We
believe that God was completely fulfilled, perfectly happy and content, not in need of
anything, before God created the universe and the human race.
Wouldn’t it make you wonder why God bothered to create us at all,
since we have proved to be so much trouble? And God would have
known about all the trouble that it was going to cause. So why did
God create us?
Here is how it
makes some sense to me. Think for a moment of some time when you were
deeply happy about something. Usually our instinct is to share it. We
want someone else to be a part of that happiness. That’s why most
people have a big party at their wedding, because they want others to
share in their happiness and that is one of the reasons why God
created us, simply because in his goodness he wanted others to share
in his own happiness. And so he created the spirit world, that we
understand as the angels and then He created the human race, in order
that we could share in his own happiness. The book of Genesis says
that we were the last thing that God created which is a biblical way
of saying that we were the most important thing, the masterpiece of
God’s creation. We are God’s greatest creation! God also created us to be like him, with the ability to love and
reason.
However,
there was one ‘catch’ as it were. In order for us to be able to
love God we had to be free, so that we could freely choose to love
God, otherwise it wouldn’t be real love at all. Real love has to be
free, since you can never force someone to love you. You can
encourage them, but you certainly can’t force them. Love has to be
free or it isn’t love. So God made us free which meant that we
would have the freedom to love God and gradually find our way to
happiness, or to reject God which would ultimately mean we would lose
the happiness that God had intended for us. It’s a strange paradox.
God created us and gave us freedom, even though He knew that some of
his own creatures would reject him.
A friend of mine, a very devout Catholic, after he was married and had children, said to me one time that when he looks at his children he couldn't believe that God who is so loving would let people go to hell, that God would create hell. How could any parent allow their children deliberately to suffer? But the paradox is that no matter how much we love our children, we cannot force them to love us back. You know the pain of falling in love with someone who doesn’t love you back, or pushes you away. Hell is the pain that people who reject God end up with, because they reject the only one who can give us total fulfillment. If you push away total happiness, you get total misery. If you reject all joy, then you end up with all pain. That’s what hell is: losing all that can fulfill us and bring us joy. God doesn’t send us to hell. We choose it if we reject God. If we have real freedom then hell must also be real. If heaven is guaranteed for everyone, then we are not truly free, because to be truly free means we have the choice to love or not to love.
A friend of mine, a very devout Catholic, after he was married and had children, said to me one time that when he looks at his children he couldn't believe that God who is so loving would let people go to hell, that God would create hell. How could any parent allow their children deliberately to suffer? But the paradox is that no matter how much we love our children, we cannot force them to love us back. You know the pain of falling in love with someone who doesn’t love you back, or pushes you away. Hell is the pain that people who reject God end up with, because they reject the only one who can give us total fulfillment. If you push away total happiness, you get total misery. If you reject all joy, then you end up with all pain. That’s what hell is: losing all that can fulfill us and bring us joy. God doesn’t send us to hell. We choose it if we reject God. If we have real freedom then hell must also be real. If heaven is guaranteed for everyone, then we are not truly free, because to be truly free means we have the choice to love or not to love.
I
think the most beautiful image we are given of how God loves us is in
the story of the prodigal son. In this story, a father has two sons.
One of them demands his inheritance before the father has died, which
is the equivalent of wishing him dead to his face. He then goes off,
wastes all the money and comes back to his father ashamed. While the
Son has been away, his father is constantly waiting and hoping that
he will return and when he does finally return the father just
celebrates. There is no giving out, no warning that ‘This must not
happen again,’ just celebration and rejoicing. The story of the
prodigal son is teaching us how God is with us and how God sees us.
No condemnation, only God’s desire for us to find happiness.
The
Lord knows how difficult it can be for us to make the right choices
and so He gives us people to guide us, the commandments, the teaching
of his Church, his own Word in the bible and many other things to
help us along the way, so that we won’t be short of the direction
and encouragement that we need. He also sends us holy people
every so often, like Francis of Assisi, Padre Pio, Therese of
Lisieux, Mother Theresa, Pope Francis and many others, often people
we know, because they radiate God and they are a real sign to us of
the Lord’s presence among us. These people seem to radiate God and
so many people are drawn to them because they sense that presence.
That is why God sends us particular chosen souls every so often, to
inspire us and remind us that we are not alone. I know of several
people who worked with Mother Theresa and it completely changed their
life, because they met God through her.
The
feast of the Holy Trinity is a celebration of love; the Trinity is a
community of Persons who share total love and joy between them, and
this Holy Trinity reaches out to us with that same love and invites
us to join them. If we respond to the Father, the Son and the Spirit,
then we are gradually drawn more and more into that love. It starts
in this world and it will be fulfilled in the next. The greatest way
that we imitate God is by loving the people around us, sacrificing
ourselves for others. That is what God did for us and that is what
God invites us to do for each other.
God so loved the world that he gave his only Son,
So that everyone who believes in him might not perish
but might have eternal life.
No comments:
Post a Comment