IT'S
traditional in schools inspired by the Christian spirit that a Holy Mass of the
Holy Spirit is celebrated at the beginning of the school year. That's what I've
been doing these past days.
Obviously,
the main idea is to remind students or to explain to the first-timers the relationship
between the Holy Spirit and our studies. There is a passage in St. Paul's second
letter to Timothy that mentions a predicament that we should try to avoid.
*"Ever
learning and never attaining to the knowledge of the truth," *(3,7) he said.
Sad to say, this anomaly is getting common. We can have an information overdrive,
wallow in an ocean of data, and yet we can miss the point of it all.
For
Christian believers, the Holy Spirit is the spirit of God, the spirit of truth
and wisdom, of love and holiness that is meant to inhere in our own soul, since
God wants to share what he us with us, his creatures, his children. God and us
are meant to live in a communion of life and love in the truth.
No
matter how mundane or worldly or secular our studies may be, no matter with what
autonomy our studies enjoy, we have to realize that they can only come from and
go to God. We have to learn to pursue our studies in this kind of orbit.
What
this all means is that we can never really arrive at the truth of things if it
is not in the Holy Spirit. At best, we can have some aspects of truth, but they
can miss a number of things, like charity, integrity, holiness.
They
can be truths that feed our weakness and malice, our pride and vanity. Instead
of building us up, they can destroy us. We have seen this phenomenon repeated
millions of times in our history.
We
need to know how to study, what are involved in our study, what attitudes and
habits should be cultivated. This is where the virtue of studiousness comes in.
We need to be more aware of our need for it.
It's
something to be developed, since it does not come automatically, or as a result
of external factors. It has to be deliberately cultivated from inside us, with
our will and effort.
Studiousness
stands right in the middle of indifference and apathy on the one hand, and inordinate,
obsessive curiosity on the other.
To
spur students to study, St. Josemaria Escriva offered a formula: *"As a student,
you should dedicate yourself to your books with an apostolic spirit, and be convinced
that one hour added to another make up-even now-a spiritual sacrifice offered
to God and profitable for all mankind, your country and your soul." *(Furrow
522)
Our
studies should be properly contextualized by the fact that we are all children
of God, meant for holiness and apostolate, that is, helping one another all the
way to bringing everyone back to God.
We
need to develop a strong, abiding culture of studiousness not only in schools,
but also at home and in other places. Obviously, this has to be done in different
ways and forms, but it has to be with us all the time. It's dangerous for us to
leave this virtue behind, since we are meant to know things always, and to know
them properly.
St.
Thomas Aquinas also warned us about the forms of unhealthy curiosity. Some signs
of this anomaly are when (a) we seek knowledge to take pride in it; (b) we seek
knowledge to sin; (c) we seek useless knowledge and waste effort that otherwise
could have been used to study what we need to know.
He
also said that we are over-curious when (d) we seek knowledge from unlawful sources,
as from demons; (e) we seek creatural knowledge without referring them to God;
(f) we may foolishly risk error by trying to master what is beyond our capacity.
Over-curiosity
is also fostered when we have an excessive love of sight-seeing, neglecting to
study to gaze idly on meaningless spectacles, observing others for the purpose
of criticizing or condemning them.
I
feel that these indications are never passé. Rather, with the temper of
our times, they assume greater relevance and urgency for all of us, since we are
often pushed if not harassed by a swarm of pressuring data and information.
We
have to learn to tame the bullish urges of our modern information technology by
this virtue of studiousness! ********
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 |