When God tests our faith, we should consider it as an opportunity to grow more in our faith. Let’s follow the example of the Syrophoenician woman in the gospel whose request for the healing of her daughter was at first denied. (cfr. Mk 7,24-30)
When Christ told her: “Suffer first the children to be filled, for it is not good to take the bread of the children, and cast it to the dogs,” she answered, “Yes, Lord, for the whelps also eat under the table of the crumbs of the children.”
That’s when Christ was so happy with her response that he told her: “The devil is gone out of your daughter.” And true enough, when the mother went home, she found her daughter already well.
We should always feel the need to sustain and ever strengthen our faith which is the bedrock of our Christian life. Without it or with a weak faith, we most likely will compromise our entire life.
We need to be more aware of this duty and develop the appropriate attitude and skill to carry out this responsibility effectively. We have to go beyond mere good intentions or being merely theoretical in order to be truly practical and vitally engaged with this obligation.
We have to remember that in developing and strengthening our faith, we need to commit our whole selves to God. We should not just be sentimental, emotional or intellectual about it. We have to give our whole selves in good times and bad, 24/7. We have to involve all our powers and faculties, our past, present and future.
Faith is not simply an intellectual assent to some truths. It is an act of our entire being wherein we integrally and entirely commit ourselves. If we truly have faith, we will show it in every action of our life.
We will consistently refer everything to Christ, look for him, find and talk to him, seek his guidance, follow his will and ways, and put him as the goal of all of our activities. This has to be distinguished from fanaticism, because faith requires a living union with God, while fanaticism can mimic the appearance of faith, but is not based on that living union, but rather on something else.
If we truly have faith, we will always make Christ present wherever we are. Irrespective of our human condition, we can always exude a certain aura of wisdom, goodness, charity and kindness, mercy and justice, and power, etc.
Faith is something much deeper and more complete than a simple affirmation of some truths. It produces an effective and operative presence of the love of Christ among men. It makes us plant the seed of love in each heart. It leads us to discover all the good things in the world where God himself has placed us so that we may be holy. It also points us where the dangers are.
Let's strengthen our faith always by spending some moments everyday in mental prayer, living always in the presence of God, waging continuing ascetical struggle to develop virtues and fight against our weaknesses and temptations, studying and assimilating the doctrine of our faith, pursuing a lifelong plan of formation, etc.