Today's Wisdom

Those who do not pass from the experience of the cross to the truth of the resurrection condemn themselves to despair! For we cannot encounter God without first crucifying our narrow notions of a god who reflects only our own understanding of omnipotence and power
Pope Francis

Saturday, May 31, 2014

The Pervasive Death? My Atheism

Everything has a price (economics). For every action there is an equal reaction opposite to it (physics). Darwinian Principle: Survival of the fittest through genetic mutation and adaptation of species to the environment (biology). Every living organism dies (biology).
We studied the above in school. If there is any truth in it, it means that death is part of life, and sometimes violent death is caused by our actions.
Everything has a price: If you wish to live a better life, you need to advance in your career, and for this you must spend more efforts, money and time at work.
For every action there is an equal reaction opposite to it. If you wish to live a better life, you must accommodate yourself to the demands of your boss or your clients regardless of how moral they are. Because, if you do not do the above you will be fired.
The Darwinian Principle is the principle that governs all life. To survive in a zoo, you must be more powerful than your competitors.You will eventually die but at least you would have secured your legacy through your powerful offspring and supporters.

If the above is too simplistic, consider more findings from experience:
While the lifespan of a typical person increased because of medical technology, pervasive death increased too. We long for eternal joy of life, but we are unable on our own to reach it. Or perhaps our knowledge of the globe, the cosmos and human frailty has focused so much on the negative, the materialist comfort, and human achievements in the material world that we forgot life with God; God as distinct from us, beyond us and yet one of us.

It seems that the more I am busy in entertaining myself and my own, the more I have no time for God. My friends and their young ones are also too busy getting things done for their living, their bosses at work, their homes, and their own friends. We see each other less frequently and go to church only as a duty. Our grown-up young adults are too busy making ends meet for their own, so how can one expect them to have time for God? The media too bombards us everyday with news of violence, rape, and killing, and entertains us with shows and movies about physical beauty, sex, games with no mention of God.

This state of society is not limited to the West. It is also in the East where perverse murdering of innocents is carried out in order to preserve the self, killing freedom in the name of religion, selling more weapons, abuse of women in rape and sex, and getting people's lives crushed by erecting dictatorial economic and political (often tribal) systems.

Introducing the picture of a Godless society:

Through fast Internet communications we know instantly events that are shaping the future of other countries and continents which adds to anxiety. Antonio Damasio, the well-known professor of neuroscience at the University of Southern California, warned that the human brain can hardly cope with the fast advances in computer science. How would the young generation cope with such complex systems?

There are many questions on the minds of Christians regarding the advances in science and the "death of God". I have attempted to respond to them in a number of lectures and articles. Please see "Has Science Discovered God?" by clicking here. One of the well-known philosophers mentioned there is Professor Antony Flew, an outspoken atheist, who was so astonished by the recent scientific discoveries that he became theist (or believer in a metaphysical God). In 2010, Professor Dr. Michael Sole, the well-known Canadian cardiologist and professor of anatomy at the University of Toronto, repeated in a meeting with me, Einstein's declaration that he believes in a metaphysical power beyond the universe that we call God. Dr. Brian Baker at the University of Toronto declared the same. In recent history many other educated atheists such as Dr. Alexis Carlyl converted to Christianity. In the 1960s, the anthropologist professor René Girard became Catholic. The British physics professor Stephen Hawking and Harvard professor of psychology Steven Pinker (both Atheists) stated in different instances their conclusions that there must be a super intelligence beyond the cosmos. See also "The Quantum Synthesis" here and "Why the Beloved is Beautiful" here. On YouTube, see this clip about Chaos Theory and Fractals here. in 2009 Professors Nancey Murphy and Warren Brown of the philosophy of mind co-authored a book "Did my neurons do it?" in which they debunk the deterministic views of atheism especially those of Daniel Dennett. The "New Atheist" Professor Richard Dawkins admitted in 2006 that religion will remain in the human mind for centuries to come. In a 2013 debate with Cardinal George Pell, Dawkins opposed  the Darwinian Principle of survival for the fittest and admitted the need for a global moral standard based on the Gospel (See it here). The distinctive influence of Christianity on the development of civilization has been indicated here based on scholarly research of history.

