Preaching is an apostolic task |
---|
In
common with the angels of heaven and the spirits of God, we have been
created in the image and likeness of God. If, in common with them, we
are to lead a spiritual life, we need as our food the grace of the Holy
Spirit and the charity of God. But grace and charity are nothing without
faith, for without faith it is impossible to please God. Nor can faith
come about without the preaching of the word of God. ‘Faith comes from
what is heard, and what is heard comes from the preaching of Christ.’
Thus the preaching of the word of God is as necessary for our spiritual
life as sowing is for our bodily life. This is why Christ says: ‘A sower
went out to sow his seed.’ The sower who went out is the preacher of
holiness. Sometimes we read that God himself was the preacher of
holiness, as in the desert when his very voice gave from heaven the law
of justice to the whole people. Sometimes the preacher was an angel of
the Lord; at the Place of Weepers he rebuked the people for breaking
God’s law, so that the children of Israel, when they heard the words of
the angel, were cut to the heart, lifted up their voices and wept
bitterly. Again, Moses preached the law of God to the whole people in
the plains of Moab, as we can read in Deuteronomy. Finally Christ, God
and man, came to preach the word of the Lord, and he sent out the
apostles on this task, just as previously he had sent the prophets.
Preaching, then, is an apostolic task, an angelic
task, a Christian task, a divine task. The word of God is so filled with
manifold goodness that it is like a treasury of all good things. From
this word come faith, hope, charity, all the virtues, all the gifts of
the Holy Spirit, all the gospel beatitudes, all good works, all merit in
this life, all the glory of paradise. ‘Receive the implanted word which
is able to save your souls.’
For the word of God is light to the mind and fire to
the will, enabling man to know and to love God. To the interior man who
lives by grace for the Spirit of God, it is bread and water; but it is a
bread sweeter than honey from the comb, a water better than milk or
wine. For the soul it is a spiritual treasure-house of merits, and so is
called gold and very precious stones. For the heart that is obstinately
hardened in vice it is a hammer; and against the devil, the world and
the flesh it is a sword that slays every sin.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.