God, in creating man, did not limit His Divine
Paternity to the exercise of a fatherly care of him
here on earth. He destined him for a far more
complete sonship. He endowed him, at his first
creation, with supernatural gifts which rendered
him in a far higher sense the son of God than
did the mere fact of creation and preservation. He
stamped upon him a supernatural likeness to
Himself, so that man is truly, as St. Peter says,
a partaker in the Divine Nature. (2 St. Peter i. 4). How
truly then may man call God his Father, since
there is no truer mark of sonship than to share
the nature of the father.
But God was not even satisfied with this. He
determined to raise man to a far closer union with
Himself, and a far more complete resemblance to
Himself than was possible on earth. He prepared
for man, body as well as soul, a place in His own
Heaven, where man would live in the closest
intimacy with Himself that was possible for one
whom God had created. Our Father in Heaven
desired that all His sons should share His own
glory and splendour.
What was the gift that God intended to
bestow on man as His choicest gift? He was not
only to dwell with God for ever, but he was to
see his Father face to face, and that sight was to
perfect his likeness to God, and to fill his heart
with an overflowing and unspeakable happiness,
a happiness like to that of God Himself. What
greater proof could God have given to man of His
love than this? "We shall be like to Him because
we shall see Him as He is" (St. John iii. 2).