Posted on 02/26/2011 8:59:48 AM PST by Salvation
Many people think of the Word of God as an it when in fact, the Word of God is a person, Jesus Christ. Jesus did not come merely to give us information and exhortation. He came to give us his very self. He is the Word made Flesh.
Pope Benedict makes this point in his most recent document, the Post Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Verbum Domini. I want to give an excerpt and then reflect briefly upon it.
[There is a] statement made by the author of the Letter to the Hebrews: In many and various ways God spoke of old to our fathers by the prophets; but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world (1:1-2) .. Here the Word finds expression not primarily in discourse, concepts or rules. Here we are set before the very person of Jesus. His unique and singular history is the definitive word which God speaks to humanity. We can see, then, why being Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a definitive direction . . the Word became flesh and dwelt among us (Jn 1:14a). These words are no figure of speech; they point to a lived experience! Saint John, an eyewitness, tells us so: We have beheld his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth ( Jn 1:14b). .. Now the word is not simply audible; not only does it have a voice, now the word has a face .(Verbum Domini 11-12)
The Word of God is not merely on the pages of a book. The Word of God is not just an idea or ethical system. The Word of God is not just a set of teachings or doctrines. The Word of God is Jesus Christ. And to really grasp this Word can only take place when we meet Him, experience Him and His power active in our lives.
It is a danger to turn Scripture into an abstraction or just a text. St Thomas Aquinas says, The Son is the Word, not any sort of word, but one Who breathes forth Love. Hence Augustine says (De Trin. ix 10): The Word we speak of is knowledge with love. Thus the Son is sent not in accordance with [just] any kind of intellectual perfection, but according to the intellectual illumination, which breaks forth into the affection of love, as is said (John 6:45): Everyone that hath heard from the Father and hath learned, cometh to Me. (Summa Prima Pars, 43.5 ad 2).
Hence we cannot really grasp Scripture unless we have met Jesus Christ. Further, to authentically read Sacred Scripture is to more and more encounter Jesus Christ there. Before we analyze a text of Scripture we are summoned to encounter the one who is speaking to us.
It is surely possible for some, even secular scholar to analyze a Greek text of Holy Writ and parse its verbs. Perhaps another scholar can analyze idioms, or the historical context. Such research can help us understand what the text is saying at a mechanistic level. But only a deepening and personal knowledge of Jesus Christ can help us to know what the text really means. It is this personal, historical, and on-going encounter with Jesus Christ that distinguishes true theology from mere religious study or literary criticism.
Indeed, theologians and Scripture scholars are dangerous if they do not personally know Jesus Christ. To know Jesus is not the same as to know about Jesus. I might know about Jesus Christ from a book or from some other person. But it is not enough to know about him. I must know him. To be a true authority in Scripture requires that we have met and know the author. Do you see the word author in authority?
Note how the Pope quotes the Prologue of Johns Gospel . . the Word became flesh and dwelt among us (Jn 1:14a). and then says, These words are no figure of speech; they point to a lived experience! The Pope also says above in reference to the Hebrews 1 text: Here we are set before the very person of Jesus.
In the Liturgical context of Scripture this fact is enshrined in our ritual. As the Priest or Deacon proclaims the Gospel, all the people stand out of respect. For, it is Christ himself who speaks to them and whom they encounter in this proclamation of the Word. At the conclusion of the proclamation of the Gospel, they acknowledge that they are encountering Jesus as they say to him personally: Laus tibi Christe! (Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ).
Hence, Scripture, and the wider concept of the Word of God, authentically interpreted by the Church, is not merely a book or a set of ideas. It is an encounter with a living God, the Lord Jesus Christ. The Word of God is a person, Jesus Christ.
Perhaps a couple of quick stories to illustrate the difference between seeing Scripture merely as a text, and seeing it as an encounter with the Word made flesh, Jesus.
1. A rural Appalachian community was visited by a Shakespearean actor. They were amazed at his elegant but strange way of speaking. At one moment in his public recital he recited the 23rd Psalm. The words were elegant, pronounced in finest King James English with great drama and flair. At the end of his recitation a strange silence filled the room. Where applause would usually follow, an awkward silence ensued. Finally a poor farmer in the back of the room stood and apologized that no one knew to applaud and that they meant no offense but they just werent sure he was done. See, out in these parts we say it a little different. The poor farmer then began, The Loerd is mah shayperd . When he completed the psalm the room was filled with amens and praise the Lords. The Shakespearean actor then told the poor farmer, I was elegant, but your words had greater power. That is because I know only the technique, but you know the author.
2. Some years ago I heard a Black AME Preacher address an ecumenical gathering at a revival. And he said to the gathered, You know I heard some strange stuff in seminary! The professors said Jesus never really walked on water, that he didnt really multiply loaves and fishes, he just got folks to be generous. They said, he didnt really know he was God, or rise from the dead. He just lives on in our thoughts or something ..Can you believe they taught me that in a Christian seminary?! Through his description of these wretched teachings the moans and disapproval in the congregation of Protestants and Catholics were audible. He built his litany of faulty scholarship and you could hear folks saying, Lord have mercy! and mah, mah, mah. And then he stopped and mopped his brow, and looked at them and said, I tell you what! The problem with them wasnt that they read the wrong books, yall. The problem with them was that they aint never met my Jesus! Well the house came down and folks were on their feet for ten minutes praising God. The Choir too leapt to their feet and began the familiar chorus: Cant nobody do me like Jesus, hes my Lord!
