Are Alienation and Purification the Same?

Some people speak about the spiritual life as if the only detachment that we must embrace is that which purifies the deep-seated tendencies to sin which have invaded, infested, festered in, and boiled over our soul. Some people speak as if the desolations, dark nights, and purifications worked by God in our soul affect only the distortions that sin has produced and by which we are inclined towards actions that are not good in themselves.

I won’t say a word against this.

But my experience tells me that, in the world of personal spiritual itineraries, the truth is a bit broader. Or, if the truth is not a bit broader, it certainly feels like it.

Why?

Because, in the end, we cannot have everything that is good. There are too many particular goods in the world. They are not all for everyone. God wants to always give us what is, for us, best. This involves, for example, a particular vocation. Every particular vocation means not taking another good road. It is not a bad thing to seek, in all holiness, marriage. But if we can take a spiritually fruitful celibate state, then God may indeed do such work in us.

Sometimes, if not usually (!), this choosing of a state in life happens before we reach the “state of union” with God in the major part of our will, and at which most of the purification has been done. Certainly, the choosing of a state in life happens before death and before our will is entirely one with God’s through the Beatific Vision.

Yet God guides us into a state of life that excludes, for us, the other options.

That means being guided, prompted, teased, to choose something that is better, when we could have had something that is good, but not as good.

This means that, to some degree, God alienates us, not only from disordered desires, but also from some good desires. Alienation worked by God is not exactly the same as purification worked by God. There are similarities. They’re not identical.

It’s the way of Love. If God wills not only to purify us, but also that we have the best in this life, we will end up alienated, to a greater or lesser degree, not only from the evil in us, but also from some of the good. Perhaps, when we become holy enough, we are no longer alienated from these goods. Then, we might choose the better entirely without being pushed that way by the Holy Spirit, somewhat against our will. At that point, there will be no more alienation from the good for the sake of the better. Our judgment will be sufficient to go always to the better. But until then, alienation is a bit broader than purification: in Christ, we are alienated from more than we have disordered inclinations for. Always for the better! But still, it requires sacrifice.

– –

On this blog, I don’t only speak about darks nights, desolations and purifications… although I do speak about these, too.

I also try to talk about alienation in general. To my mind, that is a way of speaking as if the God of Love and Goodness is also the God of Providence. In all the details of life and not only in our sanctity, God is always on our side.


5 responses to “Are Alienation and Purification the Same?”

    1. Ben (เบ็น) Avatar

      =)

      This post was one of those moments where I felt I was putting myself out on a limb, really…

      1. newhofjah Avatar

        Being alienated from good, that which is not bad yet not of my calling, in some ways, maybe is more difficult. I am fifty, the disordered inclinations I am relieved to battle. God, absolving love, assists through conscious and spiritual guidance in allowing me understanding. I know, what is bad for me, is bad for me. I cannot plead ignorance. I am to old and enlightened for excuses. I understand salvation, eternal resting in peace, taking part in the victory of Christ is a reward so intense that accountability is heavy. As St Liguori stresses I must flee from sin, not the least bit of entertaining. Harder, the alienation of good is vague, a serious advancement in unifying wills. A blind trust is necessary for I find myself disturbed the greatest trying to figure out exactly how to live. I pray for a spiritual guide, yet throughout my life voice of sound influence come and go. Ann Marie has been essential, yet anymore she causes severe consternation. I am so convinced we have received so many signs, blatant signs, that further healing exist within the sacrament of matrimony. She does not see them. IN fact we fight terribly over my insistence. Now she has been sick for two weeks. I am convinced it is for denying the will of God during Advent. We seem to be at such a terrible impasse. It is not evil, yet it is overwhelming. Both ways are good, with or without, or maybe somewhere in between. I am not sure and definitude is evasive. I am proud it takes me deeper into surrender. The humiliation post I did, quoting Dom Vital Lehody, strikes so deeply at my core right now. To accept the humiliation of wanting something good so deeply, something that seems so in tune with Divine Will, and being denied, alienated, only opens me more to God. I feel helpless.

        1. newhofjah Avatar

          Sorry poor editing–I hate infractions after posting. conscious=conscience and voice should be voices. I whined a bit. I think you are younger than me, yet I feel you are a solid guide, distant yet relevant.

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