Sometimes it can feel like God is so far away. Why? Sure there is the obvious, “Well, I’m a sinner.” But sometimes God feels far away even when we’re in a state of grace. Why does he do this to us?
After all, in a solemn moment of self-revelation, God manifested himself in a burning bush and gave Moses his name, “I AM WHO AM.” Then, while the Israelites were stuck in the desert, God did the unthinkable and came to dwell among them—not in an Athenian temple or a Roman basilica but in the tabernacle of a movable tent. There, God was close to his people, remaining with them and guiding them by night and by day.
And if this wasn’t enough, God desired an even greater proximity to his people. So “the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us” (John 1:14). In the Incarnation, Jesus showed us just how close God was willing to come to be with his people. No longer was his presence in the tabernacle good enough. Now God desired to take on flesh, to be joined to humanity, and to make a virgin his new tabernacle. God became so close to his people that he literally walked among them.
That was all thousands of years ago, but what about now? Just as Moses relied on God’s support, just as the nation of Israel followed the cloud and the pillar of fire through the desert, and just as the Apostles walked and talked with the Incarnate God, so too wouldn’t it be helpful if God were present with us to guide us on the way? After all, thanks to Jesus’ Ascension to heaven, hasn’t God left us without his presence again?
Not at all. Jesus said to us, “I am with you always, to the very end of the age” (Matt. 28:20). This is especially true when we consider the Eucharist. In the Eucharist, God has done something even more marvelous than speak from a burning bush or descend into a tabernacle in the wilderness. Now, God enters into us. For a short time, we become his tabernacle where he transforms us through the power of his grace, communicated to us via his Eucharistic Body and Blood. Each and every day, God comes down on our altar where he continues to manifest his great love for his people and to show us just how near he really is.
Sometimes God might feel far away, but God is not a God who is transcendent in such a way that he won’t come near us. Rather, because of his divine immanence, he is simultaneously present to us. He was immanently present in a special way to the Israelites in the wilderness and to his people in the desert tabernacle. Now, on our Catholic altars and on our tongues, he is immanently present to us again. As in the Old Testament period and now in the more profound way of the Eucharist, God comes to be with his people and to guide us on the path to heaven.
This post was written by Br. Peter Martyr Joseph Yungwirth, OP.