Well, you get the point, when youve met Jesus Christ you just dont doubt that he walked on the water, multiplied loaves, raised Lazarus, knew perfectly well that he was God and stepped out of the tomb on Easter morning.
The Word of God is not merely a text. It is a person, Jesus Christ, the Logos, the Word made flesh. And once youve met him his spoken (and later written word) begins to make greater and greater sense and there is just no doubt that this Word is true and powerful.
Let me let Pope Benedict conclude as we recall his words above: the Word finds expression not primarily in discourse, concepts or rules. Here we are set before the very person of Jesus .These words are no figure of speech; they point to a lived experience! Saint John, an eyewitness, tells us so: We have beheld his glory, the glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth."
Actual title: Getting Personal With the Word of God A powerful reflection by Pope Benedict on the true Reality of the Word of God
If we were given a copy of “The Story of a Soul” by St. Therese or a copy of original music by Bach or Beethoven, would not we be very respectful of the person who haded us their work of literature or music??
So why don’t some people respect the Bible?
Why don’t we all respect the Word of God?? (And follow it?)
All of it — that is......all the books of the Bible?
Catholic Ping!
Society has bought into the idea that each person can have their own truth and what is truth for one person is just as valid as any other truth someone asserts. This means that whenever something is open to a degree of individual interpretation it becomes less respected since every interpretation is equally valid. If all truths are equally valid, there is no single standard for truth and no reason to respect Scripture as such.
Progressing from individual conscience as your guide when Scripture is silent, to conscience is equal to Scripture, to what we have now where individual conscience superceeds Scripture, is a clear progression of decreasing respect for the Bible.
Regards
I think Pope Benedict’s expertise as a Biblical Theologian makes him the perfect Pope for this time.
I was reading Amazon’s reviews of “Jesus of Nazareth” and was struck by the number of Protestants who gave it 5 stars. Many reading the book came in looking for Catholic dogma and perceived bias.
What they found was a man who puts and emphasis on Jesus Christ and our personal relationship with Him. Benedict uses Scripture intensely throughout the book.
As Christians, it is about Jesus Christ. Jesus of Nazareth, the book is a reflection on Him, the Word of God.
If you are touched by Jesus of Nazareth, the classic movie. Read this book. It is powerful.
I should note that I recently downloaded Jesus of Nazareth, on my Kindle....hard to put it down.
WHEN READ AFTER DEEP PRAYER, THE BIBLE SPEAKS TO US AS LIVING DOCUMENT
All we need to know is in Scripture. But it is more than words. It is a living document. Its phrases, its sentence, its anecdotes, its accounts say different things at different times in our lives.
In prayer the Bible actually speaks to us.
Have you noted how different passages mean different things at different times — corresponding, often, with events in your life?
That’s because the Bible is a supernatural and living document.
And that’s how we know for certain (along of course with the confirmation of the Church) that it’s the Word of God.
His Word is the bread of life and in deep prayer phrases from Proverbs or Psalms or the New Testament vivify — even dance — before us.
It is alive because it’s from the living waters!
Pray deeply, and at the most powerful stage of prayer, read the Bible.
Don’t do it like tea leaves. Don’t do it as augury. Don’t open it and let your fingers fall at random on a page and treat it like a divining rod.
It may work that way — at times. The Spirit moves as He will. But it’s not just to predict matters. It is to place the events of our lives in context and instruct us on real inner development.
You may be seeking guidance, and the Bible may well provide a course, but more likely it will simply speak to the depths of your spirit.
Let it cleanse you. Let it reach your innermost being. It does this through prayer. The Scriptural Rosary is a splendid way of getting into the frame of spirit.
Read Scripture during Mass. Really follow the reading. How many times have the readings (when you listened) been pertinent?
The passage that my wife opened to right after the very first time we met was the passage: “What God has joined together, let no man put asunder.”
We recall a former atheist who converted after a near-death experience. In the alleged company of angels, he was told precisely this: to pray and let Scripture speak.
“The Bible resonated with truth as I had been given it,” said this man, Dr. Howard Storm, of his alleged conversation with several angels, and then the aftermath. “After weeks it dawned on me that I was not the first person to discover the Bible and find the truth. God speaks directly to us through the testimony of men and women written thousands of years ago. The more I read the Bible the more enthusiastic I became. There are frequent times when you are reading the Bible that the Spirit of God speaks directly to you. You shout inside, ‘Yes! Yes! Yes!’ It is like discovering a magnificent jewel.”
It can also be like discovering a life preserver.
“When I read the Bible slowly, prayerfully, openly, it was like having a conversation with God,” he recounted of his conversion. “It was, and still is, as if the words were alive. They resonated with vitality and excitement in my mind, as if I was engaged in a conversation with the Divine.
“This was surprising since I had tried to read the Bible on a few occasions in the past, and I had found it dry, lifeless, and confusing. The difference was how I approached it.
“If you sincerely ask the Bible to speak to you, and read slowly, listening to every word, it speaks to your mind and becomes alive in your imagination. The more you allow it to speak, the more vivid it becomes.”
Indeed. Pray. Read. Listen. Let God speak where He does loudest: in the deep silence of a trusting heart.
Thanks for the recommendation.
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