Showing posts with label relating to God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relating to God. Show all posts

Saturday, July 19, 2025

I want to get closer to God and keep doing all I can, but nothing is happening. I feel far away... it's as if God is silent. What can I do?

On these Blogger pages we explore TOPICS in our desire to respond to Jesus' call to walk with Him in our world as his missionary disciples empowered by the Holy Spirit to bring to humanity the Good News of the Father's love manifested and given in Jesus, the Divine Mercy. G.S.

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Dear Reader, two millennia of disciples of Jesus have preceded us on this journey of faith, and they came to know God personally through his love and mercy. The riches of their lives, writings, sayings, teachings, and example are accessible to us; they are not kept hidden, and we only have to seek them, ask for them, and we will find. 

Our Roman Catholic Tradition accumulates, proclaims, and shares with all who would receive them, the teachings and example of Jesus, and especially his saving Passion, Death, and Resurrection. As well, Tradition stores for us the teaching and example of the shepherds the Lord gives us and also of the saints. For this and many other reasons, we do well to immerse ourselves daily in this life of the Lord's Church, his Assembly of the Saints... in the Prayer of the Church - the Liturgy of the Hours (American version - International version) - Holy Mass on Sunday and daily whenever possible, the duty of the moment in accord with our specific vocation in God, generously doing the works of mercy, attending to our duties in life, being hospitable to others, forgiving, and merciful to enemies, and so on... as Jesus taught and did. 

It is as if Jesus, the Son of God, were a child saying to us children, "Won't you come out and play with me?" To put it differently, Jesus is the Bridegroom saying to us - each of us individually, personally, and to all of us collectively - "I love you. Won't you dance with me?" Jesus, with the Most Holy Trinity - He, the Son, with his Father and the Holy Spirit - constantly offer us to share in their divine life. It is always up to us to respond as God our Creator asks us to do: "He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?" Micah 6:8. We are to do the right thing in our own life and in relation to others, even enemies, Jesus said, we are to be kind to all and to be open, honest, and humble before God, worshipping Him. 

It is also advisable for whoever wants to come closer to God to seek and find a good spiritual director; who is holy and disciplined, in good standing with our Church, who understands your soul, and is not afraid to challenge you. Of course, you do well to follow your spiritual director's guidance, and I want not to interfere with that, but only to reflect with you here around the subject expressed in the title of this blog post, namely: 

What is one to do when one wants to get closer to God, when even though one takes responsibility for one's life, one strives to love God and one's neighbour as oneself; with all the appropriate Christian disciplines and practices, and yet nothing seems to be happening... on the contrary, God seems farther away than ever, and oh so silent? What then? What is one to do then?

A good place to start, and as good as any, would be with an excerpt from St. Augustine's "Tractates on the first letter of John" under the subtitle "Our heart longs for God." It is to be found in the Liturgy of the Hours, Volume III, Friday of the Sixth Week in Ordinary Time, on pages 219-221. One could sum up his reflection simply by saying that it is God Himself who places in our soul holy desires, or more specifically, a holy desire; which is meant to draw us to Him. The Holy Spirit draws us on in that direction, but there is also a fair amount of waiting, because that desire is generally not immediately fulfilled or accomplished.

To quote St. Augustine here: "The entire life of a good Christian is in fact an exercise of holy desire. You do not yet see what you long for, but the very act of desiring prepares you, so that when he comes you may see and be utterly satisfied."

He goes on to use an image, that of a sack. It is as if our soul can be likened to a sack into which is to be deposited that for which we long and which God wants to give us. Our problem or challenge is that our sack is not large enough; it's capacity is too small to receive the magnitude of what it is that God wants to give us. However, we are not to despair; on the contrary, we are to hope, because the action of God, the Holy Spirit within us, is to use that holy desire to stretch and expand our sack, our soul. While we wait and experience a kind of suffering by exercising this holy desire while it is not yet being fulfilled; the capacity of our sack, our soul, is being stretched by God until the day when our capacity to receive becomes great enough to accommodate God's gift. We know that the Most Holy Trinity want to give us themselves, their own divine life and love; so, we do very well to accept to endure the waiting and the longing. 

