Showing posts with label The Just Man. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Just Man. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2016

Amor Meus Crucifixus Est


Greetings, Friends! Today I invite you to love. Listen to the tender voice of Our Blessed Savior, the Word-Made-Flesh. He restores us to our inheritance by dying on the cross.

His mercy is unbounded and the gifts He shares with his adopted children are infinite. While most men look for glory and power, He leads us down the Royal Road of the Cross to establish peace. He never forces Himself on us and is always ready to receive us when we repent. How do I know this? I believe in the promises of Scripture and the testimony of the Church, and I see the power of Divine Love in my own life and in those around me. If life is all about our relationships, let us firmly establish a relationship with Him as the foundation of every other relationship we have.

Consider how He treated the rich young man. This fellow heard about Our Lord and sought His advice. He asked, "What must I do to inherit eternal life?" In chapter 18 of his Gospel, Luke tells us that Our Lord "looked at him and loved him".  The response of the divine Lord was not bereft of human consolation. Before He answered, Jesus gave the rich young man what his heart desired (even if he didn't realize it): love. Jesus didn't just tell the man to give everything away, but first met the desire of his heart.

It's likely that this is just one account of many interactions that Our Lord had with folks around Him. But consider the account of the woman taken in adultery and the woman at the well. Have you ever considered that Our Lord initially met the emotional human needs of those whom He encountered?

Imagine every day Our Lord is walking through the streets of Galilee or chatting with his disciples and apostles on the shores of the lake. Someone approaches, asks a question, and the response of Our Savior is to love him. Not just give a rote answer or speculate about the good life, but Our Lord loves the interlocutor. How did Our Lord announce His purpose? "I have come to heal the broken hearted."

How many times to we do that? How are we helping to heal the broken hearted? Let's personalize this, as I think that's the intent of the Gospel of Salvation: that we make it personal. When someone asks you about the Faith, do you give a sterling intellectual account of the Mysteries that we contemplate, or do you invite the person to love? Do you try to meet their legitimate emotional needs and invite them to a relationship, or is it just about the words and how much fun it is to talk about cool things?

We see how the apostles were called and that they left everything to follow Jesus, but they didn't really leave anything of value considering what they received: The found the source and fulfillment of all their needs: Love. We can have that, too! What did Saint John say in the Apocalypse?

"Behold I stand at the door knocking. Anyone who hears me, I will have supper with him and he with me." 
Here is He through Whom all things were made, just standing there waiting for us to open the door.

Let's consider the woodcut that appears above. My favorite images of the Crucifixion have people in them. Don't get me wrong; the bare crucifix on my rosary and in each room of my home is wonderful. But my favorite shows the dynamic relationships that Our Lord had and how they endured even unto His death. In the woodcut, their appears to be Our Lady and John the Beloved. Note that name: John the Beloved. Wow! We even have the souls among the dead pictured and some angels floating about. We see in brief the entire Communion of Saints, and the angelic helpers of the Mystical Body.

I invite, you then, to walk with my and my Savior. Today while we enter into our own reflections on the Paschal Mystery, remember it's all about Love. Let us share our faith with our friends. Let's remember that we don't convert anyone. That's the work of the Holy Ghost. We can do something great in our evangelizing, however: We can try to meet the legitimate emotional needs of people whom we meet.

Saint James saw this when he wrote in his epistle (2:16):
... and one of you says to them, "Go in peace, be warmed and filled," without giving them the things needed for the body, what does it profit?
Certainly, we need to share an intellectual knowledge of the Faith with others, but I've learned in the street evangelizing that I've done that people listen to the Word of God when I show them that I'm really quite concerned about their needs. Their own needs. When I take the time to love someone and truly understand where they are coming from, I see how God invites me to share His life with others by demonstrating in a real and personal way that I'm concerned about their good.

Consider, too, how Our Lord acted during His Crucifixion. He was still making friends, even as He died on the Cross: "This day you will be with me in paradise." He wasn't all neurotic and needy. He wasn't showing off for His mom and asking His best friend to prop up His ego. That's love. He didn't complain about how much work He'd done to get there, he simply continued His invitation to Love.

And so, beloved reader, please know that I offer my prayers and works of the day so that you and I can continue to walk with Our Lord and build a civilization of love so that all things might be subjected to the One who redeemed us and set our captive hearts free.

Let's work to invite others to walk with Our Crucified Savior. Let's never forget that the most important thing is love. Let me know what you decide. Nothing would please me more than to know that you're walking with us. Remember, you'll receive no condemnation from me; this is just a gentle reminder of the gift that can be ours.

