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Life In The Spirit: Inhale His Fragrance of Love; Let Him Ravish Your Heart

Have we encountered the mystery of God? Do we live in a relationship of unceasing and intimate love with the Spirit of Love?

Life in the Spirit, immersed in his way of love and beauty, docile to his movements as a feather is carried about by a Divine Wind, is a way of life. And it is not easy: it requires determined commitment, persistence and sacrifice. It is a sacramental life that travels the way of sanctity, holiness and loving obedience in the womb of mother Church; it is an ascetic life of repentance and grace and unceasing prayer, lived in humility and love, with our human gaze ever fixed on the divine Other who sustains us and possesses us that we too might possess him. It is a life of voluntary and innocent suffering, that we truly may become "little christs." It is a life whose supreme focus is directed unrelentingly on Love.

When a lover is in the presence of his Love, his gaze remains constantly fixed on the divine Other who is the highest object of his joyous hope. The lover holds his cherished Love in an attentive embrace, alert to all the endless movements and delicate sighs that accompany the language of love, thirstily drinking in every breath, every subtle whisper.

When a lover is in the presence of his Love, his gaze remains constantly fixed on the divine Other who is the highest object of his joyous hope. The lover holds his cherished Love in an attentive embrace, alert to all the endless movements and delicate sighs that accompany the language of love, thirstily drinking in every breath, every subtle whisper.

GLADE PARK, CO (Catholic Online) -- In his book The Experience of God's Presence, Fr. Anselm Moynihan quotes from an American writer who, in referring to a group of university students, describes them as living "in comfortable disregard of the superhuman. They are neither in revolt against it, nor in search of it. Religion as a social service they find all about them, and they respect. Religion as something relating to God they neither know nor miss" (9).

Fr. Moynihan utilized that quote in order to underscore a disturbing problem he noticed, one which he characterized as the "degradation of religion to a thinly-disguised worship of humanity" (ibid.). What does he mean by this statement? He is not, of course, suggesting that Christians are somehow in error if they pursue with zeal the love of neighbor and the common good of society. For Jesus said, "Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Mat. 25:40). He does point out, however, that the often militant atheism of the present age is not nearly so frightening "as the lack of interest in God or sense of His reality among reputed Christians" (8). Speaking of this lack of awareness of God's presence, he states that "almost the whole content of Christianity is the commandment to 'love thy neighbor,' with little reference to the first commandment" (9).

The Experience of God's Presence was copyrighted two years after the close of Vatican II. Consequently, Fr. Moynihan aptly observed that the Council Fathers vigorously affirmed that the primary mission of the Church is to bring the world to Christ. Many others have since said the same. For instance, Cardinal Avery Dulles wrote: "The council repeatedly and emphatically taught that the procurement of salvation is the most important task of the church" (qtd in Vatican II: Renewal Within Tradition 163).

Moreover, in the first year of his Pontificate, Blessed John Paul II taught that "The Church's fundamental function in every age and particularly in ours is to direct man's gaze, to point the awareness and experience of the whole of humanity towards the mystery of God, to help all men to be familiar with the profundity of the Redemption taking place in Christ Jesus" (Redemptor hominis 10 § 3). If the function of the Church is to draw man into an experience of the mystery of God, it is also, then, of paramount importance that every Christian engage themselves, on a personal level, in a pursuit of that same object; i.e. an encounter with God. In order to do so, it is vital to direct the actively of one's life in such a way so as to promote an increase of love of -- and intimacy with -- the Holy Spirit.

Am I Conscious of The Indwelling Spirit of God?

The question is, how deeply have we plunged into the sublime mystery of God? Are we in a state of grace, and, if so, are we aware of the constant presence of the indwelling Spirit? Do we, throughout the day, give adoration and praise to God, nestled as we are in the arms of his unceasing embrace? Or, on the other hand, is the temple of God (1 Cor. 3:16) that we are by virtue of our Baptism and faith in Christ left unvisited by our own hand? That is, have we become "deserted temples," not because the Spirit has refused entry within the mysterious corridors of our soul, but rather because we have failed to prayerfully explore with depth the interior landscape of our own being and thus discover the Advocate who dwells therein and awaits our love?

