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Falling in Love with God: The Greatest Romance
By Jennifer Hartline
6/28/2009

Catholic Online (www.catholic.org)

To fall in love with God is the greatest of romances, to seek Him the greatest adventure, to find Him the greatest human achievement. (St. Augustine)



CHESAPEAKE, Va. (Catholic Online) - There are days when I do battle with a deadly spiritual malady, a form of spiritual heart disease. It comes in two forms, both rather sneaky in how they creep up on me and worm their way into my heart. They are cynicism and indifference. It’s not so much that I choose them; it’s that I make no effort to refuse them.

Clearly, many of us are suffering this malady. This is the disease that zaps our energy and steals our excitement. It leaves us weary and lazy and full of handy excuses. It eats away at devotion and leaves our souls empty. Christendom in America is deeply infected with this life-sapping sickness. It is why so many Christians have been enticed and beguiled by power and popularity and persuaded to compromise. Without passion, without zeal, without fervor, we are lifeless and faith is so easily cast aside.

St. Augustine prescribes the cure: We need a new romance. "To fall in love with God is the greatest of romances, to seek Him the greatest adventure, to find Him the greatest human achievement." What the cynical and indifferent heart needs is a healthy dose of romance.

We have every reason to be enthralled in romance! The greatest gesture of love known to the universe was made toward each of us by the Author of True Love. We are not simply liked and enjoyed; we are passionately, deeply, obsessively loved!

How does it go again?

“God so understood the world…”
“God so cared for the world…”
“God so respected the world…”
“God so accepted the world…”
“God so disdained the world…”
“God so rejected the world…”

No…God so LOVED the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in Him will not perish but have everlasting life. God made a bold and unflinching proclamation of abiding, endless love to all mankind, and Jesus came to be made a fool of, all in the hope that He would win the hearts of His beloved ones. Only a passionate lover is willing to look foolish for his beloved.

People, we desperately need a new romance. We need to take a good, long look with fresh eyes at the Lover of our souls and internalize the high price He paid for the chance to be reunited with us. I hope we have not stared at our painted images of God for so long that we are no longer impressed by what we see, for it’s not the typical picture of enchantment. Unadulterated passion and pure, ambitious love are not presented to us in flowers and sunsets, but in straw, wood, nails and blood.

I wonder in our day if we can even comprehend the nature of real love. Do we spend much time anymore contemplating a love that isn’t sexual or pleasure-oriented? Are we even inclined to pursue an endeavor that demands self-sacrifice?

“There will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God – having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with them.” 2 Tim 3:1-5

We have lost the fervor of our affection for God because we have become deadened to the meaning of real love. Love gives. Love is not self-seeking. Love cannot keep anything for itself. This kind of love is increasingly foreign to us. Like some kind of Dead Sea that only receives and never gives of itself to anyone else, we die inside because we don’t love. We must make a concerted effort to dwell on this crazy, extravagant love of God until it captures us again in the flush of romance. We need to fall in love with Jesus. It is the only cure for the cynical and indifferent heart.

We need that love to make us fearless in our devotion. We need the kind of passion that turns us into willing fools, people who couldn’t care less what the world thinks of us. I want the kind of passion and love for Christ that is oblivious to everything but Him. If He holds my heart, I need nothing else. The sound of His voice makes my heart pound, and there’s no room in my ears for any scorn or insult. I say I want this kind of passion and love because I’m not quite there yet. But I’m being wooed, and the more I attend to His affection, the more this romance grows, and the more my heart longs only for Jesus. I want the love described in the Song of Solomon: “Place me like a seal over your heart, like a seal on your arm; for love is as strong as death, its jealousy unyielding as the grave. It burns like blazing fire, like a mighty flame. Many waters cannot quench love; rivers cannot wash it away.”

This is the love that turns ordinary people into saints! This is the love that turns you and me into the hands and feet of Jesus in the world. This is the love that softens the most hardened of hearts, the love the world simply cannot ignore. It is this love that gives us courage and compels us to be faithful no matter the cost.

The heart in love with Jesus has no room for compromise or deception, since it only desires more of Jesus. The moral courage and conviction we lack, the absence of zeal and fervor in our faith is easily cured, if we will purposely incline ourselves toward Him. It is a sweet romance that beckons to us…let us fall in love again!

-----

Jennifer Hartline is a Catholic Army wife and stay-at-home mother of three precious kids who writes frequently on topics of Catholic faith and daily living. She is a contributing writer for Catholic Online.


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Comments
Good to have this article reprinted. I personally don't like the word "dare", but it seems almost as if we need to ask ourselves, "Dare we fall in love with Our Lord?" Are we willing to surrender ourselves totally to Him?
jh | 12/21/2009
I really love the article. Thanks for your reflections.

I thought the quote was amazing but I was wondering if it really is from St Augustine. It just doesn't quite sound like him (or it is a bad translation).

I searched St Augustine's works which are available online and this quote doesn't appear. But I see that it is attributed to him all over the internet. It may just be a self perpetuating error because people don't go to the source to confirm.

But when googling the quote, it appears to be from an American priest, Fr Raphael Simon. Here is an article that attributes it to him: http://www.logosinstitute.org/Raphael_Simon_bio.html
I don't know if that is conclusive but it would be worth checking Fr Simon's writings for that quote and its context.
Jody | 11/3/2009
Such a beautiful article. It touched me to tears and all I could say was, "I love you Jesus." I felt so ashamed of my self because I know I have not perfected myself in His eyes. And yet I know I love Him so much and that feeling alone makes me realize: God cares for me and He draws me to Him even if I am a sinner. He is such a loving wonderful Father!

The Holy Spirit was with you, Jennifer, when you wrote this for us. Thank you. You must be an angel.

Karen

Everybody are using GOD's name in Vain.. Especially the Beast Ratzinger..

As we know that the Holy Trinity is the GOD the Father God, the Son and GOD the Holy Spirit..
The Holy Spirit is the one who guides Jesus so the Holy Spirit is the highest of all spirit and now Karen you are saying the Holy Spirit guides Jenifer then you are trying to say that Jenifer can be Christ too! Well Mother Mary did not claim that the Holy Spirit is with her. You are breaking the Ten commandments. Thou shalt have no other GOD before me. Thou shalt not take GOD's name in vain.
The people who wants to be holy are all OA = overacting or exagerated which they were guided by evil to mislead other people. Then you are all does not understand what and how to respect GOD. You are all contrdicting your own belief. Even the Priests and Nuns does not know their faith they just want to create and be called Holy. In other word "Hypocrites".
Faith to God is common sense. You do not even know Christ well!

Eddie

eddie | 10/28/2009
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