If today you hear His voice, harden not your hearts.




Friday, January 22, 2016

Our Title Revisited: I don’t think I’m a relativist

I’ll preface this post with a warning: I may be wrong. If a gentle soul can direct me where I’m wrong, I’ll happily repent of my mistakes and correct them.

Plato identified one of the earliest relativists in his dialogue named after the relativist himself, Protagoras. The elderly sophist was quoted by Plato as saying “Of all things, man is the measure.” He enunciates the essence of relativism; namely, that each person can view reality and make up his own truth about what he sees. This view is contrary to philosophical realism and the teaching Church.

A fundamental tenet of relativism is that no external authority can dictate what someone believes. Catholic spirituality is based upon the principle that not only can an external authority dictate what we should believe, but an external authority has dictated what we should believe. Catholic spirituality is diametrically opposed to relativism.

In an earlier post, I referenced St. John of the Cross in his book The Ascent of Mt. Carmel saying “Here there is no law, for the just man is a law unto himself.” By this, I do not mean that there is no external authority by which we should judge ourselves. Nor do I mean to say that the “law unto himself” is a law that is self-motivated or derived simply from one’s own mind. St. John was particularly clear about the need for external direction and his books inculcate a deep distrust for idle manifestations of the mind.

The whole point of the Christian life is to conform oneself more closely to the perfect man: Our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. I believe (and think) that our goal is the conformity of the mind, heart, and will to become a perfect image of the Just Man. In no other way can we find perfection.

In the early stages of the spiritual life, attendance to an external law is the means of spiritual growth. Aided by grace, of course. Fidelity to the commandments, frequent meditations on the nature of virtue, exercise of the will in the practice of the good, and avoiding vices and sin mark these early days. In sin and in the early days of conversion, the “old man” is still active and dominant in the penitent’s heart. Such a man uses the precepts of an external law in order to leave the old man behind.

Some writers called these early days the way of purgation because they are marked by a deep suspicion of one’s own actions and motives. The great Carmelite cautions souls who are beginning their spiritual journey to be careful about their internal motivations and attend to what they have been taught about the moral law and the life of virtue. Exercise of the will seems to be difficult and engaging in spiritual things a trial. However, by prayer, the sacraments, grace, attendance to the moral law, and the practice of a devout life, in time new habits are formed that are virtues, ordered to the good and not to evil.

As these good habits become part of us, they become, as Aristotle said, a kind of second nature. Doing good becomes easier and more natural, almost spontaneous. Not as if there were no direction to their proper end, but doing good becomes almost easy, a likeness of which is the muscle memory of an accomplished musician finding the keys of the piano as he plays. He no longer needs to “think” about where to put his fingers, he just plays. Another example is a person who plays a sport and finds himself “in the zone” as we sometimes here. This is, perhaps, what some Eastern writers term the “Zen moment”.

As I understand it, when the master musician or athlete has practiced his art long enough, he finds his body responding to the internal order or harmony of what he is doing. So too the adept in the Christian life, after conforming his mind and will to the Just Man, no longer needs to “attend” to the moral law, he simply carries it out. The law no longer is, as such, the means to his conformity with Christ. This does not dispense with the law, but such a man no longer needs to think about the law so much.

He is a just man because he has become the Just Man. He has fulfilled the admonition of St. Paul to “put on the Lord Jesus” and become what our Loving Father in heaven meant us to be from the beginning.

Our title, then, is no relativist declaration that whatever I want, I can go after. Rather it is the recognition that, after years of toil in this valley of tears, I may be freed from slavish attention to the law and no longer find it a burden. Our Lord even said, “My yoke is easy, my burden light.”

By quoting Saint John, we articulate the summit of spiritual perfection, the perfection for which I hope and I strive. When the soul has been perfected, he no longer needs the external structure placed upon him by the law, for his actions so closely resemble Christ; no, originate in his union with Christ, that he truly becomes “a law unto himself.” Virtue and goodness flow from the soul’s conformity to the Just Man, as a spring of living water.

The amazing thing about this transformation is that once the highest stages of the spiritual life are reached, there is even greater attention to the law in all its integrity, but that attention flows from within the soul (even though it is always guided by the Holy Spirit) and does not come from outside as it did before.


No relativism is advocated here, just conformity to Our Blessed Savior, leading us along the royal way of the Cross until we find our resting place, in Him.