Our
planetary home is always changing as the seasons come and go. The rise and fall
in temperature, times of rain and days of high winds, all contribute to unending
variation.
This summer, one of my grandsons, Connor, spent time
in the French Alps. One of the many images he took showed the edge of a melting
glacier. Through the clear and very cold water you can see the stone grit and
larger pieces of rock that slowly are being carried to the sea. Light and dark
shades, irregular shapes dragged down from some higher outcrop. Later in the
year, when the Winter cold returns, the water will freeze again as glacial ice
is re-formed and this detail will be lost. In the time that it can be seen we
have a small snapshot of the otherwise hidden earth.
In
so many ways the early 60s, the years of the Council and beyond, were a similar
period of thaw and vision. Those times were often summarised by the Italian word
Aggiornamento,
a ‘bringing up to date’.
It was certainly a time when we looked beneath the
surface and explored the substance of the Church in a more open and expansive
way. We asked questions rather than just receiving answers, looked for ways to
explore the Gospels, appreciating the teaching that is there in a manner that
could be understood in our times, a story for our own particular journey.
The Council brought recognition to many theologians
whose stature had been diminished in earlier years, many of whom are now no
longer with us. But one most certainly is, Hans Kung. I have no hesitation in
repeating a comment I made here in late March this year, “A most significant and charitable action towards Kung
would be for Francis to restore Kung’s credentials as a Catholic Teacher who,
throughout these difficult years has remained a priest in good standing”.
A stone uncovered by the thaw if ever there was one.
For that time of thaw,
when we explored beneath the surface for a while and found there excitement and
refreshment of our faith, that time closed all too quickly. In the years that
followed there were many attempts to regain a centrality of control that served
only to enforce a clericalism that was no longer viable. The stones under the
ice were lost to view as the waters froze again. But not quite.
Too much had happened to prevent a complete return
to pre-conciliar days. There is an awareness, that now is global, where people
ask honest and sincere questions, where their exploration of faith is a lived
experience. It is of course easier to be told what to do, how to behave, what to
believe. That is a process that limits our true acceptance. A good teacher does
not tell the pupil all the answers but encourages the pupil to ask the pertinent
question that leads to an answer, for there maybe more than one answer to a
question and in some cases no answer at all. Why do we always expect matters of
belief to have a clearly formulated structure when that is exactly what faith is
all about, a trust in seeking.
The Gospels are just that. Parables, actions, events
that were offered by the Lord for ‘those
who have ears to hear’. Then and now.
Dogmatic statements where there was expectation of
acceptance without question were not his way of teaching. In the gospel of John
we read of Philip calling Nathaniel to follow the Lord.
Philip
found Nathanael and said to him, "We have found him about whom Moses in the
law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus son of Joseph from
Nazareth
."
Nathanael
said to him, "Can anything good come out of
Nazareth
?"
Philip
said to him, "Come and see."
Those final words of
Philip are telling, ‘come and see’. Not words of finality, not a teaching of ‘you
will do this’ but an invitation to come and see what they had found, and
then to act accordingly. Once something that was hidden is seen, it is hard to
forget it. What has happened cannot be undone.
Even though the glacial ice returns each Winter and
hides the debris exposed by the Spring and Summer warmth, we know it is there,
we cannot remain in ignorance.
Francis is anxious that we continue our exploration
of faith in the context of the Council’s teaching, his open-handed invitation
is there for all to see. Maybe that should be the essence of our generosity as a
Christian people towards those we meet, come and see and be with us.
END
-----------------