1. St. Paul reached such a degree of union with Christ that he could
exclaim: “To me to live is Christ.” (Phil. 1:21) Elsewhere he says: “It
is now no longer I that live, but Christ lives in me.” (Gal. 2:20) This
is a characteristic of the Saints. They live their own lives no longer,
for they live the life of Christ. That is to say, their minds and
hearts are always fixed on Jesus. They love the Lord more than all
things, and more than themselves. God is the object of all their
desires, affections and actions. As a result, the soul is transfigured
and is infused with divine life, so that it does nothing which is not
activated by grace. In the Saints, then, there is reflected something
heavenly which attracts and stimulates one to virtue.
The Saints
preached effectively in simple, unadorned language, as in the case of
the Curé of Ars. But their most effective sermon was the example of
their lives. They could say with St. Paul: “To me to live is Christ.”
They could repeat the thought of St. Jerome: “Christ is the breath of my
lips.” Like St. John Chrysostom they could say: “My heart is the heart
of Christ.” They could say with St. Augustine: “I am only an instrument
in the service of Christ,” and with St. Anselm: “My eyes are the eyes of
Christ.” When we meditate on these words, which signify the height of
sanctity, we feel very small, shabby, and far from the Christian
perfection to which we should aspire. Perhaps we are still immersed in
sin; or perhaps we are wavering between the things of this world and the
things of God; or perhaps, as yet, we have not given up our egoism and
complacent mediocrity in order to offer ourselves entirely to God. Real
Christianity demands that we renounce ourselves, live the life of
Christ, and make every effort to
acquire perfection.
2. Through
the work of the Incarnation and Redemption, Jesus assumed not only a
human body and soul so that He might be loved more and so that He might
redeem us, but He also assumed a mystical body, which is composed of all
men in the state of grace. The mystical body is the Church, of which
Christ is the head. We should all desire to be members of this mystical
body. To do so we must live the life of Christ, which is His grace. If
we are separated from the life of Christ, we are no longer Christians.
We are merely dead and rotten limbs, to use the metaphor of the vine
tree and the branches. “I am the vine,” says Jesus, “you are the
branches. He who abides in me, and I in him,” He continues, “he bears
much fruit. If anyone does not abide in me,” He adds, “he shall be cast
outside as the branch and wither; and they shall gather them up and cast
them into fire, and they shall burn.” (Cf. John 15:4-5)
“For the
branch,” says St. Augustine, “there can be no half-measures. Either it
remains united with the vine, or it is thrown into the fire.” The same
holds true for each of us. We must choose either close union with Jesus,
or separation and spiritual death. We must decide between a life of
fervour in Christ, or a life of tepidity and sin.
3. Am I
determined to live the life of Christ by striving to be indissolubly
united with Him through divine grace? Am I prepared to say with St.
Paul: “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? For I am sure that
neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any
other creature, will be able to separate us from the love of God, which
is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Rom. 8:35-39) But in order to bring this
about it is necessary for me to fly from every sin and to look for God
in all things and in all actions. I must love God with my whole heart
and nurture the divine life within me by prayer, recollection and
frequent Communion. If I fail to put these resolutions into practice, I
shall become a barren branch, fit only for eternal fire.
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