Seek His Face

Seeking to be enthusiastic friends of Jesus, to allow Him to gaze into our eyes and to set our hearts on FIRE with His love, to be embraced by Him for who we are, created in His image and likeness.

27 April 2006

Friendship with Christ

Adult and mature is a faith profoundly rooted in friendship with Christ. This friendship opens us to all that is good and gives us the measure to discern between what is true and what is false, between deceit and truth. ...

Let us now turn to the Gospel [John 15:9-17], from whose richness I would like to draw only two small observations. The Lord addresses these wonderful words to us: "No longer do I call you servants ... but I have called you friends" (John 15:15). Many times we simply feel like useless servants, and it is true (cf. Luke 17:10). And, despite this, the Lord calls us friends; he makes us his friends; he gives us his friendship. The Lord defines friendship in two ways. There are no secrets between friends: Christ tells us everything he hears from the Father; he gives us his full confidence and, with confidence, also knowledge. He reveals his face to us, his heart. He shows us his tenderness for us, his passionate love that goes to the folly of the cross.


He gives us his confidence; he gives us the power to speak with his I: "This is my body," and "I absolve you." He entrusts his body to us, the Church. He entrusts his truth to our weak minds, our weak hands, the mystery of God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit; the mystery of the God who "so loved the world that he gave his only Son" (John 3:16). He has made us his friends and, we, how do we respond?

The second element with which Jesus defines friendship is the communion of wills. "Idem velle -- idem nolle," was also for Romans the definition of friendship. "You are my friends if you do what I command you" (John 15:14). Friendship with Christ coincides with what the third petition of the Our Father expresses: "Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven."

In the hour of Gethsemane, Jesus transformed our rebellious human will in a will conformed and united with the divine will. He suffered all the drama of our autonomy and, in carrying our will in God's hands, he gave us true freedom: "Nevertheless, not as I will, but as you will" (Matthew 26:39). In this communion of wills our redemption takes place: to be friends of Jesus, to become friends of God. The more we love Jesus, the more we know him, and the more our genuine freedom grows, as well as the joy of being redeemed. Thank you, Jesus, for your friendship! ...

The other element of the Gospel that I would like to mention is Jesus' discourse on bearing fruit: "I […] chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit that will remain" (John 15:16). Here the dynamism of the Christian's existence appears, of the apostle: "I appointed you to go." We must be animated by a "holy anxiety," the anxiety of taking the gift of faith, of friendship with Christ, to all. In truth, love, friendship with God, has been given to us so that it will also reach others.

Pope Benedict XVI

23 April 2006

An Unpetalled Rose


A priest asked me: have I ever read St. Therese's poem, An Unpetalled Rose -- Not being familiar with the Little Flower's poetry, I had to search for it -- written towards the end of her young life, it expressed such love and total giving of all one is to Jesus. Here it is:

1 Jesus, when I see you held by Your Mother,
Leaving her arms
Trying, trembling, Your first steps
On our sad earth,
Before You I’d like to unpetal a rose
In its freshness
So that Your little foot might rest ever so softly
On a flower!....

2 This unpetalled rose is the faithful image,
Divine Child,
Of the heart that wants to sacrifice itself for You unreservedly
At each moment.
Lord, on Your altars more than one new rose
Likes to shine.
It gives itself to You…. but I dream of something else:
To be unpetalled!...”

3 The rose in its splendor can adorn Your feast,
Lovable Child,
But the unpetalled rose is just flung out
To blow away.
An unpetalled rose gives itself unaffectedly
To be no more.
Like it, with joy I abandon myself to You,
Little Jesus.

4 One walks on rose petals with no regrets,
And this debris
Is a simple ornament that one disposes of artlessly,
That I’ve understood.
Jesus, for Your love I’ve squandered my life,
My future.
In the eyes of men, a rose forever withered,
I must die!...

5 For You, I must die, Child, Beauty Supreme,
what a blessed fate!
In being unpetalled, I want to prove to You that I love You,
O my Treasure!...
Under Your baby steps, I want to live here below
With mystery,
And I’d like to soften once more on Calvary
Your last steps!....

"We wish to see Jesus" (Jn 12,21)


"Allow Jesus to gaze into your eyes. Whether we are aware of it or not, God has created us because He loves us and so that we may in turn loveHim.
Only an encounter with Jesus can give full meaning to your lives.
Do not let yourselves be distracted from this search.
Persevere in it
because is your fulfillment
and your joy
that are at stake." (John Paul II)