Showing posts with label truth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label truth. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Wisdom Stories

Starting to read Margaret Silf's One Hundred Wisdom Stories.  The first one is not much more than a page and is titled "A Beautiful Friendship.".   It made me smile. 

I hope to read only 1 or 2 of these a day.  I want to savor them!

Friday, October 4, 2013

Thank You, Lord, for Your Self-Revelation

Reading USCCA, Chapter 5: "I Believe in God"

Knowing that God is love and that He is rich in mercy draws me to Him.  My earliest concept of God was as my Loving-Heavenly-Father-Who-Created-me-and-loves-me-forever.  Because I know too that God requires of us holiness which includes our acting and relating justly, I am challenged to grow in my understanding of how mercy and justice are part of one thing.  I still have much to learn.  In relating with my "neighbor," I find that it's very difficult to experience true/complete justice on this earth, yet God has given me the capacity to offer mercy.  So, for now, I trust God to work out all things for good for those of us who love Him, and meanwhile, I try to show mercy whenever I can.

Re the doctrine of the Trinity:  My understanding of God is primarily as The One Who Is.  The fact that God told Moses "I Am Who Am" resonates deeply within me.  It makes sense to me.  It makes more sense to me than anything else in the whole world.  My understanding of anything and everything else is founded on or in relation to my complete embracing of God as the great "I Am."  That God reveals Himself as 3 Persons also makes sense to me, but only as firmly grounded in the primary truth that God is One.  I accept the Mystery.  I know in my spirit that God is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  I believe that the Holy Spirit has helped me to grow in this understanding.  No aspect of this has ever been a road-block for me in believing the doctrine of the Trinity, but I do find it difficult to explain to anyone who doesn't believe.  It's much easier to believe that God Is One.  HOW God reveals Himself is what requires the gift of Faith to perceive.  For me, I have EXPERIENCED God first as Father (my Loving-Creator), then as Son (my Savior), then as Spirit (my Life).  Throughout my life I have continued to relate with God primarily in one Person or another.  It is only most recently (maybe the past 10-20 years?) that I have consciously related with all 3 Persons at once.  This is not to say that I think 1 Person of the Triune God works independently of the others; I don't.  I KNOW they are One and that the 3 Persons are always at work together as the One God.  I'm talking more about my perception, my personal experience, as it has changed over my life-time.

I don't think I can really teach ABOUT the doctrine of the Trinity.  I can only share my acceptance of Scripture and Tradition on this matter, and my personal experiences.

Too much Catholic literature equates "creationists" with "fundamentalists."  This is an error.  First of all, "creationists" are people who believe God created all that exists.  To what extent they take the Genesis account literally varies.  How and to what extent they accept the theories of micro-evolution as part of God's creative act, or as part of the effects of the Fall, varies.  Typically "creationists" reject the Darwinian theory of (macro) evolution; typically "creationists" view that theory as antithetical to God's creation of a world He proclaimed Good.  "Fundamentalists" are thought to take everything in Scripture as literally true and only literally true.  But those who would call themselves "fundamentalists" vary in the degree to which they do this.  Furthermore, anti-fundamentalists often call anyone who believes any of the miracles revealed in the Bible a "fundamentalist."  IN MY EXPERIENCE, many intellectual Catholics confuse "fundamentalists" and "fundamentalism" with "fanatics" and "fanaticism."  Often when talking about "fundamentalists" they make generalizations and assumptions that are simply not true of any group of people!  Everyone would be better served if people would quit talking about the "-ists" and talked about the "-isms."  Furthermore, those who want to compare and contrast various "-isms" would do well to be more specific and more consistent in their definitions.  Furthermore, when anyone talks about "creationists" (regardless of their attitude toward them) they are usually talking about which scientific theories those persons find more credible.  Whereas, when anyone talks about "fundamentalists" (regardless of their attitude toward them) they are talking about an orientation to Scripture interpretation.  The two labels are not equivalents.  The two categorizations of people are not the same.  The reality is whether or not any one person would validly be labeled a member of both categories varies greatly from person to person.

Having said all that, I do not consider myself a "fundamentalist" because I accept that there are various literary forms in Scripture.  I am however, a creationist in that I see that the theory of special creation by an intelligent Designer is a better model than any other theory that would interpret the scientific evidence for origins of species, human development, etc.

As regards how I understand Scripture, while acknowledging I am not a "fundamentalist," I would also be quick to say I do not subscribe to much of what modern-day liberal theologians teach.  I think it is probably fair to say I am a "Traditionalist."  I really don't think I fit perfectly into any one category, but I think most people would place me in the category of the "Traditionalists" in terms of how I receive Scripture.

The question that is often posed is "Why is the dialogue between religion and science necessary and valuable?"  I can't take this question head-on because I think the all truth is from the One Source of Truth, God, and we can only receive the  fullness of Truth when we accept in faith God as The Author of Truth.  I.e. believing must come first.  Even atheistic folks who categorically discount God have to believe something.  Every argument has an "a priori."  That "given" has to be at least accepted as if believing it in order to proceed with any thoughts based on it.  And if any of the succeeding thoughts are to actually be believed, the "given" has to be truly believed as well.  Furthermore, we don't really KNOW anything in the fullest sense of knowing something (embracing it into our life-view, and acting on it) until we BELIEVE it.