Nevertheless, the tragedy of meaningless life is widespread. I seek comfort both physical and spiritual. Does not this remind us by Calvinism? According to Calvin, God blesses the elect here with the good life and increased wealth, and there in the next life with the kingdom. But materialism sneaks in to confine reality to material things only, and individualism creeps in through private holdings and legal protection of my privacy. I use the best that suit my interests from all realms and thoughts. I make money to spend it, live and die. I collaborate with others only when I need them for myself. This is today's credo which our children have learned and are learning in schools and universities. The "Death of God" was symbolically announced by Nietzsche over a hundred years ago. It followed a long conversation of philosophers in doubting the existence of God in the modern mind of the West's Enlightenment including Kant, Comte, Voltaire, Feuerbach, Marx, and followed by the 20th century philosophers such as Carnap, Wittgenstein, Jean Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Bertrand Russell, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, John Searle, Daniel Dennett and David Chalmers (see Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy here).  To each doubting mind there have been abundant responses in the 20th century by other minds such as  Henri de LubacKarl RahnerTeilhard de ChardinJoseph RatzingerJohn HaldaneHans Urs von BalthasarChristopher DawsonJohn PolkinghorneLorenzo AlbaceteAvery Dulles among others (see some of their contributions in website links on the blog). But a trend to liberalism and individualism, supported by economic capitalism, continues. We are becoming numbers in a digital world. Death is pervasive today: if not materially then spiritually. I have no God.  I am practically an atheist!

A simple picture for conclusion:
Can I save myself? No. Can we save ourselves? Yes. Here are a few important steps by a top psychologist. He spoke about the challenges we have. I am attempting to follow these steps:

1.  Build good relationships with your family and your children. Communicate and share precious time together. Love is not simple but it starts with good intentions.
2.  Enjoy your relationships with the family, the extended family, and the community. Check: Are you willing to serve them without condition?
3.  Avoid gossiping and building networks of hatred. They do not go with love.
4.  Be a model in action in service to your family, your children, and the community.  Collaborate in good intentions and based on the primacy of conscience with your co-workers, your boss, your assistants/servants, your colleagues and classmates. Before you ask others or children to follow what you say, you need to follow the advice of good people.
5.  Be humble. Be vulnerable like kids. Accept your faults and ask for forgiveness. Forgive others as you wish to be forgiven.
6. Spend time in meditation and contemplation of the good (half an hour every day is suggested). Taste the goodness you are offered in having grown in your life.
7.  Upon doing the above pray to find God in the world here and today. Think of him who described himself as a loving Father. Think that he does not forsake anyone. Taste the Lord in his creation. Taste the Lord in confession and the Eucharist (the sacrament of thanksgiving). Pray with the Church to grow in wisdom and love.
8. You have found God. The Father sent Christ, his eternal image who is one with him, by the power of the Holy Spirit to save the world. He saves. Pray that all be saved and enjoy eternal life of increasing love.

Everyone in the whole world is related to others. It is in relationship of enduring love with each other that we are saved. Death is only a step to the better life. If I die to my own selfishness and desires, I then can experience selfless love in a way that resembles the eternal love of the Triune God. Then we will resurrect into glory as Christ did and continues.

