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... From the Goodnews archives, November/December 2009

 

 

God’s Word Has The Power (Part 2)

(Second of two parts of a talk delivered at the National Catholic Bible Conference June 2009 in Denver, Colorado)

 

Archbishop Charles Chaput

Archbishop CharlesThe Old Testament recalls a great renewal in the time of the priest Ezra, who led the Jewish exiles back from Babylon to rebuild Jerusalem and the Temple. The return from exile was a bleak time for the Jews. They remained under the political control of the Persian Kingdom, and back home the Samaritans and others in the land opposed their plans for rebuilding Jerusalem and its Temple. Indeed, those who returned were largely impoverished from the Babylonian captivity and had few resources for the daunting task of rebuilding Jerusalem and Judah, which had been completely destroyed by the Babylonians. Intermarriage had become a problem, and a perplexing one from Ezra’s perspective because it illustrated the people’s lack of religious commitment, even after all they had suffered in the Babylonian captivity.

As the remnant of exiles gathered in Jerusalem Ezra read, as Josiah did generations before, the “book of the law of Moses” to all the assembly “both men and women and all who could hear with understanding” (Nehemiah 8:2). Once again, the reading of God’s Word precipitated a renewal of God’s people, and this Word was intended to be heard by all God’s people, not just the professional religious or experts.

1. We need to hear the Word of God with reverence

I’d like to offer three lessons from Ezra’s renewal of Israel through Scripture. The first lesson regards the kind of piety required to hear God’s Word. When Ezra opened the book to read it, “all the people stood” in honour of God whose words were being spoken in their hearing (Nehemiah 8:5). The people’s standing while hearing God’s Word is much like our practice of standing during the reading of the Gospel, at the words of our Lord Jesus Christ. Both these acts of piety illustrate a vital point, that if we want to properly “hear” or “read” God’s Word in Scripture we must do so with reverence. Augustine said that a sincere and humble piety is the precursor to understanding Scripture; we shouldn’t forget this.

2. God’s word is always given within the context of the believing community

Second, when Ezra read the Word of God to the people he sent out leaders from the Levites who “helped the people to understand the law” and who “gave the sense so that the people understood the reading” (Nehemiah 8:7-8). God’s Word, throughout Scripture, is always given within the context of the believing community. If we take Scripture out of its ecclesial context, the Church, we will not “understand” and catch the full “sense” of God’s Word. This recalls the story of Philip in the Acts of the Apostles which we recently read during the Easter season (Acts 8:26-40). On a road through Gaza, Philip encountered an Ethiopian eunuch, the treasurer of the Queen of Ethiopia. As Philip approached the eunuch’s chariot, Philip heard him reading from Isaiah, in the very place that spoke of the Lord’s suffering servant. Philip asked the Ethiopian if he understood what he was reading (and it is worth noting that this official was reading the text in Hebrew while he was returning from a pilgrimage to the Temple in Jerusalem). The response of this court official was both honest and humble: “How can I, unless some one guides me?” (Acts 8:31). This was a favourite story of St. Jerome and many of the Church Fathers, who used the Ethiopian’s answer to illustrate the need to have members of the Church, like Ezra’s Levites, who can guide our reading of Scripture.

This doesn’t mean you need an expert at your side in order to read Scripture. As Augustine says, the Bible’s “plain language and simple style make it accessible to all” (Confessions 12.30). St. Gregory famously described Scripture as a river that has enough shallows that a lamb could cross and yet enough depth to submerge an elephant. In other words the plain sense of Scripture is open to all, but to grasp its depths we need good guides to help us navigate its riches.

This is why I strongly recommend that you find good and trustworthy guides for your study of Scripture. It’s why the Denver Catholic Biblical School has teachers who have studied the Scriptures both academically and from the heart and mind of the Church. I think our Biblical School here is so successful because people find their “Philip” who can help open up the Bible and make it come alive for them. Look for these kinds of teachers, like the ones we have here at this conference, and learn the Word so that you too can help guide others. The Church desperately needs many such guides to bring about the recovery of Scripture.

3. The Story of God guides our own stories

The third lesson from Ezra’s reform of Israel is that after he finished reading the Torah of Moses to the people, he summarized for them the narrative shape of Israel’s Scriptures (Nehemiah 9). Starting with the call of Abraham, to the Exodus, through the time of the kings and prophets, and all they way down to his own present-day return from exile, Ezra grasped the story shaped contours of what we call salvation history. It is precisely the story of God that guides our own stories. Thus to discern the meaning of our moment in history and of our own lives we must first grasp the plot of God’s story.

The scholar Christopher Thompson described this point well when he commented on Augustine’s famous insight that God has made us for himself: The overriding motif of any narrative of Christian experience is the claim that ‘God has made us for himself.’ . . . This is the drama of the revelatory narratives: that I find in them, not confirmation of myself, but the very constitution of myself. I do not place the actions of God within the horizon of my story; rather, I place my story within the action of God. (Christian Doctrine, Christina Identity: Augustine and the Narratives of Character, University Press of America, p. 99) This means that we can’t approach Scripture as if it were something that needs to be interpreted by us, but rather quite the opposite -- we need to let Scripture interpret us, our lives, and our world. To read the world in light of Scripture, as opposed to Scripture in light of the world, is the hallmark of a Christian reading.

The narrative thread of Scripture’s story weaves its way into our lives

In short, if we can discern Scripture’s story we can begin to see how the drama of that story continues today. The narrative thread of Scripture’s story can then weave its way into our lives, weaving within us the text and texture of a life that is formed by God’s Word. Augustine is right, God has made us for Himself, so any account of our own stories, our own lives, that does not make God the author and aim is just another idolatrous myth.

