This
explains why, apart from this body, outside this unity of the Church in Christ,
outside this Church which — in the words of Romano Guardini — "is the
bearer within history of the plenary gaze of Christ on the world" — faith
loses its "measure"; it no longer finds its equilibrium, the space
needed to sustain itself. Faith is necessarily ecclesial; it is professed from
within the body of Christ as a concrete communion of believers.
It is
against this ecclesial backdrop that faith opens the individual Christian
towards all others. Christ’s word, once heard, by virtue of its inner power at
work in the heart of the Christian, becomes a response, a spoken word, a
profession of faith. As Saint Paul puts it: "one believes with the heart
... and confesses with the lips" (Rom 10:10). Faith is not a
private matter, a completely individualistic notion or a personal opinion: it
comes from hearing, and it is meant to find expression in words and to be
proclaimed. For "how are they to believe in him of whom they have never
heard? And how are they to hear without a preacher?" (Rom 10:14).
Faith
becomes operative in the Christian on the basis of the gift received, the love
which attracts our hearts to Christ (cf. Gal 5:6), and enables us to
become part of the Church’s great pilgrimage through history until the end of
the world. For those who have been transformed in this way, a new way of seeing
opens up, faith becomes light for their eyes.
Lumen Fidei 22
Reflection – This passage may seem a bit abstract
or remote, a bit dense in its wording, a bit hard to follow, perhaps. But it
speaks to a real question, a real difficulty that many people have today.
Do you
remember that viral video from a year or so ago: “I love Jesus, but I hate
religion”? That’s what this passage, in admittedly dry theological language, is
trying to answer. There is a strong idea, common really, that we can love Jesus
and love God while completely distancing ourselves from the Church and having
nothing to do with Her.
To which we
say, ‘not so fast, slick.’ To live one’s faith as an individual, a little
person on his own, or a little group of people on their own, is not sustainable
really. Faith comes from hearing, and bears fruit in proclamation. Faith is
inherently public, in the Christian sense of the affair. A faith that is not
publicly professed is not a full and genuine faith, and this is strictly
scriptural (Rom 10:10).
Furthermore, a
faith that is separated from the faith of the Church is a faith that is
precisely measured by the individual’s own level, his or her own possession of
truth, of goodness, of beauty. And this is not how God designed the human race
to be, not His providential plan at all. We are meant to find a genuine
personal faith, a genuine following of Jesus, within the larger faith of the
billions of Catholics who share it with us, and in union with the many millions
of Catholics who have gone before us and who have passed it on to us.
My personal
faith—that frail plant prone to blight and frostbite at any moment—is upheld
and strengthened, preserved and fostered in the giant greenhouse of the Church,
in which the light and warmth of Christ is held and amplified in the
sacramental flow of life. It would be a matter of extreme ingratitude and
churlish ill-temper on my part to receive all this sacramental grace and
evangelical proclamation from the Church, to have received the Christian faith
in the first place from the Church and have had it nurtured and fed by the
Church, and then just turn around and walk away from it because I don’t like
this priest or that bishop or I think the Pope should do x, y, or z and he’s
not listening to me or whatever.
I realize that
so many people who walk away from the Church do so because they have not
experienced themselves as being fed by it, simply don’t know what it is they
have been given, or perhaps were given it very poorly indeed so that the treasure
was unrecognizable as what it is. Such is the lamentable state of our times and
our ecclesial life.
But we who are
in the Church need to clarify for ourselves our proper relationship to Her, and
understand that our personal faith is intrinsically bound up, springs from, and
is held by, the faith of this corporate entity, this communal experience. We
cannot distance ourselves from the Church, even inwardly, without our faith
being damaged in some basic way.
That’s all I
have to say on the matter today. Tomorrow I am in poustinia, so no blogging. We’ll
keep on with the encyclical for a few more days after that, and then see where
we are.
Ah, "un bon mot", Fr. Denis.
ReplyDeleteI am rather hoping that you would say more about this; in particular from the perspective of an individual's ability, through grace, to be in love with God. Not so much in love or enthralled with a particular manifestation of God but with the Father as a person. How do you see that in terms of one's own love of self (now there's a dry term or is "arid" a more realistic descriptor?) and how that same person can leave or abandon that perspective of self love. Where do you see the person of God residing in this Church, His bride, and how does the church lead us away from self-love and into a true communion? Sacramental yes - without a doubt - but what does the church do and how does she enable us to change? How does she heal us of this so that we can be?
Kindest regards - John Lynch.
Dear Mr Lynch
ReplyDeleteAll my life I have prayed mostly to Jesus and the Holy Spirit (am 65) but this year in March I distinctly recd. the word Matthew 6:6
"When you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father who is with you in secret; and your Father who sees what you do in secret will reward you." Since then I have been having "closet time with Abba Father" each night before retiring. The Father has shown me so much of His love that it has displaced self-love because knowing and receiving His infinite love cannot but push away our fears and insecurities which result from self love...well this is just sharing in response to your first half of comment, the second part i leave to the wisdom of Fr. Denis...as I am a relatively new (5 years) Church goer who has learned to love the Church as Christ loves Her...and i am so grateful today that I was born and baptized into this mysterious marvelous miraculous Body of Christ...Thank You, Abba Father.
.
.
Well, this encyclical is short, but sort of startlingly compact....Just before this section...there is some discussion about Jesus, the mediator who opens us by loving us to a truth greater than ourselves- Jesus the "trustworthy witness", "deserving of our faith"-thru whom God works thru out history. Jesus is the "one who makes God known to us" and so we welcome him in our lives and trust him.
ReplyDeleteFaith helps us open ourselves to a Love that precedes and transforms from within. This is the true action of the Holy Spirit : " the Christian can see with the eyes of Jesus and share in his mind, His filial disposition, because he or she shares in his Life, which is his spirit " (LF, 21)
Because of our love of Jesus and that love in us, " the life of the believer becomes an "ecclesial existence", since faith is confessed within the body of the church. Christians are one without becoming the Borg - without losing individuality because Christ comes to us first, in our solitary hearts.
It is an intensely private and intensely public matter at the same time.
Anyway, this is how I am understanding this tiny bit.....
Bless you
Clearly, I must follow up on this post, since it has started a discussion... stay tuned for next week's blog.
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