T
Trishie
Guest
We, who seek our eternal destiny in our loving God, ask that He will guide us beyond despondency and unbelief when faith seems hollow.
Our God in His humanity knows this mocking loneliness—as is evidenced in the desolation of His loud lament— “My God, My God, why have You abandoned Me?” One feels troubled, yet encouraged, before such words from God incarnate. “You also, Lord? What sufferings underlie such a plea wrung from You?” Let us unite our doubt with Jesus’ faltering, for the Father looks with silent pity and unspeakable love on His Son, knowing that Jesus, though ever sinless, must choose to suffer with us, drinking the cup of our guilt to the full.
Anything is bearable if we have sustaining faith, but where belief dissipates we are stranded. There is no greater desolation to one who wishes to live according to the Spirit, than to lose the purpose of its requisite effort and pain, finding spiritual vacuum.
Yet if we remain faithful, such deprivation allows God to fill our being with God’s own divine will and truth, through act of faith by obedient will. As we are not yet pure and holy, we cannot even then, experience God except through faith. Until we are also freed at the appointed time from our mortal existence and its imperfect consequences, we cannot truly know God.
Should we bind ourselves wilfully from life in the Spirit, this can never be granted us—to know God who is Love. This divine love is the only source of our being. It is our true destiny. Deprivation of God’s love ultimately becomes our hell ( which is lovelessness ) forever.
…continued…
Our God in His humanity knows this mocking loneliness—as is evidenced in the desolation of His loud lament— “My God, My God, why have You abandoned Me?” One feels troubled, yet encouraged, before such words from God incarnate. “You also, Lord? What sufferings underlie such a plea wrung from You?” Let us unite our doubt with Jesus’ faltering, for the Father looks with silent pity and unspeakable love on His Son, knowing that Jesus, though ever sinless, must choose to suffer with us, drinking the cup of our guilt to the full.
Anything is bearable if we have sustaining faith, but where belief dissipates we are stranded. There is no greater desolation to one who wishes to live according to the Spirit, than to lose the purpose of its requisite effort and pain, finding spiritual vacuum.
Yet if we remain faithful, such deprivation allows God to fill our being with God’s own divine will and truth, through act of faith by obedient will. As we are not yet pure and holy, we cannot even then, experience God except through faith. Until we are also freed at the appointed time from our mortal existence and its imperfect consequences, we cannot truly know God.
Should we bind ourselves wilfully from life in the Spirit, this can never be granted us—to know God who is Love. This divine love is the only source of our being. It is our true destiny. Deprivation of God’s love ultimately becomes our hell ( which is lovelessness ) forever.
…continued…
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