Authentic reform comes through the recovery of God’s Word

In addition to examples in the Old Testament, other examples abound throughout salvation history of the Church being plunged into dark times where a few faithful souls rediscover the heart of Scripture and bring about the authentic reform that comes through the recovery of God’s Word. As a Capuchin, I keep the example of St. Francis of Assisi near to my heart. Francis heard the Sermon on the Mount, not as God’s Word in the past, not as a word to others, but he heard it as God’s Word spoken to him personally.

This set Francis off on an adventure of recovery and renewal. Called to rebuild the Church in his day, Francis had a special devotion to Scripture. Indeed, it was the only book he would allow the early Franciscans to own and in his early movement any new members spent their first three years studying God’s Word, so that they would be faithful heralds of God’s good news. Scripture set Francis’s heart aflame with the love of God, and with that fire he rekindled the faith and love of many who had strayed. This is our task today. As Francois Mauriac admonished, “The day on which you no longer burn, many others will die of cold.” The best way to evangelize is to burn, like St. Francis did, for the love of God; and to sustain that kind of zeal you need constant contact with the fire of God’s Word.


Second Vatican Council: Renewal in Our Own Day through God’s Word

In our own day, the Second Vatican Council met to bring about a Catholic renewal in many areas, but one very particular focus was renewal of the Church through recovery of the Word of God. In every gathering of the council the assembly was led by a procession headed by the carrying of the Sacred Scriptures, adorned in a beautiful case. The Scriptures were then enthroned upon the altar in St. Peter’s Basilica where the council gathered. The Word of God then, from the perspective of the bishops gathered from around the world, presided over the entire council. The point was that everything the Church teaches or does is in response to God’s Word.

The Second Vatican Council produced many documents, but there were four that were given the title “constitutions” and thus were the primary areas of focus for the council. One of these four documents, entitled Dei Verbum, which means the Word of God, was on the subject of Scripture. One of the aims of the Council’s constitution on the Word of God was to bring about a recovery of the primacy of Scripture in the life of the Church and all her children. This is illustrated in one of the famous lines from that document:

The Church has always venerated the divine Scriptures just as she venerates the body of the Lord, since, especially in the sacred liturgy, she unceasingly receives and offers to the faithful the bread of the life from the table both of God’s word and of Christ’s body. (Dei Verbum, 21). Here is one of the most profound statements of Vatican II: putting Scripture virtually on a par with the Eucharist. And yet there is a profound parallel here, as the council recognized, for the Eucharist is the body of the Lord made flesh, and Scripture is the Word of the Lord made written. We must, as the Catholic Tradition makes clear, reverence both. Just this past October Benedict XVI summoned bishops from around the world to discuss in a special synod how to better implement the renewal in Scripture that the council called for some four decades ago. Again, the aim of this synod was the recovery of Scripture in the life of the Church, which was the title for the synod and also the title for this conference. The Church is giving a clarion call to recover the ancient Christian practice of reading Scripture, of knowing God through His Word.

Our Job to make the Word of God spread vigorously in our culture

The Word of God listened to with obedience and lived with simplicity can still make news for those willing to hear, as it did in the days of Josiah, Ezra, and Francis. Indeed, it is precisely the recovery of God’s Word that the Church is calling us to in our day, through the Second Vatican Council and the recent Synod on Scripture.

The Second Vatican Council concluded its Constitution on Divine Revelation with the words of the Apostle Paul to the Thessalonians quoting: “that the Word of the Lord may speed on and triumph” (2 Thess. 3:1). Dei Verbum took these words of Paul as its closing prayer, in order that “we may hope for a new stimulus for the life of the Spirit from a growing reverence for the word of God, which “lasts forever” (Is. 40:8).” (DV, 26).

It’s now our job to help the Church make the “Word of God” spread vigorously in our culture - a culture that desperately needs light to dispel its present darkness. So this is your task, beginning today: Be witnesses of the one, true, and loving God. Be faithful sons and daughters of the Church. And like Josiah, Ezra, and St. Francis, be disciples.

 

Archbishop Charles Chaput is a Franciscan and the first native American archbishop in the USA.

SPIRITUAL DIRECTION COURSES


Those who are interested in getting some basics about spiritual direction may be interested in the course organised by the Chemin Neuf community. They are offering Spiritual Accompaniment Training on 7 Saturdays, 10.30 am -4.30pm – once a month - starting 21st November and finishing 5th June at their London base, 56 Amersham Road, SE14 6QE. Cost £15-£20 per day including lunch but no one should be excluded because of lack of finances. Contact Rev D Ferry at the above address or email him at dometmcferry@ btinternet.com (see coming events for other courses by Chemin Neuf)

Other more intensive courses are also available. The Catholic Bible School near Chichester does a two year part time course which starts in 2010, one day a forthnight

10am to 3pm. It involves both the theory and practice of Spiritual Direction. You can also do a course on the Spiritual Exercises and the Art of Spiritual Direction – one day a week 11am to 4pm for three years at the London Centre for Spirituality. The aim is to train and equip students to adapt the spiritual exercises to the many needs of people today. For further details contact The ISC Administrator, Church of St Edmund King & Martyr, Lombard Street, London EC3 9EA Tel 020 7623 6970 or email info@ artsd.org.uk

The Irenaeus Team in the Liverpool diocese have also done a short taster of six afternoons this autumn for people interested in Spiritual direction led by Fr Brendan Rice. They plan to do a longer more in depth course in 2010 for those interested. Further details contact 0151 924 4921 or email: brendon.rice@ irenaeus.co.uk

 

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