Anyone who has ever watched a fire knows that at some point the flames subside and disappear into smouldering coals which themselves eventually cool and turn into cold, grey ash. But there’s a moment in that process, before they cool off, that the coals can be stirred so as to make them burst into flame again.
That’s the image St Paul uses to encourage us to rekindle the fires of our faith when they seem to be burning low. “I remind you to stir into flame the gift of God that was once given you,” he writes in the Second Epistle to Timothy. It’s a meaningful image. Our faith sometimes needs some stirring in its roots to make it alive and effective again. But how’s that to be done? How do we stir into flame again the fire of our faith?
We stir our faith back into flame by re-situating ourselves inside its roots. Although faith is a divine gift, it can be helpful sometimes to journey back and examine what earthly forces helped plant the faith inside us. Who and what helped to give us faith? Of course that’s a deeply personal question that each of us can only answer for themselves. For myself, when I try to go back and touch the roots of my faith a number of things come into focus.
First, there was the faith and witness of my parents, the critical piece. Faith was the most important thing in their lives and they did everything in their power to ensure that this was true too for us, their children. And their lives never belied their faith. That’s a strong witness and a gift of incalculable value.
Then there was the witness of my parish church, a rural, immigrant community in Canada, small enough so that everyone knew everyone else’s joys and sorrows and was able to share them in faith, even if not always in full neighbourly warmth. It takes a village to raise a child; in my case, it was a parish. As a boy growing up, I could glance around a church and see almost everyone I knew, friend or not, all kneeling together in one faith. That’s a rarity today and no small gift.
Next came the dedication and faith witness of the Ursuline Sisters, who came into our rural community to teach in our public schools and were not only our best teachers academically but also catechised us. By the time I reached my teens, I’d memorised two catechisms and had a solid intellectual grasp of the tenets of my faith, a gift whose importance I recognised only later on.
Finally, and in a way that left deep, permanent roots in my soul, there was the voice of the God of my youth. When I was young God’s voice was strong and clear inside me.
Admittedly some of what I took to be God’s voice then was in actuality the voice of fear, timidity, tribalism and what Freudians term the superego. But, that being admitted, God’s voice was there too, clear and unavoidable. I know that because much of my youthful fear, timidity, crass tribalism and superego have long since departed, and the voice of the God of my youth remains inside me still.
However, sometimes that voice can be quite silent and it can feel like simply the voice of the naïvety of my youth – Santa, the Easter bunny and Jesus – and not something that’s real any more or indeed ever was genuinely real. For me, as for everyone, faith-wise, sometimes my imagination and affectivity simply run dry so that my preoccupations preclude God’s presence.
It’s then that I need to stir the seemingly smouldering coals of my faith by making a journey back to reground myself in the reality of my parents’ faith, in the reality of what branded my soul in our small parish community, in the reality of the witness and catechesis of the Ursuline Sisters who taught me, and, not least, in that clear, deeply moral, divine voice that spoke inside me and guided me in my youth.
This kind of journey, I believe, can be helpful for almost everybody, with one cautionary flag: the seeming silence of God in our lives as adults can in fact be a deeper modality of God’s presence rather than a sign of a deteriorating faith.
The voice of God often seems clear in our youth but later on that clarity gives way to what the mystics call “dark nights of the soul”, where God’s seeming absence is not a question of a loss of faith but of a new, richer, less imaginative mode of God’s presence in our lives.
Fervour is not always a sign of a deep faith, just as the seeming absence of God is not necessarily a sign of a weakening faith. God must be patiently waited for and will arrive in our lives only on God’s terms, not ours.
Even so, St Paul’s advice remains: “I remind you to stir into flame the gift of God that was once given you.”
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