One time he said, “To what shall I compare this generation?
It is like children who sit in marketplaces and call to one another,
‘We played the flute for you, but you did not dance, we sang a dirge
but you did not mourn.’” (Mt 11,16-17)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church lists down some of the
reasons that can stifle our natural religiosity, like “revolt against
evil in the world, religious ignorance or indifference, the cares and
riches of this world, the scandal of bad example on the part of
believers, currents of thought hostile to religion, that attitude of
sinful man which makes him hide from God out of fear and flee his
call.” (CCC 29)
We cannot deny that there’s vast religious indifference and
even hostility against religion today. That may be intriguing to say,
since on the other hand, thanks be to God, we can also notice a surge
of religious fervor in some sectors.
This contrast actually has been around since time
immemorial, an indication that human history is always an interplay
between good and evil, between God’s providence and man’s freedom. But
what is interesting to note is the degree of seriousness into which
both indifference and fervor have developed.
A complex structure of rationalizations now supports
religious indifference and hostility to religion. It seems that the
threads of naturalism, skepticism, agnosticism, atheism, relativism,
etc., have become more sophisticated, snuffing whatever religious
ember that may still remain in a person or in society.
Some intellectuals and occasional theologians join free
thinkers in lending their dissenting voices and expertise to this
trend, adding to the string of scandals the Church has been suffering
these past few years.
Try to look at some of our so-called leading Catholic
universities, and you will likely find nests of dissenters who invoke
an unhinged type of academic freedom (aka, academic license) to retail
their heresies and questionable if not patently erroneous ideas. They
are quite well-funded and supported by powerful international
ideological groups.
Even centers of religious formation and seminaries are
infected with this kind of virus. Imagine seminarians and priests now
taught about the beauty and practicality of contraception, etc. It’s
really about time that a thorough clean-up be made in these places,
but, of course, with due process.
Let’s take advantage of this season of Advent to develop a
burning desire to be with Christ. Actually, more than just being with
Christ, we are supposed to be like Christ, to be “another Christ”
himself. That’s what God wants us to be. That’s how we become God’s
image and likeness, children of his.
We have to develop an abiding and burning desire to fulfill
the real purpose of our life which is precisely for us to be “another
Christ.” We should be clear about this ultimate purpose of ours so we
can have the proper sense of direction and focus in our life, and the
corresponding urge to fulfill it. We have to follow the example of
Christ. In fact, we have to assume the same mind and mission of
Christ.
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