Salvation Paradox
Salvation Paradox: With Yet Longing
In the opening of his sermon Bl. Guerric crisply identifies the paradoxical relationship a Christian has with God, “Already my being is with you”[1] while at the same time, “…all flesh will come to you, the members following their Head, so that the holocaust may be complete.”[2] We are with Christ while coming to Him yet we wait to be completely with Him. Christ’s refinement occurs in time. He is with us as He grows our capacity to give ourselves to Him and to receive Him. There is some “end point,” where our submission to Him will be absolute, allowing us to experience the fullness of His submission to us, “Our abiding place is in heaven….”[3]
That Christ works in time is a central feature of the salvation paradox. Time implies movement. Guerric points out that the waiting he discusses is not static. It is a process. The process of salvation unfolds as time moves forward:
1) In the present, men and women of Christ wait with Him as we are refined, in the hope of receiving Him more fully,
2) In the future, we submit fully to Him and fully receive Him when His work is completed.
Graced movement is more toward fulfillment in Christ. On the other hand, not following God’s grace leads toward fulfillment of self desire—fulfillment in the world. Those who hold Christ as their prize wait with Him. They experience His presence, though not fully until His work comes to completion.
Paradox Rather Than Ideal
Ideals generally delineate some sort of perfection; conditions where everything is as it should be or at least so close to such a state that any deviations can be quickly eliminated and perfection efficiently restored. Sounds good—as long as we remember that ideals are concepts and concepts are abstract; and as abstractions, ideals can never reflect all aspects of a real situation. [4] Ideals often are attractive. It can be easy to react to Guerric’s first sermon by reading it as a statement of an ideal rather than a paradox. Thus it may be easy to conclude that we should live in joyful anticipation and therefore there is something wrong with the pain of longing to experience Christ more fully. This would be analogous to looking at only one side of a beautiful coin and to prefer it to the extent of overlooking the other side, which can have its own beauty—its own graced impression, its own worthy qualities.
Another analogy might be a man who is with his wife and child on a wonder-filled holiday. He is living in the joy of his family. He is fulfilled; a lovely setting. A year later, the same man finds himself in a foxhole on the battlefield of a terrible war. He pulls from his pocket a picture of his wife and child. He feels their love for him and his love for them. He may feel this love more powerfully than he ever has, yet something of his family is lacking. He longs for the fulfillment of their presence in a way he does not have on the battlefield. Still this second scene has beauty—the beauty of love in the midst of tragedy. The scene demonstrates a beautiful paradox; love’s “presence in absence.”
We are with Christ in His presence and as well in our experience of His absence. We have Him who makes life worth living yet we desire to experience more of Him. St. Paul expresses something like this when her writes to the Philippians, “to live is Christ, to die is gain,” and tells the Corinthians he lives with a “thorn in his flesh.” The thorn is allowed by God—in essence refining Paul and growing his experience of God and His power.
Guerric elaborates reasons that God allows unfulfilled holy longing. Among them are to:
1) Grow hope, patience and persistence,
2) Strengthen the believer’s humility, and recognition that God Himself is humble, “They recognize the divine majesty humbled in the flesh…,”[5]
3) Allow for repentance of sin, more complete conversion and growth in virtue,
4) Increase the gift of His mercy to us, “If you are a sinner, do not be heedless but take the opportunity to repent. If you are holy the time given to you to progress in holiness,”[6]
5) Develop in the believer the kind of fulfillment born of increased anticipation and a prolonged duration of longing, “we wait for you…to come and take us up.”[7]
A Proposed Model: Four Stances
Some may find the model below useful for practical application of the salvation paradox. It may offer light on why the uncomfortable states of loneliness and anxiety can exist while waiting in faith to receive the fullness of Christ.
The model illustrates how different levels of spiritual joy and different levels of spiritual longing result in different stances. Central terms are described below:
Spiritual longing is a graced sense of desire to answer Christ’s call to be with Him more completely.[8]
Spiritual joy is a graced sense of contentment with the degree to which God has developed us to allow fuller submission to Him and fuller reception of Him.
When “high and low” conditions on each of these dimensions are compared to one another, four general stances become possible. [9] Broad descriptions of these stances appear below:
1) Loneliness and/or Anxiety, where spiritual longing is high and spiritual joy is low,
2) Self-will motivates action, where both spiritual longing and spiritual joy are low,
3) Joyful anticipation, where spiritual longing and spiritual joy are both high,
4) Spiritual fulfillment, where spiritual longing is low and spiritual joy is high; we are completely with God and completely content.
Both spiritual longing and spiritual joy are graces which we can prepare ourselves to accept, but ultimately they are gifts from God. Perhaps the simplest prescriptions to incline us to answer God’s call to grow in spiritual longing and in spiritual joy are prayer and acts of love. Prayer and acts of love both bring us more to the presence of God. Faith tells us this is so even though we may not be contented with the sense of God’s presence when we pray and perform acts of love. Thus, one possible state of spiritual longing is loneliness and anxiety. Spiritual longing may leave us feeling dry, but faith in prayer and acts of love must trump our senses if the focus is spiritual growth.[10] There are a number of reasons why God may allow loneliness and anxiety for those who truly long for Him. Among them are that God may wish to:
1) Make us more aware that our sense simply is not accurate and needs to become more attuned to His presence in our lives,
2) Use loneliness and anxiety as a call to greater submission to and reception of Him,
3) Grow our faith,
4) Call us to more deeply feel our poverty and need of Him,
5) Develop us in several of these areas.
