Let’s remember that we are meant to be God’s image and
likeness, and to share in his very own divine life for all eternity.
For this, we have been given Christ, the son of God who became man to
be our “way, truth and life.”
Yes, we need to follow Christ. In fact, we are supposed to
identify ourselves with him to such an extent that we become,
individually and collectively, “alter Christus,” another Christ.
Christ, of course, has already come, and did what he had
to do to redeem us. He died on the cross, resurrected and ascended
into heaven. But he continues to be with us in the Church, in the
sacraments, and in endless other ways. He accompanies us in our
earthly pilgrimage toward our heavenly definitive home with God.
These truths of our faith should be kept alive, and made
to give us the proper impulses to keep us moving in this life, guiding
and helping us as we go along. They are supposed to help us have the
proper focus and sense of direction and purpose in our life.
But let us just remember that our earthly life can be
described as a training and testing ground since through the different
conditions and circumstances of our life, it is God through Christ in
the Holy Spirit who is shaping us to be what he wants us to be—his
image and likeness, his adopted children.
This is where we have to learn how to be properly focused
but not rigid, since in our life, there will always be things that are
beyond our control and we just have to know how to deal with them.
We can only do that if we are with Christ who would show
us how to be rightly focused while being flexible and resilient,
knowing how to adapt to the different situations without getting
confused and lost.
We have to be wary of our tendency to do things simply on
our own, relying mainly on our own powers that definitely cannot cope
with the many challenges, not to mention, the mysteries in life that
include supernatural realities. We need Christ to be properly focused
but flexible and resilient, not rigid.
With Christ, what can be impossible for us can become
possible. With our own selves alone, we can only tend to be rigid as
we would like to impose our own ideas and ways on situations where,
humanly speaking, it is not possible for us to handle properly. And,
of course, the impossible remains impossible to us in the end.
It’s important that we follow closely the teaching and the
example of Christ which definitely will include suffering,
self-denial, carrying of the cross. We need to regard these things as
our liberating factors in our life, and not just purely negative,
painful elements.
And we can do that, to be sure, because of the grace God
definitely gives us and of the spiritual aspect of our humanity that
can handle the supernatural character of God’s grace.
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