Our Lord instructs us to address God as "Our
Father," not as "My Father," because our highest
right to sonship comes to us through Jesus Christ.
He, alone, has an eternal and unalienable right
to be called the "Son of God." He, alone, is the
Son of God by nature. We are only sons by adoption.
It is because God has sent the spirit of His
Son into our hearts, that we can call him, "Abba,
Father." This is why Christ says to His Apostles
before the Ascension: "I ascend to My Father, and
your Father." Make acts of gratitude that you,
though so unworthy, have been adopted as the
son of God.
We are further taught by the phrase, "Our
Father", that we are all brethren in Jesus Christ,
sons of one common Father, members of one family.
If all are our brethren, we must treat them
as such. Every one in the world, however vicious,
degraded, or disagreeable, however unkind or
hostile to us, is our brother, because Christ died for
him, has redeemed him with His Precious Blood,
and identifies Himself with him, saying: "Whatever
you do to him, I, your Lord and Saviour, count
as done to Me." What a splendid motive for
charity is this!
But above all, those who are united to us as
members of the Catholic Church are our brethren
in Jesus Christ. They are our brethren on a fresh
ground, being members of His mystical Body. They
are of our flesh and our bone. We ought to show
very special charity to Catholics; they have a
claim on us that others have not. They, and they
only, belong to that sacred family of which Jesus
Christ is the Head.