The Freeman

Love makes the difference

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The use of our senses and all our other human powers and faculties depends on the motive and spirit that drives them. Their quality and ultimate purpose will also depend on the same motive and spirit.

If we would just be motivated by worldly values, then most likely we can only discern what is effective and beneficial in the persons, things and situations around us in terms of convenienc­e, practicali­ty, profitabil­ity, popularity, etc., and hardly anything beyond.

If we are only or mainly interested, for example, in earthly or physical beauty, then we can only appreciate colors, shapes, and feels that are pleasant to the senses and human faculties we have.

Our senses and human faculties are tools and instrument­s at best, and they need to be guided and animated properly. They actually just cannot be left on their own, or to their own devices, mainly at the mercy of biological, physical, chemical laws, or some social, political, economic, cultural, and historical trends and conditioni­ngs.

Given our innate dignity as persons and children of God, our senses and faculties need to be animated by the spirit of God no less. And this can only mean that they have to be guided and driven, in the end and always, by the theologica­l gifts of faith, hope, and charity. We are not merely animals guided by instincts alone.

In this way, our senses and human faculties would not get stuck in the level of the sensible and the intelligib­le, but would help us enter into the spiritual and supernatur­al aspects of our life. We are meant for this kind of life because of our rational nature that is spiritual in character and therefore ought to be animated by the supernatur­al spirit of God.

If we are driven by faith, hope, and charity, we, for example, would get to see and look at persons, things and events differentl­y. We would not be confined only to appearance­s and feelings.

We would look at things with a higher and nobler purpose and get to see more than shape, color, and size. We would get to see love, even if things involve suffering. In fact, suffering becomes a clear touchstone of love. As one love song puts it, "I'll be looking at the moon / but I'll be seeing you." That's the difference love makes.

This point about love, the real love that comes from God, making a difference in our life is important and urgently needed for us to learn nowadays. And that's simply because we cannot deny that at the moment we are simply wallowing on shallow, passing, and ephemeral realities, offering us no stability and pledge of eternal life and happiness that our heart actually is yearning for.

Even if things now look exciting and absorbing, they are only passing realities. They don't last. Sooner or later, we get bored and boredom is a clear sign of the absence of love. With regard to this, St. Paul already warned us we who "use the things of this world should not be dependent on them, for this world in its present form is passing away." (1 Cor 7,31)

In fact, the more exciting and absorbing they are, the more wary and determined we should be to keep our senses and faculties on the right foundation and orientatio­n.

This is why Christ told us that if we want to follow him, we need to deny ourselves and carry the cross. (cfr Mt 16,24) There's no other formula in life for us to follow.

‘Even if things now look exciting and absorbing, they are only passing realities. They don't last.’

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