To be an empty suit is to be quite impressive and showy on
the outside, in appearance, in airs or aura, etc. but rather empty on
the inside, that is, in substance, in spirit that animates our life,
in real capabilities.
Dictionaries describe an empty suit as “a prominent person
regarded as lacking substance, personality or ability.” A number of
similar variations can flow from that general description of an empty
suit.
An empty vessel, while literally meaning a container with
nothing inside, is a biblical term first referred to in 2 Kings 4,1-6
where a woman, troubled by the creditors of her dead husband, was
asked to get as many empty vessels so that oil can be poured into them
to pay for her husband’s debt.
That term has come to mean our need to empty ourselves so
that the oil of God can fill us, which is the condition or state that
is proper to us. We have to empty ourselves of our own selves, so to
speak, so that the spirit of God, the spirit that is proper to us
since we are God’s image and likeness, can fill us.
This need has been referred to several times in the New
Testament, in particular in the Second Letter of St. Paul to Timothy:
“If anyone cleanses himself from what is dishonorable, he will be a
vessel for honorable use, set apart as holy, useful to the master of
the house, ready for every good work.” (2,21)
We have to be wary of our tendency to become an empty suit
rather than an empty vessel. We cannot deny that the prevalent culture
nowadays pressure us to live some kind of hypocrisy, since we are made
to worry more about our public image, our appearance than about what
really matters in our life, and that is, to be truly identified with
Christ, who is the pattern of our humanity, the redeemer of our
damaged humanity.
This does not mean that we should not worry about our
public image. We should! But it should be a public image that is
solidly supported by the real substance, that is, the spirit of God
animating in us.
We should worry less about our public image or our public
packaging than about our quest to have God in us, since the former
would just come as a consequence of the latter.
Besides nowadays, more and more people already have the
skill to discern which one is just an empty suit and which one is a
real man of God. Sooner or later, the real character of a person can
be known by the fruit that they bear, so to speak. They are known by
their deeds and the effects of their behavior.
As Christ said: “A good tree does not bear bad fruit, nor
does a bad tree bear good fruit. For every tree is known by its own
fruit…A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth
good; and en evil man out of the evil treasure of his brings forth
evil.” (Lk 6,43-45)
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