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Spirituality

Where Do We Get Our Desire to Do Good?

Image by Michael Schwarzenberger from Pixabay

Have you ever wondered what it is within you that desires to make another person happy? Where does our urge to do good come from?

Whichever part of the world we may be, we can observe how people do things for the benefit of others. We can see it in the way that parents think about what’s best for their children. We can see it in the way friends naturally have that desire to give something good to each other, something that would make the other person smile. We can see it in strangers helping people they have only met.

When we come to think of it, this is our human instinct that calls us to love and to find fulfillment in love. It is this love we have that propels us to work for the good of others, to move for their sake, to find words that heal and encourage the other.

Why are we happy every time we’re able to help another person? Why do we fill satisfied whenever we make another human being smile? The answer to these questions hold the key to who we truly are, human beings created in the very likeness of God who is Infinite Goodness and Love.

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Spirituality

Is Heaven Just Too Far to Reach?

Image by Cindy Lever from Pixabay

Have you ever felt like heaven is just too far to reach? I mean, we hardly expect anyone to go there directly without going to purgatory. Only the saints do that. And we all know how hard their lives have been on earth. They have had many sufferings and they went through terrible pain. About those in purgatory, they won’t escape suffering either. It is said that the suffering in the life after this one, even if not in hell and just in purgatory cannot compare to the greatest suffering on earth.

Why is it like that? Why is it so hard to be happy? Sometimes it can even feel as though salvation isn’t free. It doesn’t feel so free when we all have to pay such great a price. And yet, it seems that even all the suffering in the world couldn’t even make us deserve heaven. Only the sacrifice of Jesus Himself, of God Himself can do that. And He was the One who suffered most for our sake.

In times like these when I am tempted to despair, I try to remember the child-like faith of St. Therese of Lisieux. I also try to recall an excerpt from St. Faustina’s diary about God’s conversation with a sinful soul. Further, I keep in mind the writings of Julian of Norwich about the goodness and mercy of God.

None of us may enter heaven without suffering, but maybe we can find comfort that the happiness waiting for us there is greater than all of our temporary griefs. The greater our sorrow, the greater also is the space that’s made for more happiness to enter in.

I may be afraid, but I have to trust in the Father who loves us all like little children. Though I cry and cry, He holds me upon His arms to comfort me. And in that way, heaven is never so far away.

“Believe in a love that is being stored up for you like an inheritance, and have faith that in this love there is a strength and a blessing so large that you can travel as far as you wish without having to step outside it.”

? Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet

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Spirituality

The Christian Temptation on Suffering

Image by Stefan Keller from Pixabay

I think one area where the rest of the world can misunderstand Christianity is in the area of suffering. While some spiritual concepts focus on the escape from suffering, Christianity seems to overemphasize its value. We talk about our need to suffer for those we love and how we should embrace the crosses given to us. We fast and mortify ourselves. We esteem the saints who have suffered most, those who have died terrifying deaths. It can come to a point as though the very purpose of our religion is to make us suffer as greatly as possible.

But if that’s the case, why would Jesus Christ even come down from heaven to save us all? If the very purpose of life is to suffer, wouldn’t we suffer most when we’re left alone in our sins until we die and suffer forever in hell?

To whom among those who approached Jesus for healing did He say that it would be better for them to remain sick and just suffer instead of being healed? Jesus may have delayed in helping Lazarus, but only so that he can be raised back into life.

If there is anything we should learn in Christianity, it’s not that we must seek suffering but that we should avoid pointless suffering. Christianity also allows us to see that there are temporary sufferings we can bear in order not to fall into greater ones.

Those who have children never want anything but goodness and happiness for their children. What good parent would want to inflict pain and suffering to their children? But there are some sufferings a parent is willing to bear seeing if such would yield a greater good. Must not all children fall many times before they learn to walk? A mother bears the risk of seeing her child fall because it is better than to prevent a child from learning how to walk.

If there is anything God wants for us, it is our greatest happiness, an eternal joy that no one could ever take away from us. All the lesser sufferings we experience in life are allowed only so that they could bear for us a greater good.

A Christian may suffer then, but not in vain, and only for a moment. We bear our sufferings and we rejoice in them not for their sake, but for the sake of something greater, for the sake of love. And love is the only thing that could make us truly happy in the end.

“If I give away all my goods to feed the poor, and if I give my body to be burnt, but don’t have love, it profits me nothing.” – 1 Corinthians 13:3, WEBBE

“Most certainly I tell you that you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice. You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will be turned into joy. A woman, when she gives birth, has sorrow because her time has come. But when she has delivered the child, she doesn’t remember the anguish any more, for the joy that a human being is born into the world. Therefore you now have sorrow, but I will see you again, and your heart will rejoice, and no one will take your joy away from you.” – John 16:20-22, WEBBE

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Spirituality

Why I Could Identify With the Woman at the Well

Could you imagine it, too?

Isn’t it the same with our encounter with Jesus?

It is no wonder then that the encounter with Jesus changed the woman.

She became a witness to this Person, this Savior who saves not only in a generic way but in a very personal way, a Savior who knows your name and everything you’ve been through.

Jesus waits for us and longs to draw us close to Him.

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Spirituality

When We Can’t Choose the Crosses We Must Bear