Friday, May 30, 2014

BOKO HARAM - The Use and Abuse of Kidnapped Girls

Not only did they abuse girls that they kidnapped, but also threatened to sell them if the Nigerian government did not release their fellow terrorists from prison. The kidnapping of girls from a residential school in Nigeria took place over a month ago.The terrorist organization that planned and executed the kidnapping is Boko Haram; a notoriously brain-washed tribal group that claims to be a follower of Islam and yet they only managed to distort the picture of Islam as a religion. For years now, terrorists of Boko Haram have been causing fear among the citizens they visited. Like a Satanic violent cult, they torched homes, schools, market places, and government buildings.They murdered scores of people who disagree with their beliefs or resist their attacks trying to protect themselves. It seems that they are funded by the same sources that continue to fund Islamic terrorism in  the so-called "Arab Spring" in the Arab world, as well as Taliban in Afghanistan, and other militia terrorists in Pakistan, Russia, Iran and Al-Qaeda to name a few. Their goal is to turn the African countries, that they operate in, into Islamic countries based on a strict interpretation of Sharia.

In the belief of Boko Haram, girls must be married at a young age, and forced to stay home to serve their masters. If they are kidnapped, those girls are to be used for the entertainment and sexual pleasure of men of the same organization or a similar one. If those girls are lucky, Boko Haram will trade them for money which will be used for more terror or for the release of their fellow terrorists from prison.

Strangely, not only do they conduct terror operations but also we note that the Nigerian government is slow in pursuing and saving the kidnapped ones. The U.S. government and other Western governments offered their technical assistance in surveillance and military tracking facilities. Yet the plight of the kidnapped girls seems to have been given a lower attention among the world's powerful nations who are able to assist in their release.

The word "Haram" can have several meanings. In Semitic languages it can be derived from "Harm" which means exclusion from the community. In the ancient Christian Churches, it is equivalent to excommunication of a person from participation in sacraments or his exclusion from the community of worship. In Islam, "Haram" is often interpreted as the sinful act forbidden by God in the Qur'an.  In the developed Catholic thought, inspired texts of the Bible are not literally dictated from God. The mind of the Church is not determined by individual impressions or free personal interpretations but by the authority of bishops in union with the Successor of Peter and the assent of the faithful according to the living tradition of the Church. In the Bible too, every person, including women, is created in the image of God. A patriarchal social system does not justify treatment of women as if they were subordinate to men. On the contrary it was a woman, the Virgin Mary, whose "Yes" to God made her venerated above all other creatures including men. She is highly venerated in both Islamic texts and  Christian traditions of Apostolic character.

Of course, no one is forced to believe what was written here. However, moral norms in the world forbid the killing of any innocent person and dictate that a just trial be set up for anyone accused of crimes for prosecution to demand punishment. It is the moral conscience that stands in trial today!

Africa remains a fertile continent for the presence of moderate Christians and moderate Muslims along with Animist religions. Catholic missionaries may be able to open schools and hospitals that care for the population they serve and thus move them to receive the grace of faith. Good businesses may bring hi technology as opportunities to invest in trades and education of local populations. The more there is security and stability the more African nations would become prosperous over time. To serve man, always discerning the call of the Spirit of God, is to serve God!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

