If our understanding of giving is that of a gift, we would
know that what we give is not just some objects, but rather our own
selves. Our giving ourselves as a gift to others then becomes the
purest expression of love.
We have to do everything so that our self-giving to others
conform to this ideal of being a gift—given without counting the cost
and with the understanding that what we are giving is not just some
objects, but our own selves.
This is the language of love that was first initiated by
God to us and that has generated an endless cycle of love, of
gratuitous self-giving to God and to one another. It is important that
we feel this tremendous love of God for us so that we can return love
with love, with God as the first object of our love and all the others
as a consequence.
Let’s remember that God’s love for us accounts for
everything that is good in us—our life, our talents and the many other
endowments and blessings that we may not even realize. And more than
this, God has given us his own self by making us his image and
likeness, children of his, sharers of his divine life.
And even if we have damaged that original gift, God has
given us his own Son who became man to save us. In other words, God
has given us the greatest gift, no less than his own Son who, aside
from becoming man like us, had to offer his life on the cross as a
ransom for our sins.
We have to learn how to be most aware of this reality of
God’s gift to us so that we can learn also how to give ourselves as a
gift to him and to everybody else. That’s why Christ told us, “freely
you have received, freely give.” (Mt 10,8)
Christ concretely expressed this way of gratuitous
self-giving in the new commandment he gave us that we have to love one
another as he himself has loved us. It’s a love, a self-giving that is
completely gratuitous without counting the cost nor expecting any
reward.
But given our human condition that is marked by our
proneness to getting spoiled by any gift given to us, we have to make
sure that we try our best to live by what God has intended our love to
be—that it be given without counting the cost, without expecting any
reward and that it should also arouse in us the same urge to give
ourselves as a gift, without counting the cost nor expecting any
return.
In this way, we generate a world of pure love, of purely
gratuitous self-giving that would be a true image of how our
definitive state of life in heaven with God would be. Let us not allow
ourselves to be frustrated in this endeavor by the usual problem that
we ourselves make in this regard. Let us simply give and give, being
generous, magnanimous, merciful, compassionate, since this kind of
self-giving will in the end conquer all things, bear all things, endure all things.
No comments:
Post a Comment