Father George W. Rutler |
If
there is no objective truth, there are no heresies. For the lazy
thinker, the mellow refrain suffices: “It’s all good.” The etymology of
“heresy” is complicated, but it has come to mean a wrong choice. Yet, if
the mere act of choosing justifies itself (as when people declare
themselves “Pro-Choice”), then no choice is wrong. But we live in a real
world, and so everything cannot be right. Thus, we have a new religion
called political correctness, and anyone who is politically incorrect is
accused of being “phobic” one way or another. Suddenly what claims to
be liberal is decidedly illiberal, and what is called “free speech” is
anything but free.
This
confusion is rooted in a fundamental misunderstanding of creation
itself. The world follows an order; otherwise all would be chaos. As God
has revealed himself as its Creator, there are truths about the world
that cannot be denied without illogical anarchy. Every heresy is an
exaggeration of a truth. For instance, Arianism teaches the humanity of
Christ to the neglect of his divinity, and Apollinarianism does the
opposite. The long list of heresies with complicated names illustrates
how many deep thinkers made mistakes by relying only on their own
limited powers of deduction. The two most destructive heresies were
Gnosticism and Calvinism, which totally misunderstood creation and the
human condition. Thus, we have the romantic fantasizing of Teilhard de
Chardin and the sociopathic astringency of John Calvin.
In
the first chapter of his letter to the Colossians, Saint Paul sets the
orthodox template by raising his glorious theology to an effervescent
canticle praising the mystery of Christ “who is the image of the unseen
God and the first born of all creation.” This hymnody animates the
Office of Vespers in the weeks of each month: “. . . for in him were
created all things in heaven and on earth . . .”
By
natural intelligence, we would know God as the Designer of the
universal order (Romans 1:19-20), but only by God’s revelation can we
know the existence of Christ transcending time and space. By Christ’s
enfleshment and the shedding of his blood on the Cross, as Saint John
Paul II said, quoting Colossians, “the face of the Father, Creator of
the universe becomes accessible in Christ, author of created reality:
‘all things were created through him . . . in him all things hold
together.'” So Christ cannot be understood as just another wise man in
the mold of Confucius or Solomon. As Saint Cyril of Alexandria
proclaimed: “We do not say that a simple man, full of honors, I know not
how, by his union with Him was sacrificed for us, but it is the very
Lord of glory who was crucified.”
Without
recrimination or censoriousness, but just looking around at the
disastrous state of contemporary culture, logic can conclude that, if
all things hold together in Christ, without Christ all things fall apart.
No comments:
Post a Comment