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You know how at Mass we always say “I’m not worthy for you to enter my roof, but just say the word and my soul will be healed”? As well as how it’s often said that we are all unworthy sinners, or even unworthy of God’s love for us?
Well, the dictionary definition of “worthy” essentially means deserving. If this is exactly what unworthiness means in the context of spirituality, then this solves a lot of problems, and has a lot of implications. The meaning of “worth” in “unworthy” has a completely different meaning from “worth” in the sense of value. In the first sense, worth refers to merit or deserving something, while the second is independent of that.
This solves a lot of problems as unworthiness then doesn’t have any association with being worthless, ugly or unlovable. To be unworthy simply means to not deserve something, and in the context of what God offers us, He does that out of love. And you know what that means? When you give a friend a gift, that gift is obviously undeserved by definition of what a gift is, but does that mean your friend isn’t worth the gift or is not valuable? Of course not! In fact, the opposite is the case - you wouldn’t give your friend a gift if you didn’t value your friend or considered him worth the gift! The same goes with the love parents have for their children - both when they decide to have them, and when they care for them afterwards. So our unworthiness as sinners to receive God or to be forgiven or whatever you have, far from making us depressed or being a negative, should fill us with joy and make us realise how valued we are by God!
So the realisation of our unworthiness, as a part of humility, has as it’s goal not to make us sad but to point us to great joy! The person who is prideful - who thinks he deserves something that he doesn’t deserve and is proud of this as if it were a personal accomplishment of his - is in reality depriving himself of the greatest joy there is, which is to be valued in love! This is also a part of gratitude - not to make us feel bad about the fact we don’t deserve something, as if we are to walk on stern eggshells in recognising we don’t deserve something - but give us true joy and optimism in focusing on what we have and on who gave it to us, and why! And just like with other virtues, the world makes us think that God wants to take away our pleasure with this as if He were the enemy of joy, when instead He is the author of joy!
What do you think?
Well, the dictionary definition of “worthy” essentially means deserving. If this is exactly what unworthiness means in the context of spirituality, then this solves a lot of problems, and has a lot of implications. The meaning of “worth” in “unworthy” has a completely different meaning from “worth” in the sense of value. In the first sense, worth refers to merit or deserving something, while the second is independent of that.
This solves a lot of problems as unworthiness then doesn’t have any association with being worthless, ugly or unlovable. To be unworthy simply means to not deserve something, and in the context of what God offers us, He does that out of love. And you know what that means? When you give a friend a gift, that gift is obviously undeserved by definition of what a gift is, but does that mean your friend isn’t worth the gift or is not valuable? Of course not! In fact, the opposite is the case - you wouldn’t give your friend a gift if you didn’t value your friend or considered him worth the gift! The same goes with the love parents have for their children - both when they decide to have them, and when they care for them afterwards. So our unworthiness as sinners to receive God or to be forgiven or whatever you have, far from making us depressed or being a negative, should fill us with joy and make us realise how valued we are by God!
So the realisation of our unworthiness, as a part of humility, has as it’s goal not to make us sad but to point us to great joy! The person who is prideful - who thinks he deserves something that he doesn’t deserve and is proud of this as if it were a personal accomplishment of his - is in reality depriving himself of the greatest joy there is, which is to be valued in love! This is also a part of gratitude - not to make us feel bad about the fact we don’t deserve something, as if we are to walk on stern eggshells in recognising we don’t deserve something - but give us true joy and optimism in focusing on what we have and on who gave it to us, and why! And just like with other virtues, the world makes us think that God wants to take away our pleasure with this as if He were the enemy of joy, when instead He is the author of joy!
What do you think?