Doing Everything for the Love of God
1. The beginning of perfection consists in doing the will of God even
in our smallest actions. But to do everything for the love of God is the
summit of Christian perfection. If we aimed always at doing God's will
and acting from the motive of love for Him, we should be contented and
at peace, because we should be holy. The saints are the only people
who remain calm and undisturbed in the midst of worldly adversity. They
are always content because they live in God. Their lives are in full
conformity with His Will, guided by His love, and dedicated to His
service. As a result, they live in a kind of spiritual stratosphere far
above the storms of this world. There they are above the clouds of
pride, ambition, avarice and all the other major vices. There they see
and contemplate everything in the light of God. Let us become saints.
Then we shall have solved all the problems of life.
2. As St.
John says, God is love; he who dwells in love dwells in God, and God
dwells in him. (I John 4:16) Since He is love, God longs to be loved by
us. Our actions should come from, and be accompanied by, our love for
Him. “Love therefore is the fulfilment of the Law,” (Rom. 13:10) writes
St. Paul. We must perform all our actions, therefore, for the love of
God. The alchemists of old made a great many experiments in the hope of
being able to transform base metals into gold. What was possible in the
physical order, however, is quite possible in the moral and spiritual
order. We can transform all our actions into pure gold by means of the
love of God. There is a story told about a sculptor who was chiselling
out a small statue which was to be placed on the highest pinnacle of the
temple. He was striving after perfection in the tiniest details, as if
it would be possible for the statue to be inspected at close quarters.
Somebody asked him why he was so particular and careful in his work, and
he replied; "I am not working for those who are looking up from below,
but for Him Who is looking down from above. I am working for God alone!"
3. In one of his letters Luther wrote that he was so busy that he had
no time to read his Breviary nor to offer Holy Mass. There is no doubt
that it was this estrangement from prayer and from the love of God which
caused him to finish up as he did. Our work must be based on charity
and the interior life, so that we may always be united with God.
Otherwise, every action of ours, no matter how good it may appear, is
sterile and valueless in the sight of God. Today also there are many
people busily engaged in apostolic work, but they have no interior life
nourished by charity. This is what is known as the heresy of action.
Everything we do is useless and even harmful if our external activity is
not accompanied by a flourishing interior life enriched by divine
grace. St. Gregory the Great paraphrases the words of the Gospel as
follows: "Our Lord says: If anyone love Me, let him keep my
commandments. Love is proved by action. This is why St. John (I John
2:4) says that the man who claims to love God and does not keep His
commandments is a liar. We love God sincerely if we keep His
commandments and avoid the immoderate pleasures of our age. Anyone who
surrenders without reserve to the unlawful desires of this world
certainly does not love God, because he is acting contrary to His will."
(Homil. 30 in Ev.)
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