Insights
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On recovering, I thought I could make it into a decent-sized book by adding on some 20 meditations on the topics following the sequence I use for a retreat. This part constitutes Part Two of the present proposed book.
The style of English corresponds, I suppose to what was current in the 1950’s. Although over the years I have tended to preach in a conversational way.
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Insights - Peter Haverty
© 2020 Peter Haverty. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 10/28/2020
ISBN: 978-1-6655-8095-3 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-6655-8096-0 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020919971
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models,
and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
Scriptures marked RSV are taken from the REVISED STANDARD VERSION (RSV):
Scripture taken from the REVISED STANDARD VERSION, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1971.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
I would like to acknowledge and thank Frs Robert Farrell and Andrew Soane for their helpful advice along with Mrs Anne Marie Walker and the formattin by Miss Judith Sheehan.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Nature
Grace
Original Sin
Transcendental Order
PART 1
Chapter 1 God
Paragraphs 1-10 There are no agnostics. Apostasy. God’s Attributes. Everlasting Love. The Incarnation. Goodness. Sacramental Words. The Devil’s Sin. The Cause of the Fall: Bishop Challoner.
CHAPTER 2 Jesus Christ
Paragraphs 11- 20 The human predicament, Transfer, Incarnation, Redemption, Charity, Sacred Heart, the Cross, Transcendental love, Cross and suffering, drop of Blood.
CHAPTER 3 Christianity: How to Live and How to Die
Paragraphs 21 -30 Our Lord with His Death has shown us how to die. Sins against the Holy Spirit. Obstinacy in sin. Final impenitence. Spiritual envy. Transcending the Abyss. Sharing. Interior life. Holy Spirit. The insight of power.
PART II
First Step: Creation and Fall
The Devil’s Temptation of Eve
Consequences of the Fall
Effect of the Consequences of Original Sin
God’s Plan of Redemption
The Narrow Gate
Divine Filiation
Hope of Becoming Saints
Sin and Lukewarmness
Confession
The Last Things
Death
Judgment
Purgatory
Hell
Heaven
The Incarnation
The Birth of Our Lord
The Hidden Life
Public Life
The Last Supper: The New Commandment
The Passion and Death of Our Lord Jesus Christ
The Glorious Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ
The Ascension of Our Lord and the Coming of the Holy Spirit
INTRODUCTION
WHEN I FIRST THOUGHT OF writing a little book on Christianity, the idea I had in mind was something along the lines of Isaac Asimov’s ‘Words of Science’, but then I began to realise that on the one hand this would be very boring to read, and on the other difficult, if not impossible, to understand without some sort of philosophical introduction. Now, although I am starting out with a philosophical and theological introduction, it is intended to be just that, an introduction, but an introduction to make the rest of the insights understandable.
And what do I mean by insights? Well, many years ago, sitting in a library, I said to myself ‘wouldn’t it be wonderful if I had all the knowledge contained in all these books in my head?’ As the years rolled by and I had studied a certain number of books, I began to realise what a lot of copying was going on. Everybody just copied what the others before them had said and in fact each one contributed very few insights of their own, and furthermore, the ideas they themselves had contributed were rather poor. I began to realise that there were relatively few really worthwhile insights. Now, like everything else, one has one’s favourites and I realise that the ones I am presenting here may not be yours. Nevertheless, if what I have seen as profound inspirations are not your cup of tea, they may encourage you to compile your own list.
Another point has to be made and it is the point that Scheeben, the German Theologian, made in his ‘Mysteries of Christianity’, i.e. that the Christian teaching is composed of mysteries because it concerns supernatural things and therefore, we cannot fully understand them. This does not mean to say we cannot have some inkling of what they are about. These insights, then, are meant to be just that - some kind of insight into Christian mysteries.
Some basic principles to begin with:
Nature, Grace, Original Sin and the Transcendental Order
NATURE
IN PHILOSOPHICAL THINKING YOU WILL not get very far unless you understand what is meant by Nature.
Everything we know about this earth has a nature of some sort. It is the philosophical principle that makes a thing to be what it is, with its characteristic qualities. Nature is the essence of a thing. But nature adds something to the notion of essence; it means essence inasmuch as the source of activities.
Perhaps some examples may help. The old philosophy teachers used to ask their pupils: `What is it that makes a horse, a horse’? And then answer: ‘Why horseness of course’! A horse neighs, gallops, eats hay and all sorts of other things. It is its nature to do so. Then there are lots of other things it cannot do, like writing home to mother, saying he is sorry for kicking. A horse does not laugh or cry.
