We have to know what exactly St. Paul meant by those
words. What we can readily see is that he made all these predicaments
a reason for him to go to Christ, to identify himself more closely
with Christ who went all the way to making himself like sin without
committing sin just to save us. (cfr. 2 Cor 5,21)
We have to learn how to react to all these negative and
evil elements in our life from the point of view of our Christian
faith, and never just from our own estimation of things that would
often lead us to be scandalized, to feel bad and discouraged, and to
run away from the one who can resolve everything for us, including
those we cannot anymore resolve.
Our faith in God can still work and function even if we
are down spiritually and morally, because it is, first of all, a gift
from God who will always give it to us irrespective of how we have
been behaving. We should just try our best to receive it and to
correspond to it as best that we can.
With that faith, we know that God is always merciful. “For
God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to
save the world through Him,” we are told. (Jn 3,17) And Christ himself
said, “I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to
repentance.” (Lk 5,32) And there still many other passages and
parables that reiterate that ever-available mercy of God for all of
us.
We have to learn how to react properly when we are
bothered by our weaknesses, temptations, when we fall into sin and are
hounded by all kinds of difficulties, trials and challenges. We have
to consider these predicaments as golden opportunities to get closer
to Christ, to identify ourselves more intimately with him.
So, instead of running away from God because of these
predicaments, we should rather run fast toward him, asking for light
and help, for forgiveness if we already have fallen into sin. It’s
only then that these predicaments can become sources of strength.
We have to be wary of our tendency to run away from God
due to shame or fear, for that can only mean that we are being tricked
by the devil or are simply being guided by our own very limited and
error-prone estimation of things rather than by our Christian faith.
If we react with faith, then we can still have hope and
practice charity despite the worst predicament that we can fall into
in this life. If we react with faith, we can fulfill what St. Paul
recommended when we have to deal with all sorts of evil in the world.
And that is that we can put on the whole armor of God. That way we put
ourselves in the best condition of “being strong in the Lord and in
his mighty power.” (Eph 6,10)
There is a certain invincibility that we can enjoy even in
the midst of all the cuts and wounds that are unavoidable in our
earthly struggles.
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