On the basis of this sharing in
Jesus’ way of seeing things, Saint Paul has left us a description of the life
of faith. In accepting the gift of faith, believers become a new creation; they
receive a new being; as God’s children, they are now "sons in the
Son". The phrase "Abba, Father", so characteristic of Jesus’ own
experience, now becomes the core of the Christian experience (cf. Rom 8:15).
The life of faith, as a filial existence, is the acknowledgment of a primordial
and radical gift which upholds our lives. We see this clearly in Saint Paul’s
question to the Corinthians: "What have you that you did not
receive?" (1 Cor 4:7).
This was at the very heart of Paul’s
debate with the Pharisees: the issue of whether salvation is attained by faith
or by the works of the law. Paul rejects the attitude of those who would
consider themselves justified before God on the basis of their own works. Such
people, even when they obey the commandments and do good works, are centred on
themselves; they fail to realize that goodness comes from God. Those who live
this way, who want to be the source of their own righteousness, find that the latter
is soon depleted and that they are unable even to keep the law. They become
closed in on themselves and isolated from the Lord and from others; their lives
become futile and their works barren, like a tree far from water.
Saint Augustine tells us in his
usual concise and striking way: "Ab eo qui fecit te, noli deficere nec
ad te", "Do not turn away from the one who made you, even to turn
towards yourself". Once I think that by turning away from God I
will find myself, my life begins to fall apart (cf. Lk 15:11-24). The
beginning of salvation is openness to something prior to ourselves, to a
primordial gift that affirms life and sustains it in being. Only by being open
to and acknowledging this gift can we be transformed, experience salvation and
bear good fruit. Salvation by faith means recognizing the primacy of God’s
gift. As Saint Paul puts it: "By grace you have been saved through faith,
and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God" (Eph 2:8).
Lumen Fidei 19
Reflection – Well,
Tuesdays with Francis time again, as we continue to read through Lumen Fidei
bit by bit. As with last week’s paragraph 18, p. 19 is jam packed with ideas
and depth of insight, this time on the theme of faith in St. Paul.
It’s this whole deal of receptivity that is so much the heart
of the matter. This is what comes out in all the Church’s contemplation of Mary
which has been a bit of a theme on this blog this week. Mary is the faithful
one, and she is the one who knows that everything she has is from God: ‘He has
looked on his servant in her nothingness.’
Yesterday’s Gospel at Mass was the rich fool building bigger
barns, and the Lord’s clear teaching that ‘a man’s life is not made secure by
what he owns.’ (Lk 12: 13-21). That is the key issue of faith/not faith in our
lives, which Pope Francis/Benedict make so well here: are we seeking a life
apart from God, or do we know ourselves as fundamentally creatures of the gift,
creatures both held and perfected in being by Another who is all love and
generosity?
Anyhow, I think I’ll leave it at that for now (shortest blog
post ever!). Too many words may blunt the point the Pope is making here, and it
really is worth it to simply sit with LF 19 and meditate on it. Tomorrow, God
willing, back to Mary for a couple more days. See you then.
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