A lot of Catholics ask me for advice on how to process what is unfolding these days. Events are really challenging people's paradigms of how they understand the Church, the papacy, and even the faith itself. They want desperately to understand how everything fits together—how can we process what we've witnessed within the framework of our beliefs? This causes people considerable anxiety, even agony; sometimes it consumes their spiritual lives entirely. They feel profound unease at not being able to account for every jot and tittle within their understanding.
One piece of advice I have been giving people is to remember that we don't have to understand everything. The need to sort everything out and fit the pieces together in a logical schema is a necessity we impose upon ourselves. It is not something the faith demands of us; it is a product of our society's left-brained, hyper-rationalist perspective that we honestly might not even be aware we are imbibing. It's a perfectly acceptable answer to shrug your shoulders and say, "I don't know what to think of all this." The Psalm tells us, "Be still and know that I am God." (Ps. 46:10)
It has been helpful for me personally to relinquish the idea that my intellect needs to make sense of it. There is always supposed to be a “not-knowingness” about faith, a “not-yet” ness, a “dark glass” element (cf. 1 Cor. 13:12). There are times when the reason we can’t make sense of something is simply because we can’t see all the pieces. I suspect that part of this trial is learning to be alright with that—learning to let go of our persistent desire to see the whole blueprint and understand how all the pieces fit together. It’s almost like having an algebra problem, but there’s no way to solve for one of the variables because you don't have enough information; you have to put your pencil down and say, "This problem has a solution, but not enough information is provided for me to solve it."
Of course, our faith should not demand that we accept blatant irrationalities. It's an extremely hard sell to insist on the Church's indefectibility, infallbility, and so forth, while trying to simultaenously process how the Church has simply chucked vast amounts of its heritage. I do understand why people lose faith over this. Sedevacantism, for example, emerges from the variance between what we "know" and what has happened. I believe this variance is only apparent, relying heavily on exaggeration and a hyper-legalist, non-contextual reading of important texts (among other things), but that doesn't mean I don't understand why people go Sede. They feel like it is the only recourse if they are to avoid accepting irrational propositions.
Of course, I would never ask any believer to accept the blatantly irrational just “because mystery.” But I do think we need to carefully distinguish between an irrationality and our inability to see the big picture. An irrationality would be like trying to solve a puzzle to which there was no objective solution. Inability to see is more like sitting down with a legitimate puzzle but your ability to solve it is limited because someone has turned the lights off in the room and it’s dark.
The trouble is, in both cases our subjective experience is the same—“I can’t figure out all to solve this.” But the difference is that an irrationality has no solution, while the other has a true solution that circumstance prevents us from seeing. Given that we are in the midst of a crisis—and given our creaturely status—I take the approach that we must be incredibly careful, discerning, and humble before we say the whole edifice has broken down. I think that what drives Sedevacantism is this notion that they must see every piece, must see the big picture, etc. and because there’s too much discordance, they throw up their hands and say “This man can’t be the actual pope.”
So I would never suggest we toss reason, but we must accept the limitations of our vision. Part of that limitation is just due to being in the midst of the crisis—of seeing things unfold in real time and having to process them in real time instead of having decades or centuries to reflect on what it all means. Problems whose solutions seem evident to us in retrospect were not as easy to find when they were happening. For example, there was a time when many Christians could not understand how a sacrament could be validly confected by a priest who had committed grave sin. Those who could not reconcile this variance slid into the Donatist heresy. The answer, of course, is that provided by St. Augustine: that the efficacy of the sacraments derives from the power of God acting through the priest, which He is able to accomplish regardless of the priest's personal worthiness. But this answer eluded generations of Catholics who struggled bitterly to make sense of this conundrum.
There are many other examples we could give, but the commonality is that the Church encountered a new dilemma it had to learn how to "digest." It is, to some degree, like trying to assemble that puzzle in the dark. The "digestion" is waiting for the light to dawn that helps put the entire thing into perspective. This is, ultimately, what faith means; what else does "walk by faith, not be sight" entail if not something like this? (2 Cor. 5:7) Faith is being able to say, "I don't understand how this all fits together, but I'm sure it does, and I trust God to reveal the solution in His time." Until then, we persevere. It is the little way, the childlike way, the way of trust. Letting go of our need to sort it all out allows us to hold on to God tigher.
