If there is no faith, if we resist the need for conversion,
we will never see the things of God and the rich reality of the truly
spiritual and supernatural world, no matter how much we spin our human
powers to capture this reality.
We need penance and conversion to get in touch with the
things of God. And we have to realize that such need is constant. We
have to understand that repentance for our sins and conversion are a
continuing affair for all of us in this life. We can never say, if we
have to follow by what our Christian faith tells us, that we are good
enough as to need conversion no more.
We are all sinners, St. John said. And even the just man, as
the Bible said, falls seven times in a day.
Besides, it is this sense of continuing conversion that
would really ensure us that whatever we do, whatever would happen to
us, including our failures and defeats, would redound to what is truly
good for the parties concerned and for everybody else in general.
That’s because conversion brings us and everything that we
have done in life to a reconciliation with God, from whom we come and
to whom we go.
In one of the post-resurrection appearances of Christ to his
apostles, that time when it was said that Christ “opened their minds
to understand the Scriptures,” our Lord told them clearly:
“Thus it is written that the Christ would suffer and rise
from the dead on the third day and that repentance, for the
forgiveness of sins, would be preached in his name to all the nations,
beginning from Jerusalem.” (Lk 24,46-47)
Yes, repentance for the forgiveness of sins has to be
preached far and wide and constantly. These words show how much Christ
is bent in saving us, in bringing us to our true dignity of a
functioning child of God. This is his will for us. We just have to
learn to correspond to that will, which is actually for our own true
good.
We need to develop the virtue of penance. Precisely, the
virtue of penance starts when we acknowledge our sinful condition. We
should be humble enough to accept this reality.
But the virtue of penance goes farther than that. It grows
when we put up the necessary defenses against these enemies of our
soul and wage a lifelong ascetical struggle. Yes, our life will be and
should be a life of warfare, a war of peace and love that will also
give us certain consolations in spite of the tension.
And for this penance to be a true virtue, it has to include
an indomitable hope that can survive even in the worst of scenarios.
In fact, this hope gets stronger the uglier also the warfare gets.
It's a hope based on God's never-sparing mercy. Some
relevant words of St. Paul: “I am sure that he who began a good work
in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ.” (Phil
1,6) It would be good if these Pauline assurance forms the deep
attitude we should have toward our fragile human condition.
That way, we get to see the things of God more clearly!
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