Sunday, July 12, 2026

Psychology needs a proper spirituality

FOR years, psychology has helped us understand the labyrinth of the human mind. It explains why we fear, why we love, why we break, and sometimes even why we heal. Yet amid its remarkable advances, one uncomfortable question persists: Is understanding the mind enough to understand the person? 

 The Christian tradition would answer with a firm no. 

 Psychology excels at describing human behavior. It identifies patterns, diagnoses disorders, and offers therapies that restore emotional balance. These are invaluable contributions. Mental health deserves serious attention, and the growing acceptance of psychological care is one of the healthier developments of modern society. 

 But emotional wellness is not the summit of human fulfillment. 

 This is where spirituality enters—not as psychology's rival but as its indispensable partner. It anchors psychology in its proper place. 

 We, of course, know that that the human person cannot be reduced to biological impulses, emotional reactions, or cognitive processes. We are created for communion with God. Every human experience—joy, work, suffering, success, even failure—finds its deepest meaning only when connected to that relationship. A purely psychological reading of life may explain our emotions, but it cannot answer the question of their real meaning and ultimate purpose. 

 Personal growth involves much more than emotional equilibrium. Authentic maturity includes the formation of virtues, the exercise of freedom, and the cultivation of one's relationship with God. Mental health is essential, but holiness remains the higher horizon. 

 The distinction matters. It should not be forgotten. 

 A person may be psychologically well-adjusted yet spiritually adrift. Another may carry emotional wounds while displaying extraordinary faith, hope, and charity. The two dimensions intersect, but they are not identical. 

 We have to be wary when we confuse feeling good with being good. Our modern culture tends to fall into this trap. 

 That confusion carries consequences. We increasingly evaluate decisions by asking, "Does this make me feel better?" rather than "Is this true?" or "Is this the right thing to do?" Comfort has quietly become the new moral compass. 

 Psychology, when detached from a sound understanding of the human person, can unintentionally reinforce this tendency. Therapy risks becoming an endless pursuit of self-satisfaction instead of a path toward genuine self-giving. 

 Christian spirituality proposes a radically different vision. 

 It teaches that the deepest fulfillment comes not from constant self-focus but from self-transcendence. Love demands sacrifice. Freedom requires responsibility. Peace grows from reconciliation—with God, with others, and with oneself. These realities cannot be measured on a psychological scale alone. 

 None of this diminishes the importance of professional mental health care. On the contrary, spiritual directors should know when psychological intervention is needed, just as therapists should recognize that many of life's deepest questions belong to the realm of meaning, conscience, and faith. The healthiest approach is not competition but collaboration between psychology and spirituality. 

 Perhaps the greatest lesson psychology and spirituality can teach each other is humility. 

 Psychology reminds believers that grace builds on nature. Emotional wounds deserve compassion, not simplistic moral judgments. Spirituality reminds psychology that human beings are more than the sum of their neurons, memories, and emotions. We possess a soul that longs for truth, goodness, beauty, and ultimately, God. 

 In an age fascinated by wellness, perhaps what we need is not merely better coping mechanisms but a fuller vision of the human person. 

 The mind deserves healing. 

 The heart deserves meaning. 

 And the soul deserves nothing less than God!

Saturday, July 11, 2026

The Divine Sower still sows—Is our heart ready?

THE readings for the 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year A) deliver a timeless reminder: God never stops sowing. The Divine Sower tirelessly scatters the seed of his living Word into every human heart, always hoping it will take root, grow, and bear abundant fruit. 

 The question is not whether God continues to sow. He does. The real question is whether we are the kind of soil that welcomes his Word. 

 The seed Christ speaks about is no ordinary seed. It is the living and life-giving Word of God. It is meant not merely to inform us but to transform us, shaping us into the sons and daughters God created us to be. 

 That is why the Church continually urges us to read, meditate on, and live the Scriptures. The Bible is not simply a collection of ancient writings or inspiring literature. It is God's living voice, speaking to us today with the same power with which it first went forth from his mouth. 

 The prophet Isaiah beautifully captures this truth. Just as rain and snow descend from heaven to water the earth, making it fruitful and productive, so God's Word never returns empty. It always fulfills its mission. It accomplishes what God intends and bears fruit wherever it finds a willing heart. 

 This is why the Gospel never becomes outdated. Its pages may have been written centuries ago, but its message is forever new because it is alive. Every passage has something fresh to say to every generation and to every person. God's Word speaks to our present circumstances, our struggles, our hopes, and our decisions. It always points us toward the life we are meant to live. 

