But also like him, let us also say, “My Lord and my God,”
that portray that dramatic, very sharp turn from unbelief to belief.
May these words be also on our lips, always, and shot from a heart
burning with faith and love, ever fresh and dripping with desire.
We need to take care of our faith. We cannot take this
duty for granted, especially now when the world is sinking in
confusion and error as it distances itself farther from God.
In many places in the world today, people are now
legalizing and inculturating outright immoralities and perversions,
rationalizing them as part of their human rights, their freedom, or as
a gesture of tolerance on a multiplicity of preferences, etc.
This is a big challenge for all Christian believers who
want to be all-the-way consistent with their faith and with humanity
itself, for the issues at hand are not just a matter of a particular
religion but rather that of our common humanity.
We should be concerned about this matter. Our faith should
not remain only in the theoretical, intellectual level. It has to be a
functioning one, giving shape and direction to our thoughts and
intentions, our words and deeds. In fact, it should shape our whole
life.
The ideal is that we feel it immediately. Indeed, it should
be like an instinct such that whatever we think, say or do, or
whenever we have to react to something, it is our faith that should
guide us.
We have to understand that it is our faith that gives us the
global picture of things, since it is God’s gift to us, a gratuitous
sharing of what God knows about himself and about the whole of
creation. It is meant for our own good, for us to live out our true
dignity as children of God.
It is a kind of knowledge that will lead us to our eternal
life. It will make us relate everything in our earthly life, both the
good and the bad, to this ultimate goal in life which is to be in
heaven with God, a state that is supernatural. But it is a divine gift
that we need to take care of. It is like a seed that has to grow until
it becomes a big tree and bears fruit.
For this, we really need to have a living contact with
Christ who is the fullness of God’s revelation to us. He is the
substance, the content and the spirit of our faith. So, the first
thing that we have to do is to look for him always in whatever thing
we are thinking, saying or doing.
We need to check our attitudes and dispositions. Do we
really look for him, in the manner spelled out by Christ himself, that
is, with constancy and determination? Christ said: “Ask, and it shall
be given you. Seek, and you shall find. Knock, and it shall be opened
unto you.” (Mt 7,7)
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