The Power of Education to Transform Society

Education is such a powerful tool that, when used properly, it can help prepare generations of people into good citizens of the "Kingdom of God." In today's society, people responsible for the education system are  increasingly ignoring the moral responsibility of raising morally-enlightened citizens. Education in Catholic primary and high schools is either private and expensive or, as is the case of most Catholic schools in Toronto, is free but ineffective. In Toronto school boards whether public or Catholic, teachers are required to get all students in a given class to pass to the next grade without necessarily having merited a successful pass. If a teacher disciplines a student or gives him a low mark, the student's parent can complain and get the teacher's credentials questioned. This is the reverse of how our schools managed us when we were students. Kids who did not respect their teachers in the classroom were disciplined by the administration and if they misbehaved, their parents were called to withdraw them (they were basically expelled by the director).Today the school board's policy is based on the relativistic idea that a given child must be allowed to only reach his own potential regardless of the requirements for study and knowledge in the curriculum.  Attention to the individual's potential overrides attention to the social standard for learning. Add to this how evil exploits it and enters into political games in boards and teachers association and children's games of envy, selfishness, and power struggle. Some teenagers exercise peer pressure on their classmates: "Are you still virgin?" or worse they can through bullying provoke their relatively more successful classmates into the temptation of despair, and possibly suicide. Teenagers in schools without discipline or at least communication can become sexually active or do drugs or both. Public school boards care only about the physical health of students. They provide their students with condoms for "safe sex." Unhappy teachers on one hand and classmates without a good moral standard on the other hand mean only that Satan is the victor. This state of affairs is prevalent in liberal societies of the Western world, and we may think the discussion is probably limited to them. However, this does not mean that conservative societies in the Eastern hemisphere are immune. Promiscuity and drugs do exist there too even though they are socially considered taboo.  The widespread access to the Internet has made it possible for students in both East and West to share and watch clips of such immoral acts and/or join in little gangs especially with lyrics of such popular singers and dancers that often call for selfishness and acts of revenge. Although the Internet has made learning material available much easier in the world, it is easier to tempt and destroy souls than help build them. If popular individuals messages on Facebook are envious or hateful then the young will learn as always from their parents who share them. Students that have just graduated from university or college are faced with double the pressure. First they have to find a job in their field of study; and second they have to pay back student loans from the money they could earn. And if a graduate is accepted for a job, the offer is usually for a contract for a limited time with probably half the salary given to the experienced older employee - no job security and no benefits. How will this young person be able to expect a good future? How will  this young person afford to get married and build a family? In an ethically-permissive society, are not we encouraging our young ones to have sex without marriage?  Where is the safety net for future generations?
The issue is complex. Let us only focus on the younger of the young.
How can the community of the faithful deal with this evil in the absence of good moral standards and records of real success in most schools? For almost every child or teenager, parents are also under pressure to work harder in order to please the boss who also works harder in order to please his own boss. By the time a working parent comes home, the child has already done his homework or probably entertained himself with like-minded children using his own phone/computer and is already tired and so the parent too. Talking of helping the offspring get better education becomes an expensive option if parents have to pay for private lessons. In some cases parents are already stressed and each adds to the tension that they are no longer together. Welcome to the single-parent family, which also costs society in welfare payments and costs the family in the loss of bonding and sacrificing love. With the loss of one parent, children then pay a higher price of emotional turbulence and/or mental sickness. As parents and children descend into individualism so too society as a whole is bombarded, over the media, with sad news of murders, crimes, trials, divorce of popular artists and embarrassing acts of politicians. The latest in Canada are the investigations of Toronto's mayor, the self-revelation of Ontario's premier that she is lesbian, and the sudden declaration of the leader of the Federal Liberal Party that every candidate in his party for future elections must be pro-choice; seemingly bowing to radical feminists in order to win their support..Though this picture sounds bleak, it is important to note the central role of the woman in building, and educating her family. This is why I consulted a number of ladies involved in education and psychology to write this article. I have much hope in the role that mothers can play in educating their children. A mother communicates with her child since conception in the womb. If you are in doubt consult the research work of Dr. Alfred Tomatis in audio-psycho-phonology (Cf. Tomatis, Alfred; 1989; "Neuf Mois Au Paradis"; Ergo Press) or visit www.tomatis.com. The bonding of a mother and her child has also been demonstrated in the widely-acknowledged neurological research on oxytocin (the so-called love-hormone) naturally released in sexual love and pregnancy as well as in the ensuing natural bonding between couples and with their children.

