In all our thoughts, words and actuations, we should see to
it that we feed our faith, that we are led to God, that in the end we
manage to live true charity that includes all the other virtues.
We should do our best to avoid getting hijacked in the
purely material or practical aspects of our life. We should imitate
Christ in his discretion and restraint, in his art of passing
unnoticed, in his effort to avoid grabbing unnecessary and dangerous
attention from others, by seeing to it that our thoughts, words and
deeds truly lead others to God, and not simply to us.
At best, we should simply be conductors to bring others to
Christ. We should avoid making ourselves something like idols, objects
of interest. The ideal situation would be that all who see and hear us
should see and hear Christ, as he himself said it clearly to his
apostles. Remember him telling his apostles, “He who hears you hears
Me, he who rejects you rejects Me, and he who rejects Me rejects Him
who sent Me.” (Lk 10,16)
We have to learn to pass unnoticed while doing things that
would lead others to Christ! That’s how genuine sanctity is, and not
just any form of apparent and fake holiness that is proliferating in
the world today. It may require heroism, but it is highly practicable,
with God’s grace. It need not be lived and achieved in some
extraordinary situations. It can be attained even in the very ordinary
things of our daily life, but pursued in utmost heroism in following
God’s will and ways.
In other words, it does not flaunt its performance and
achievements. In fact, it likes to pass unnoticed. It’s never showy,
although something in it will always attract the attention of those
who have faith. Of course, it may turn off those who are hostile to
the faith.
This is the sanctity that comes from Christ who, in spite of
the many wonderful miracles he made, tried his best not to show off
because of them. Rather, he preferred that people get attracted to him
when he would already be on the cross, as testified by his words: “And
I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to
myself.” (Jn 12,32)
Genuine sanctity can never sit well with complacency,
laziness, self-satisfaction, the attitude that we can say enough in
our self-giving and the like. It will always demand more and more from
us, and we correspond to that demand with utmost freedom and love,
never feeling pressured or coerced to do so.
It is something done, developed and lived gratuitously,
reflecting the very gratuitousness of the love of God for us. The
dedication and devotion involved in sanctity is freely given, with no
strings attached, even if we know that God will richly reward such
self-giving.
Sanctimony is the opposite. It likes to show off its good
works. It’s driven by self-righteousness, not the righteousness that
comes from God!
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