The Awareness of the Presence of God
1. The cultivation of a continual awareness of the presence of God is
such a useful practice that many writers regard it as the fundamental
principle of the spiritual life. As St. Alphonsus de' Liguori points
out, it obliges us to do three things: (1) To preserve ourselves
completely free from sin; (2) To practise virtue in every possible way,
and (3) To seek a closer and more loving contact with God. (Al. Div. Servizio, III, 1, 3)
The realisation of the presence of God is a particularly good way of
subduing our passions and conquering temptation. “If we were always
aware of God's presence within us,” writes St. Thomas, “we should never,
or hardly ever, sin.” (Opusc. 58, c. 2)
It is unlikely that a
man who is committing sin adverts to the fact that God is watching him
and could intervene to punish him at any moment. He has forgotten the
presence of God, his Creator and Redeemer, Who has been so good to him
and Who will one day be his judge. His mind has been darkened and his
heart led astray by the deceptive pleasures of this world.
God
is far from the sinner because the sinner ignores His inspirations and
advice and has, in short, rejected Him. The unhappy man will never find
peace in this world and is doomed to eternal unhappiness in the next.
“If we remained always in the presence of God,” wrote St. John
Chrysostom, “we should neither conceive nor do anything evil.” (Homil.
8, ad Phil., 2.)
2. The presence of God, moreover, encourages
us to do our best to acquire all the virtues. When He is always before
our eyes we have no difficulty in recognising that He is the supreme
Truth, Beauty, and Goodness.
Let us seek to please God,
therefore, by obeying His commandments and inspirations. If we wish to
be worthy of His presence, let us seek to adorn our souls with His
grace, which is ours for the asking. Our awareness of God's presence
should not be a passive state. It should enliven our faith and increase
our love for Him.
Do we realise how poor and pitiful we are in
the sight of God? Let us ask Him to make us holy. If we are troubled by
temptations, let us ask Him for the strength to conquer them. If we are
worn out by suffering, let us ask Him to help and console us.
3. If we remind ourselves constantly of the presence of God, we shall
always be closely united to Him. Union with God should be the result of
our love for Him, for it is an unfailing rule of love that it increases
with the nearness of the beloved. If we live in the presence of God and
contemplate Him as the perfection of beauty, truth and goodness, we
shall be moved to love Him more and more. Our love, moreover, will
generate in us the ardent desire of an even closer intimacy with Him.
This sacred union will bring us great peace and tranquility in all the
vicissitudes of life, a serenity which will be reflected in our
personality and in our conduct for the edification of our fellow-men.
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