Contrary to what the evolutionists believe, and bear in mind that it is just a question of belief, God has given everything its nature. The vast majority of animals can see. Some insects have hundreds of eyes. Man has just two, situated at the front of his face so, although we do have peripheral vision, we can see only what lies ahead. Horses, however, have two eyes, one on each side of the head, like most shy and vulnerable animals (antelopes, deer etc) which are often preyed upon, so that they can see behind them and then run away when danger looms. Lions and tigers and other animals which prey on others, need not fear what comes from the rear and have their eyes at the front. Does this tell us something about humans? Anyway, the main point I want to make is that we will say that it is man’s nature to see. And so, anyone who is blind, is deprived of something natural.
It was St Augustine who pointed out that privation is what we call evil. The notion of evil for him, was to be lacking in something natural, that is, what belongs to that thing by nature, or, in other words, what God intended it to have.
Being able to see does not define man’s nature, since he shares it with pretty well all other animals. So, how do you define a nature? This was one of Aristotle’s concerns. As a scientist he realised that, especially in the animal world they had their animality in common with all the rest and then they had something special to them; the specific difference that made them into a species all their own.
What sets a man apart from the rest, giving us the human species, is his ability to reason, to work things out using his intelligence. So, we can say: man is a rational animal.
Now it is being able to define what man is in his nature or essence, that is - being rational, that gives us the basis of ethics or moral science. You go to an art school to become an artist - a man or woman who is better at drawing and painting. You go to a School of Engineering or a College of Technology to become a better technician or engineer – a person whose ability with machines is superior. So, what do you go to an ethics school for? Why to be a better person of course. Now, in order to be a better person, you need to know what ‘man’ is essentially. Now since man is a rational animal, he has to learn in the School of Ethics what principles he needs and then apply them so as to perform actions which are rational and lead himself to become more rational. This is why we need education.
GRACE
IN THEOLOGICAL THINKING YOU WILL not get very far unless you understand what is meant by Grace.
When God created man, he endowed him with sanctifying grace. This is a theological term meaning a quality which likens man to God. It signifies friendship with God, and is a certain participation in the divine life. The word ‘grace’ has Latin roots and signifies something freely given and also beautiful. In old English we speak of a ‘gradely lass’, meaning handsome, or good-looking. As free, therefore, grace is a gratuitous gift from God and the first man - Adam - was given this gift by God. In Genesis we read: ‘and God created man to his own image and likeness’(Gen 1:27). This is a sentence of both fact and of intent. It describes what man already is, coming from God’s hands, so-to-speak, and what God wants man to be.
Now, we have to be clear about this, because it is defined doctrine that the first man was endowed with what are called preternatural gifts; immortality, impassibility, integrity, and above all supernatural grace. But when the first man disobeyed God he lost God’s friendship and grace. But since grace is gratuitous, we cannot call it privation in the strict sense. Likewise, we cannot call the consequence of the loss of grace in Adam’s successors sin. Nevertheless, when Adam sinned through disobedience, the grace he should have bequeathed to his offspring throughout the successive generations, was withheld. Now this deprivation we call Original Sin even though Adam’s successors are without guilt. But, remember, that is all original sin is: absence of sanctifying grace. But what are we missing? What is this sanctifying grace? Given that it is supernatural we cannot really understand it. However, we can use a simple analogy: grace is to the soul what the soul is to the body - its principle of life.
When we walk through the woods and are about to step on a twig and we find it moves - it is a frog or a snake - we shout `it’s alive’. The principle of its living activities and what gives that living thing its unity is its soul. The word for soul in Latin is ‘anima’ and so we speak of inanimate things and living things; those with a soul and those without. In man, this soul is the source or principle of the spiritual actions as well as the physical actions; it is the principle of unity. This is attested in a court of law. If the accused admits that it was his fist which struck the fatal blow, he cannot say he had nothing to do with it as if he were detached from his fist; the person and the fist are one. This is important in all moral actions, namely, the connection between the person and his faculties. Here, once more, we can speak of the importance of sanctifying grace, because, just as the soul is the source of human actions, so the soul in grace enables the human being to perform supernatural actions.
Theology teaches that only supernatural actions, that is, those performed by man in a state of grace, are meritorious for eternal life. It is as if God does not recognise actions which are not supernatural. So, when a man performs actions in a state of grace, this puts him, so-to-speak, on a par with Jesus Christ, and God from Heaven, says once more, as He said when Jesus was baptised in the Jordan, ‘This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased’ (Mt 3:17). It is the objective then of every Christian - to perform these actions in a state of grace so that they are pleasing to God. Of course, there are other conditions to be fulfilled to qualify for being actions totally pleasing to God; but the main condition is fulfilled.
