It’s important that we don’t lose sight of our need for
joy even as we go through the exercise of penance which is what is
called for in this season of Advent. And that’s because, as St. Paul
said, the Lord is near. This piece of news should gladden our heart
even as we intensify our penitential acts to prepare ourselves
properly to receive him.
This Good News, which with faith we can consider as
already done, should remind us of the bigger picture about ourselves.
We come from God and not just from our parents. We are meant to be
with God in our definitive state of life in eternity. Our life here on
earth is simply a training and testing ground to see if what God wants
us to be is also what we want to be.
We should develop the appropriate sense of nostalgia and
expectation that should bring us beyond the limits of time and space,
and lead us to God in eternity. That’s where we came from and where we
are meant to be. And for this, we have been given the adequate means,
none other than Christ himself who told us that he is “the way, the
truth and the life. No one goes to the Father except through me.” (Jn
14,6)
If we live by this conviction provided to us by our
Christian faith, then we have every reason to be happy and at peace
however our earthly life turns. We should try our best never to lose
our joy and peace despite the difficulties, trials and other negative
things we can encounter in our earthly life.
We have to remember that joy and peace are what are proper
to us. As Sacred Scripture would have it, “A merry heart is the true
life of man, is an unfailing store of holiness. Length of years is
measured by rejoicing.” (Sir 30,23) And St. Thomas Aquinas has this to
say also: “Happiness is a good proper to human beings. Animals can
only be called happy by a misuse of language.”
There are many benefits of joy and peace. The Book of
Proverbs says, “A cheerful heart makes a quick recovery. It is crushed
spirits that waste a man’s frame.” (17,22) Joy facilitates thinking
and reasoning. It helps us understand people and situations. It
fosters simplicity, creates a good atmosphere around, builds up unity.
Joy facilitates the exercise of penance.
We have to make sure that we are happy and peaceful.
Obviously, we have to understand that to be in that state is first of
all a result of grace which we should always ask for. But it is also a
product of our own correspondence to God’s grace, and of our effort to
closely follow Christ’s teaching and example.
The joy and peace rooted on Christ transcend the physical
and earthly dimensions. They can be lived even in what may be
considered humanly speaking as difficult moments of pain, suffering
and privation.
For this joy and peace to be with us, we have to have a
strong faith in Christ!
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