Do you remember Mike, the young man from Monday diary? No matter where he looked, he did not see
God. He knew there was not such “thing” as God. How odd it is then that for the attentive believer,
it is difficult to look and not see God.
He reveals a bit of Himself in all of creation just like the artists
reveals a bit of himself in his artwork.
He not only reveals Himself in His works, but through His deeds.
Mike will buy anything scientific that such people tell
him. He does not have to see it, taste
it, hear it, feel it, or smell it personally, but because scientists tell him
that it is so and he trusts them and he “believes” it. (Thus is he a man of faith and dogma.) I understand that in theory he could do all the experiments to prove it
to himself, though it would take a great many lifetimes.
In a similar way, the Testaments are chuck full of people
telling us that God does exist because they (heard Him, touched Him, saw Him .
. .). For some reason, these persons are
easy to discount. Whereas scientists may
less likely be discounted, people of faith, in Mike’s world, almost always
are. Anyone before the modern era is
considered inferior intellectually and could never recount phenomena accurately. (What will future generations say of us? How primitive and barbaric we may seem those
in the future! But are there not truths
we can know now? Can we not know there
is more to life than what we can touch, feel, see, taste, and hear? Is not the universe so much bigger than what
we can put at the end of a telescope?)
And through this relationship with God, we have been told to
expect Savior right from the first moment we needed one beginning with the
proto-Gospel of Genesis 3:15 and continually throughout the Old Testament
making Christ the only founder of a major religion that was foretold by
prophets.
As St. Thomas said, “To one who has faith, no explanation is
necessary. To one without faith, no explanation
is possible.”
1 comment:
Dear father,
For me, as a Roman Catholic
physician/scientist in the 21st century I have no conflict between faith and science. For me, science tells me how God does things and faith tells me why. He loves us.
Maybe if I were smarter, maybe if I were "cooler" I would have conflict between faith and science.
Oh well,so sad. Too bad.
Stephen Stone
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