ORIGINAL SIN
YOU COULD SAY WE HAVE already spoken about original sin. This is partly true. We have said what it is essentially, but not what people generally think about it. In Catholic circles if someone does something wrong, people often say, ‘that’s because of original sin’, in much the same way as people from a Protestant background might suggest it was because they were destined to act in that way, or others say it was the Devil who put them up to it. Catholics say it was original sin because they confuse the sin with its consequences. When man offended God not only was his relationship with God fractured - sin - but his own nature was wounded.
An analogy from elementary physics can help. Spread some iron filings on a white sheet of paper and put a magnet underneath the paper. On tapping the sheet, the iron filings arrange themselves along the lines of magnetic force -polarisation. Take the magnet away and tap the sheet again and you will find that all the iron filings will go higgledy-piggledy again – disorder. This is what happened when man offended God, his internal order was disrupted and he lost his integrity. His body and soul which, previously, were working in perfect harmony, were henceforth at loggerheads. Furthermore, this disintegration of the body parts would end up in total corruption – death, and so man lost his immortality. Finally, all man’s faculties would deteriorate and suffer pain, so man lost his impassibility.
TRANSCENDENTAL ORDER
THE TRANSCENDENTAL ORDER IS THE opposite of the predicamental order. Loosely speaking, these two orders correspond to the uncreated order of God and the created order respectively. But let’s go step by step. Whenever I predicate something of another, I am implicitly drawing attention to its limitation. So, for example, if I say ‘Peter is a…. dog’. Until I commit myself to equating dog to Peter, Peter could be any number of things ... a parrot, or a human being.
Consequently, the operation of predication clamps down on Peter and restricts this subject to just one thing… a dog. Now dogs are generally nice things, provided they don’t bite. Lots of people have them as pets, but the minute I predicate dog of Peter, that’s Peter finished (finite) and he cannot be anything else. Take another example…. ‘Which dress shall I wear tonight? My blue dress’. Very well, blue is a beautiful colour, but by the very act of choosing the blue one, all the other dresses, red, yellow, brown etc. are eliminated. This is because all the things belong to the predicamental order. So how do I transcend it? Reduplication.
If I say, ‘Peter is a man’, this is true. I can also say ‘My dress is blue’, this is true; ‘the weather is fine’, is also true, then all these statements are true and participate in the truth.
Plato is the philosopher we have to thank for the concept of participation, although he may have got it from Socrates. We know that instead of concentrating his attention on material things and the material composition of the universe, Plato paid attention to virtues. He observed this man was truthful and this other man was truthful. And the same thing applied to goodness. This man was good and this man and this other man. All participating in the truth and goodness, but then I think this notion of participation rather went to his head because Plato decided that all the qualities of things on earth participated in a corresponding supreme idea in the World of Ideas. This exaggeration was a mistake. Not the basic principle, but the discovery that there were two different orders: the predicamental order, and the one that transcends it: the transcendental order. The latter, of course, is confined to just a certain number of true transcendental properties: Being, One, True, Good, and Thing. But we must call a halt to this philosophy lesson, at least for the time being, in the hope that enough has been said to appreciate the corresponding insights.
PART 1
CHAPTER 1
60716.pngGOD
1. THERE ARE NO AGNOSTICS
EVERYBODY BELIEVES IN GOD. IT is just that some people worship and obey a God ‘out there’ that is, a transcendental God (Christians, Jews and Muslims), and the rest a God who is identified with the universe, or part of it; in other words, a predicamental God. But what about me, I hear you cry, `I am an atheist’! An atheist is someone who hates God; well, obviously, you have to believe in God first before you can hate him! But what about pantheists? Well, I have just mentioned those; they are the ones like modern scientists who consider the world is God; that is to say self-existing or, what is the same, self-causing which, of course, is contradictory. Why then do they deny the existence of a transcendental God? Because a predicamental god is much easier to manipulate. They worship at the shrine of their own selfish pleasures and interests. They are idolaters. That is why God condemns them in the Old Testament. But let us go back to the scientists just for a moment so as to see a little bit better where they go wrong. In his book, ‘Theology and Sanity’, Frank Sheed says: ‘We have thus caught some glimpse of why the created universe exists. That must always be the primary question. Until we know why a thing exists, we cannot properly know anything else about it. Whatever details we can discover by studying it, our interpretation of the details must always be governed by our understanding of why the thing exists at all. If we are wrong about that, the details we do know are as likely to mislead us as not. But if ‘why’? is the primary question and its answer the key to all knowledge, there are other questions to be answered in due order. The question ‘why’? is followed by the question ‘how’? The universe exists