"Man cannot truly find himself
except through a true gift of self."(Pope Saint John Paul II)
by Susan Fox
Editor's Note: Religion News Service reported on Dec. 19, 2013, that it is a growing trend to rebuff contributions and volunteer labor from atheists' groups. Atheist Giving Rebuffed I am a Christian, and I don't agree with that policy because every man and woman needs to be able to participate in the act of giving. Giving is the most supreme act of the human being, the one act in which someone might discover they are indeed made in the Image and Likeness of God, who is total Love and Self Giving. These atheists do not know God, but in their love and generosity they are able to reveal His Face to the world and intimately share in His work. So the act of giving can actually be a conduit to a change of heart.
Ever step on a hornet’s nest?
Ever step on a hornet’s nest?
Suddenly Noah’s ark is an object of ridicule, and God killed 3 million babies in Africa, while evolution is established scientific fact. Some atheist groups are even playing grinch and stealing Christ out of Christmas.
Atheists billboards are "small evil baby steps" to another holocaust, warns NY State Senator Andrew Lanza. |
Don’t get me wrong. I don’t have a problem with evolution as a theory of
the means by which God created the world. I live in Colorado, and we have more
dinosaur footprints than anywhere else in the world. I don’t think the world is only 6,000 years
old, and I don’t think the Grand Canyon is carved from faux rock made to look
old.
The Book of Genesis is a beautiful work of poetry, which explains that we
were made by God in His image and put into the family of man. God is love, so
the image we reflect is that of Eternal Love. Our own choice knocked us out of Paradise, and
brought suffering into the world. Now all creation groans for redemption. But
Genesis is not a science textbook. I know this is a surprise to some
Protestants as I met one on Twitter arguing vehemently with the atheists on
that very issue.
I thank God one Christian was talking to them. There was also a brave
Muslim taking on one hornet at a time.
But really if you are an atheist, how do you cope with suffering? How do
you overcome your bitterness at a God Who either doesn’t care or doesn’t exist?
Both thoughts seemed to cause enormous pain to my little hornets, who flashed
pictures of dying African babies with a vulture nearby ready to eat them.
These pictures infuriated me as well. How dare someone photograph a
dying baby and do nothing to help the child!
It reminded me of Pope Francis’ economy of indifference, the “economy
that kills.“ My friend, Mary, survived Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans on top
of her roof. She said CNN‘s helicopter flew over many times, and filmed her.
(Long before I met Mary I had seen the television images of her struggling to
stay on her roof with floodwaters all around) But she said CNN never offered her
a single bottle of water -- even as days went by. Meanwhile all the news media complained
about President George Bush.
CNN reminded me of my little hornets, complaining about the world’s
ills, blaming the president or blaming God, while they had it in their power to
relieve at least some of the sufferings of their fellow man. I wasn’t nice. I reminded my little hornets of
this option.
But my hornets also reminded me of the story of the kingdom of God in in
Matthew 20:1-16. The householder went out in the morning to hire laborers for
his vineyard, which He did. But going out again in the third hour he saw others
standing idle in the market place, and he hired them. He did the same in the
sixth and the ninth hour. But at the end of the day all received the same wage.
This is a welcome reminder to Christians that the last will be first and the
first will be last. In the end, even those who convert on their deathbed will
receive the same wage – eternal life. And we all rejoice in our brothers’
return to the home of Our Father.
Spiritually, this is the place where my little hornets rest: idle in the
market place. They wait for the householder to come and hire them. In the
parable, he does. But in the Twitter Feed, in real life, either the householder
is awfully slow in coming or his offer of employment was rejected. Pope Saint John Paul II wrote about this condition in “Fides et Ratio: On the Relationship
between Faith and Reason.”
“Happy the man who meditates on wisdom and reasons intelligently, who
reflects in his heart on her ways and ponders her secrets. He pursues her like
a hunter and lies in wait on her paths.” (Sir 14:20-21)
But what is distinctive in the Bible is the “conviction that there is a
profound and indissoluble unity between the knowledge of reason and knowledge
of faith,” Pope John Paul II wrote.
“The world and all that happens
within it, including history and the fate of peoples, are realities to be
observed, analyzed and assessed with all the resources of reason, but without
faith ever being foreign to the process. Faith intervenes not to abolish
reason’s autonomy nor to reduce its scope for action, but solely to bring the
human being to understand that in these events it is the God of Israel who
acts. “
The pope is saying by faith, we can see history unfold in an entirely
new light without abandoning our reason. We can see God actually present in
history, and we can marvel at His works. If it rained in our evergreen woods, my mother would say, "Isn't God good?" The atheist would assume He didn't exist or else that He wanted to ruin his day.
“The human mind plans the way,
but the Lord directs the steps.” (Proverbs 16:9)
But if man abandons fear of God, he runs the risk of “ending up in the
condition of the fool,” the pope added. What a nice way to put it!
“The fool thinks that he knows many things, but really he is incapable
of fixing his gaze on the things that truly matter. Therefore, he can neither
order his mind (Prov 1:7) nor assume a correct attitude to himself or the world
around him. And so when he claims that ‘God does not exist,’ he shows with
absolute clarity just how deficient his knowledge is and just how far he is
from the full truth of things, their origin and their destiny.”
