
GOD'S ACTION IN US
What matters in mental prayer
is not so much what we do, as what God does in
us. — Time for God, p.50
Now God is not the God of the
dead but of the living, and his presence, being
the presence of the living God, is active, life-giving,
healing, and sanctifying. One can’t stand in front of a fire
without being warmed, or stay in the sun without being
tanned, and in remaining in God’s presence and letting him
act in the depths of our being, we are doing what really
counts.
— Time for God, p.51
The secret actually is very
simple. It is to understand that we can only transform
reality fruitfully if we accept it first. This also means having
the humility to recognize that we cannot change ourselves
by our own efforts, but that all progress in the
spiritual life, every victory over ourselves, is a gift of God’s
grace.
— Interior Freedom, p. 35
Often
we find it easier to love than to let ourselves be loved.
Doing something, giving something, gratifies us and
makes us feel useful, but letting ourselves be loved means
consenting not to do anything, to be nothing. Our first
task in mental prayer, instead of offering or doing anything
for God, is to let ourselves be loved by him like very
small children. Let God have the joy of loving us. That
is difficult, because it means having a rock-solid belief
in God’s love for us. It also implies accepting the fact
of our own poverty. Here we touch on something absolutely
fundamental: there is no true love for God which
is not built on a recognition of the absolute priority of
God’s love for us; there is no true love for God that has not
grasped that, before doing anything at all, we have first
to receive. “In this is love,” St. John tells us, “not that we loved God, but that he loved
us first” (1 Jn 4: 10).
— Time for God, pp.53-54