Let’s remember that these Christian ideals are eminently
spiritual and supernatural in nature, although adapted, of course, to
our human condition. As such, they usually are above our head, and
cannot be attained simply using our natural powers. We need God’s
grace to which we should try our best to correspond.
This is where a lot of effort, adjustments, sacrifices are
required. And this will obviously take time, even a lot of time. We
have to learn, for example, how to materialize the spiritual, how to
put in the proper context the supernatural messages of the gospel, how
they can be made attractive and doable to the people, etc.
When we propose these Christian ideals, we should try our
best not only to give the doctrine, the principles and some ideas. We
should also come out with the appropriate plans, strategies, training
and formation programs, etc., plus the fact that we have to accompany
the people in pursuing these ideals as best that we could. We should
avoid just preaching about these ideals.
Obviously, we should first live what we preach, since we
cannot give what we do not have, nor be convincing and credible when
we ourselves are not practicing what we preach. The inconsistency
would be shown one way or another, sooner or later.
By living first what we preach, we would be richly
supported by practical considerations that would be most helpful for
the people to live what is being preached to them. At all costs, we
should avoid preaching what we do not live ourselves or preaching in a
way that we know people are not yet ready to live them. Thus, we
should try our best to know the people very well so we would know how
to adapt the preaching to them.
It’s true that we should preach in season and out of
season as St. Paul said (cfr. 2 Tim 4,2), but this does not excuse us
from adapting our preaching to the concrete conditions of the people.
Otherwise, our preaching would be regarded as overwhelming and would
just turn people off rather than inspire them.
Let’s remember that Christ himself did this. That is why
he used parables and other devices to impart important lessons to the
people. Obviously, employing the right way to preach, to walk the talk
and to accompany people in their pursuit for the Christian ideals
would be a very dynamic thing, a life-long process that will never
end. We should just be ready for this condition, humble enough to
accept its tentative character and to make the necessary adjustments
and adaptations along the way.
In this regard, it would be helpful that we assume a
sporting but creative spirit in this task. We have to expect some
mistakes that we can commit, some failures, etc., but these should
offer us precious lessons rather than be simply discouraged.
If we persist in this, time will come when it is kind of
instinctive in us to know how to preach and guide people gradually as
on an inclined plane.
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