Saturday, September 21, 2013

The Jesus Code


Love is the deepest mystery within the universe. It lies at the base of everything, the cosmic, the biological, the emotional, the psychological, the sexual, the spiritual

Agnelo Vaz
6:18 AM (9 hours ago)

to
Ron Rolheiser

THE JESUS CODE - UNRAVELLING THE SECRET


We all love to unearth hidden things, to crack some puzzle or code. We need only to look at the hoopla surrounding The Da Vinci Code to see how true this is. Like children, we all still believe there's a buried treasure somewhere, a secret wisdom, just waiting to be found.

Interestingly, Jesus speaks of just such a hidden secret. The gospels tell us he spoke in parables and that these were only understood by those who were inside a certain circle, but they remained riddles to everyone outside that circle.

That, of course, begs the question: What is the hidden secret and who is inside and who is outside the circle of understanding? In the message of Jesus, what's the secret to be discovered, the code be cracked?

Mark's gospel takes this up explicitly. His Jesus makes it very clear that there is a hidden, secret wisdom that needs to be grasped if one is to understand the deep design of things. What is it?

In caption, it's the cross of Christ and the wisdom that's contained within it. The hidden secret is that love is most truly revealed in the brokenness of Jesus on the cross. What's hidden in the cross of Christ is the code that we have to break open if we are to learn the deep secrets of life. The cross contains a wisdom, the wisdom of the crucified, which is a prism through which all else is to be viewed.

More specifically, what is this wisdom?

Unlike false, gnostic teachers who are forever playing games and giving the impression that learning the deep secrets is a question of luck, brilliant intelligence, or of becoming their disciples, Jesus tries everywhere to reveal the secret in public and in a language open to everyone. His whole life and mission are an attempt to lay open for everyone the deepest secret of all and to make that secret accessible to everyone, as accessible as the nearest water tap or the village well. Since Jesus, the deepest secret is an open secret. What is it?

One entry into it is through the words Jesus speaks to his uncomprehending disciples on the road to Emmaus. In trying to explain this secret, he asks them: "Wasn't it necessary?" Wasn't what necessary?

The secret is that there is a necessary connection between certain things: Isn't a certain prior suffering and humiliation always the condition for glory? Don't we all, like Cinderella, first have to sit in the ashes before the glass slipper will fit our feet? Isn't sublimation always the means to the sublime? Isn't it precisely when we are vulnerable and unable to impress or overpower others that we are finally open to intimacy, love, and family? Aren't self-sacrifice and self-denial, in the end, the way real love manifests itself? Isn't the crucifixion of the private ego the route to empathy and community? Isn't the forgiveness of those who hurt us the final manifestation of human maturity?

And, most graphic of all, isn't the way Jesus died - innocent, trusting, unwilling out of love to protect himself against suffering, absorbing hatred and sin, understanding and forgiving those who were murdering him, refusing to resort to any kind of superior physical power to overwhelm his adversaries, refusing to give back in kind, and refusing to give himself over to bitterness and cynicism - the paragon of mature human love?

Love is the deepest mystery within the universe. It lies at the base of everything, the cosmic, the biological, the emotional, the psychological, the sexual, the spiritual. There is no level of reality where one doesn't see the relentless deep pull inside of all things towards a unity, community, fusion, and oneness beyond self. Love stirs all things, speaking to every element in the language it can understand. Deep inside of us, we know too that this alone can bring us home.

And there is an inner code, a certain DNA, within love itself. It too has inner secrets, an inner structure, and a code that needs to be cracked if we are to properly understand its dynamics. And we don't crack that code all at once, at a weekend retreat or at religious rally. We crack it slowly, painfully, with many setbacks, over the course of a lifetime.

But Jesus gave us the keys to crack it. They can be named: vulnerability, the refusal out of love to protect ourselves, self-sacrifice, putting others before ourselves, refusing to give back in kind when someone hurts us, a willingness to die for others, the refusal to give ourselves over to cynicism and bitterness when things beset us, continued trust in God and goodness even when things look the opposite, and especially forgiveness, having our hearts remain warm and hospitable, even when we have just cause for hatred.

These are the keys to the wisdom that Jesus revealed and the gospels tells that we are "inside" or "outside" the true circle of love, depending upon whether or not we grasp this wisdom.

Pope Francis on Faith and the Church

Pope Francis’gentle stabs at change

 
 
Pope Francis
POPE FRANCIS

In an interview with Jesuit magazine “Civiltà Cattolica”, Pope Francis says it is important to focus “on what is essential, because this is what impassions and attracts people the most; this is what sets the heart on fire”. Francis also stressed he does not want a censorship-crazy Curia

ANDREA TORNIELLI
VATICAN CITY
It is an extraordinary 29 page portrait of Pope Francis’ outlook on faith and Church life. Understandably, what will attract readers’ attention the most will probably be the bits where the Pope talks about homosexuality, the fact that the Church should not only focus on questions linked to abortion, same-sex marriage and contraception and the bits in which he says that the Curia dicasteries “run the risk of becoming censorship bodies.” But the crux of the Pope’s message in his interview with Italian Jesuit magazine Civiltà Cattolica is the image the Pope gives of the Church as a field hospital after a battle. A hospital where wounds are treated. It would be pointless to ask the seriously injured patients – who stand for the many men and women today who have lost the meaning of life or live “irregular” lives – whether they have high cholesterol or blood sugar levels. Their wounds need to be treated to prevent them from dying. Everything else can wait.
 
