Knowing without loving, or without loving in the proper way,
can only lead us to see and understand things improperly and most
likely to be judgmental. The most simple and obvious example of this
phenomenon is to see how a toddler who starts to know things misses a
lot of things for him to behave properly. He can be attracted to fire
not knowing it can do him harm, for example.
And as the toddler starts to grow in age and knowledge, he
of course starts to improve in his behavior. But since knowing and
loving proper involve a process and take time, it usually happens that
whatever growth of knowledge that growing child has leads him to make
rash judgments or judgments that fail to consider many other, and
even, more important aspects of any issue at hand.
We really have to be most wary of the need to animate our
desire for more knowledge with the love that comes from God. Only then
can our knowledge become true knowledge. Yes, we have to understand
that our knowledge can only be true when it goes with charity that
comes from God.
St. Paul said something in this regard: “Knowledge puffs up
while love builds up. Those who think they know something do not yet
know as they ought to know. But whoever loves God is known by God.” (1
Cor 8,1-3)
We have to see to it that the more we know, the more we
ought to love the way God loves, as shown to us and even commanded of
us by Christ himself. If our knowledge, which can get very
considerable, leads us to be judgmental of others, impatient and
irritated by others, etc., we have to convince ourselves that that
knowledge, no matter how significant in human terms, is not yet true
knowledge.
The real knowledge would always make us more patient,
understanding, compassionate, merciful of others. It certainly
prevents us from pride, vanity and conceit, since we would realize
that everything that we know and have are things we received from God
in the end.
In this regard, St. Paul said: “What do you have that you
did not receive? And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though
you did not?” (1 Cor 4,7) Yes, the more knowledge we have, the more
humble we ought to become.
And given the tremendous reality that governs our life,
considering that our life is not simply natural but also supernatural,
we should realize that our knowledge would always be incomplete. In
fact, the old philosopher Aristotle once said, “The more you know, the
more you don’t know.”
It is precisely because of this condition that the more
knowledge we have, the more humble we should also be. Humility in our
knowledge allows the love that comes from God to enter and to grow in
us.
The very intellectually gifted should see to it that their
knowledge makes them more humble and infused with God’s love as shown
by Christ and put into effect by the Holy Spirit.
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