With a due respect, this is beginning to sound like a Christian Scientist reading room. LOL
Let’s get back to our primary focus, the saints.
Earlier, someone cited, “Be perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect.” This is a most interesting quote, because the Biblical authors deliberately avoided using the quote that they preached, “Be holy as your Heavenly Father is holy.” In Judaism only God can be holy. Holiness is not something that man should aspire to, because it is easily confused as aspiring to be God, which many Jews of that time recalled as the original sin of Adam. Thus the early evangelists substituted “perfect” for “holy”. But when they preached, they used the word, “holy.”
This is precisely what the Lord called us to be, holy. Perfection would have been an impossible demand. Christ never demanded the impossible. Observe in the Book of Revelations that the angels sing “Holy Holy Holy, Lord God almighty.” John’s Book of Revelations calls our attention to God’s holiness not his perfection. That is a given, but not man’s vocation. Only God is perfect.
Our Holy Father Francis once wrote a letter to a superior of one of the friaries regarding the state of his soul. He describes how one is to achieve holiness. There are several striking notes in this letter. Regarding those things that impair our love of God and those who cause such impairment, we should regard as a grace so that that which may seem like a hurdle, becomes a means to holiness. We should not only accept it, but be grateful for the hurdle; because without the cross, the Christian’s journey has no compatibility with Christ’s journey.
He also orders the superior to be truly obedient to God and to him (Francis) as he speaks for the Lord, because everything that he taught his brothers he received from the Lord. Here again, Francis is obstinate on the importance of Christian tradition and the scriptures, because everything that he taught his brothers came from Sacred Tradition and Holy Scripture. Thus it all came from the Lord himself, as both are great gifts that God grants us.
In addition, our Holy Father counsels the superior to accept all evils that men do to him and not want anything else from them and in this to love them, because this is truly the embrace of the cross. We must desire nothing but the cross of Christ. He goes on to encourage the superior not to wish that those who treat him poorly be better Christians, because in this way they prove to him (Francis) and to God that they are truly God’s servants as Christ was the suffering servant. The should only intervene in the abuse of others, not of them.
He concludes by telling the superior that if he has done these things and accepted such ill treatment from those whom the world would consider to be sinners, and after they have exercised all of their ill will toward him, they should see nothing else in his (the superior’s) eyes but mercy, so that if that person seeks mercy, they will have found it through the one who has been persecuted. In this way, one draws the merciless toward Living Mercy itself. This is the measure of true holiness.
JR