So we see photo-shopped pictures of dying African babies with a vulture
standing nearby and laborers standing idle in the marketplace.
Perhaps American memoirist Emily Rapp was one of those laborers waiting
in the marketplace for the householder to hire her.
The daughter of a Lutheran pastor, Rapp was married and had a nine-month
old son, Ronan, when he was diagnosed with Tay-Sachs disease, a death sentence
for a baby before the age of three. Perhaps in Emily’s life, this was the
moment that her idleness ended. The householder had indeed made his appearance.
Emily Rapp & son Ronan |
"I was definitely not identifying as a Christian long before Ronan
was born. I think having that kind of a diagnosis, which really feels straight
out of the biblical Job — I
mean, it really does — it's like you feel cursed, and what Job does in the
Bible is wander around asking everyone why this is happening because he doesn't
understand, and I think that's a little bit how I felt,” Emily said in an
interview with Fresh Air’s Terry Gross.
Tay-Sachs disease is a genetic and degenerative condition that is always fatal
before a child’s third year.
In her own words, Emily said, “Ronan’s
body lacks hexosaminidase A, an enzyme critical for brain development, and his
brain is, as they say in the neurology world, “devastated.” Nerve damage
progresses quickly, leading to dementia, decreased interaction with the
environment, seizures, spasticity and eventually death. Before he dies, Ronan
will become paralyzed, lose his sight, his hearing and his sense of touch.”
She and her husband watched their beloved baby grow
up a little and then become a baby again. “We no longer wonder, “What if he
starts talking today?” but, “What if he stops smiling, cooing?”
They watched, put away his more advanced toys and brought out ones he
played with earlier in his development. Ronan died on Feb. 15, 2013 just before
his third birthday.
In her book published this year, “The Still Point
of the Turning World,” Emily ponders, “How do you parent without a future? What
is it possible to learn from a dying baby? Rick and I spend each day with
Ronan, trying to enjoy him, loving him, taking him for walks, to the zoo and
the aquarium. We’re not worried about what college he’ll attend, or what he’ll
do with his life. We are not living for him, or through him; we are living with
him.”
To be present to her son, and not to plan his
future, represented quite a transformation in her life. A Harvard graduate, she
freely admits she had made plans for her son’s future. In fact, she had planned
out every aspect of the pregnancy including a test for the likelihood of the
very disease that her son died from. He
died from a very rare form of Tay-Sachs for which there is no test.
“I read all the parenting magazines. My husband and
I thought about a lot of questions they raised: will breast-feeding enhance his
brain function? Will music class improve his cognitive skills? Will the right
preschool help him get into the right college? I made lists. I planned and
plotted and hoped. Future, future, future,” She wrote.
“We never thought about how we might parent a child
for whom there is no future. Our parenting plans, our lists, the advice I
read before Ronan’s birth make little sense now. No matter what we do for
Ronan — choose organic or non-organic food; cloth diapers or disposable;
attachment parenting or sleep training — he will die. All the decisions that
once mattered so much, don’t.”
Her blog bleeds with a newfound understanding that life’s
true treasure is simply being with the ones we love. “Love is spilling out
without apology,” she wrote in a November 2012 post on “What If This
Thanksgiving Was Your Last?”
A writing teacher as well as a writer, she said she
used to assign her students the task of creating a Thanksgiving scene, bringing
in conflict: the rude uncle, someone falls asleep in the potatoes, or a teenage
vegetarian gives an angry speech about the turkey.
But because of her experience, “I’d change the
writing exercise I give to students,” she said, “I’d ask them instead to write
a holiday dinner scene with all the people they loved best, but with the added
knowledge that it will be the last time everyone sat around the table together
and passed around crystal bowls full of cranberry sauce and relish dishes.
Write the scene knowing that everything, always, can be fractured, broken,
dissolved. Write it knowing that the only conflict worth worrying about is this
one: When faced with the choice between shutting down your emotion, at the fear
of risking pain, or opening up to everything and trusting that you’ll survive
it, which will you chose?”
And in that understanding, unbeliever Emily Rapp
has uncovered the secret to happiness.
Love someone.
Love someone passionately.
And you will tenderly uncover the Face of God.
For as we Christians know, God is Love.
For as we Christians know, God is Love.
And man is made in His image.
FOOTNOTE: Should any atheist think I am calling him or her a "hornet," please note I am referring to their behaviour on Twitter. I completely feel that all people who self identify as atheists are human beings, further I believe they are beloved children of God whether they recognise themselves as such or not. As a child of God, you are my brother and sister, and that's why I called you in this post, "my beloved hornets." Hey, as an only child in my human family, I have no brothers or sisters biologically, so I always am happy to have new spiritual brothers and sisters -- even ones who like to sting me. God bless you. Susan Fox
FOOTNOTE: Should any atheist think I am calling him or her a "hornet," please note I am referring to their behaviour on Twitter. I completely feel that all people who self identify as atheists are human beings, further I believe they are beloved children of God whether they recognise themselves as such or not. As a child of God, you are my brother and sister, and that's why I called you in this post, "my beloved hornets." Hey, as an only child in my human family, I have no brothers or sisters biologically, so I always am happy to have new spiritual brothers and sisters -- even ones who like to sting me. God bless you. Susan Fox