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dramatic sculpture of the Pieta which resides inside St. Peter's basilica
in Rome, is safely behind glass now. It was, at one time, more accessible
and vulnerable. The beautiful creation was attacked and damaged by a mentally
injured fellow. Most of the world's great paintings are guarded and protected
in similar manners. Why? Sin is a part of the same creation which also brings us such beautiful works as paintings, statues, forests, rivers and other human beings. We pray early and often during the Exercises about God's creative and sustaining relationship of love which God has for each and every creature. Very simply stated, sin is the action which flows from the attitude that my selfish, greedy and irreverent relationship with any of God's creatures replaces God's own relationship with them. It all goes back to reverence and seeing God in everything and everything in God. Through my need for efficiency, I might have used a sterling silver butter knife to pry open a paint can. Sin is not that I broke the knife, but the attitude of disrespect for the limitations of sterling silver which God placed there and gave to us. Sin is also my disregard for the importance to another human being of that piece of silver. You may check out your behavior against the demands of the Ten Commandments and find you haven't violated any of those. Sin is more relational than that. More than the Ten Commandments are the personal covenants which God has made with us through all of creation. Sin is how we violate, ignore and freely choose to replace God's prior relationship with an object or person with my own self-centered blue print. Ignatius offers us his picture of God's always working, laboring to attract and support us. God's mercy is above all other works. Mercy is not only His forgiving our violations of God's covenants with us, but even more, God intensely desires us to come more and more alive, alert, aware and sensitive to His presence in His presents. Forgiving us is God's judicial side, continuing our personal creation is His compassionate side. Jesus did not give up on His friends nor those whom He found to be enemies. He was always speaking, working around, to have them all come to their full senses. In
praying this week in the frightening area of violent and irreverent
sin, stay close to the image of Jesus on the cross. He is there to manifest
both the evil of sin and the loving response of God to that evil. We
can look at anything while standing next to the cross. The grace we
seek this week is a gratitude for the ongoing, redeeming love of God
that both cancels the debt against us and works that we might have life
and have it to the full.
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