 The Office of Readings for Tuesday in the Fifteenth Week in Ordinary Time offers us another insight on this topic, and in 1 Kings 19:1-9a, 11-21, it is with Elijah's trek into the desert to Mt. Horeb to meet God. Elijah had shown powerful faith in God when he confronted the 450 false prophets of Baal and challenged them to a duel. They were to set up a sacrificial offering, but make no fire, and call on their gods to demonstrate their divinity by sending down fire from heaven to accept and consume their sacrifice. They failed and in answer to Elijah's prayer, Almighty God sent down fire from heaven to consume his sacrifice, the wood, the stones of the altar, and the water all around it. The people cried out: "The Lord is God! The Lord is God!" Then, Elijah had the 450 false prophets brought down to the brook and slit their throats. The pagan Queen Jezebel then threatened to do the same to Elijah, and he ran for his life.

As he journeyed into the desert towards Horeb, God's mountain, Elijah slept and twice was awakened by an angel who told him to eat and drink; that he might have strength for the journey. Finally, he arrives at Mt. Horeb and takes shelter in a cave. God tells him to go outside because He was about to pass by. First, there was a mighty wind rending rocks, followed by an earthquake, and a fire. Elijah knows that God is not in the mighty wind rending rocks (which evokes for us our body strength*), nor was God in the earthquake (which evokes our emotions*), nor in the fire (which is like our intellectual acuity*). Finally, Elijah heard "a tiny whispering sound", like a gentle breeze or whisper of wind (which suggests the Holy Spirit, and in us, that would be the dimension of our soul or spirit*). "When he heard this, Elijah hid his face in his cloak and went and stood at the entrance of the cave." Elijah knew that he was in the Presence of Almighty God, his Creator and our Creator and Lord. 

*It was while on an Ignatian Directed Retreat, while praying with this text of Sacred Scripture, and under the guidance of a spiritual director; that it occurred to me that the powerful wind images our body, our physical strength - rending rocks - that an earthquake images our emotions - which shake us up and can overwhelm us - that the fire images the "spotlight" of our mind as it seeks to penetrate reality in seeking the truth - and that the whisper of wind images the Presence and action of the Holy Spirit entering into our soul, our own spirit; as we open ourselves up to God. Jesus himself, in talking with Nicodemus, spoke of the wind as imaging the motion of the Holy Spirit in human beings born again in God, in the Most Holy Trinity; as recorded in his Gospel by John 3:5-8

One of the truths which this passage of Sacred Scripture teaches us is that body, psyche / emotions, and mind are gifts from God, not to be neglected or abused, and God fills these dimensions with his life and love, but God comes personally to dwell within us in our soul. When God comes to us, into us, He inhabits our whole self, including our body, heart, mind, and soul, but it is in the "seat" of our soul that God comes to dwell. God has created our immortal soul with an emptiness, a capacity for receiving Him, his indwelling Presence; for which the Temple was but an image.

In the July 15th memorial of St. Bonaventure, we find an excerpt from "The Journey of the Mind to God" with the subtitle "Mystical wisdom is revealed by the Holy Spirit". Here, he writes about the ascent of the mind to God and similarly tells how we are to let go of all our varied expectations in order to be brought by the Most Holy Trinity into the communion they enjoy together in their unity. For this to happen, we need to experience a "passover" from everything of this world into the domain of God. 

He writes: "For this passover to be perfect, we must suspend all the operations of the mind and we must transform the peak of our affections, directing them to God alone. This is a sacred mystical experience. It cannot be comprehended by anyone unless he surrenders himself to it; nor can he surrender himself to it unless he longs for it; nor can he long for it unless the Holy Spirit, whom Christ sent into the world, should come and inflame his innermost soul. Hence the Apostle says that this mystical wisdom is revealed by the Holy Spirit." 

Catherine Doherty, Foundress of the Madonna House Apostolate, often spoke and wrote of having to fold the wings of our mind or intellect in order to advance further into this divine communion or to be filled with the Holy Spirit. It is good for us to employ all of our God-given faculties mentioned above in order to seek and approach God, but then, we need to let go, to relax our efforts, and allow God to lift us up beyond the reach of our faculties.

It is like the woman in the Song of Songs, or Song of Solomon. She hears the footsteps of her beloved, a hint of his voice, she smells the fragrance of his garments, and turns around to see and seize him, but he is gone. Although this book never mentions God directly or indirectly, the Jews kept it in their Sacred Scriptures precisely because it speaks so eloquently of our soul's search for God who remains elusive; who plays "hide and seek" as it were with our souls.

We would not be able to bear the full intensity of the divine love, which is why we need rather to be gradually prepared for it. Our most practical daily opportunities to grow in love of God is to love all our neighbours, and especially our enemies; that is, those whom we find difficult to love.

