IV. THE MYSTERY OF CREATION
God creates by wisdom
and love
295 We believe that God
created the world according to his wisdom.141 It
is not the product of any necessity whatever, nor of blind fate or chance. We
believe that it proceeds from God's free will; he wanted to make his creatures
share in his being, wisdom and goodness: "For you created all things, and
by your will they existed and were created."142 Therefore
the Psalmist exclaims: "O LORD, how manifold are your works! In wisdom you
have made them all"; and "The LORD is good to all, and his compassion
is over all that he has made."143 God
creates "out of nothing"
296 We believe that God
needs no pre-existent thing or any help in order to create, nor is creation any
sort of necessary emanation from the divine substance.144God
creates freely "out of nothing":145
If God had drawn the
world from pre-existent matter, what would be so extraordinary in that? A human
artisan makes from a given material whatever he wants, while God shows his
power by starting from nothing to make all he wants.146
297 Scripture bears
witness to faith in creation "out of nothing" as a truth full of
promise and hope. Thus the mother of seven sons encourages them for martyrdom:
I do not know how you
came into being in my womb. It was not I who gave you life and breath, nor I
who set in order the elements within each of you. Therefore the Creator of the
world, who shaped the beginning of man and devised the origin of all things,
will in his mercy give life and breath back to you again, since you now forget
yourselves for the sake of his laws. . . Look at the heaven and the earth and
see everything that is in them, and recognize that God did not make them out of
things that existed. Thus also mankind comes into being.147
298 Since God could
create everything out of nothing, he can also, through the Holy Spirit, give
spiritual life to sinners by creating a pure heart in them,148 and
bodily life to the dead through the Resurrection. God "gives life to the dead
and calls into existence the things that do not exist."149 and
since God was able to make light shine in darkness by his Word, he can also
give the light of faith to those who do not yet know him.150
God creates an ordered
and good world
299 Because God creates
through wisdom, his creation is ordered: "You have arranged all things by measure
and number and weight."151 The
universe, created in and by the eternal Word, the "image of the invisible
God", is destined for and addressed to man…
Benedict XVI: “All things come from the Word, they are products of the Word.
"In the beginning was the Word". In the beginning the heavens spoke.
And thus reality was born of the Word, it is "creatura Verbi". All is created from the Word and all
is called to serve the Word. This means that all of creation, in the end, is
conceived of to create the place of encounter between God and his creature, a
place where the history of love between God and his creature can develop. "Omnia serviunt tibi". The history
of salvation is not a small event, on a poor planet, in the immensity of the
universe. It is not a minimal thing which happens by chance on a lost planet.
It is the motive for everything, the motive for creation. Everything is created
so that this story can exist, the encounter between God and his creature. In
this sense, salvation history, the Covenant, precedes creation. During the
Hellenistic period, Judaism developed the idea that the Torah would have preceded the creation of the material world.
This material world seems to have been created solely to make room for the Torah, for this Word of God that
creates the answer and becomes the history of love. The mystery of Christ
already is mysteriously revealed here. This is what we are told in the Letter
to the Ephesians and to the Colossians: Christ is the protòtypos, the first-born of creation, the idea for which the universe was
conceived. He welcomes all. We enter in the movement of the universe by uniting
with Christ. One can say that, while material creation is the condition for the
history of salvation, the history of the Covenant is the true cause of the
cosmos. We reach the roots of being by reaching the mystery of Christ, his
living word that is the aim of all creation.”[1]
…himself created in the
"image of God" and called to a personal relationship with God.152 Our
human understanding, which shares in the light of the divine intellect, can
understand what God tells us by means of his creation, though not without great
effort and only in a spirit of humility and respect before the Creator and his
work.153 Because
creation comes forth from God's goodness,
it shares in that goodness - "and
God saw that it was good. . . very
good"154- for God willed creation as a gift addressed to man, an inheritance
destined for and entrusted to him. On many occasions the Church has had to
defend the goodness of creation, including that of the physical world.155
Me: What is meant by
“good” in CCC? Veritatis Splendor: “Only God can answer the question
about the good, because he is the Good. But God has already given an answer to
this question: he did so by creating man
and ordering him with wisdom and love to his final end, through the law
which is inscribed in his heart (cf. Rom. 2, 15), the ‘natural law.’ The latter
is ‘is nothing other than the light of understanding infused in us by God,
whereby we understand what must be done and what must be avoided. God gave this
light and this law to man at creation.’
