HOW ARE YOU, LORD?

Does God have a human side?     The reason I ask is that when they pray to God most people see Him as someone who just sits on a throne enjoying songs of praise and granting requests as He sees fit.   We love Him, well that is what we are expected to do. and  look upon Him as the great benefactor in our lives.

We then learn that God became Man in Jesus Christ.   Now that perhaps answers the question, for in Jesus the Divine became Human.   Now that helps us to understand something for as men we are loving, feeling, compassionate and moved to help others.   But did God not have these virtues until He became man?    And for that matter can God like man experience sorrow and hurt?   When we read the Old Testament we see a God of anger although we often read of the God of Love.   The God of Anger we try to explain away for we want a God who in a modern phrase 'accepts us as we are'. and does not care if we sin, after all we are in another modern phrase "only human.  

Let us then look at Fatima and St Francisco in particular.   When Our Lady said "We must stop offending God who is already too much offended, Francisco spent the rest of is life consoling the God who was hurting.   He would pray and spend hours in front of the Blessed Sacrament consoling the God whom men were offending.   He knew that to stop offending God meant to stop men and women sinning against Him.   He made the sacrifices asked for by Our Lady and what we can learn from him is that if we do not value those little sacrifices and acts of love we do not really care about God and how much we hurt Him.  "Behold the heart that has loved so much and is loved so little in return" Jesus told St Margaret Mary Alcoque as he showed her his heart surrounded by the thorns of our sins.,  His mother Mary too suffers everything Jesus suffers but her Immaculate Heart is rejected also.   The hearts of Jesus and Mary are not just meaningless trivia or devotions, they demonstrate that the seat of love which is the heart burns with love for us, everyone of us, and yet we take such little notice.

Too often in many lives God is asked to prove Himself, yet how little we prove ourselves to Him.   We do not thank God enough for our gifts and we blame  Him when things go wrong rather than blaming ourselves.   The next time you visit Church let us not start with our litany of requests, why not just ask "How are you Lord" and listen to His complaints.

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