Thus, Christ said, “No disciple is above his teacher, no
slave above his master.” (Mt 10,24) In this particular instance, what
he was trying to tell us is that we ought to be most faithful to him
and to be fully trusting of his will and ways, irrespective of how
things go in our life here on earth.
We have to be wary of our tendency to easily fall into
pride, vanity and conceit whenever we enjoy special status in our life
here on earth. We should strengthen and continue reinforcing our
conviction that we are actually nothing without God and that we need
to continually keep an intimate relationship with Christ in the Holy
Spirit.
We have to make some readjustments in our understanding of
being a disciple of Christ. It should not be pegged only on some
worldly and temporal standards. Rather, it should be understood in the
context of the role of Christ in our life, he who is the “way, truth
and life” for us.
To be sure, understanding our being disciples of Christ that
way would never be regarded as some kind of downgrading our status.
Rather, it would lead us to realize that we are achieving the fullness
of our dignity as the “image and likeness” of God, children of his,
meant to share in God’s very own life that is supernatural.
We just have to be most trusting of God’s will and ways, of
his ever wise and omnipotent providence. That way we avoid falling
into unnecessary fears and worries. We all know that our life always
has more to offer to us than what we can understand, let alone, cope.
And they can come in all shapes and sizes, good and bad, pleasant and
unpleasant, likeable and hateful. There are surprises and moments when
we seem to rot in expectation and still things we long for don’t come.
In the face of all this, I believe the attitude to have and
the reaction to make is to be calm, pray hard, and while we do all we
can, we have to learn to live a certain sense of abandonment in the
hands of God.
With all the things that we have to contend with in this
life, we certainly need to have a healthy sense of trust in God’s
loving and wise providence, abandoning ourselves in his will and ways
that often are mysterious to us and can appear to be contrary to what
we would like to have.
A healthy spirit of abandonment in God’s hands is necessary
even as we exhaust all possible human means to achieve our goals or
simply to tackle all the challenges, trials and predicaments of our
life. We should never forget this truth of our faith.
In those situations, I believe we just have to allow
ourselves to play in God’s game plan, in his abiding providence whose
designs are beyond reckoning, are way beyond comprehension and
appreciation. In this life, we need to acquire a good, healthy
sporting spirit.
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