CCC
#1955: “The ‘divine and natural’ law[2]
shows man the way to follow so as to practice the good and attain his end. The
natural law states the first and essential precepts which govern the moral
life. It hinges upon the desire[3]
for God and submission to him, who is the source that the other is one’s equal.
Its principal precepts are expressed in the Decalogue. This law is called
‘natural,’ not in reference to the nature of irrational beings, but because
reason which decrees it properly belongs to human nature:
Where then are these rules written, if not in the book of that
light we call the truth? In it is written every just law; from it the law
passes into the heart of the man who does justice, not that it migrates into
it, but it places its imprint on it, like a seal on a ring that passes onto
wax, without leaving the ring. (St. Augustine, De Trin. 14, 15, 21).
The natural law is nothing other than the light of understanding
placed in us by God through it we know what we must do and what we must avoid.
God has given this light or law at the creation.[4]
God transcends creation and is present to it:
300 God is infinitely greater than all his works: “You have set
your glory above the heavens.”156 Indeed, God’s
“greatness is unsearchable”.157 But
because he is the free and sovereign Creator, the first cause of all that
exists, God is present to his creatures’ inmost being: “In him we live and move
and have our being.” Acts 17, 28 In
the words of St. Augustine, God is “higher than my highest and more inward than
my innermost self”. St. Augustine, Conf. 3,
56, 11
Me: Rev. Gerald B. Phelan (Co-founder of the Pontifical Institute of
Mediaeval Studies with Etienne Gilson at St. Michaels’s College, University of
Toronto) commented that he was taught at Louvain that esse is the only act which "God gives when he
creates,"[5]
and understood it to mean that "God gives esse and nothing more .... Just nothing but esse, writ small."[6]
"The act of existence (esse),"
says
Phelan,
"is not a state, it is an act and not as
any static definable object of conception. Esse is dynamic impulse,
energy, act- the first, the most persistent and enduring of all dynamisms, all
energies, all acts.[7]
In all things on earth, the act of being (esse) is the consubstantial
urge of nature, a restless, striving force, carrying each being (ens) onward,
from within the depths of its own reality to its full self-achievement ...”[8]
Me: And so, in creating, God, Who (in the Thomistic metaphysic),
is Ipsum Esse Subsistens, gives esse
as the act of all further acts. That is, all doing (agere) comes from being (esse).
And thus, God is most intimate and present all to all of His creation.
God upholds and sustains creation
301 With creation, God does
not abandon his creatures to themselves. He not only gives them being and
existence, but also, and at every moment, upholds and sustains them in being,
enables them to act and brings them to their final end. Recognizing this utter
dependence with respect to the Creator is a source of wisdom and freedom, of
joy and confidence:
“For you love all things
that exist, and detest none of the things that you have made; for you would not
have made anything if you had hated it. How would anything have endured, if you
had not willed it? Or how would anything not called forth by you have been
preserved? You spare all things, for they are yours, O Lord, you who love the
living.” Wisdom 11, 24
V. GOD CARRIES OUT HIS
PLAN: DIVINE PROVIDENCE
302 Creation has its own
goodness and proper perfection, but it did not spring forth complete from the
hands of the Creator. The universe was created "in a state of
journeying" (in statu viae) toward an ultimate perfection yet to be
attained, to which God has destined it. We call "divine providence"
the dispositions by which God guides his creation toward this perfection:
By his providence God
protects and governs all things which he has made, "reaching mightily from
