“I am not looking for peace but the face of Him who gives the

peace I ask for in prayer. We think it is we who are searching

after God, whereas it is really we who are being sought.” (Father Bernard

Bro, O.P.)

Each year around this time I have written about preparing for Lent. What shall I give up? What shall I take on? Taking on a daily Ignatian examen was one of the most practical ‘tools’ to melding my “church self” with my “worldly self”. This spawned conversations with God that brought wholeness and integrity to my life. Healing the wounds underlying sin then made it possible to avoid habitual sins altogether because it is the strength of God fueling my efforts.

Yet God wants to show us a more excellent way to live beyond overcoming sin. He wants us to take on love. To do so, we must first know what love is, what it looks like in action, how it is lived. We look to Jesus.

Therefore you rebuke offenders little by little, warn them, and remind them of the sins they are committing, that they may abandon their wickedness and believe in you, Lord!

–Wisdom 12:2

Jesus wants us to grow. He has the power to abolish all sin with just a mere thought. But if He did so, we would not mature in our love for Him. He has the power to wipe out all sinners with just one decisive Word, but it is His loving will that all come to find their salvation in Him for eternity. He desires our repentance and love for He is the God of love, not death. Therefore, He withdraws His grace by degrees, little by little, no longer restraining the forces of nature nor the consequences of choices. Each is a moment for conversion; an opportunity to honestly face our attachments and sin head-on and choose to be changed.

One is punished by the very things through which one sins.

–Wisdom 11:16

Continually grasping to worldly things to console emotions and appease passions is self-punishing: we punish ourselves by stepping away from His grace. The remedy to our brokenness is to keep His love and fidelity in our heart and mind at all times, letting this form our thoughts and actions. Obedience to His love is the foundation of humility, and humility opens the door of the soul to grace.

It seems, then, that what God wants most of us this Lent is to return to grace.

“Our nothingness, if it is accepted, becomes the free space where God is still able to create.”

–Saint Francis of Assisi

Surrendered in abandonment, with total acknowledgement of our helplessness to God’s loving will, He will create a new heart within us that overflows with love just as His own.

Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam.

This post was originally published on the Face of Grace Project and is reprinted here with permission.

Image courtesy of Unsplash. 

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