March 22
We must rise to holiness
he result of
our undergoing a conversion from one state to another is that we cease
to be what we were and begin to be something more. But the end of our dying
or living is of the utmost importance, for there is a death that brings
life, and a life that brings death. It is only in this fleeting world that
both are sought together, so that the difference in our future rewards
depends upon the quality of our present actions. We must therefore be dead
to Satan and alive to God; we must abandon sin in order to rise to holiness.
And since Truth himself says: No one can serve two masters, let
our master be the Lord who has raised up the fallen to glory, not the one
who has brought the upright to ruin.
There is therefore every reason for us to rejoice at the exchange, which translates us from earthly disrepute to heavenly honor through the untold mercy of him who descended to our level in order to lift us up to his, by assuming not only the reality of our human nature but also its sinful condition, and allowing his divine impassibility to be assailed by all the sufferings which are our mortal lot.
| Augustine Day By Day | The Augustinians - St. Thomas of Villanova Province |
From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
HTML text prepared by David P. Steelman