one end of the earth to the other, and ordering all things well". For
"all are open and laid bare to his eyes", even those things which are
yet to come into existence through the free action of creatures.Vat. 1, Dei Filius 1
303 The witness of
Scripture is unanimous that the solicitude of divine providence is concrete and
immediate; God cares for all, from the least things to the great events of the
world and its history. The sacred books powerfully affirm God's absolute
sovereignty over the course of events: "Our God is in the heavens; he does
whatever he pleases."162 and
so it is with Christ, "who opens and no one shall shut, who shuts and no
one opens".163 As
the book of Proverbs states: "Many are the plans in the mind of a man, but
it is the purpose of the LORD that will be established."164
304 And so we see the
Holy Spirit, the principal author of Sacred Scripture, often attributing
actions to God without mentioning any secondary causes. This is not a
"primitive mode of speech", but a profound way of recalling God's
primacy and absolute Lordship over history and the world,165 and
so of educating his people to trust in him. The prayer of the Psalms is the
great school of this trust.1Psalm 22, 32, 35, 103, 138…
305 Jesus asks for
childlike abandonment to the providence of our heavenly Father who takes care
of his children's smallest needs: "Therefore do not be anxious, saying,
"What shall we eat?" or "What shall we drink?". . . Your
heavenly Father knows that you need them all. But seek first his kingdom and
his righteousness, and all these things shall be yours as well."1Mt. 6, 31-33
Providence and secondary causes
306 God is the sovereign
master of his plan. But to carry it out he also makes use of his creatures'
co-operation. This use is not a sign of weakness, but rather a token of
almighty God's greatness and goodness. For God grants his creatures not
only their existence, but also the dignity of acting on their own,
of being causes and principles [9]for
each other, and thus of co-operating in the accomplishment of his plan.
Me: The Christian anthropology of Vatican II (GS #24) is essential
here. Two large principles are at work: 1) Subjects: Being created in
the image of the Son, rational creatures (persons) must not only receive being
[esse] but also must be related to by affirmation (love: grace) in order to
have the identity of personal subjects; but also 2) Relational: having
this identity and autonomy, exercise it freely by determining self to act in this
way or that. Hence, Gaudium et spes #24: “Indeed, the Lord Jesus, when He
prayed to the Father, ‘that all may be one…as we are one’ (Jn. 17, 21-22)
opened up vistas closed to human reason, for He implied a certain likeness
between the union of the divine Persons and the unity of God’s sons in truth
and charity. This likeness reveals that man, who is the only earthly creature
that God willed for itself, cannot fully find himself except through a sincere
gift of himself.” And so, as “the Son
can do nothing of himself, but only what he sees the Father doing” (Jn. 5, 19),
so also, “without me, you can do nothing” (Jn. 15, 6).
Keep in mind: the anthropology that is at play throughout here is not Greek
[individual substance]but Christian [relational subject]. Christ is the meaning
of man (GS #22). And Christ is Priest. Hebrews 9, 11-13: “But when Christ appeared, as high priest of the good things to come,
he entered once for all through the greater and more perfect tabernacle, not
made by hands (that is, not of this creat ion), nor again by virtue of blood of
goats and calves, but by virtue of his own blood, into the Holies…” Christ
mediates between Himself and the Father, Priest of His own existence. In
Christ, this is autonomy. In us, it is “theonomy”[10]
because we really do it with proper causality, but not without being created
and loved by Christ. We know who we are by knowing who He is. By obeying His
Commandments, we fulfill ourselves in freedom[11].
