
ROUGH SPOTS ON THE PILGRIM ROAD

As we travel our Lenten journey, we, like those intrepid pilgrims on the road to Compostela, should expect to meet all sorts of difficulties and temptations on the way.
The Judeo-Christian tradition has various metaphors for this resistance, whether internal or external, that we encounter whenever we try to respond to God's call to conversion of heart. Here are just a few of those images:
Trials in the Desert. During their forty years in the wilderness God sends the Israelites various hardships such as thirst, hunger or marauding tribes to test their faith and their trust in Yahweh. Unfortunately, the People of God usually fail the test and give in to the temptations.
The "sinful Adam" in us. Saint Paul complains "I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate. … But in fact it is no longer I that do it, but sin that dwells within me" (Rom. 7:15,17).

Holy Combat. In the language of the early monastic tradition, the spiritual life is a battle between the forces of good and the forces of evil, and the battleground is the human heart. The desert fathers and mothers spoke all the time of the demons who constantly try to discourage us by disrupting any good work we begin.
Misdirected Love. Saint Augustine teaches that our one basic desire is for God; but our passions get disordered and we begin to pursue other lesser loves, created ones, instead of God.
"The False Self." Thomas Merton uses this image to describe the resistance we experience in ourselves when we try to respond freely and authentically to God's call to conversion; the "false self" tries to take over and push us toward selfish, inauthentic behavior.
All of these metaphors describe the same phenomenon: there is something in us that resists the movement toward mature, self-giving love. They also teach, implicitly or explicitly, that we ourselves are powerless against these forces, and that we need God's help to overcome them.
MY TWO YEAR-OLD IN LENT

WEEK TWO: HOLY COMBAT

Discussion:
What about you? Have you ever had to deal with your own inner two year old

This two year old has bothered me a lot lately when I tried to do something good or has caused me to criticize people and not to accept them when I wanted to "love my neighbor".
ReplyDeleteThanks for this insight. It helps and I know that only God can do it, not me.
I've found the image of the inner two-year old very revealing. For example, how does one deal with a child in her or his terrible twos? Well, you don't let the little one throw you into turmoil, but you just handle the situatiion calmly without making a big deal of it. You try to be patient with the childish behavior rather than trying to "fix" the two year-old on the spot. You accept the fact that this needy child is there and is right now making your life difficult. And, yes, I'm sure that many parents must hand things over to God in prayer when they realize that they really don't quite know what to do with this little person!
ReplyDeleteMarch 23, 2009 7:57 PM