Jesus Is Truth

Years ago, I realized I would never know the truth, but if I choose my words carefully, they could point to the truth. First, there has to be honesty and sincerity. People look for this first and if it’s not there, then there is nothing much there anyway. Secondly, I believe it’s respect; you can respect the goodness others bring to the table without agreeing or disagreeing.

 The biggest idea is LOVE… I believe this should be cultivated, more seen in the things you have done, and what you are doing; not so much what you say.

I’m a Catholic because I believe everything Jesus said is the truth, because He is the truth. For me, you can’t have truth without the Church…it takes both the Formative and Transformative…the Form and the Content.

 

Time and Space

This world of ours, this temporal place where we live, is in a bucket which God is carrying in His hand. We are contained in the bucket, where there is time and space, or perhaps for your personal world view, call it time and place. We realize the handle which God is carrying is outside the bucket, yet the handle is clearly attached to the bucket. Outside the bucket, in His heavenly realm, there is no time or place, for paradoxically, God is in all places at all times, in and outside the bucket. Outside the bucket, He is in what we commonly call the eternal now. Since there’s no time in the eternal now, everything is happening for Him all at once. We are made in His image and likeness, and Christ Jesus is both man and God.  The point being, we also have a human and temporal condition as well as a connection to the divine nature. We are certainly not God, yet our bucket’s handle is surely in His hand and in His realm.

Saving Justice


I found the entrance antiphon of Sunday, 3 July 2022 to be particularly inspiring. So much to be unpacked in each phrase. Consider the opening line; “Your merciful love, O God, we have received in the midst of your temple”. Of all the names we have for our Triune God, merciful love is one of the most beautiful. This opening line could have read, Your merciful love is, O God. For God Himself is love and love shone through the prism of light reflects all the names and all the virtues we know and love about our God.
This opening line is a clear, practical and grateful appeal to our God to shower His goodness on us, as we receive in the midst of His holy place. It is our disposition which governs this compensation, for His grace is given in full measure and in this sustaining grace we receive as much as we are capable. It is our open hearts and empty hands which allow us to be filled with His gifts. Again, we are told, “Your praise, O God, like your name, reaches the ends of the earth.” It is your righteousness and our right worship which has no bounds and no limits, for the ends of the earths encompasses all that is in our world and reflects all which is in Your heavenly realm.
Finally, we are told; “Your right hand is filled with saving justice.” The metaphor of the “right hand” shows the mighty power and prestige of what is working in our lives through His saving justice. We can see plainly that there must be justice and His judgment is justice. This is a spiritual physics anchored in the intelligibility, reason and logic of His genius. Unlike karma which we consider to be the cause and effect in our life in a world of contingences; His justice is His creation endowed with love and mercy on the path to salvation. Lord, thank you for Your purpose and the power to bring us into Your loving arms.



Choosing a Model

    Much has been said about the eighteen century “Age of Enlightenment” as a world phenomenon as well as it’s impact on American history. Let’s (for the moment) accept this historical movement in it’s entirety as a credible passage into a new era of understanding, including the hidden gems and also the down side of it’s assumptions, dead ends and shallow rhetoric. At the same time, let’s give ourselves credit for being in another era of enlightenment one of equally serious world beginnings and consequences.

    Let us be cautious that we are not misled by our assumptions or the claims of pop culture. Let us have the wisdom to look through a lens of enlightenment, through what seems to be obvious into the truly obvious. A disturbing feature of today’s society and perhaps a long-standing feature of any era is our vulnerability to be misled by those who exercise power and control for the sake of pride and prejudice. These powerful people can be identified when they are engaged in their well ordered and effective effort to build empires and spread their influence. A tried-and-true method of claiming essence without substance paves the way to what they declare is common knowledge in an attempt to replace common logic. Their mass media rhetoric is designed to replace historical events and to use metaphors to replace an investigation of a case-by-case inquiry. These titans would have us believe that ambiguities lead to imagination, basic research or breakthrough innovations; they do not. They do demonstrate deceptive intentions and foster confusion, frustration and apathy. These titans believe once the focus is centered on the clash of conflict the serious consideration of the issues will be ignored.

     As an answer to these titans of empire, we turn to wise commentary which tells us there is no political solutions to spiritual problems. As believers we will engage in a critical examination of what we are being told and shown by our pop culture versus what we know to be true in our hearts. This is not an exercise of spiritual superiority, a train we never want to get on. This is not a drill in relativism because the truth is not predicated on circumstances. This is a trajectory of orthodoxy, the moving under the action of a given force, that force being the Holy Spirit. Using this lens of enlightenment is in actuality praying for guidance, never assuming we are doing God’s work, only God can do God’s work. We are, however, praying that our actions are done with love and humility, appealing to everyone’s highest ideals and best intentions and we have considered all the attributes of the divine virtues. For us laity this is a monumental task, a venture which needs a model to follow. I am suggesting this model is the Catholic Church, the body and bride of our Lord. I am suggesting the metaphor for this Church is a finely cut diamond, seen through any of it’s facets depicts it’s fullness, brilliance, life and truth of itself. This allows each of us to view the Lord in ways we can understand. Through the facet of the magisterium, or the Bible itself, the homilies of our pastors and priests, the podcasts of our scholars, the ministries and charities, or the adoration and the prayers of our more contemplative moments and a host of other inspirational, devotional and sensational considerations we come to a deeper and richer understanding of ourselves and our Church.  

    Of all these possible facets it is Vatican II which is inviting us into a age of innovation established upon the traditions of orthodoxy: which makes the path from the past, the path into the future. The innovation is built upon this past trajectory. For example, a society is always operating at the top of the technological curve. What is currently being developed may, and in many cases does see beyond the immediate horizon. It is not farfetched to theorize what advancements could be coming, however, the next step is still bound by the workings of current technologies. This illustrates the accumulated culminations of technologies passing through the “lens of enlightenment” and into tomorrow’s future. This applies as well to Vatican II. The innovations are not tomorrow’s unrealized expectations, they are the well ordered and logical next step in the development of the Church.