Who may stand in his holy place? The one who has clean
hands and a
pure heart, who does not trust in an idol or swear by a
false god.”
(3-4)
With
these words, somehow we are given an idea of the
conditions that would enable to get close to God and
eventually to
know and be familiar with his will and ways.
Psalm
25, on the other hand, shows us what attitude we
ought to have before we ask God for light. “No one who
hopes in you,”
it says, “will ever be put to shame, but shame will come
on those who
are treacherous without cause. Show me your ways, Lord,
teach me your
paths. Guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are
God my Savior,
and my hope is in you all day long…” (3-5)
It’s
good to be familiar with these words and to try to
live out what they say, especially nowadays when we are
confronted
with many new things that can confuse us. We know that we
can easily
be seduced by the many conveniences and advantages these
new things
can offer without realizing the dangers that they can
also occasion.
We
really would need to relate these things to God!
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