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The Virtue of Hope Is the Virtue of the Wayfarer
| The Virtue of Hope Is the Virtue of the Wayfarer |
Christian asceticism pictures man’s life on earth as a
journey that has its end in God. We are all homo viator, the wayfarer longing
to turn his steps quickly towards his definitive goal – God. Because of this we
must all 'provide ourselves with hope’ if we want to walk with a firm and
certain step along the hard path in front of us (Paul VI, Address, 9 December
1975). If the traveller were to lose hope of reaching his destination he would
not continue with his journey. The only thing that keeps him on his way is his
trust that he will some day reach his goal. We want to travel very straight and
fast towards holiness -- to God.
In human life, when a person sets himself an objective, his hope of achieving it is based on his physical resilience, his training and his own experience. When all is said and done it is based on his will power which enables him, if necessary, to draw strength from his very weakness. To reach the supernatural end of our existence, we do not rely on our own strength, but on God, who is all-powerful.
He is the faithful friend
who does not let us down. His goodness and mercy are not the same as the mercy
and goodness of men, which are frequently like a morning cloud, like the dew
that goes early away (First Reading, Hos 6:1-6).
Thanks to the supernatural
virtue of hope, the Christian can be confident that he will reach his
definitive objective which has already begun with Baptism in this life and will
remain forever in the next. This definitive objective is not something merely provisional,
it is not the point of departure towards a further goal, as is the case with
ordinary journeys. Through this virtue, we hope and long for that eternal life
promised by God to those who love him, together with the means needed to
achieve it and the sup port of his omnipotent help (cf Catechism of St Pius X,
893). The greater the difficulties and the weaker we are, the stronger our hope
in God has to be, for the greater his help will be. His closeness to our lives
will be all the more evident. In the Second Reading of the Mass (Rom 4:18-25), Saint Paul recalls how Abraham believed in hope,
against hope, that he should become the father of many nations; as he had been
told. John Paul I comments: You will still say, ‘How can this happen?’ It can
happen because it clings tightly to three truths: God is omnipotent, God loves
me immensely, God is faithful to his promises. And it is He, the God of mercy,
who awakens trust within me; trust which makes me know that I am not alone, or
use less or cast aside, but rather that I am part of a salvific destiny which
will end one day in Paradise (John Paul I, Address, 20 September 1978).
Abraham did not hesitate
despite his advanced years and his wife’s sterility, but he trusted firmly in
the power and mercy of God, being fully persuaded that God is able to do what
He promises. And aren’t we going to trust Jesus Christ ‘who was delivered
up for our sins and rose again for our justification’? How could God leave us
alone to deal with the obstacles we encounter which try to prevent us living in
accordance with the call we have received from Him? He holds out his hand to us
in many different ways: normally in our daily prayer, in our fulfillment of the
plan of life we have set ourselves, in the sacraments, and in a special way, in
the advice we receive in spiritual direction. Our Lord will never leave us
alone on our journey through this world and on which we frequently experience
faintheartedness and weakness. The hope of becoming saints, of faithfully doing
what God expects of each of us, depends on our accepting the hand that He holds
out to us. This virtue is not based on our own worthiness, on our personal
situation in life, or on the absence of difficulties, but on God’s will - on
his will that we should reach the goal - a will which is always accompanied by
all the grace and help that we can need in any possible circumstances.
‘Nam, et si ambulavero in medio umbrae
mortis, non timebo mala’ – though I should walk through the valley of the
shadow of death, no evil will I fear. Neither my wretchedness nor the
temptations of the enemy will worry me, 'quoniam tu mecum es’ - for you Lord
are with me (J. Escrivá, The Forge, 194).
With permission from Scepter UK.
Short excerpt from IN CONVERSATION WITH GOD by Francis
Fernandez.
Available at SinagTala or Totus Bookstore 723-4326 or at www.totusbookstore.com
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