What you may feel, Dear Reader, perhaps drawing you to the title of this post, is not unlike how a married woman may feel about her husband. Without realizing it, she develops expectations about how she would like it to be between them or how she would like to feel, but it doesn't happen. This could also happen to a married man in his expectations of how he would like his wife to be.

It really is like this; I have seen it time and again in couples. We are hidden in the mystery of how God our Creator has designed us, with an infinite desire for love that only He, our Creator, can satisfy. This is why He patiently leaves us free to experience this restlessness and dissatisfaction; until like St. Augustine we realize that our hearts are restless until they rest in Him. This is how God grows our desire for Him, and enables us to freely accept to let go of all tangible expectations and let our lives go, surrendering entirely to Him. This is how the anonymous author of "The Cloud of Unknowing" around the 13th or 14th century reflected on our searching for God. Here is a good overview of this spiritual text, its content and meaning, and its history - on Wikipedia

At the time of the Counter Reformation, the Spanish mystic of the late 16th century, Saint John of the Cross, in his spiritual work "Ascent of Mount Carmel", likens this mystical faith journey to ascending Mount Carmel; which is an image for Christ Himself. There are many paths up the mountain, each pursuing some good grace or virtue, and these appear good, but because they are indirect ends and not Jesus Himself; they end up leading us away from Christ, or at the very least they distract our attention away from Jesus Himself, or they lead us on a longer, more circuitous path. We may, by his grace, eventually find Him, but the road will be more laborious and risky. 

The most direct way, he teaches, is to renounce everything, all good things, all pleasures, and even all graces and spiritual ends; in order to desire nothing at all except Jesus Christ Himself, his Person, and all that pleases Him. The most direct route into communion in the Most Holy Trinity is to seek Jesus rather than graces and gifts; to prefer Jesus Himself rather than "our experience of Him". In other words, we are to prefer Jesus in Person to our own feelings about Him. When we do all that He asks of us, even when we feel nothing at all; we can be comforted and encouraged that He has us and that we have Him

So, in light of this, getting back to our original question, and our feeling that we are not getting any closer to God, or that nothing is happening; we are simply to accept to endure this current condition, to set aside all those expectations, and ever strive to refocus the "peak of our affections", the focus of our holy desire, on Jesus, and Him alone. We set aside our feelings, our thoughts, our sensations in the body, the gifts and graces that God gives... everything... so as to set aside the gifts and desire only the Giver of the gifts. We let Him do as He wills with us in accord with his own Heart.

Our faith journey provokes many questions and even doubts. We do well to find, join, and remain rooted in a lively, faithful, and well directed community of faith. Within that living community of faith, we can also do some research and study of the Word of God and our faith tradition. One good Catholic Christian source where we can be assured that the reflections are faithful to the Word of God and the Magisterium, the teaching authority of the Roman Catholic Church, is from our American brothers and sisters: Catholic Answers

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On these Blogger pages we explore TOPICS in our desire to respond to Jesus' call to walk with Him in our world as his missionary disciples empowered by the Holy Spirit to bring to humanity the Good News of the Father's love manifested and given in Jesus, the Divine Mercy. G.S.

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© 2006-2025 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2006-2025 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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Monday, March 21, 2022

If there is a god - so what? Why bother to pray? If I decide to pray, how do I go about it? How do we pray together?

On these Blogger pages we explore TOPICS in our desire to respond to Jesus' call to walk with Him in our world as his missionary disciples empowered by the Holy Spirit to bring to humanity the Good News of the Father's love manifested and given in Jesus, the Divine Mercy. G.S.

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Is there a god? If there is a god, what difference does that make? 


All the pioneers of modern science in the second half of the second millennium were not only scientists but also believers. They pondered what they observed and then declared all that they observed in the universe manifests the qualities and character of a careful designer, the Creator. 
Richard Dawkins and the "new atheists" - some of whom have their own TV "science shows" - declare that science provides no evidence of god and that science has no need of a god or of such a "hypothesis". 

As one example, Neil deGrasse Tyson in his many appearances on Science "shows" on TV and YouTube points to the as yet unexplainable "mysteries" of science as the grounds for belief in God by some people. However, he doesn't seem to address the real science by real scientists who do find scientific grounds in their scientific observations and experiments for belief in a Creator God who is the "Intelligent Designer".

