Nov 17 2014

On God’s Providence

In the opening lines of the Liturgy of the Hours—known as the invitatory psalm—the Church professes of God, “He holds in his hands the depths of the earth.” Which means God holds in his hands the depths of my life: all my worries, my troubles, my nagging concerns big and small, my challenges, my struggles, my phobias. Nothing is beyond the reach of his tender, infallible protectorship. God’s loving providence shepherds the minutest details of our daily life. The high eternal Father says to Saint Catherine of Siena in theDialogue, “I am constantly providing for what you need at any given time. I am that supreme providence who never betrays my servants’ hope in me in soul or body.”

The above comes from “Have You Asked God What It Is He Wants?” by Fr. Peter Cameron, O.P. the Editor-in-Chief at Magnificat. The article may be from a couple of years ago, but it’s a nice meditation on God’s providence.

Permanent link to this article: http://3optn.com/main/archives/882

Nov 16 2014

Exegesis via Rosary

rosary-hands-istock-montageOne of the questions that comes up when you start thinking about Scriptures is how to correctly interpret the Scriptures. That would be exegesis the drawing out of meaning from the Bible versus eisegesis which is interpreting in a way that puts your views into Scripture. There are many tools from a variety of viewpoints that help us with the literal interpretation of Scripture. The spiritual interpretation, built on the literal, can be even tougher. Today I ran across an article on the Inebriate Me blog about how the Rosary leads us to that correct interpretation. It’s worth a read.

To “open the Scrolls,” then, we must do so from the heart of the Church. In other words, we must, like the Church, be like Mary, and be blessed because we heard the Word and keep it. It is Mary who helps us unlock the Scriptures.

Permanent link to this article: http://3optn.com/main/archives/879

Nov 14 2014

The Threads Come Together

Over the past few days of surfing my regular sites on the internet there have been a number of stories that stood out because in one way or another they tied together. So let me begin by gathering the threads.

First there was a homily given by Pope Francis on November 7th where “Pope Francis urged the faithful against living as lukewarm pagans who are merely Christian in name, for these are ‘enemies of the Cross.'”

Next is the 2014 Erasmus Lecture given by Archbishop Chaput that I saw mentioned by last months speaker at our chapter meeting Joan Watson. One of these days I’ll have to track down all of these lectures available online as the 1988 lecture by then Cardinal Ratzinger was particularly thought provoking. Archbishop Chaput’s lecture is titled “Strangers in a Strange Land” and can be found in video and pdf formats. The entire article is worth reading and here a few pull quotes:

… in Catholic terms, Christianity is worthless as a leaven
in society unless people actually believe in Jesus Christ, follow the Gospel, love the Church and
act like real disciples with passion and purpose. If they don’t, then religion is just another form
of self-medicating. And that essentially sums up the way too many people in my generation
have lived out their baptism.

If we ignore the poor, we will go to hell. If we blind
ourselves to their suffering, we will go to hell. If we do nothing to ease their burdens; then we
will go to hell. Ignoring the needs of the poor among us is the surest way to dig a chasm of
heartlessness between ourselves and God, and ourselves and our neighbors.

We need parishes that are real antidotes to loneliness; real sources of mutual support, counseling,
sharing and friendship – not just garrisons devoted to servicing the baptized pagan.

Today there was a story by the Catholic News Agency with Robert Cardinal Sarah reminding us that “charity is very linked with the proclamation of the Gospel, and doing charity is not only giving food, giving material things, but giving God too. Because the main lack of man is not having God.”

Also today there was a report at the US Catholic Bishop’s conference on the attitude of Catholic’s in the pews to Church doctrine. Get Religion has good commentary on how this leads back to what has become the default religious belief in America of Moralistic Therapeutic Deism (MTD). The five main tenants are:

  1. “A god exists who created and ordered the world and watches over human life on earth.”
  2. “God wants people to be good, nice, and fair to each other, as taught in the Bible and by most world religions.”
  3. “The central goal of life is to be happy and to feel good about oneself.”
  4. “God does not need to be particularly involved in one’s life except when God is needed to resolve a problem.”
  5. “Good people go to heaven when they die.”

Not exactly the deposit of faith handed down by the Apostles. Fr. Longenecker has a pretty decent take on MTD and modern American Christianity.

And so after these quotes and links where are we left? Personally I’m scared. I see far too much of myself being described. The antidote is to meditate on God and the proper due He is owed. We use many terms to describe the Persons of the Holy Trinity: Father, Son, Holy Spirit, Brother, Wisdom, Lord, King. These terms shed truth, but only partial truth. We simply cannot comprehend God. He is further above us than we are above ants. As Father and King He is owed our love and respect, by divine right He is owed so much more than we can give, by the love He has shown us He is owed even more.  Beginning to think about God in such a way the mind shies away. He is too much and we are so small. The image of the burning bush comes to mind. The all consuming fire that is never consumed. Part of me longs to throw myself into the fire and hopefully like St. Ignatius give off the scent of burning bread. Of course I cannot do it with my own strength, and I am too weak and cowardly to rely on His. Day by day I will try to inch toward the fire and pray that God converts my pagan heart.

Permanent link to this article: http://3optn.com/main/archives/876

Nov 10 2014

Joan Watson – 9 November 2014

JoanWatsonBelow is the audio for the presentation given by Joan Watson at our last meeting on “The Rosary: How 1% of Your Day Can Change Lives”

 

Here is a link to the Rosary Album Booklet from the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.

Also helpful may be The Rosary with Fra Angelico and Giotto available many places including Amazon. This little booklet includes images for each Mystery from Fra Angelico and each Hail Mary has a different phrase with the final having the traditional ending.

For the guys like me who carry a Rosary and have had issues with the Rosary getting damaged, you may want to check into the Church Militant Combat Rosary. It’s a pull chain rosary like the ones issued by the military during the World Wars and I’ve been carrying it with me for over a year and no noticeable wear or tear yet.

Permanent link to this article: http://3optn.com/main/archives/871

Oct 20 2014

Schrödinger’s Womb

Once upon a time there was a scientist named Schrödinger who believed the then current interpretation of a scientific theory that seemed to show that something could both be and not be at the same time to be ridiculous. To illustrate this he devised a thought experiment now known as Schrödinger’s Cat. The summation is that a cat is placed in a box with a container of poison. Also in the box is a device that can detect if a radioactive sample has a single atom decay. If this does happen the poison is released killing the cat. If this does not happen then the cat will be unharmed. The experiment is set up in such a way that there is a 50/50 chance of this event occurring. The scientific theory in question (the Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics) would state that the cat is both alive and dead until an observer opens the box and takes a look to see if Fluffy is dead or alive. Below is a video that does a better job of explanation.

 


I’ve told this story to highlight a ridiculous aspect of modern law. If a woman is pregnant it is her decision alone that determines whether she is carrying a baby or ‘the products of conception’. For the cynical sake of attempting to make sex consequence free our society is allowing the determination of when human life ‘begins’ to be decided by individuals on a case by case basis. More bluntly society is allowing the determination of whether a specific segment of human population is to be allowed the protection of the law and the most basic of human rights, that is existence, to be determined in a manner that is mind numbingly illogical. This has set a horrible precedent that will almost certainly allow the stripping of legal protections from other groups of human beings.

If only we could apply the Copenhagen Interpretation to this unfortunate reality. As Dominicans we know that there is an outside observer who has already determined if the contents of Schrödinger’s Womb is actually a human being with the inherent rights of a human or just a clump of cells.

Permanent link to this article: http://3optn.com/main/archives/792

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