“If anyone love me, he will keep my word, and my
Father will love him, and we will make our abode with him.”
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Almighty God freely created a world for man; He freely lived in the
world as a man and now lives among us under the appearance of bread and
wine; but more, Almighty God desires not only to dwell with men, He
desires to dwell in them. And although Almighty God created the
world and became a man without our help, He is helpless to dwell in men
unless they help Him.
We will speak on the indwelling of the Trinity.
The brevairy reading for today we read from St. Gregory the Great,
“If anyone one of you were asked whether he loved God, he would feel
safe in answering with complete confidence, ‘Yes.’ At the very
beginning of this Gospel reading, however, you heard what Truth Himself
says, “If anyone love me, he will keep my word.” The proof of
love, then, is shown in works.”
“In the letter of St. John we read the same thing, “If anyone says, ‘I
love God’ and does not keep His commandments, the man is a liar.”
“We certainly do love God, that is we keep His commandments, when we
keep our lusts in check. For whoever still lets himself go in
sinful desires obviously does not love God, because his will decides
against God.”
We love God when we delight in the Truth; anyone who deliberately
delights in sinful pleasures certainly does not love God... as St.
Gregory says, “because his will decides against God.” Anyone who
commits a willful act of blasphemy, hatred towards neighbor, fraud
involving much money, fornication, adultery, sodomy, or any sin of
impurity,... proves that he does not love God.
But if anyone keeps the word of God, loves God in his deeds, what can
he expect?
Our Savior has given us the answer, “My Father will love Him, and we
will come and make our abode with Him.” Such a man becomes a
temple of God. This is the great dignity of man... that he can be
or become a temple of God. When we lose God we lose the one thing
that gives us any dignity or any right to the respect of our fellow man.
One of the frequent mysteries we should contemplate in our prayers, in
our drives to work (with the radio off), or at any moment we have the
opportunity, is this aspect of our spiritual life... If I am truly a
friend of God, if I possess sanctifying grace, then God dwells in my
soul.
And what greater treasure could I ever posses than God in my
soul? Anything compared with God is a vanity... a void, an
emptiness... a thing which has no existence.
At home I have a safe where I put important documents,
investments, heirlooms; when I leave my house to go to work or run an
errand, I check every lock twice; when I park my car, I put valuables
in hidden places and secure the doors.
Every day I make sure to take my vitamins and eat healthy food. I
am careful to bathe and wear clean and mended clothes; I wash and wax
my
car and with regularity take it to the shop for maintenance... and
perhaps even make shiny the hubcaps.
In so many ways, I am very careful to maintain my earthly
possessions... am I as careful to preserve the Guest of my soul?
Am I careful to avoid near occasions of sin?; am I assiduous in my
practice daily prayer and petition my God for those graces I most
need?; do I try to frequent the Sacraments; read spiritual books; say
my Rosary, use holy water; examine my conscience nightly.
God forbid that I should ever commit a willful sin of impurity, fraud,
blasphemy, hatred towards my neighbor... for then the divine Guest must
leave my soul. But even in lesser things, if God truly is my
greatest possession then I must protect His presence with most care.
St. Gregory continues,
“Consider, dearest brethren, how great a privilege it is to have God
come into one’s heart as a guest. If a wealthy or influential
friend were coming into your house, would you not hurry and tidy the
house thoroughly, in order that there would be nothing offensive to his
eyes when he entered? In the same way, if you are preparing the
house of your mind to receive God, remove the filth of evil deeds.
“Now look closely at what Truth Himself says, ‘We will come and make
our abode with him.’ For God indeed enters certain hearts, but He
does not dwell there; such persons, by contrition, gain God’s
attention, but in time of temptation they forget the very acts for
which they were sorry. Accordingly, they continue to commit those
sins as if they had never bewailed them.”
At this Holy Mass, let us compare the delicate care we take to maintain
our earthly body, home, or striving to climb up some career
ladder... and compare this with my striving to please the Guest of my
soul or restore Him there should I have lost Him by serious sin.
Having made such an exam, let us all implore the Blessed Trinity for
the grace to become a worthy or a more worthy dwelling for His presence
in our souls... recalling to mind that God dwelling in my soul is the
only possession I shall be eternally thankful for owning.