The Church Francis wants is not a Church that changes its nature or shoves its dogma away in the attic. It is a Church that is capable of showing its merciful side and concentrates on proclaiming “what is essential, necessary and what impassions and attracts people the most, what sets the heart on fire, as in the case of the disciples of Emmaus." Benedict XVI also spoke about this in a memorable and yet quickly forgotten about speech he gave on a trip to Portugal in May 2010, when he said that references to morality and values don't touch people’s hearts today. So in his interview with the director ofCiviltà Cattolica, Francis responds to those who criticise his silence over non-negotiable values. As if the fact that he does repeatedly condemn abortion and same-sex marriage every week is evidence that he is not fulfilling the Church’s mission.

 
“We cannot just focus on issues linked to abortion, same-sex marriage and contraception. This is not possible,” the Pope said. “I haven’t spoken a great deal about these issues and this has been held against me. But when one speaks, this must be in context. We know what the Church’s opinion is and I am a son of the Church, but there’s no need to go on about this.” The Church has “sometimes got bogged down in small things, in small precepts.” Instead, it must go back to announcing that “Jesus Christ has saved you!” Ministers of the Church “must above all be ministers of mercy” because “the proclamation of God’s redeeming love comes before moral and religious duty. Today it seems the opposite often prevails.”
 
These words are the reverse of the approach taken by those who believe that the most important task for Christians today is not announcing the message of salvation, closeness and mercy but to constantly repeat a set of precepts and condemnations. Precepts and prohibitions have a meaning in the context of the experience of faith but they end up pushing people away instead of reaching out to them with the evangelical message when they become the main subject of preaching and pastoral care. The Pope’s words and his outlook on faith require “pastoral conversion” from the whole Church.
 
Accompanying through mercy, Francis explained, does not mean being excessively strict or too lax. The confessional is not a a torture chamber but neither is it a dry cleaners where you go to get a stain removed as if nothing had ever happened. Evil can never be called good. It is the approach one takes, the outlook one has and the priorities one has that differ.”I have one dogmatic certainty: God is present in every person’s life, Godi s present in the life of each and every one of us. Even if a person’s life has been a disaster, if it is destroyed by bad habits, by drugs or whatever it is, Godi s in their life. Every human can and must search for Him in their life.”
 
 
During the interview Francis even risponde to questions from those who expected quick decisions, immediate reforms and for him to substitute his collaborators straight after the election: The President of the U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Conference, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, for example espresse his criticism: “I believe it always takes  time to build the foundations of real and efficient change. And this is the time of discernment.” But that discernment can make urgent decisions and interventions necessary, when the intention was to deal with them at a later date. The Vatican bank (IOR) and the scandals unleashed by the judiciary’s investigations are a case in point.

In terms of decision-making ability and authority, the Pope talked about his experience as a young provincial priest and the fact that his “abrupt and personalist” decisions led to him being seen as an “ultraconservative” priest even though he has “never been a rightist”. This is why he now believes it is essential to discuss things and think things through carefully before making any decisions. He also wants consultations with collaborators in the Vatican and with the group of eight cardinals he chose to look into the reform of the Roman Curia to be real and sincere not formal consultations.
 
 Finally, the sections about the Curia and the Council are also fundamental. “Roman dicasteries are at the service of the Pope and the bishops: they are there to help” local Churches and bishops’ conferences. “They are helping mechanisms” and must not turn into “censhorship bodies”. Local Churches need to be given the chance to get more involved. Speaking about the Second Vatican Council the Pope said that the Gospel must be read within the context of today’s world, as suggested by Vatican II.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Interview with Pope Francis Sept 30 2013


A Big Heart Open to God

The exclusive interview with Pope Francis
Pope Francis
Editor’s Note: This interview with Pope Francis took place over the course of three meetings during August 2013 in Rome. The interview was conducted in person by Antonio Spadaro, S.J., editor in chief of La Civiltà Cattolica, the Italian Jesuit journal. Father Spadaro conducted the interview on behalf of La Civiltà Cattolica,America and several other major Jesuit journals around the world. The editorial teams at each of the journals prepared questions and sent them to Father Spadaro, who then consolidated and organized them. The interview was conducted in Italian. After the Italian text was officially approved, America commissioned a team of five independent experts to translate it into English. America is solely responsible for the accuracy of this translation. This interview is copyrighted by America Press and cannot be used, except for brief quotations, without written permission.
Father Spadaro met the pope at the Vatican in the pope’s apartments in the Casa Santa Marta, where he has chosen to live since his election. Father Spadaro begins his account of the interview with a description of the pope’s living quarters.
The setting is simple, austere. The workspace occupied by the desk is small. I am impressed not only by the simplicity of the furniture, but also by the objects in the room. There are only a few. These include an icon of St. Francis, a statue of Our Lady of Luján, patron saint of Argentina, a crucifix and a statue of St. Joseph sleeping. The spirituality of Jorge Mario Bergoglio is not made of “harmonized energies,” as he would call them, but of human faces: Christ, St. Francis, St. Joseph and Mary.