Watch this excellent lecture by scientist Stephen Meyer of the Discovery Institute to better understand how the worldwide scientific community developed over the centuries, turned away from God, and by more carefully following the science, is now coming back to the "God Hypothesis". CLICK THE LINK 

So what?  

Either the existence and significance of God is of interest, or it's not, and "He" isn't.

If it's "No!" 


If God doesn't exist; then the only choice I have is to live my life until I die and then it's all over, in which case I will have gained or lost nothing. However, if God does exist; then it would be wise to take interest and get to know a lot more about 
God so as to enter into a significant relationship with the Creator of the Universe 
before the end of my life. Otherwise, once my immortal soul or spirit leaves my body behind in death and I come "face to face" with God; it could be embarrassing. At the very least, I would not be able to claim having shown any interest whatsoever in the Creator of the Universe. 

If it's "Yes!"


If on the other hand I believe that God exists, or could exist; then it's like any other human experience. Before I "nail" the interview and get the job I seek, I may know something about that position, but clearly I have a lot more to learn. We learn primarily in two ways: from other people's knowledge and experience - taking courses, reading, studying, listening to live and video conferences and podcasts, and so on - and from our own experience. 

This also applies to our human relationships and "getting to know" someone. Initially, I may know "a little" about someone from conversations with others as well as from my initial observations. As I take interest in the other and spend more time with them; I get to learn a lot more about them from what they share with me, but also from continuing observation and personal experience. I learn a lot about others from what I think about them and from how I feel about them and when I am with them. Well, it is much the same with God. 

Relating to / with God


Just about every people, tribe, nation, and culture of humanity on Planet Earth has its own "religious paradigm" or religion or "experience of God". What they all have in common is that over time there stand out certain individuals who "have an experience" relating to "the divine" and they then try to express that experience in testimony, teaching, art, or writing. As certain "religious practices" arise in relation to "the divinity"; a new religion is born. 

About religions and gods

Depiction of Druid human sacrifices at Stonehenge

In all the "great" and "lesser" religions of humankind, the god or gods are all seen to have similar characteristics: they are "far above" humanity, they are "aloof" of human concerns, they are generally "disinterested" in being involved with human beings, if they show interest it is usually to enhance their own honor and worship, and at worst, they "lord it over" humanity with harsh demands of human sacrifice, that is, that live people should be put to death in their honour and as acts of worship. The motivating factor is universally to "appease the gods' wrath against humans" and to "obtain their favour" with regards to life, health, prosperity, protection from enemies and harsh climate, bountiful crops and children. Even in Islam, which claims to believe in only one God, and that this Allah is benevolent; nevertheless this religious tradition also teaches that their Allah is quick to punish and is "far removed" from humanity and can never be approached. No intimacy is possible with Allah.

Depiction of Mayan human sacrifices

God interferes in human history to "choose" the Jewish People


Unlike any other "religion", the faith of the Jewish People is based on the experience of God which their ancestors had and which every Jew, male and female, in every generation can verify in their own personal experience and relationship with the God of their ancestors. 

For the first time in human history, God - the Creator of the Universe - interferes in human history be choosing to "reveal Himself" to a concrete individual and to offer to enter into a "covenant" with him. Since this people were a patriarchal culture, it is primarily with men, with the patriarchs of their "tribe", that God chose to relate. In time God revealed to them the history of our human origins in the stories told about Adam and Eve and then Noah.


Book of Genesis: God of Abraham, Isaac, & Jacob
ca 1,850 B.C.


The initial religious history of humanity in relation to God the Creator tells a story about "gradually forgetting all about God", let alone having any significant relationship with God. After the time of Noah and his family's survival of the great flood, people forgot all about God; until He began to "reveal Himself" to Abram whose people lived in Ur of the Chaldees which was around 225 km southeast of where Baghdad is today, where Babylon once stood millennia ago, and about 16 km west of the present bed of the Euphrates River. This is the region which "origin stories" identified as the "original garden" in which humanity came to exist. Abram's people practiced human sacrifice in their tradition, and this was the man to whom God chose to "reveal Himself" and offer a covenant which would last "forever". This is the "story of the patriarchs" through the next 3 generations through Abram's sons Isaac and Ishmael and Isaac's son Jacob and his 12 sons who became the "12 tribes of Israel".

Book of Exodus: God of Moses: the "Torah / Law" ca 1,250 B.C.


