St. Paul expressed it clearly when he said, “God’s will is
for you to be holy.” (1 Thes 4,3) And Christ himself said, “Be perfect
as your heavenly Father is perfect.” (Mt 5,48)
We have to understand then that for us to be holy, we have
to be united and identified with God who revealed himself to us in
Christ. He makes himself available and accessible to us through the
many instrumentalities in the Church that was established by Christ
himself. These instrumentalities can be the sacraments, doctrine as
summarized in the Catechism, the different spiritualities and charisms
in the Church, etc.
With these instrumentalities we would be able to convert
everything in our life as an occasion and motive to pursue and achieve
holiness even while we are still journeying on earth toward our
definitive home in heaven.
Let’s see to it that our work, for example, should have as
its main purpose the achievement of holiness, and not just the
fulfillment of some technical requirements and the attainment of some
worldly goals, no matter how legitimate they are. Remember Christ
saying, “What does it a profit a man if he gains the whole world but
loses his soul.” (Mk 8,36)
We should see to it that the Christ-and-Church provided
instrumentalities lead us to have a living encounter with Christ,
something that can happen only when we activate our faith, hope and
charity through a functioning life of piety.
This life of piety, of course, is nourished and maintained
when we learn to pray and to have recourse to the sacraments, to
undergo continuing formation, to continually develop virtues and wage
a lifelong struggle against our weaknesses, temptations and sins, etc.
That life of piety should give us the awareness that we
are always with Christ in all the circumstances of our life. It should
make us understand that holiness is not so much a matter of fighting
against the negative elements in our life as of growing more and more
in love for God and for all souls.
It should lead us to understand that holiness is more a
matter of being consistent in our love for God and souls in the little
and ordinary things, which comprise the bigger part of our life, than
in showing that love in the big and extraordinary events, trials and
challenges that come only few and far between in our life.
If we are truly with Christ and thus enjoy a certain
degree of holiness, we would know how to handle any situation in our
life, be it good or bad according to human standards. There would be a
palpable manifestation of the different virtues—humility, patience,
hard work, prudence, compassion, mercy.
We would always be driven by the desire to give glory to
God in everything that we do. And to be sure, our love for God is
always accompanied and expressed in our effective love for others, for
everyone, irrespective of who they are and of how they are to us. We
would be willing to suffer for others, etc.
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