Proposed Actions:
1. The Church leadership (bishops and priests) need to implement the directives of the Church on the family and the upbringing of good children. Churches need to organize effective seminars with videos accessible of their websites and tailored to the various needs of different generations where the faithful are attracted to learn the moral teachings of the Church especially on education.
Bishops and priests need to be a Christian example for their fellow faithful in humility and accessibility as Pope Francis has demonstrated. We can only look to the leadership of Pope Francis; a moderate pastor who communicates well with the young, the outcast, the poor, and the weak. How dared he to challenge the mafia, the men of power and excessive consumerism, and global Capitalism without condemning anyone remains a powerful display of the courage that Christ showed in his love of his enemies! Probably this is where the lessons should be drawn for the Christian community in dealing with this generation of young minds.
2. Leaders of youth groups in parishes must coordinate spiritual/moral formation of the groups by effective educators in the Church.These activities, using videos, computers and high tech facilities if required, must take priority over fun games, parties and outings and be given on a weekly basis.
3. Parents need to understand the needs of their children and communicate daily with them - If you do not love your children who will love them? Love them with wisdom. Parents must be careful not to show favouritism for one child over another. Husband and wife need to talk daily and show appreciation for each other on little things. Love is more than emotions for it is the grace that carries the world.
Parents in Canada can join an organization such as PAFE to register their defense of Christian teachings on moral issues with school boards.

Education is a powerful tool that can help us be transformed, and society too, albeit slowly, into little children of God (Matt 18, 3) who increase in wisdom.
In Luke, it is written: And [Jesus] went down with [his parents] and came to Nazareth, and was obedient to them; and his mother kept all these things in her heart. And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature, and in favor with God and man. (Luke 2: 51-52).
 It was Caiaphas who had given counsel to the Jews that it was expedient that one man should die for the people (John 18, 14). That was Christ who sacrificed his life for the world to live, but who today would sacrifice a bit of time to help families and future generations live the joyful eternal life? Are we the educated wise or the foolish ones (Matt 25, 1-12)?

Monday, April 28, 2014

The Fear of Thomas!

[On the evening of that first day of the week, when the doors were locked, where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in their midst and said to them, "Peace be with you." When he had said this, he showed them his hands and his side.  The disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord. Jesus said to them again, "Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you." And when he had said this, he breathed on them and said to them, "Receive the holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained. Thomas, called Didymus, one of the Twelve, was not with them when Jesus came. So the other disciples said to him, "We have seen the Lord." But he said to them, "Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands and put my finger into the nailmarks and put my hand into his side, I will not believe." Now a week later his disciples were again inside and Thomas was with them. Jesus came, although the doors were locked, and stood in their midst and said, "Peace be with you." Then he said to Thomas, "Put your finger here and see my hands, and bring your hand and put it into my side, and do not be unbelieving, but believe." Thomas answered and said to him, "My Lord and my God!
(John 20: 19-23).
 This was the Gospel's reading in both Byzantine and Roman Catholic Churches this past Sunday April 27 2014.  Friday April 25, it was Fr. Georges Farah who gave an impressive lecture on the meaning behind this reading.  Georges Farah said: The Gospel is the word of God that can be seen in multiple dimensions. It is a historical reality that after his Resurrection Jesus came to the disciples and gave them his peace. It is a historical reality that  Thomas doubted it. But it is also the story of fear in men and women who constantly need the risen Jesus Christ to come in and give them his peace. While we are full of fear in the closed room and our doors are locked, Christ  is the One who enters In  our being in spite of the locks, approaches us and invites us to communicate with him and live in the joy of Easter. We are Thomas in our doubts that there is no life for us with  the risen Christ beyond this life. We are Thomas that sees the challenges of science as too overwhelming in the material world we increasingly live in that only science can save us here. We have forgotten the source of science who makes it possible that humanity advances in its limited awareness of him who creates all from nothing.  We have forgotten the power of the Holy Spirit who guides the Church, the People of God.  God wants you and me to live and have joy eternally. He is full of compassion that he does not leave the disciples until he has strengthened them and poured the life-giving Holy Spirit in breathing the Spirit in them. We are the disciples in Syria, Egypt, Lebanon and the entire world for we are afraid that God has forsaken us or will forsake us to the Devil. We are Thomas in North America and Europe because we doubt now the Christian faith we inherited. Yet Jesus calls and comes in the Eucharist every Sunday. In him there is no fear. In him there is only hope, faith, and, above all, love. Let's love each other and those who do not love us. Let us thank God for the canonization of Blessed Pope John XXIII and Blessed Pope John Paul II, great leaders of the faithful who served Christ. Their canonization as saints in the same Mass by Pope Francis and in the presence of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI is an important step in the direction of the unity of all in the Church. In spite of much resistance to the Spirit, we ask our loving God to unite us all in the global human family as we await the New Jerusalem in which he will be "all in all." 
    



