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Lay Witness
Looking
for Answers
by Leon J. Suprenant, Jr.
My algebra textbook in ninth
grade had an answer key in the back that enabled me to check
my answers upon completing my homework assignment. Most of
the time, the answer key simply served to verify that I in
fact had arrived at the correct answer. Sometimes, however,
the answer given in the book was different from my answer.
What did I do?
I realized that 99.99 percent
of the time the book was right. The book didn’t have
to change—I did. I would rework the problem a little
more carefully and eventually I would discover my error and
correct it. There were still times that I didn’t get
the right answer. In those cases I had to admit that maybe
I didn’t quite understand the material well enough,
and needed to consult the teacher. I had a fundamental trust
in the reliability of the answer key, as I was humble enough
(barely) to recognize that the professional mathematicians
who wrote the book were probably right, and I, a cocky adolescent,
was probably wrong.
Pillar of Truth
In a very real sense, God’s
Word is our answer key, providing answers to our most basic,
essential questions. Who made us? What is the purpose of our
existence? What good must we do to attain eternal life?
I must admit that every so often
there was a typo in the answer key of my algebra book, and
I would rather proudly point it out to my teacher and classmates.
But God’s Word is even more reliable. It is utterly
free from error. As we say in the Act of Faith, God can neither
deceive nor be deceived. His Word surely will not lead us
astray. And that’s not all. We have the best of teachers,
Mother Church, to ensure that the Word of God is faithfully
communicated through all ages.
Do we take time each day to open
the Bible, the written Word of God? Do we listen attentively
to God’s Word proclaimed to us in the liturgy? Do we
take the time to consider whether our actions are in accord
with God’s plan for our lives? Do we accept the role
of the Church, the pillar and bulwark of the truth (1 Tim.
3:15), to authentically interpret God’s Word?
Faith and Humility
Like the algebra student, there
are various approaches we can take to the Word of God. There
are, of course, students who are not motivated to learn algebra
and don’t bother to do the assignment, let alone check
their answers in the back of the book. Sadly, in the classroom
of life, there are many who are indifferent to the Word of
God. We need to fervently pray that they may have the grace
of conversion, and that the Lord will lift up a generation
of missionaries (i.e., “tutors”) who will help
them discover “the unsearchable riches of Christ”
(Eph. 3:8).
Then there are those who do the
assignment and maybe even check their answers in the back
of the book on occasion. There’s no problem as long
as the answer key agrees with their answers. However, when
there’s a discrepancy, they too easily assume the book
is wrong, or at least that their answer is equally valid.
This points to an analogous problem
in the Church today. Many who consider themselves Catholics
believe they are justified in rejecting those teachings they
don’t agree with. Often there is an inadequate understanding
of the Church’s teaching, and unfortunately the Church’s
teaching on issues such as contraception or homosexuality
is caricatured in the media. Yet, even the most honest and
well-researched disagreement with the Church on an issue of
faith or morals is problematic, because it involves replacing
God’s laws with our own private judgment.
The antidotes to this problem
are faith and humility. We all need to pray for an increase
in faith. Faith means that we accept God’s Word not
necessarily because we naturally agree with it, but because
we accept the authority of God as the source of all truth.
The virtue of humility, on the other hand, inclines us to
recognize not only our God-given dignity and talents, but
also our personal limitations and our need for divine wisdom
and grace.
Doing Our Homework
At the other extreme, there
are those who short-circuit the educational process by looking
up the answers and copying them down without learning and
understanding the material. I had classmates who would take
this a step further. They would look up the answer and then
work backwards so that it would look like they actually worked
out the problem when they hadn’t. While the problems
with these approaches are rather obvious, at least my classmates
correctly identified the source of the right answers.
When it comes to God’s
Word, we can be tempted to take similar approaches. These
approaches are rightly criticized as being fundamentalist
(inadequately taking into account the complexities of the
human condition and the fact that revealed truths are at the
same time “mysteries” of faith) and proof-texting
(taking God’s Word out of context and improperly using
a passage as a shortcut to defending our understanding of
the Church’s teaching).
In a secular age characterized
by what is sometimes called a “crisis of faith,”
the affirmation of trust in the authority of God’s Word
manifested by these approaches can be refreshing and praiseworthy.
Yet, faith in the end is not about knowing the right answers,
but about growing in our relationship with the living God.
In addition, God desires us to ponder the mysteries of faith
in imitation of our Blessed Mother (cf. Lk. 2:19), using our
intellect and will in cooperation with divine grace to wrestle
with real-life difficulties in our pilgrimage of faith. I
believe that I may understand (cf. Catechism, no. 158).
Further, those who simply look
up the answers in the back of the book not only cheat themselves,
but also aren’t much help when it comes to teaching
others or answering their questions and objections. For us
to participate most fully in the “new evangelization,”
we must personally appropriate the truths of our faith and
in word and action bear effective witness to the hope that
is within us (cf. 1 Pet. 3:15).
Taking God at His Word
We need to trust the reliability
of God’s Word and immerse ourselves in His saving truth.
For this reason, we started Emmaus Road Publishing a couple
years ago as a vehicle for producing books and tapes that
are biblically sound, steeped in Tradition, and entirely faithful
to the Magisterium, recognizing that the “answer key”
is Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh and source of all truth.
I invite all to take advantage of our growing inventory of
study materials that are advertised throughout the pages of
Lay Witness. Call our toll-free Emmaus Road number (800) 398-5470
for prompt, friendly service, or order online at www.emmausroad.org.
In approaching Scripture, we
must avoid the pervasive skepticism and doubt that poison
many biblical materials today. This theological skepticism
has its roots in 19th century biblical scholarship, but also
draws upon contemporary secularizing tendencies. The response
is not fundamentalism, or a rejection of the various scientific
tools that give us important new insights and which have the
full blessing of the Church (cf. Vatican II, Dei Verbum, no.
12). Rather, the appropriate response is a fundamental trust
in Our Lord Jesus Christ and in His Church, especially when
we are tempted to doubt.
St. Augustine, one of the most
brilliant theologians in the history of the Church, aptly
summarizes the humility and reverence we should have before
the Word of God.
On my own part I confess to your charity that it is only
to those books of Scripture which are now called canonical
that I have learned to pay such honor and reverence as to
believe most firmly that none of their writers has fallen
into any error. And if in these books I meet anything which
seems contrary to truth, I shall not hesitate to conclude
either that the text is faulty [a defective copy of the Bible],
or that the translator has not expressed the meaning of the
passage, or that I myself do not understand.
May God’s Word be a light for our paths (Ps. 119:105).
May the articles in this issue devoted to Sacred Scripture
increase our confidence in God’s Word to us, and draw
us all more deeply into the heart of His family, the Church.
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