“I give you praise, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for although you have hidden these things from the wise and the learned, you have revealed them to the childlike.”

What does it mean to become childlike? Should we return to the innocent ignorance of our childhood? Or ignore the knowledge we already have? That seems unlikely. We can’t turn back time, and Christ still calls us to learn. So how else do we access “these things” that Christ mentions in His prayer?

Christ invites us here to set aside the search for human wisdom and embrace our human littleness. Some of the most pressing questions we grapple with are questions we might never answer ourselves. “How will my life go? Where will I end up? What if I never accomplish X, or understand Y?”

But the simplicity of God is beautiful. He’s not asking us to find all the answers. Remember, He has hidden them from the wise and the learned. His message isn’t restricted to people with multiple degrees or Einstein-level genius. Who receives the wisdom of God? According to Christ, “the childlike.” The little. Those who, regardless of their knowledge or wisdom, have humility.

What if hunting for answers actually draws us away from Him?

Christ’s words call us to consider that maybe having the wisdom or the answers actually isn’t the answer. He knew that a quest for human wisdom might distance us from Him. Christ’s closest friends, the Apostles, were ordinary men – fishermen, workers; not scribes or scholars. Likewise, some of the greatest saints never received formal schooling. It was not wisdom that brought them close to Christ. It was their childlikeness, their humility.

St. Francis Xavier, whose feast day is celebrated today, stated: “With humility, all things are obtained.” He was a priest of the Society of Jesus and a close friend of Ignatius of Loyola. His words give us a simple, beautiful explanation of Our Lord’s prayer in the Gospel today.

St. Francis Xavier did attend the University of Paris for a time, but that’s not how he became a saint. He was a missionary in many countries, notably India and Japan, and it definitely wasn’t easy. St. Francis Xavier probably never knew ahead of time where he’d be sent, or what challenges he’d find on the way, or whether people would accept the Gospel. But St. Francis Xavier had childlike trust in God, and he ultimately baptized around thirty thousand converts before his death. 

St. Francis didn’t rely on human wisdom to do God’s will. Rather, he embraced his littleness. He allowed God to carry his life, as a father carries a little child. Christ is calling you to do the same. Can you let go of the quest for answers? Can you let Him carry you?

St. Francis Xavier, pray for us! 

Contact the author

Daily Reading

 

Saint of the Day