|
As
I've been saying since Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger became Pope
Benedict XVI three years ago, we have to learn to catch up
with him, because his words just flow from his mouth like
a kilometer a second.
And
to think that these are not just casual words, but words that
carry a lot of weight, that had been invested with hours and
days and years of study and prayer, and that truly hit the
mark, bull's eye, where putting Christ to our current complex
life situations is concerned!
This
was clear during his recent US visit where we heard him speak
quite at length in his gentle, mellifluous, heavily German-accented
voice. The miracle was that people got mesmerized by him even
if most likely they did not get even 80% of what he said.
His
addresses, I think, are meant more than just heard. They have
to be studied, meditated, parsed and analyzed, and hopefully
put into action, applied into life, and made a living culture.
Thus,
I am happy to know that the American bishops are conducting
post-visit conferences to reflect more deeply and echo more
widely the Pope's many very interesting messages.
For
if one is already a practicing Catholic, then he understands
that listening to the Pope, and reading and studying his words
are like listening and reading and studying Christ.
This
is because the Pope, successor of Peter, inherits these words
from Christ himself: "I will give to thee the keys of
the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth is also
bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth is also loosed
in heaven." (Mt 16,19)
But
if more than just a practicing Catholic, one is more sensitive
to the Pope's personal qualities-his deep spirituality and
his tremendous mind-then he realizes that the Pope's words
indeed provide him with a wonderful picture of the world as
seen through faith.
This
is a point I would like to reiterate. Especially for those
who may find the Gospel a bit dated, study the Pope's words
and you will most likely be fascinated to see how the Gospel
becomes alive again and is directly in touch with our current
reality.
The
showtime of the papal visit should be accompanied by a quiet
and rigorous study time and prayer time!
I
myself am still wading through his many addresses. And I admit
that I get overwhelmed at many junctures of his speeches.
He simply has a way of presenting things that takes you out
of your own world, your own cocoon.
In
his address to the American youth and seminarians, there was
a point that totally struck me. It was the point about our
business of knowing the truth. We often think it is just a
matter of studying, researching, gathering data, etc., in
short, a purely human and intellectual affair.
This
was what he said: "Dear friends, truth is not an imposition.
Nor is it simply a set of rules. It is a discovery of the
One who never fails us; the One whom we can always trust.
In seeking truth we come to live by belief because ultimately
truth is a person: Jesus Christ.
"That
is why authentic freedom is not an opting out. It is an opting
in; nothing less than letting go of self and allowing oneself
to be drawn into Christ's very being for others."
I
must say that many things can be said of and from these words.
To be upfront about it, these words challenge us to make a
revolutionary turn in our usual way of understanding of what
knowing the truth entails.
At
least to me, these words explain quite well what St. John
in his first letter said: "He that knows God, hears us.
He that is not of God, hears us not. By this we know the spirit
of truth, and the spirit of error." (4, 6)
Knowing
the truth is dealing with God through Christ in the Spirit.
It's living by faith, by God's commandments. It's not just
us with our human resources studying and discovering things
on our own.
Especially
now when we can become easy prey to alarmist claims of some
our brighties, we need a sure guide and path to know the truth.
And that's simply dealing with Christ. Everything else follows
properly.
**********
Fr.
Roy Cimagala is the Chaplain of Center for Industrial
Technology and Enterprise (CITE) in Talamban, Cebu City. You
can email him at:Email: roycimagala@boholchronicle.com
|