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21- "Acquire
wisdom, acquire understanding" (Prov 4:5)

Acquire wisdom, acquire understanding (Prov
4:5)
21. For the Old Testament,
knowledge is not simply a matter of careful observation
of the human being, of the world and of history, but
supposes as well an indispensable link with faith and
with what has been revealed. These are the challenges
which the Chosen People had to confront and to which they
had to respond. Pondering this as his situation, biblical
man discovered that he could understand himself only as
being in relationwith himself, with
people, with the world and with God. This opening to the
mystery, which came to him through Revelation, was for
him, in the end, the source of true knowledge. It was
this which allowed his reason to enter the realm of the
infinite where an understanding for which until then he
had not dared to hope became a possibility.
For the sacred author, the task
of searching for the truth was not without the strain
which comes once the limits of reason are reached. This
is what we find, for example, when the Book of Proverbs
notes the weariness which comes from the effort to
understand the mysterious designs of God (cf. 30:1-6).
Yet, for all the toil involved, believers do not
surrender. They can continue on their way to the truth
because they are certain that God has created them
explorers (cf. Qoh 1:13), whose mission it is
to leave no stone unturned, though the temptation to
doubt is always there. Leaning on God, they continue to
reach out, always and everywhere, for all that is
beautiful, good and true.
22. In the first chapter of his
Letter to the Romans, Saint Paul helps us to appreciate
better the depth of insight of the Wisdom literature's
reflection. Developing a philosophical argument in
popular language, the Apostle declares a profound truth:
through all that is created the eyes of the
mind can come to know God. Through the medium of
creatures, God stirs in reason an intuition of his
power and his divinity (cf. Rom
1:20). This is to concede to human reason a capacity
which seems almost to surpass its natural limitations.
Not only is it not restricted to sensory knowledge, from
the moment that it can reflect critically upon the data
of the senses, but, by discoursing on the data provided
by the senses, reason can reach the cause which lies at
the origin of all perceptible reality. In philosophical
terms, we could say that this important Pauline text
affirms the human capacity for metaphysical enquiry.
According to the Apostle, it was
part of the original plan of the creation that reason
should without difficulty reach beyond the sensory data
to the origin of all things: the Creator. But because of
the disobedience by which man and woman chose to set
themselves in full and absolute autonomy in relation to
the One who had created them, this ready access to God
the Creator diminished.
This is the human condition
vividly described by the Book of Genesis when it tells us
that God placed the human being in the Garden of Eden, in
the middle of which there stood the tree of
knowledge of good and evil (2:17). The symbol is
clear: man was in no position to discern and decide for
himself what was good and what was evil, but was
constrained to appeal to a higher source. The blindness
of pride deceived our first parents into thinking
themselves sovereign and autonomous, and into thinking
that they could ignore the knowledge which comes from
God. All men and women were caught up in this primal
disobedience, which so wounded reason that from then on
its path to full truth would be strewn with obstacles.
From that time onwards the human capacity to know the
truth was impaired by an aversion to the One who is the
source and origin of truth. It is again the Apostle who
reveals just how far human thinking, because of sin,
became empty, and human reasoning became
distorted and inclined to falsehood (cf. Rom 1:21-22).
The eyes of the mind were no longer able to see clearly:
reason became more and more a prisoner to itself. The
coming of Christ was the saving event which redeemed
reason from its weakness, setting it free from the
shackles in which it had imprisoned itself.
23. This is why the Christian's
relationship to philosophy requires thorough-going
discernment. In the New Testament, especially in the
Letters of Saint Paul, one thing emerges with great
clarity: the opposition between the wisdom of this
world and the wisdom of God revealed in Jesus
Christ. The depth of revealed wisdom disrupts the cycle
of our habitual patterns of thought, which are in no way
able to express that wisdom in its fullness.
The beginning of the First
Letter to the Corinthians poses the dilemma in a radical
way. The crucified Son of God is the historic event upon
which every attempt of the mind to construct an adequate
explanation of the meaning of existence upon merely human
argumentation comes to grief. The true key-point, which
challenges every philosophy, is Jesus Christ's death on
the Cross. It is here that every attempt to reduce the
Father's saving plan to purely human logic is doomed to
failure. Where is the one who is wise? Where is the
learned? Where is the debater of this age? Has not God
made foolish the wisdom of the world? (1 Cor 1:20),
the Apostle asks emphatically. The wisdom of the wise is
no longer enough for what God wants to accomplish; what
is required is a decisive step towards welcoming
something radically new: God chose what is foolish
in the world to shame the wise...; God chose what is low
and despised in the world, things that are not to reduce
to nothing things that are (1 Cor 1:27-28). Human
wisdom refuses to see in its own weakness the possibility
of its strength; yet Saint Paul is quick to affirm:
When I am weak, then I am strong (2 Cor
12:10). Man cannot grasp how death could be the source of
life and love; yet to reveal the mystery of his saving
plan God has chosen precisely that which reason considers
foolishness and a scandal.
Adopting the language of the philosophers of his time,
Paul comes to the summit of his teaching as he speaks the
paradox: God has chosen in the world... that which
is nothing to reduce to nothing things that are
(cf. 1 Cor 1:28). In order to express the gratuitous
nature of the love revealed in the Cross of Christ, the
Apostle is not afraid to use the most radical language of
the philosophers in their thinking about God. Reason
cannot eliminate the mystery of love which the Cross
represents, while the Cross can give to reason the
ultimate answer which it seeks. It is not the wisdom of
words, but the Word of Wisdom which Saint Paul offers as
the criterion of both truth and salvation.
The wisdom of the Cross,
therefore, breaks free of all cultural limitations which
seek to contain it and insists upon an openness to the
universality of the truth which it bears. What a
challenge this is to our reason, and how great the gain
for reason if it yields to this wisdom! Of itself,
philosophy is able to recognize the human being's
ceaselessly self-transcendent orientation towards the
truth; and, with the assistance of faith, it is capable
of accepting the foolishness of the Cross as
the authentic critique of those who delude themselves
that they possess the truth, when in fact they run it
aground on the shoals of a system of their own devising.
The preaching of Christ crucified and risen is the reef
upon which the link between faith and philosophy can
break up, but it is also the reef beyond which the two
can set forth upon the boundless ocean of truth. Here we
see not only the border between reason and faith, but
also the space where the two may meet.

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