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Perhaps
the greatest temptation we are faced with in the spiritual life is to
pursue the things of God rather than God himself. After all, it is the
things of God that often fill our senses with delight and consolation,
whereas God himself always transcends our senses and their experience.
This is why all the great spiritual masters remind us that we must
welcome consolation, moments where we can “feel” God’s presence and
times of great enthusiasm in our spiritual life. However, we cannot
stop there nor can we rely on them to always be there. In short, we can
never find our rest in anything but God, not even in his works.
In
a mysterious way, the spiritual life really begins when we stop
“feeling” God and when all the lights we relied on to get to him have
been dimmed or even turned off. It is here where faith, hope and love,
the theological virtues that ultimately lead us to union with God,
become activated and we begin to really make “progress” in the spiritual
life. St. Paul himself alludes to this when he reminds the Corinthians
that they are to, “walk by faith, not by sight.” 2 Corinthians 5:7
Ultimately, God wants our love to become mature. In the beginning of our journey God used our senses and his works to get our attention and draw us to him. But as we grow God wants us to be ready for a deeper experience of him, which means that we have to leave behind the “things” that once drew us to God so as to receive something greater, namely God himself.
+ Fr. Jeremiah Myriam Shryock, CFR
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