It would be “heteronomous” if we obeyed God simpily as “”Other”, but not as
images. When we freely determine
ourselves according to God’s revelation of Himself and us as images of Him,
307 To human beings God
even gives the power of freely sharing in his providence by entrusting them
with the responsibility of "subduing" the earth and having dominion
over it.Gen. 1, 26-28 God thus enables men to be intelligent and free causes
in order to complete the work of creation, to perfect its harmony for
their own good and that of their neighbors. Though often unconscious
collaborators with God's will, they can also enter deliberately into the divine
plan by their actions, their prayers and their sufferings.169 They
then fully become "God's fellow workers" and co-workers for his
kingdom.[12]
308 The truth that God is at work in all the
actions of his creatures is inseparable from faith in God the Creator. God is
the first cause who operates in and through secondary causes: "For God is
at work in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure."Phil. 2, 13 Far from diminishing the creature's dignity, this truth
enhances it. Drawn from nothingness by God's power, wisdom and goodness, it can
do nothing if it is cut off from its origin, for "without a Creator the
creature vanishes."172 Still
less can a creature attain its ultimate end without the help of God's grace.173
Me:
The Mission of Jesus
Christ: The Kingdom of God. “The
time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the
Gospel” (Mk. 1, 14-15; cf. Mt. 4, 17; Lk. 4, 43). “The proclamation and
establishment of God’s kingdom are the purpose of his mission: ‘I was sent for
this purpose’ (Lk. 4, 43).”[13]
“Christ not only proclaimed the kingdom, but
in him the kingdom itself became present and was fulfilled… ‘Above all… the
kingdom is made manifest in the very person of Christ, Son of God and Son of
Man, who came to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many’ (Mk. 10, 45).
The kingdom of God is not a concept, a doctrine, or a program subject to free
interpretation, but it is before all else a person with the face and name of
Jesus of Nazareth, the image of the invisible God.”[14]
Locution to our Father (8/7/31 during Mass): (The Mission of the Work – “a sea without
shores”): J"And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will
draw all things to myself" [Jn. 12, 32]
and "You are my son (Psalm 2, 7),
you are Christ." He commented years later that he
understood Christ saying those words “not in the sense in which in
which Scripture says them. I say [them] to you in the sense that you
are to raise me up in all human activities, in the sense that all over
the world there should be Christians with a personal and most free dedication,
that they be other Christs." [15]
- PAUL II AND THE TRUTH ABOUT FREEDOM
Providence and the scandal of evil
309 If God the Father almighty,
the Creator of the ordered and good world, cares for all his creatures, why
does evil exist? To this question, as pressing as it is unavoidable and as
painful as it is mysterious, no quick answer will suffice. Only Christian faith
as a whole constitutes the answer to this question: the goodness of creation, the
drama of sin and the patient love of God who comes to meet man by his
covenants, the redemptive Incarnation of his Son, his gift of the Spirit, his
gathering of the Church, the power of the sacraments and his call to a blessed
life to which free creatures are invited to consent in advance, but from which,
by a terrible mystery, they can also turn away in advance. There is not a
single aspect of the Christian message that is not in part an answer to the
question of evil.
Me:
Why evil? To reveal Love. If “good” is self-gift, then evil is
“self-referential” and, as the Pope says, “sick.”
A companion question:
Why suffering? John Paul II:
“Suffering must serve for conversion, that is, for the rebuilding of goodness in the
subject, who can recognize the divine mercy in this call to repentance. The
purpose of penance is to overcome evil[16],
which under different forms lies dormant in man. Its purpose is also to
strengthen goodness both in man himself and in his relationships with others
and especially with God.
13. But in order
to perceive the true answer to the ‘why’ of suffering, we must look to the
revelation of divine love, the ultimate
source of the meaning of everything that exists. Love is also the richest
source of the meaning of suffering, which always remains a mystery: we are
conscious of the insufficiency and inadequacy of our explanations. Christ
causes us to enter into the mystery and to discover the why of suffering, as far
as we are capable of grasping the sublimity of divine love.”[17]
310 But why did God not
create a world so perfect that no evil could exist in it?[18]
With infinite power God could always create something better.174 But
with infinite wisdom and goodness God freely willed to create a world "in
a state of journeying" towards its ultimate perfection…
Me: “ultimate
perfection” consists in becoming “Love” (Agape) = loving the enemy.
…. In God's plan this
process of becoming involves the appearance of certain beings and the
disappearance of others, the existence of the more perfect alongside the less
perfect, both constructive and destructive forces of nature. With physical good
there exists also physical evil as long as creation has not reached perfection.175
311 Angels and men, as
intelligent and free creatures, have to journey toward their ultimate destinies
by their free choice and preferential love. They can therefore go astray.
