Our Passions
1. Our passions are not essentially sinful. They can open the way to
evil, but they can also lead us towards perfection. Everything depends
on how we control and direct them. They are impulses which are at the
same time valuable and dangerous.
Human nature was wounded as a
result of original sin. The soul was disobedient to God, and the lower
faculties rebelled against right reason.
Hence the disturbance of our passions. What should our attitude be in
regard to this problem? Should we suppress or obliterate our passions,
as some of the Stoics would have done? It is, in fact, impossible to do
this, for our passions are innate natural forces which cannot be
destroyed. What we should do is guide and control them. If the dykes are
burst, a strongly flowing river can cause havoc, but if its course is
wisely directed it irrigates the soil and makes it fertile. It is the
same with our natural inclinations, which “can be used to form a saint,
but can also make a brigand.” (Cordovani, Breviario Spirituale, p. 66)
A man with a fiery and aggressive temperament can use his natural
impulses under God's guidance to combat vice in himself and in others.
One who is haughty and ambitious by nature can convert his ambition into
a quest for the true and lasting glory of Heaven. Finally, a passionate
man who feels the need to love and to be loved can find a partial
remedy in Christian friendship. Most of all, however, he can find repose
in the love of God.
2. It is a hard thing to control and to
direct our natural inclinations. It requires perseverance, sacrifice,
and the grace of God, for which we should always pray.
Often
this struggle will last a lifetime, and we can still fall even after
many years of combat. It is important, however, never to give up. If a
man accepts defeat and quietly submits to the tyranny of sinful passion,
he is lost forever. It is a poor outlook also for a Christian who ends
up by being satisfied with a life of worthless mediocrity. We must fight
hard, pray fervently, and value nothing higher than the love of Christ.
When we are finally victorious, our joy will be greater than any
happiness which the world can give.
3. Let us be vigilant in
the control of our passions. As soon as they tempt us to do anything
contrary to right reason and the divine law, let us renew our
resolutions and implore the help of God. “O God,” let us pray, “I wish
to love You above all things. I wish neither to contemplate nor intend
nor do anything which could offend You in any way.” This is the only way
in which we shall find peace and an easy conscience for, as “The
Imitation of Christ” says, “whenever a man desireth any thing
inordinately, straightaway he is disquieted within himself.” (Imit. of
Christ, Bk. 1, c. 6) “It is by resisting the passions,” it continues,
“and not by serving them, that true peace of heart is to be found.”
(Ibid.)
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