The trouble is, in both cases our subjective experience is the same—“I can’t figure out all to solve this.” But the difference is that an irrationality has no solution, while the other has a true solution that circumstance prevents us from seeing. Given that we are in the midst of a crisis—and given our creaturely status—I take the approach that we must be incredibly careful, discerning, and humble before we say the whole edifice has broken down. I think that what drives Sedevacantism is this notion that they must see every piece, must see the big picture, etc. and because there’s too much discordance, they throw up their hands and say “This man can’t be the actual pope.”
So I would never suggest we toss reason, but we must accept the limitations of our vision. Part of that limitation is just due to being in the midst of the crisis—of seeing things unfold in real time and having to process them in real time instead of having decades or centuries to reflect on what it all means. Problems whose solutions seem evident to us in retrospect were not as easy to find when they were happening. For example, there was a time when many Christians could not understand how a sacrament could be validly confected by a priest who had committed grave sin. Those who could not reconcile this variance slid into the Donatist heresy. The answer, of course, is that provided by St. Augustine: that the efficacy of the sacraments derives from the power of God acting through the priest, which He is able to accomplish regardless of the priest's personal worthiness. But this answer eluded generations of Catholics who struggled bitterly to make sense of this conundrum.
There are many other examples we could give, but the commonality is that the Church encountered a new dilemma it had to learn how to "digest." It is, to some degree, like trying to assemble that puzzle in the dark. The "digestion" is waiting for the light to dawn that helps put the entire thing into perspective. This is, ultimately, what faith means; what else does "walk by faith, not be sight" entail if not something like this? (2 Cor. 5:7) Faith is being able to say, "I don't understand how this all fits together, but I'm sure it does, and I trust God to reveal the solution in His time." Until then, we persevere. It is the little way, the childlike way, the way of trust. Letting go of our need to sort it all out allows us to hold on to God tigher.
"When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?"
(Luke 18:8)
*Special thanks to Peter Kwasniewski, whose private conversation helped shaped the line of thought taken in this essay*
6 comments:
Thanks! I'm at the point now that when I read the next bit of heretical absurdity I just shrug and say, "Whatever ", and go on with my daily prayer life. If God wants me to understand it all then He'll give me understanding. Meanwhile, I'm in a dying NO country parish in Australia and there is no next generation of either priests or parishioners. 300-student catholic (small c) school opposite the church. Average number of students at Sunday Mass - 2. Perhaps 5% of teachers go to Mass. When Jesus comes back He'll find me practising the faith of our Fathers. That’s all I've got. Though some days are harder than others!
I've read this blog since 2014 when I started my conversion to the Faith. Back then, I would call the articles intelligent. But now, the articles are also wise. It's very impressive to see the change.
What an ironic blog post! The writer makes important points regarding Faith and accepting mystery (but not irrationality), thinking this vindicates recognize-and-resist, whereas the very logic actually shows one should embrace Sedevacantism.
Except Donatus and followers rejected the answer given by St Augustine and the rest of the Church Magisterium, it's not like the doctrine was up in the air. Similarly, it's not like novusordism is dealing with unknown mysterious subjects and applying new doctrines and disciplines and practices (etc) that we cannot know whether they are right or not, the Church Magisterium has already spoken and they are wrong and cannot be harmonized. So whoever promulgated them cannot be Pope, See vacant.
Is there everything explained then, how the vacant See will end for example? Whether a conclave can happen among the remnant, hopefully, and if so when? And who would need to attend? That is indeed a mystery. But other things are certain. Pray to God we find whatever certainty we can, for the Truth will set us free (John 8:32). Pray we remain thus in His grace.
Sedes become that because they are effectively private judgment Protestants.
Only the church, not individuals, can judge whether or not a Prelate might have committed the delict of heresy, say nothing about declaring him guilty of it
I have a question for Sedes - I once asked it to Mario Derksen who operates Novus Ordo Watch - “when a stranger comes to your town and asks where the Catholic Church is, what do you tell him?”
The Catholic Church is visible; even Sedes can’t avoid that Doctrine.
Derksen said he’d tell the stranger about the local independent chapel he goes to; that is, he was admitting he doesn’t know where the Catholic Church is.
For Sedes, their idea of the Catholic Church is like the idea of the church for Protestants, it is invisible .
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