So I would say that it's intuitively obvious that "religion" and "science" must be in dialogue because I believe all that is true is compatible with all else that is true; Truth is One.  However, my bias is that the best of what religion has to offer is rooted in living one's faith in God, and when one is alive in God, one realizes faith is the higher and deeper and all encompassing source of Truth.  The burden of the challenge is mostly on Believers to find ways to communicate with atheists and to show atheists, even w/in their own way of thinking, how faith is not only necessary to discovering Truth, but it is actually something they already do in an idolatrous form: they have faith in their own minds rather than the Mind Who created them.  I think it (assuming scientific knowledge is equal or greater than faith knowledge) is the "apple" and Babel all over again.

"I praise You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because You have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children." (Matthew 11:25)

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Being Transformed

Reading USCCA, Chapter Four: "Bring About the Obedience of Faith"

The questions "for discussion" listed in this chapter are huge!

Challenges in "applying" my faith:
I feel it is important for me to "live it first."  It is so hard to speak about something unless I am living it.  I know Christ teaches us w/ authority through His Word (the Bible), but my witness to His Truth isn't respected by those "of the world" unless I've lived and am living whatever it is I say.

The help I expect from The Church is at least 3-fold:
1) Teach and form me in the Truth of Jesus Christ.
2) Lovingly and mercifully correct me when I go astray.
3) Show me by example how to be like Christ.

My parents are my best models of faithful discipleship to Christ.  Next would be many persons recounted in Scripture.  Next would be anyone who has suffered greatly yet perseveres in trusting God and sharing His Love.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

My Soul Longs For You, Lord

Reading the United States Catholic Catechism for Adults, pub. USCCB, c. 2006, 9th printing 2012.
Responding to discussion questions from chapter one, My Soul Longs for You, O God:

What am I looking for in life?  Hmm... peace, wholeness, oneness-with-God, rest, meaningful-but-tranquil-connectedness.  As for my goals and ideals?  I find that for the first time in my life I don't have clear dreams or goals; I have fulfilled many (all?) of my previously envisioned goals, and I feel I have spent/exhausted my life along those lines; I want new dreams; I want an all-consuming dream for this next era of my life. 

How does God and the Church play a part in this?  Hmm... finding God's purpose for me now is the central defining balance-point and the only thrust/trajectory that will satisfy me.  As for "The Church," I don't know what part it plays "in my life"; rather, I think in terms of what part my dream (God's purpose for me) will play in the life of the Church. 

How is my life a journey toward God?  I am very aware (and have been for as long as I can remember) that my life is entirely about being held by God, walking w/ Christ, longing for being completely consumed with and by the Holy Spirit.  Even as a very young child I remember feeling a deeply poignant longing/ yearning for something; I was beginning, even at age 14, to realize that this fathomless hole inside me could only be filled by God.  All of my adult life has been a mixture of responding to God's drawing me into intimacy w/ Him and allowing myself to be distracted by other things, sometimes alternating between the two, more often struggling with the tension of the ever-present choice.

As a seeker I look for the truth in The Truth as revealed by the Author of All Truth, God, by reading His Word (the Bible), by communing w/ Him in prayer, and by opening myself further to the movement of the Holy Spirit by worshipping the Lord in communion w/ other believers, namely through the Mass.  I pay attention to people, things, and events in my life and continually ponder how they are part of God's Story.  I listen to my heart.

When I experience truth, beauty, goodness, I praise God.  I credit God for all good things.  I bless His Holy Name.  What makes it POSSIBLE for me to seek God?  Firstly, God Himself; secondly, God designed and created me to seek Him; thirdly God designed and created the universe to be a context, a time and space, where I can meet God and relate w/ Him. 

The main thing I have found in my search for Truth is this: Jesus-Christ is my Creator and Redeemer, my Teacher, Best-Friend, and Lover of my soul.  It is in trusting and following Jesus as my Lord that I can grow in my understanding of Truth.

Does being Catholic give any particularity to my search for God?  Hmm... I'm not sure.  I know that God definitely led me to finding my Home in the Eucharist.  I also know that I feel a soul-kinship with "the mystics."  But does being Catholic give me any sort of advantage in growing in the Lord?  I tend to think of being-Catholic as being open to becoming ever more aware of the bigness of God and ever more embracing of others.

My first family, especially my parents, have been a profound blessing, especially in terms of learning of and experiencing God as an absolutely unconditionally loving Creator and Parent.  My parents have done this by being themselves unconditionally loving and giving the credit to God, and by teaching me from His Word.  They also gave me an amazing start in life and introduction to the wonders and beauty of the world, most notably the awesomeness of creation and the sacredness of all peoples in all their variety.  They lay the groundwork for giving me the perspective that I am a citizen of the Earth and yet my true home is Heaven.

Right now, today, my longing for God is most genuinely expressed in my questioning how God wants to organize my life, order my schedule, prioritize my commitments.