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OraLabora
Guest
Often though, I’d even say usually, this doesn’t happen through exhortation but a realization that one’s life cannot carry on the way it has. In other words, hitting rock-bottom. An addition counsellor who gave a seminar to us managers some years ago, gave an example of alcoholism and drug addiction. It’s the same with many sins. It comes from the heart, not from lecturing. Which is why I think her approach would fail.I didn’t see where Josie mentioned anything about ‘just following the rules’, rather, I see what she is presenting as a call to break with sin. Not the same thing!
No one expects it not to be a journey, but the first steps involve a recognition of the sin in our lives. To even trust in God’s Mercy hinges on a recognition that what we did was wrong in the first place. You are quite correct that God’s Mercy is what lifts us up out of the mess we fell into and sets us back on the right path. It is not our own doing. But that Mercy is meaningless without the recognition that we fell in the first place.
It happened to me on a business trip in a hotel room when I realized I couldn’t go on as I had in the fast lane, and picked up the Bible in the night table and started to read. A couple of months later I came back to the Church, mentally at least, crawling on all fours. It will be 19 years this fall.
An approach that might work is simply “come and see”. No lecturing. No proselytizing. Just come, see, ask questions, speak to a priest, tell us your joys and your pains. Make it plain that all are welcome no matter what their beliefs or how ready they are to break with sin. It may take years. Meet sinners where they are. Do not expect them to be where you are when they walk through the door. No quid pro quo “you’re welcome if you renounce sin”. Just “you’re welcome”. Period. And listen to what they have to say. The world is full of hurt. Many of our own sins are the result of past mistreatment. Mine was. My wife’s father even more so, he spent the ages of 16-20 in a Japanese concentration camp. You can imagine how abandoned by God he felt.