15th Week OT (W)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
Our
Lord declares to his apostles and to us that he comes among us to
break the bonds of sin and to bring peace btw heaven and earth, btw
God the Father and His fallen creatures. With the bonds of sin
forever cut, those who claim their freedom in Christ will find
themselves uncomfortably set apart from those who choose to remain
slaves to disobedience. The peace he establishes btw heaven and earth
disrupts whatever temporary, worldly peace we might hope for in this
life. Christ's explosive entrance into human history as a squalling
baby and his bloody exit as an executed criminal uncovers a divine
plan for creation's redemption. That plan can only be revealed. It
cannot be deduced from evidence, discovered by exploration, or
guessed at by chance. What God has hidden, no man may find. . .unless
God Himself shows the way. In the presence of his apostles, Jesus
praises the Father, saying, “. . .for although you have hidden
these things from the wise and the learned you have revealed them to
the childlike.” Thus, the sword Christ wields against the bonds of
sin creates another division: those who trust their own judgment and
those who trust the way of the Lord.
We
might rightly wonder why learning and worldly wisdom prevents us from
seeing and following the way to God's hidden truths. Knowing is not
trusting. If you tell me that you trust your spouse's fidelity b/c
your private detective lets you know what he/she is doing all day,
every day, I would say to you that you might know that your spouse is
being faithful but you do not trust his/her faithfulness. If you tell
me that you trust in God b/c scientists now know that the laws of
nature have an intelligent designer, I would say to you that you
might know that there is an intelligent designer but you do not trust
him. Knowing is not trusting; knowledge is not faith. Faith is freely
given. Trust that comes from evidence, experiment, exploration is not
trust. At most, it's a feeling of confidence, an assurance. If your
faith is based on the testimony of miracles, apparitions, locutions,
based on anything other than the apostolic witness of the Church and
your own experience with the power of Christ's sword to sever the
bonds of sin, then your trust is not trust; it's knowledge. And
knowing is not trusting. Knowledge is not faith.
Does
this mean that knowledge has no place in the life of faith?
Absolutely not! It means that all that we come to know we know as
those who have given their trust to God. It means that we begin with
faith, a childlike trust in God, and then we walk His way to a more
profound Truth, to those truths that take us behind and beyond the
knowledge that reason alone acquires. Worldly learning and wisdom
cannot reveal God's truth, but they can supplement all that God has
revealed. The trap we must avoid is the belief that knowing all there
is to know about creation tells us all there is to know about the
Creator. If – in some possible future – we come to know the most
fundamental elements and operations of the universe, exhaust every
scientific tool we have in the exploration of matter, energy, force,
motion, space, and time, and uncover the unifying law of nature, we
have learned no more about trusting God than a child learns by loving
his mom and dad. Loving God is knowing God. If you will know God,
then love Him and love all that He has created. No matter how much we
might learn, how wise we might become, nothing can replace the saving
power of faith.
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