 In the Parable of the Sower, Christ describes different kinds of soil. Some hearts are hardened. Others are shallow or distracted. Only the good soil receives the seed, nurtures it, and allows it to produce an abundant harvest. 

 That parable is not merely a story about people long ago. It is about us. Every day, God sows his Word into our lives through Scripture, prayer, the liturgy, and the events of ordinary life. He continues to guide us, correct us, encourage us, and reveal both the bigger picture of his plan and the practical steps we need to take today. 

 Becoming good soil requires effort. We must develop the habit of spending quality time with the Gospel—not simply reading it as another book but listening to it with an attentive heart. We should never assume that because we have heard a passage many times, we have exhausted its meaning. God's Word always has something new to reveal. 

 St. Jerome expressed this truth with striking simplicity: "Ignorance of the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ." He also reminded us, "When we pray, we speak to God. When we read Scripture, God speaks to us." 

 One particularly fruitful practice is to place ourselves within the Gospel scene. Imagine standing beside Christ. Listen to his words. Observe the people around him. Ask questions. Notice details. Let your imagination, guided by faith, make the scene come alive. 

 Soon the Gospel stops being a distant story. It becomes your story. Christ's words become personal. His invitations become concrete. His challenges demand a response. 

 That is how the seed bears fruit. 

 The more we allow God's Word to shape our thoughts, choices, and actions, the more we realize that we are not living by our own strength alone. We are living with Christ, walking beside him each day. And there is no richer, fuller, or more meaningful way to live than as God's faithful children, nourished constantly by his living Word.

Friday, July 10, 2026

Be prepared to be a sheep among wolves

CHRIST never sugarcoated the cost of following him. As he sent his apostles to the “lost sheep of Israel” (Mt. 10:16-23), he gave them a sobering warning: they would face rejection, persecution, and suffering. They would be hauled before councils, scourged in synagogues, and dragged before governors and kings because they bore his name. Their trials, however, would become a testimony not only to Israel but also to the Gentiles. 

 Still, Christ did not leave them trembling in fear. He immediately gave them an assurance that remains just as relevant today. “Do not worry,” he said. When they were called to defend themselves, they were not to be anxious about preparing clever speeches. God himself would provide the words. “It is not you who speak, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you.” 

 What a liberating lesson! Christ was asking his disciples to trust more in divine grace than in human preparation. Their greatest strength would not come from eloquence or strategy but from the Holy Spirit working within them. 

 Yet this trust was never an excuse for carelessness. Jesus paired it with another command that has lost none of its force: “Be wise as serpents and innocent as doves.” Christians are expected to combine prudence with purity, intelligence with humility, and courage with gentleness. They should not be gullible before evil, but neither should they answer evil with more evil. They must remain meek without becoming weak. 

 Christ also taught them that prudence sometimes requires retreat. Escaping danger when necessary is not cowardice if it allows the mission to continue. The goal is not to seek persecution but to remain faithful to the task of proclaiming Christ wherever circumstances permit. 

 That same mission belongs to every Christian today. To accept Christ's call is to embrace a love that reflects God's own love—a love that perseveres, sacrifices, and remains steadfast regardless of the cost. 

 It is much like the promise exchanged by husband and wife on their wedding day: to love each other for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health, until death. Authentic Christian commitment is measured not by convenience but by fidelity. 

 Such perseverance, however, does not happen automatically. It demands constant nourishment. The spiritual and supernatural dimensions of love must be cultivated through prayer, reflection, and a living relationship with God. Otherwise, commitment gradually becomes shallow, driven only by emotion or personal comfort. 

 In today's culture, love is often reduced to feelings, attraction, or emotional satisfaction. While emotions and passions are valuable gifts, they cannot carry love by themselves. Feelings change. Circumstances shift. Difficulties arise. 

 That is why genuine love must be anchored in the higher powers of the human person—the intellect that recognizes what is true and good, and the will that freely chooses to remain faithful even when emotions fade. These are the faculties that lift love beyond the merely human into the supernatural. 

 Ultimately, God is the source, pattern, strength, and destiny of every authentic commitment. The closer we remain to him, the more enduring our love becomes. Prayer is therefore not an optional devotion but the lifeline that keeps commitment alive. 

 Life will always bring setbacks, disappointments, and unexpected crosses. But the person whose love is rooted in God will not be easily shaken. Sustained by divine grace, that love continues to burn through every trial, remains faithful amid life's uncertainties, and bears lasting witness to Christ in a world that desperately needs both courage and hope.