  

Friday, April 25, 2014

The Goal of the Expanding Universe!

 This week, while on the bus, a little baby girl smiled to me and I smiled back to her. I know in my heart that she liked to connect with me because she felt my innocent looks that I wished to ask her mom to only let me carry her for a minute. I know that in spite of my sins and shortcomings, God our Father loves every one of us.  Think of your mom, dad, spouse, children, and friends, and you will find God and his love through many of them.  Or probably you will find the joy for which God created you, as Fr. Henri Boulad suggests, when you enjoy the food you eat and bless Him for what He gave you in food that carries in it the fruit of the earth which is itself an offering of love. We are all interconnected and relational. For nearly six years I gave a course to adults on database systems including the Relational Model implemented in information technology at Sheridan College near Toronto. 

The first surprise is that in our busy days, we hardly think of love. We have no time for love. Yet we receive love, otherwise we would have disappeared.  Surprise yourself and read this 
article. The entire universe is a blessing that gives glory to God. 

In this article, I attempt to connect you and myself to the great surprises we have had in the past few weeks. From there I draw your attention to a reflection on the victory of Christ that surprises me more so in the natural phenomena whose mysteries are not fully understood yet and the ecstatic experiences of mystics who surpass my ordinary experience.  I particularly remember the words of Maurice Zundel "God knelt before Man" to restore Man!



The canonization of two recent Popes in one day raised a lot of interest especially because of the rich work that each of them contributed to the world. 

Pope John XXIII, elected in 1959, shocked the Catholic world when he announced his intention to convoke an Ecumenical Council in order to renew the Church, make her teachings understandable by a changing world, and seek unity of all Christians. John called himself "Your brother Joseph" when he invited leaders of other Churches and Christian communions not in union with the Catholic Church. He attributed the thought to a sudden inspiration by the Holy Spirit for a second Pentecost. The Second Vatican Council (Vatican II) lasted for 3 years starting in 1962 but the "Good Pope", known for his compassion and care for the ordinary persons, died from cancer in 1963. The Council was completed by Pope Paul VI described by Yves Congar as a saint. In his funeral the world (political and ordinary people) was mourning "Papa John", an old man of courage whose intercession between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R.  over the Cuban Crisis in 1961 helped avoid a military confrontation between the superpowers - a man who dared to challenge the "old guards of the Church as if she were a museum" for the Church is our living mother and is still delivering saints today as she did in ancient times.

Pope John Paul II, elected in 1978, was by contrast a determined man who sought to implement Vatican II with rigor and invigoration unknown in modern history. He is credited with initiating the World Youth Day and presiding over its activities in many countries; the re-evangelization program worldwide; his travels to most of the capitals of the world in order to strengthen his Christian brothers; his visits to many Christian Patriarchs and leaders as well as his encounter with Jewish and Muslim leaders visiting their sacred places in his historic pilgrimage in the Middle East; his reaffirmation of moral values in sexual ethics; his pro-life stance where, in collaboration with Islamic countries and other traditional countries, he defeated the radical program of contraceptives promoted at the U.N. Conference on Population held in Cairo in 1993; his interfaith meetings and prayers with representatives of other confessions; his beatification and canonization of servants of God more than all his predecessors together; his initiation of collaborative conferences with scientists and scholars and his official recognition of the Theory of Evolution; and above all his solemn apology in 2000 for sins by sons and daughters of the Catholic Church throughout its long history. When he died of illness complications in 2005 after 26 years on the See of Rome, it seemed that no one pope could ever fill the shoes of John Paul the Great.

