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The divine knowledge of a soul

  • FR. DONALD HAGGERTY

The divine knowledge of a soul is always a merciful knowledge. 


aaaajlkjjesusupdateWe can never be in a true relationship with God until we discover that we are only known mercifully.  Not just loved with intermittent mercy after sinning and repenting once again, but that we cannot be looked at, that we cannot be known by God or drawn to him except as a soul in need, poor and destitute, incapable of avoiding collapse and ruin without divine intervention.

A profound mercy, in other words, permeates God's vision of our soul.  On our part, faithfulness to this mercy is to keep an awareness of the divine gaze upon our soul.  It is to know ourselves as known by God in mercy.  The soul conscious of mercy enters into prayer in poverty and need, but it also knows God's presence as a gaze of love upon its poverty.  And its confidence in mercy becomes an implicit wonder and admiration directed toward God's attraction for the poverty at the heart of our soul.

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Acknowledgement

haggertyFr. Donald Haggerty. "Coming to be known." Conversion: Spiritual Insights into an Essential Encounter with God (San Francisco, CA: Ignatius Press, 2017).

Reprinted with permission from Ignatius Press.

The Author

haggerty1Fr. Donald Haggerty, a priest of the Archdiocese of New York, serves at Saint Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. He has been a Professor of Moral Theology at St. Joseph's Seminary in New York and Mount St. Mary's Seminary in Maryland and has a long association as a spiritual director for Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity. He is author of Conversion: Spiritual Insights into an Essential Encounter with GodContemplative ProvocationsContemplative Enigmas: Insights and Aid on the Path to Deeper Prayer, and The Contemplative Hunger.

Copyright © 2017 Ignatius Press

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