Let’s revisit some of Guerric’s reasons God grows holy longing and consider their implications in the framework of time:
1) Renunciation may need to grow (and this growth occurs at least in part over time),
2) Patience and persistence are practiced in time,
3) God’s humility is often revealed more and more over time,
4) Repentance can grow in time and more complete conversion occurs over time,
5) Increases in God’s mercy occur over time.
To fine tune our understanding of a sense of dryness in spiritual life, one useful question may be, “How is God trying to grow me so I may submit more of myself to Him and receive Him more fully?”
For Further Consideration
If you have found this discussion strikes some cords of recognition, you may wish to consider some questions:
- Do I find this model helpful in some ways? If so, how? If not, why not?
- If this model might be helpful to you, where would you place yourself given your own development in the areas of spiritual longing and spiritual joy at this time? At other times that were significant to your spiritual development?
- Our levels of spiritual longing and spiritual joy can change depending on the issues we may be grappling with at a particular time. Is this so for you? What kinds of change do you notice with different issues? What does this tell you about your spiritual growth and your relationship to God and your community?
- Does Blessed Guerric’s First Sermon for Advent give you other ideas that might help you open more to God when he calls you to increase your spiritual longing or your spiritual joy?
[1] Cistercian Fathers Series: Number Eight, Guerric of Igny Liturgical Sermons, v. 1, translated by monks of Mount Saint Bernard Abbey. Cistercian Publications: Spencer, Massachusetts. (1970). p. 1.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid., p. 2.
[4] A general problem in being unmindful of this quality of ideals is that it can lead to unrealistic expectations. At best, such expectations lead to disappointment when we fail to meet them or to unrealistic evaluations of the extent to which we as individuals or as communities live by the ideals we are striving to maintain. Further forgetful that ideals are rarely fully attained in life can incline us to two dangers. We can suffer undue disappointment when we fail to meet our ideals, leading us to a misguided humility formed by an unrealistic frame of mind. On the other hand, our desire to fully live our ideals may be so strong that it blinds us to significant ways we are falling short of them. Both errors sell humility short. Humility is a dangerous virtue to sell short, because as pride is the primordial evil and always somehow intertwined with all other sins, humility is a foundational grace; a condition preceding or developed simultaneously with all virtue. Thus selling humility short runs the danger of thwarting the development of virtue.
[5] Ibid., p 2.
[6] Ibid., p 3.
[7] Ibid., p 5.
[8] Note the assumption here is that at some point redemption will be experienced fully—salvation will bring us completely to Christ and Him completely to us. Thus there will be no more desire to be with Him more fully as we will eternally be with Him in full. In this state, spiritual longing as described here will cease to exist, and spiritual joy will be complete.
[9] These categories are a “rough” division with permeable boundaries. There are obviously a large number of possible states allowed by the matrix, and naming each one would be a difficult task. We do need to recognize that each person’s place in any scheme may follow certain patterns but is unique, and that while recognizing general patterns of development is helpful, tailoring interactions to individuals and their particular situation is more useful still. Note that for a “pure” stance, a stance would have to fully reflect its description, containing no qualities of another stance. Short of this, a stance reflects at least some of the characteristics of some other stances. Thus, for example, complete joyful anticipation would require full spiritual longing and full of spiritual joy. It is reasonable to question whether many attain this state in this life. This being so, most of us at least at times feel some dissatisfaction with the state of our presence to God and the degree we sense His presence to us.
[10] One brother recently remarked to me:
“To me dryness in prayer is a positive. Contemplative union transcends the senses, and dryness involves a lack of feeling that God is present. The absence of feeling is not a negative, but a positive. It is inner silence, which is the essence of contemplation—no subject-object split, pure [inter-]subjectivity. Oneness—one, yet two. There is no ABOUT. When we speak of an experience OF or about God, that is not contemplation.”
We each of course have our experiences of Our Lord and our descriptions of these can never be complete. Above, the brother appears to describe dryness in contemplation as a state of higher spiritual longing and lower spiritual joy—something akin to loneliness in the model I propose. The brother’s remarks can be interpreted as adding a different dimension to the factors I explore here, and he is certainly not alone on this point. Another possible interpretation of the situation he describes is that perhaps during contemplation more than one thing may be occurring, at least from time to time. One thing happening would be the experience of contemplation itself. Another thing could be the human reaction to the contemplative experience. This reaction could encompass a sense of joyful anticipation, or spiritual fulfillment, or loneliness. The brother’s remarks and the possibilities they propose for understanding contemplative experiences are worthy of a more in depth examination than the scope of this short paper allows.