It is tempting to lay blame on the frenetic "busyness" of the modern age. Perhaps none of us need reminding of the dangers of clutter and distraction in our daily lives; nevertheless, it is all too easy to fall prey to the plague of unrelenting "noise," allowing it to blot out the subtle yet persistent divine impulses of the Spirit.

There is also the problem of simple forgetfulness; insidious though it is. Although we know we are temples of the Spirit and have often been told as much, we yet suddenly awaken to the fact that days or weeks or even months have passed in silence. How is it possible that the lover could forget his most adored and cherished Love? It is not that we refuse to speak with the Advocate who shapes our hearts and defines the richness of our life, rather it is that our attention is drawn to lesser, smaller and often insignificant things. Therefore it is profitable to seriously ask ourselves, "What or who do I really love?"

Upon reflection many will find that their spiritual life has never begun to flourish. Why is this so? It is not God's doing. Christ did not die on the cross to diminish or empty out our life, but rather he came so that we may have life and have it abundantly (Jn 10:10). Christ died to give us true, everlasting and superabundant life. Nevertheless, rather than thirsting after the fiery heat of intimacy with the ...

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1 - 4 of 4 Comments

  1. Fr. Harald Jude Menzes, svd
    1 year ago

    I am a catholic priest from India currently working in Russia, belonging to the Society of the Divine Word. I would like to know if I can get this article "Life In The Spirit: Inhale His Fragrance of Love; Let Him Ravish Your Heart" translated in Russian and put it on our parish website www.katolikamur.ru? I would be very grateful for your permission.
    In the Divine Word
    Fr. Harald

  2. Sonja
    1 year ago

    Beautiful Fred!

  3. DLL
    1 year ago

    The life of the Spirit is like rain on the plain. Education opens the human heart to the Holy Spirit. Praying the Liturgy of the Hours,attending Mass,knowing the Catechism of the Catholic Church is the rain on the plain that educates. Spiritual reading of the Bible and great spiritual works of the Saints is prayer as well as education. Prayer is the desire to allow the Holy Spirit to mold and educate the soul. God is perfection. Christ is perfection that was a life lived out in perfect obedience to God,from birth to His sacrificial death on the cross for the redemption of our sins. Our life our bodies are acceptable sacrifices to God as we live lives of love and chastity and learning through prayer that innocence to sin is much better than being guilty of sin. Family,Man,Woman,Child is the sound foundation for understanding the very ideals that Christ stood for. Prayer is always to be of one mind in Christ and always obedient to God the Father through the Power of the Holy Spirit,working within us all,to mold us and shape us all into Holy Vessels that are acceptable to God. Real Prayer is always living in the moment and always obedient to God. Of coarse routines during the day allowing for a time of prayer as well as prayer books help. God help us all as like minded to be temples of His most Holy Spirit. Amen

  4. abey
    1 year ago

    If we seek to be with God in the eternal, which is the goal of life, then we need to go by The Spirit such that we live in it to be led by it 'cause God is Spirit. Right now man lives in the flesh, which is called the fallen state & is the very reason as to why he is more with the demons, even unto the worship, mistaking it & calling it god's, denoted by Paganism & its cultures, the status quo of sin. The sacrifice of Christ is made in the truth that He died to take away the sins of mankind, where actually mankind was to be condemned, like it happened at the time of Noe except Noe & Family by grace to the continuation of mankind. Now with Christ, collective condemnation is removed but individual condemnation exists & to this the saying '"Jesus took away our our sins " is not in the fulness unless we "Take up our own crosses to follow Him" as asked of us in the faith & it is only then we equate with Him, so as to die in Him to be raised in Him. But them who say He took away our sins & so believing live by the World will have nothing to do with Him,'cause He is not of this World & they by so believing & doing, make the sacrifice of Christ into an Occult, not to do with Him & thus into condemnation, the truth of many a Christians even.

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