Indeed, they have sinned. Thus has moral evil, incommensurably more harmful
than physical evil, entered the world. God is in no way, directly or
indirectly, the cause of moral evil.176 He
permits it, however, because he respects the freedom of his creatures and,
mysteriously, knows how to derive good from it:
For almighty God. . .,
because he is supremely good, would never allow any evil whatsoever to exist in
his works if he were not so all-powerful and good as to cause good to emerge
from evil itself.177
312 In time we can
discover that God in his almighty providence can bring a good from the
consequences of an evil, even a moral evil, caused by his creatures: "It was not you", said Joseph to
his brothers, "who sent me here, but God. . . You meant evil against me;
but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept
alive."178 From the greatest
moral evil ever committed - the rejection and murder of God's only Son, caused
by the sins of all men - God, by his grace that "abounded all the
more",179 brought the
greatest of goods: the glorification of Christ and our redemption. But for all
that, evil never becomes a good.
313 "We know that in
everything God works for good for those who love him."180 The
constant witness of the saints confirms this truth:
St. Catherine of Siena said to "those who are scandalized and rebel against what
happens to them": "Everything comes from love, all is
ordained for the salvation of man, God does nothing without this goal in
mind."181
St. Thomas More, shortly before his martyrdom, consoled his daughter: "Nothing can come but that that God wills. And I make me very sure that whatsoever that be, seem it never so bad in sight, it shall indeed be the best."182
Dame Julian of Norwich: "Here I was taught by the grace of God that I should steadfastly keep me in the faith... and that at the same time I should take my stand on and earnestly believe in what our Lord shewed in this time - that 'all manner (of) thing shall be well.'"183
St. Thomas More, shortly before his martyrdom, consoled his daughter: "Nothing can come but that that God wills. And I make me very sure that whatsoever that be, seem it never so bad in sight, it shall indeed be the best."182
Dame Julian of Norwich: "Here I was taught by the grace of God that I should steadfastly keep me in the faith... and that at the same time I should take my stand on and earnestly believe in what our Lord shewed in this time - that 'all manner (of) thing shall be well.'"183
314 We firmly believe
that God is master of the world and of its history. But the ways of his
providence are often unknown to us. Only at the end, when our partial knowledge
ceases, when we see God "face to face",184 will
we fully know the ways by which - even through the dramas of evil and sin - God
has guided his creation to that definitive sabbath rest185 for
which he created heaven and earth.
[1]
Benedict XVI, Keynote address, Synod on the Word of God October 6, 2008,
2.
[2]
GS #89, 1: “Since, in virtue of her mission received from God, the Church
preaches the Gospel to all men and dispenses the treasures of grace, she
contributes to the ensuring of peace everywhere on earth and to the placing of
the fraternal exchange between men on solid ground by imparting knowledge of
the divine and natural law.”
[3]
CCC #27: The Desire for God: The desire for God is written in the human
heart, because man is created by God and for God; and God never ceases to draw
man to himself. Only in God will he find the truth and happiness he never stops
searching for.
[4]
In the spirit of Johannine theology, Basil knows that love
consists in keeping the commandments. For this reason, the spark of love which
has been put into us by the Creator, means this: "We have received interiorly
beforehand the capacity and disposition for observing all divine commandments
... These are not something imposed from without." Referring everything
back to its simple core, Augustine adds: "We could never judge that one
thing is better than another if a basic understanding of the good had not
already been instilled in us."
This means that the first so-called
ontological level of the phenomenon conscience consists in the fact that
something like an original memory of the good and true (both are identical) has
been implanted in us, that there is an inner ontological tendency
within man, who is created in the likeness of God, toward the divine [My emphasis]. From its origin, man's being resonates
with some things and clashes with others. This anamnesis of the origin, which
results from the godlike constitution of our being is not a conceptually
articulated knowing, a store of retrievable contents. It is so to speak an
inner sense, a capacity to recall, so that the one whom it addresses, if he is
not turned in on himself, hears its echo from within. He sees: "That's it!
That is what my nature points to and seeks."