As John XXIII is revered by mostly liberal Catholics, while John Paul II is revered by conservative Catholics, the canonization of both popes in one celebration by Pope Francis is widely regarded as a step to unite liberals and conservatives into one mystical soul. The Catholic Church is indeed very large and is the sacrament of unity of humanity that all people in every spot in the world long for. If this is true, the goal of the expanding universe can be understood; that is unity of all in God who creates and sustains all.

Of course, non-Catholics will object to this description, but who said they are not in a way attached to the Catholic Church? To our Protestant brothers and sisters, Evangelical Anglican Bishop Tony Palmer said it clearly in his message to the Conference of Evangelical and Pentecostal ministers associated with Kenneth Copeland Ministry: You are Catholics. And the Protestant ministers applauded him. He had come with a video message from Pope Francis after meeting earlier with him. Watch both here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uA4EPOfic5A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZ9Ssvs5cgY The messages probably have an emotional overtone but they reflect what John Paul II, basing himself on the Gospel,  reminded the World Council of Churches "Let everyone know that Catholics believe in  salvation through Jesus Christ alone".
To the Orthodox brothers and sisters, Vatican II had already recognized them as true Churches almost in full  union with the Church of Rome and all other Catholic local Churches although not yet perfect. The positive values and elements in other religions are also recognized dogmatically in Iesus Dominus published in 2000 by the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith (CDF). For more on this and the uniqueness of the Catholic Church, see my writing here.

Earlier on Easter Sunday April 20, 2014, Christians in Churches around the world sang hymns of victory to Christ who in the Byzantine liturgy "has risen from the dead and by his death he has crushed death and has given life to those who are in the tombs." The words "death" and "tomb" are significant since every human person wants to survive death somehow. The bravest of us and a martyr, Fr. Frans van der Lugt, S.J. murdered on April 7 in Homs, Syria had recorded a speech two years earlier in which he pleaded with the killers to let Syrians live and let him survive too in spite of his age. He had no resentment against the conspirators. In fact, all sentient beings such as plants, fish and animals, that were studied show a basic need for survival of death in spite of the Darwinian Principle "Survival for the fittest"! And anthropologists and historians insist that in spite of competition and ugly wars, collaboration was crucial to the survival of humanity. We may learn here from history how important is the arrow of love, central to Christianity.

Probably the most daring and evolutionary interpretation of the victory of Christ and his Resurrection come from the pen of  Teilhard de Chardin, the Jesuit scientist-theologian whose ideas were used in the writings of many subsequent scholars including Joseph Ratzinger (a top theologian at Vatican II who in 2005 was elected to succeed John Paul II as Benedict XVI)  on the truth of the Resurrection of Christ. Teilhard  wrote extensively on the development of the cosmos, life in its different forms and the emergence of the human mind by God's free love.

If we think of the Resurrection of Christ in terms of the mystical theology of Teilhard de Chardin, we will conclude that Christ's fullness of victory will not take place until the "Omega Point" or in other words until the "cosmic" Christ himself has restored creation to his Father. This is when we are united to God in the New Jerusalem and when Christ utters the words "Behold, I make all things new" (Revelation 21: 5). The Triune God then is "all in all."  In the twenty centuries since the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ, the Holy Spirit has been working in the hearts of many who long to return to their source. It was illustrated by Christ in the Parable of the Prodigal Son who, although he returned out of self-interest after losing everything, was surprised by the outpouring love and reception of his dad.

