Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Caring for our doctrinal formation


IF we believe in God, then we have to believe in Christ, the son of
God who became man to be our redeemer. We also have to believe in his
teachings that are now entrusted to the Church and authoritatively
taught to us through its doctrine.

We need to see this vital connection between God and the doctrine that
we need to study and meditate on. Hopefully, we assimilate this
doctrine such that it becomes flesh of our flesh.

Our usual problem is that we tend to disconnect the two, raising all
sorts of reasons why such vital link between God and the doctrine
cannot be possible, if not always, then from time to time.

There’s obviously some point to why the doctrine cannot fully capture
God and his teachings. And that’s because of the human elements
involved in the doctrine. But in spite of that, we need to realize
that in its substance and in its core, the doctrine is actually
divine.

We just have to know how to distinguish between its divine character
and its human elements that would unavoidably include some
limitations. This is actually our human condition.

Truth is God always intervenes in our life and makes use of our
humanity to come and be with us. We should not waste time making a big
fuss about the human limitations that accompany this abiding divine
intervention.

That’s why God through Christ in the Spirit has endowed the Church
with the proper power and authority to teach his doctrine integrally
and infallibly, much like we as a nation entrust our government with
certain power to govern us in spite of the many limitations in the men
running the government.

Except that in the case of God in relation to the Church, the act of
empowering goes far more radically than what takes place in our
empowering of our government to rule over us.

The former involves God, the latter simply us through some consensus.
The former involves the entire scope of our life, especially its
spiritual and supernatural end, while the latter simply involves the
temporal dimension of our life.

This clarification is important because we need to cultivate the
appropriate attitude toward the doctrine of the Church. In the gospel
of St. Matthew, Christ clearly said:

“Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets. I
have come not to abolish but to fulfill. Amen, I say to you, until
heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or the smallest
part of a letter will pass from the law, until all things have taken
place.” (5,17-18)

Then he continued, “Therefore, whoever breaks one of the least of
these commandments and teaches others to do so will be called least in
the Kingdom of heaven. But whoever obeys and teaches these
commandments will be called greatest in the Kingdom of heaven.” (5,19)

These words need to be studied and understood well, so that we can see
the vital connection between what Christ said directly about the “law
and the prophets,” and the doctrine that the Church, founded and
properly empowered by Christ, now teaches us.

We need to consider the Church doctrine as the true and most precious
doctrine that can bring us to our ultimate joy and end. It is not just
a man-made doctrine that can give us some benefits and advantages,
some social or economic progress, but not our ultimate supernatural
end.

We also need to see the Church doctrine as the proper spirit that
should animate any human doctrine we may make for some practical
purpose we may have in the different aspects of our life—personal,
family, professional, social, political, etc.

Thus, it is essential that we learn to know the Church doctrine or the
doctrine of our faith such that this doctrine becomes the moving
spirit behind our every thought, word and deed, behind our every plan
and project, big or small, ordinary or extraordinary.

There is need for us to know how to relate the doctrine of our faith
to our daily affairs and to our very serious and big projects and
plans, and vice versa. At the moment, this expertise is hardly known,
its need hardly felt.

This is the challenge we are facing today as we tackle the
increasingly rapid, complex and complicated developments. Let’s hope
that we can overcome whatever biases we have that hinder the
appreciation of our basic need for Church doctrine in our human
affairs.

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