The possibility for, and right to
"mission" rest on this anamnesis of the creator which is identical to
the ground of our existence. The Gospel may, indeed, must be proclaimed to the
pagans because they themselves are yearning for it in the hidden recesses of
their souls (cf. Is 42:4). Mission is vindicated then when those addressed
recognize in the encounter with the word of the Gospel that this indeed is what
they have been waiting for. In this sense, Paul can say: the Gentiles are a law
to themselves—not in the sense of modern liberal notions of autonomy which
preclude transcendence of the subject, but in the much deeper sense that
nothing belongs less to me than I myself. My own I is the site of the
profoundest surpassing of self and contact with Him from whom I came and toward
Whom I am going. In these sentences, Paul expresses the experience which he had
as missionary to the Gentiles and which Israel may have experienced before him
in dealings with the "god-fearing." Israel could have experienced
among the Gentiles what the ambassadors of Jesus Christ found reconfirmed.
Their proclamation answered an expectation. Their proclamation encountered an
antecedent basic knowledge of the essential constants of the will of God which
came to be written down in the commandments, which can be found in all cultures
and which can be all the more clearly elucidated the less an overbearing
cultural bias distorts this primordial knowledge. The more man lives in the
"fear of the Lord"—consider the story of Cornelius (especially Acts
10:34-35)—the more concretely and clearly effective this anamnesis becomes.
[5]
G.B. Phelan, "Being, Order and Knowledge," Selected
Papers (Toronto: PIMS (Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies) 1967), 127.
[6]
Ibid., 126-27.
[7]
St. Thomas, Summa Theologica, I, 4, 1, ad 3: Esse is
the most perfect of all things, for it is compared to all things as that by which
they are made actual; for nothing has actuality except in so far as it exists.
Hence esse is that which actuates all things, even their forms. Therefore it is
not compared to other things as the receiver is to the received; but rather as
the received to the receiver. When therefore I speak of the esse of man, or
horse, or anything else, esse is considered a formal principle, and as
something received; and not as that which exists.
[8]
Ibid., `The Existentialism of St. Thomas," 77.
[10]
Veritatis Splendor #41-42.
[11]
“If you abide in my word, you will be my disciples indeed. You will know the
truth, and the truth will make you free.”
[12]
1 Cor. 3, 9: “We are God’s helpers.”
[13]
John Paul II, “Mission of the Redeemer” 13.
[14]
Ibid. 18.
[15]
J. Coverdale, Uncommon Faith Scepter (2002) 90.
[16]“(F)or me, sin is not a stain I need
to clean. What I must do is ask for forgiveness and reconcile myself to it, not
go to the dry cleaner around the corner. I need to go and find Jesus, who gave
His life for me. This is an idea that is quite different from sin. In other
words: sin properly assumed is the privileged place of personally finding Jesus
Christ our Savior, of rediscovering the deep meaning that He has for me. In
short, it is the possibility to live the wonder of having been saved.”
Bergoglio is asked about “a growing
indifference toward religion on the one hand, and a strong search for religion
on the other, not always through
orthodox ways:
“Exactly. There is a denial of God due to
secularization, the selfish egoism of humanity. And there are a thousand ways
to search for God that require one to be careful not to fall into a consumer
experience or, at its extreme, a kind of ‘immanent transcendence,’ that still
does not result in true piety. What happens is that it is more difficult to
enter into personal contact with God, a God that waits for me and loves. The
pantheism in the air, like a spray, does not last. At the end of this kind of
search we need some kind of idol, and we end up adoring a tree or seeing God on
a tree;” Francesca Ambrogetti and Sergio Rubin, Pope
Francis, His Life in His Own Words Putnam 2010, 120-122.
[17]
John Paul II, On the Christian Meaning of Human Suffering,” #12 and 13; 2/11/84
[18]
I add: Mt. 5, 43-48: “You have heard that it was said, ‘Thou shalt love thy
neighbor, and shalt hate thy enemy./ But I say to you, love our enemies… ‘be perfect even as your heavenly Father is
perfect.”
No comments:
Post a Comment