Also follow Fr. Paul at his personal website - mtmonk.com

Copyright © 2011-2018 William Paul McKane. All rights reserved.

22 January 2013

"If You Have Seen....Beauty, Remember." (Enneads V:8)



Judaism and Christianity contain within them unique and extraordinary experiences of divine reality.  The experiences must be studied and remembered. These experiences ever form the living core of Jewish and Christian faiths.  

Christianity is essentially derivative.  Its primary and grounding experiences occurred in Jews, who in turn had been formed by the experiences, beliefs, practices of Jewish culture, including Hebrew and Aramaic languages. To these we could add Hellenistic and Greek linguistic influences on nascent Christianity. Later, the Christian experiences and surrounding culture underwent continuing modification and development through more Greek, Latin, and German cultures, and so on. The process is unending.

Christian faith is not fully original or unique. The core experiences--such as the vision of Christ risen, faith in the atoning death of Jesus, and so on--occurred, as noted, in souls already steeped in Jewish faith and culture. The experiences never existed in a vacuum, nor can the original experiences be fully recovered, but are always known through one’s interpretation. The struggle is to minimize the filtering effects of one’s personality and culture, and to understand the original experiences as well as possible. That is the work for disciplined scholars well trained in philosophical detachment.

Christianity as it exists is highly dependent on other thought forms. It is impossible to read any Christian writer, even the best, and not see the mental influence of other mental cultures. And the best Christian thinkers were immersed in the best philosophy available to them. Of Christian mystics, perhaps only Paul and John (and if there be other NT forms of mysticism, perhaps they, too) moved within Jewish thought forms without much influence of Greek paideia and philosophy. But even here, one can see Greek thought influences in both Paul and John. As for later Christian spiritual writers, they are all derivative: both from the original Christian experiences (as in Paul and John, evident in the Gospels), but from the mental culture in which each writer was steeped. Augustine’s Christian theology, for example, seems inexplicable without Plotinus nurturing his mind; and Thomas Aquinas shows the influence of Plato and Aristotle, as well as Plotinus and Augustine, and others, on every page.  

One must seek to understand both the original Mosaic, prophetic, and apostolic experiences, and the philosophies in which these experiences have been articulated, explored, developed, lived. Someone who seeks to understand the best that Christianity has to offer must study not only the Scriptures with their formative experiences and religious cultures, but such philosophical minds as Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Plotinus. And one should be well acquainted with the ancient Gnostics and other religious cultures that became kneaded into Christian faith and practice.  

Much of contemporary Christianity is superficial because it lacks experiential grounding and philosophical articulation. A major problem in the contemporary churches is that Christian experience is not only neglected, but articulated in highly defective thought forms, such as modern psychology, Marxism (and its derivatives, such as liberation theologies), Hegelianism, liberal democratic thought, and so on. These contemporary ideologies and thought forms are insufficient for articulating the experience of divine union in Christ, which lies at the core of Christianity.  As a consequence, Christians in the pews--or those who have walked away--are left poorly nourished and largely unacquainted with the treasures of Christ. 

Jesus and the "Good News"


Ordinary Time begins and unfolds, we hear much about Jesus and his gospel or “good news”--his message of “the Kingdom of God,” which means for us eternal life in God. The same truth of reality is presented from various angles and with different emphases, but ultimately it is the same reality: God, Christ, and our movement into God in and with Christ. The Gospel, the “good news” of God-for-us-in-Christ, is essentially the message of our life in the God who suffered and died in Christ to bring us into full union with God and with one another in Him. “God was in Christ, reconciling [or, rejoining] the world to Himself.”

Because the news is truly so good and life-affirming, why is it that from the opening chapters of the Gospels, Jesus encountered so much opposition and resistance? What is there about God, Christ, and Jesus’ message that elicit such different responses from human beings? Why do some people encounter Jesus, and respond with faith filled with love, but others refuse to listen, or rebel against what they hear? And as we know, the religious establishment of Jesus’ day, and then the Roman political powers, tried to silence Jesus in one way or another. Why?

You and I have heard the gospel message many times over the years. We have tried, each in his or her own way, to heed and to obey, to do the LORD’s will and work. So from where comes the resistance to such a good God, to the most loving Jesus, to the message of eternal joy in Christ? “O you of little faith, why did you doubt?” Why, indeed? “It is the Father’s good pleasure to give you the Kingdom.”

Each of us must face the mystery of evil in our own hearts, for at times each of us refuses to listen, to heed, to obey the LORD. And each minister in the church, every disciple of Christ in fact, must ask himself or herself again and again: “Am I truly presenting Christ in his goodness and glory, or am I distorting our LORD into something he is not? Am I helping to lead people into God, or am I a hindrance? In what ways am I assisting, and in what ways am I hindering human beings from hearing the gospel, and seeing it lived in me?” Such questions must be asked again and again. God wants all of us, and each of us completely.

The good news of God is ever the same: that victory in Christ is assured, that despite our human flaws and failings, the LORD will triumph in us and through us. Despite human weaknesses and sin, God will indeed become “all in all.” When the battle looks lost, when human vices and evil seem to gain the upper hand, look at the glow of light in the eastern sky before sunrise, realize and rejoice, that as the sun rises, so the all-good God is breaking through, that nothing ultimately can hinder the power and glory of God’s love in Christ--not even death. “And all shall be well, and every manner of thing shall be well,” when every creature will be filled forever with the living God. To Him be glory and thanks forever. Amen.

04 January 2013

On The Feast Of The Epiphany

What a contrast: God comes to us in Christ, is manifested in the flesh, revealed to believing hearts, and the world yawns. Some fanatics proclaim that an imaginary “end of the world” is at hand and the result is mass hysteria (with fortunes made). In our country, it is far easier to sell nonsense and destructive “entertainment,” ugly “music,” and violent films then to turn a mind or two towards the living God.  As a people in history, we are choosing our fate:  we want ease, wealth, pleasures, entertainment, even as we spiral out of control, lost in addictions, mindless entertainments, sheer verbal nonsense (such as “end of the world” fantasies).  Is this what it looks and feels like as a society growers sicker and moves towards death?  

There is much more mass interest in a new “block-buster” movie generated by degenerate Hollywood than there is in God. The “heroes” of American youths are drawn from the world of money-making sports, mindless music, and mass-indulging entertainment, not from the world of simple goodness, devoted service, courageous acceptance of death to protect human lives.  We are shouting “crucify him” by the way we live, clutching the gods of self-love, self-esteem, self-importance. Over a hundred years ago, the Russian writer, Dostoevsky, warned that our civilization is dying because we rejected Christ:  “The West has lost Christ.  That is why it is dying; it is the only reason it is dying.”  The loss of God and Christ is more manifest now, a century later.  We are indeed dying as a people and as a culture. What we must wonder is whether or not we passed the point of no return?  By prudent loving kindness we can help individuals to “get their lives together,” but there seems to be nothing one can do for the common good, for our society as a whole. Christ came for individuals persons, not to spare the destructive and dying Roman Empire, or Hellenistic culture, or even his own Jewish traditions.

So even as our culture and society grow sicker and die, there remains hope for individual human beings who will break from mass culture, from the sickness of our society, and tend the garden of their souls. Jesus came into the midst of the decadent and brutal Roman Empire; and although the civilization collapsed, with millions suffering in the process, some individuals responded to Christ. Some made the break from cultural decadence and found true and abundant life in God. That choice remains ours to make. The light that comes must be received, accepted, and lived in order to have its effect in us. Just “celebrating feasts” and not living Christ does nothing for our personal spiritual renewal.