Learning to Be Docile to God’s Promptings

By Fr. Roy Cimagala

LET’S hope that we give due attention to this basic duty of ours of how to be docile to the abiding promptings of God through the Holy Spirit. Let’s remember that God is our creator and we are his creatures. As such, God and us as creator and creatures can and should never be separated.

Why? That’s because God as our creator is the one who gives us our very own existence. He can never be absent from us because, otherwise, we will lose our own existence. The creator cannot be absent from his creature, since not only does he give existence to his creature but also keeps it. Without the creator, the creature ceases to exist.

So, every creature, from the smallest to the biggest, from the inanimate to the living, from the material to the spiritual, from the natural to the supernatural, etc. has God in him or in it. That is why we can say that God is everywhere.

God as creator of all things governs all of his creation by giving each of them their appropriate law with the view of ultimately giving glory to the creator. By creating the universe, God as creator has no other purpose than to share in varying ways what he has with his creatures. And the bottom line is for the creatures to be united with the creator, giving glory to the creator in their own way.

In our case, since we have been created to be God’s image and likeness, sharers of his supernatural life and divine nature, we have been endowed by him mainly through our spiritual powers of intelligence and will so that we can know and love him.

That is the proper character of our relation with our creator. And since God is infinitely above our nature, God gives us his grace so that we can achieve what we on our own cannot—sharing his very own life and nature.

This giving of grace is something gratuitous to which we have to learn to correspond properly. Said another way, God is actually always intervening in our lives, giving us direction of how we should pursue our lives, not only from time to time but rather all the time.

This is where we are told that God through the Holy Spirit continues to send us promptings so we can act and be as children of God, sharers of his life and nature, even while here in our temporal world.

That is why we need to learn how to discern and to be docile to all these abiding promptings of the Holy Spirit in our life. Christ himself said it very clearly. “The Advocate, the Holy Spirit whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you.” (14,26)

We have to understand that the Holy Spirit perpetuates the presence and redemptive action of Christ all throughout time, with all the drama, vagaries, ups and downs that we men make in our history.

We have to do everything to keep this awareness of the Holy Spirit’s abiding interventions in our life alive and operative. This duty and task are not meant for some special people only but rather for all of us. And this we can do if we try to keep ourselves always in the presence of God, constantly asking him and consulting him.

“Oh, Holy Spirit,” we may start asking, for example, “how should I understand this thing that is happening to me now, how should I react and behave, what are you trying to tell me in this particular event and circumstance, etc.?”

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