Because of famine throughout the Middle East and by divine providence through the treachery of the sons of Jacob who sold their brother Joseph into slavery, all of Jacob's sons ended up taking their father and their whole family to Egypt. Unknown to them, their brother Joseph rose to prosperity as the Pharaoh's "right hand man" through the action of divine providence. In this way, God took care of his "Chosen People" who prospered in Egypt for generations until they became so numerous that after four centuries the new Pharaoh took fright at their growing numbers and began to oppress them. The people cried out to God and He sent them one of their own, Moses, to deliver them. God had to employ drastic and dramatic shows of power to convince Pharaoh to release the Israelites, and Moses led them through the desert towards the "Promised Land" promised by God to Abraham as his heritage. While in the desert, God continued to "reveal Himself" to Moses and entrusted Moses with the "Law" or "Torah" enshrining God's Covenant with his People.

Time of the Judges, Prophets, and Kings ca 1,200 to 1 B.C.


Human nature being what it is, we are inclined to "want to go our own way". As a result, God's "Chosen People" 
generation after generationwere constantly turning away from God. Some of them continued to "cry out to God"; so He sent them judges to govern them and protect them from their enemies. In time He sent them prophets; then the people wanted to be governed by a king like all the other nations around them. In effect, the people didn't like being governed by "God Himself", but He granted their request and gave them a king. 


The first king given by God to his People was Saul, but he was too full of himself to obey God's will with care; so God rejected him. His successor 
David was the greatest King of Israel; son of Jesse and great grandson of Boaz and Ruth, the Moabitess widow who followed her mother-in-law the widow Ruth back to her home in Israel. David was "a man after the Lord's own heart" and the ancestor of Joseph, husband of Mary, Mother of Jesus. 


That was not the end of their troubles; on the contrary, the kings often behaved as "rivals" against God and his authority over his People. The time of the prophets continued simultaneously with that of the kings. As they again turned away from God, He allowed them to be taken into captivity in Babylon. After 70 years God raised up a benevolent emperor who allowed them to return to Israel and rebuild their Temple. Like other nations they were overrun by Alexander the Great, and his successors oppressed Israel. Then for a few centuries they had no prophet or king, and God was preparing them for the coming of the promised "Messiah".

God as revealed by Jesus of Nazareth also called "the Christ"


Uniquely though, God - the Holy Trinity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit - is a "divine being" and not a human being. This single divine being is not a solitary individual but an intimate communion or community of three divine persons. This means that in all that God says and does, all three divine Persons are involved, because "they" do everything together; each divine Person having its unique "place" and "role" within the Trinity. 


Whereas in the past, God "played hide and seek" with humanity: He "hid" and they had to "seek" Him. Now the Son of God became human and took on a genuine human life as a man, as the son of Mary, Myriam of Nazareth, daughter of Joachim and Anna. She was married to Joseph son of Jacob, and He helped Mary raise Jesus to manhood. Jesus lived an ordinary life as "son of the Carpenter Joseph" and a carpenter Himself. Then in his final 3 years on Earth, He preached and revealed much about God, whom He called "Papa", and his love for humanity. Then, consistenly with all of human history, the "good guy" Jesus was rejected, falsely accused and condemned, tortured, and executed. True to his prediction, He then rose from the dead and revealed God's plan to give us resurrection after we die. 


The life we have within us, containing all that we have ever said, thought, and done, will not be lost when we die. Our immortal soul "contains" all that we are - not unlike the "hard drive" on a pc - and when it is time, God will "raise up our mortal bodies to be like his own in glory", and we will be given to share in God's immortal 
community life and love. 

So, why would we not want to "relate" to God?


However much "progress" humanity may experience, it is up to each and every human being to appropriate for themselves the fullness of life. No one can "get it for us". The wisdom and experience of others cannot be "injected" into us. There is no shortcut "to God" or to wisdom and understanding. It is up to each of us to "make the journey" in spite of the pressures, temptations, and allurements which we face every day of our lives. We must each decide how 
important God is, and to invest our time and energy in making ourselves open and available to this mysterious "divine Being" who is the Creator of the Universe. 


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On these Blogger pages we explore TOPICS in our desire to respond to Jesus' call to walk with Him in our world as his missionary disciples empowered by the Holy Spirit to bring to humanity the Good News of the Father's love manifested and given in Jesus, the Divine Mercy. G.S.
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© 2006-2022 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2006-2022 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC 
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I want to get closer to God and keep doing all I can, but nothing is happening. I feel far away... it's as if God is silent. What can I do?

On these Blogger pages we explore TOPICS in our desire to respond to Jesus' call to walk with Him in our world as his missionary discipl...