If you were
to stumble across a motionless human body, you could determine if the body was
alive via signs, like a heartbeat or breathing. Observing these signs, one
could say the body is alive, but only alive in a minimal sense. A human fully
alive would have many more signs of life like dancing, playing, working,
loving, learning, etc.
The same is
true for waking-up. Upon observing signs like siting, walking, talking, etc.
one could say a person is awake, but perhaps not fully awake, like the person not
fully alive. We might experience a waking up process every morning feeling
tired, slow and groggy at first, but energetic after a baptism of sorts in a
hot shower.
Of course the
signs are never the destination. Signs always point to something else, so the
signs of being fully alive or awake point to perfect being itself. If God is
perfect being itself, then the glory of God is seen in a person fully alive.
Why all this
talk about waking up? I recently read Waking Up Catholic by Chad Torgerson from Assisi Media. The book is geared toward those converts, reverts, or anyone just
waking up Catholic, perhaps still groggy with blurred vision under the towering
sky of Catholic light. The author brings his perspective based on personal
experience being first an atheist, then a non-denominational Christian and then
finally waking up Catholic.
I’ve heard it
said that theology is the highest science. Catholic theology is bright &
beautiful, but like any high science, challenging to understand, and like any
bright light, difficult to see. It’s all too easy to just turn way from a bright
light or to simply mock what we do not understand. Chad’s book presents a very readable
overview of the aspects of Catholicism that are thorny to non-Catholic
Christians or just unknown to anyone unfamiliar with the faith.
• On
Sacred Tradition: Learn about tradition with a capital “T” that ultimately comes
from God (not men). How important is it to understand this correctly? Well,
it’s only the major dividing factor between Catholics and other Christians.
Although Christ’s revelation is complete, our understanding of it continues to
grow and mature through the centuries and this is where Sacred Tradition comes
into play.
Examples are most helpful:
How does the Word of God come to us? How
did Adam & Eve, Noah, Abraham, Isaac & Jacob pass on the Word of God?
They had no scriptures (no Torah). It was via tradition. How did the early Christians
pass on the Word of God before the New Testament was written; at Bible study? No,
it was via tradition. Even today, how does the canon of the Bible come to us? It
comes from Sacred Tradition. How do we know that? We know that because the Bible
itself does not attest to its own canon.
How does the teaching of the Trinity
come to us? The Bible? No, it comes from Sacred Tradition. The word “Trinity”
is not found in the Bible and there are verses that imply Jesus is not God.
Additionally, the Holy Spirit can easily be interpreted as an allegory for the
power of God, not an actual third person.
How does the teaching of marriage as
one man and one woman come to us? The Bible? No, once again it comes from
Sacred Tradition. There is nothing in scripture that says a man cannot have
more than one wife.
• On the Guardians of the Faith:
Learn the truth about ministerial priesthood and other religious orders that
preach and teach the gospel and serve the needy. No other Church has the rich
history and long standing teachings of the Catholic Church. The gates of Hell
have not prevailed thanks to the guidance of the Holy Spirit. If we are the
body of the Church, the guardians are surly the backbone!
• On Mary and the Saints: The
Catholic teachings on Mary and the saints are just as true as any other Sacred
Tradition mentioned above. Learn the difference between worshiping and venerating
and learn why this doesn’t need to be such a deep & complicated point of
division.
• On the Eucharist: Learn how
this is a standing or falling point (see John 6:60 & 66). See how the author woke up
to an amazing truth instead of turning away from it forever.
• On Confession: Dig into the
Biblical roots of Jesus passing on his authority to forgive sins on to mere men
and how the earliest Christians confessed their sins to one another. Beyond
this, the scriptures are clear about mortal sins (or deadly sins) and those
that are not deadly. Even for those who hold tight to Bible alone theology,
there is no denying the distinctions in sin and that some cannot be simply
“prayed away” (see 1 John 5:16-17).
• On Action: Get tips on who
should evangelize, why evangelize and how to evangelize. The clergy shepherd
the flock, but it’s our job to help it grow. Just as someone once planted a
seed in you, you should plant a seed (or two) in others. Why? The author summed
it up well. “The world is crumbing underneath the weight of selfish desires and
sinful lifestyles. Now more than ever, society needs to re-embrace Christ as
her Savior.”
I'm often
surprised how many Catholics don't know that the word Catholic comes from the
Greek word “katholikos”, which means universal,
and what an appropriate word that is. To wake up Catholic is to find yourself
in a universal Church that was founded for everyone. Universal, not in the
sense of accepting everything, but to understand everything as God reveals it
to be; to wake up to the fullness of faith; a worldwide light so bright that it
reveals the grains of truth contained in everything else.
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