We have to make sure that we truly acknowledge Christ as the
Son of God who became man in order to save us. He is the Redeemer of
all mankind. Not only that, he is the pattern of our humanity. We are
supposed to be like him. In fact, we are meant to be “another Christ,”
having the same identity as Christ which we can achieve, first,
because of God’s grace, and then, of course, because also of our
all-out free effort.
Everyday we have to see to it that we are becoming more and
more like Christ because we share the same spirit of love and
everything that is good that Christ has. In this regard, we should
realize that our knowledge of God is always made alive, updated and
renewed, and our eagerness to be like him burning.
Let’s hope that at the end of each day, as we make some kind
of accounting of how the day went, which is what we should be doing,
we can truly say that we are becoming like Christ because we are
becoming more patient, more compassionate, more apostolic, more
hopeful, etc., etc. This should be a never-ending exercise until God
himself will take us to himself.
We have to be clear about this point. We are meant to assume
the identity of Christ. And that is not a gratuitous, baseless
assertion, much less, a fiction or a fantasy. It is founded on a
fundamental truth of our faith that we have been created by God in his
own image and likeness.
And this truth of faith has been vividly shown to us since
it is acted out in the whole history and economy of salvation that
culminated in Christ offering his life and his very own self as the
Bread of Life so we can have the eternal life with him, and so that he
and us can be one.
We have to arrive at that point where we can make St. Paul’s
words as our own too: “I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The
life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved
me and gave himself up for me.” (Gal 2,20)
We just have to learn to set aside whatever difficulty or
awkwardness we may have in dealing with this basic truth of faith
about ourselves. We have to try our best to know Christ and to adapt
his very own mind and will, his own ways, behavior and reactions to
whatever situation we may find ourselves in.
What is also clear is that Christ is actually already living
with us. He is in us as the pattern and perfecter of our humanity, and
the savior of our damaged humanity. We just have to learn to live with
Christ.
He is never far or indifferent to us. Even in our miserable
and wounded condition, he continues to be with us, showing us with
greater solicitude. It’s rather us who tend to ignore and contradict
him. We need to do something about this predicament of ours.
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