What surprises me most is the fascinating group of mystics and saints throughout history such as St. Anthony of Egypt, St. Bernard of Clairvaux, St. Francis of Assisi with his stigmata or the wounds of Christ that he accepted for love of all , St. Gertrude the Great who at the age of 26 started receiving private revelations from Christ, St. Rita of Cascia who loved her husband in spite of his unfaithfulness and loved her children although in their evil thoughts they wanted to avenge the killing of their dad, St. Teresa of Avila a mystic who spoke to Christ as to a friend, St. Jean-Baptiste Vianney of Ars, and, not the least, St. Thérèse of Lisieux a young nun who promised to shower flowers of blessings on all from heaven and St, Maximilian Kolbe who in 1941 accepted death as a prisoner of the Nazi so that another prisoner may live. Almost all of them had some kind of mystical conversion at some point in their lives or a fascination in God in spite of suffering. But also it seems, according to Peter Kreeft, that mystics and saints are not exclusive to Christian faith. They are individuals who loved God as much as they could in any religion. Fr. Jacques Dupuis, S.J. wrote too that in all religions we can find the work of the Holy Spirit on individuals although adherents of non-Christian religions, if saved, are saved through Christ alone as the official publications of the Catholic Church (e.g. Dominus Iesus, published by the CDF in 2000) recognize. The development of understanding the mystery of salvation has been proposed here by the late American theologian and Cardinal Avery Dulles, S.J. 

And a sublime surprise of the natural sciences comes to us through the discovery of the quantum world.  I wrote a little article about the significance of this discovery in many fields of knowledge and technological advances and especially how quantum entanglement is a stamp of the living Triune God of Christians. Another sublime surprise is the rediscovery of the beloved as beautiful in the eyes of the beholder that I attempted to describe here. It is particularly fascinating in nature and in fractals of chaos elegance, but mostly in those mystical experiences or the 4th degree of love of which St. Bernard of Clairvaux says 
"The Fourth Degree of Love: Love of Self for God's Sake
Blessed are we who experience the fourth degree of love wherein we love ourselves for God's sake. Such experiences are rare and come only for a moment. In a manner of speaking, we lose ourselves as though we did not exist, utterly unconscious of ourselves and emptied of ourselves.If for even a moment we experience this kind of love, we will then know the pain of having to return to this world and its obligations as we are recalled from the state of contemplation. In turning back to ourselves we will feel as if we are suffering as we return into the mortal state in which we were called to live.
Can We Attain the Fourth Degree of Love?I am not certain that the fourth degree of love in which we love ourselves only for the sake of God may be perfectly attained in this life. But, when it does happen, we will experience the joy of the Lord and be forgetful of ourselves in a wonderful way. We are, for those moments, one mind and one spirit with God.I am of the opinion that this is what the prophet meant when he said: "I will enter into the power of the Lord: O Lord I will be mindful of Thy justice alone." He felt, certainly, that when he entered into the spiritual powers of the Lord he would have laid aside self and his whole being would, in the spirit, be mindful of the justice of the Lord alone."


Yes, we can connect the above since love is a strong relationship. It was because of love that God creates and sustains everything/everyone, and, in time, became man, redeemed man and rose from the dead. It is my conviction that he is still working in humanity until all become one in his kingdom. This is the beauty of the mystics and the beauty of the mystical theology of Teilhard de Chardin. God never fails. His Word, Christ, achieves everything in the Spirit, even if it takes a long time to possess his creation in his one love. Christ is risen and continues to be risen. 

St. Paul writes "I consider that the sufferings of this present time are as nothing compared with the glory to be revealed for us. For creation awaits with eager expectation the revelation of the children of God; for creation was made subject to futility, not of its own accord but because of the one who subjected it, in hope that creation itself would be set free from slavery to corruption and share in the glorious freedom of the children of God. We know that all creation is groaning in labor pains even until now; and not only that, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, we also groan within ourselves as we wait for adoption, the redemption of our bodies."  (Rm, 8, 18-23)


With the above fascinating picture we can hope for a universe that will reach its purpose and goal in the Omega Point for the glory of God in his creation and for the emancipation of creation from evil.

Today's Quote

"Behold I make all things new." (Revelation 21:5)







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