The Stroke Of A Pen

Magna_cartaKnow what yonder document is?

It’s the Magna Carta (Latin, "Great Charter").

The document is considered a landmark in the development of constitutional government.

Basically, a buncha barons twisted King John of England’s arm into ceding a buncha his authority.

It was signed today, June 15, in A.D. 1215 at Runnymede, which is not a kind of soft cheese, despite its name.

The document was immediately repudiated by him, plunging England into a civil war.

He died during the civil war (of dysentery–ouch!).

Pope Innocent III–who had bad relations with John–also didn’t cotton to the document.

LEARN MORE.

AND MORE.

Tradition & The Intercession Of The Saints

A non-Catholic reader writes an e-mail titled "Re Your quote on Gary’s site" and says:

Greetings Mr. Akin

I was reading Gary’s quote of your words:

A: Well, aside from the fact that the Magisterium has ruled on the issue and that Apostolic Tradition teaches it (both of which are sufficient to prove the matter), the Bible also teaches it.


http://www.cin.org/users/james/questions/q040.htm

What "apostolic tradition"?

Could you refer me to the text or material you refer to?

Thanks.

May God grant your house peace

Thanks. Yours, too.

I’m not sure who Gary is, but the link you provide goes to a question I wrote some years ago (like 10 years ago, actually) on how we can be assured that those in heaven can hear our prayers.

This subject is dealt with in apostolic Tradition, which is conveyed in the writings of the Church Fathers. There is a pronounced stream from the early centuries onward showing that Christians recognized the practice of asking the saints (both human and angelic saints) for their intercession. Magisterial intervention has clarified that this is, indeed, part of the deposit of faith and thus apostolic Tradition (meaning that it was present in the deposit of faith at the time of the apostles either explicitly or implicitly).

For sample quotes from the Church Fathers and other early Christians,

SEE HERE.

There is an inscription in a cemetery near St.
Sabina’s in Rome that I find personally very moving. It dates from
about the year A.D. 300 and says:

 

Pray for your parents, Matronata Matrona. She
lived one year, fifty-two days.
 
 

The asking of the saints for their intercession implies an awareness on their part of our prayers. How this is accomplished is a matter of theological speculation. The most common theological speculation is that it is God who makes them aware of our requests for their intercession. They are united with him, and he knows everything, so if they could learn of them through no other means, they could learn of them through God.

Scripture, as I point out in under both of the links provided above, also depicts them being aware of our prayers.

Hope this helps!

Tradition & The Intercession Of The Saints

A non-Catholic reader writes an e-mail titled "Re Your quote on Gary’s site" and says:

Greetings Mr. Akin

I was reading Gary’s quote of your words:

A: Well, aside from the fact that the Magisterium has ruled on the issue and that Apostolic Tradition teaches it (both of which are sufficient to prove the matter), the Bible also teaches it.

http://www.cin.org/users/james/questions/q040.htm

What "apostolic tradition"?

Could you refer me to the text or material you refer to?

Thanks.

May God grant your house peace

Thanks. Yours, too.

I’m not sure who Gary is, but the link you provide goes to a question I wrote some years ago (like 10 years ago, actually) on how we can be assured that those in heaven can hear our prayers.

This subject is dealt with in apostolic Tradition, which is conveyed in the writings of the Church Fathers. There is a pronounced stream from the early centuries onward showing that Christians recognized the practice of asking the saints (both human and angelic saints) for their intercession. Magisterial intervention has clarified that this is, indeed, part of the deposit of faith and thus apostolic Tradition (meaning that it was present in the deposit of faith at the time of the apostles either explicitly or implicitly).

For sample quotes from the Church Fathers and other early Christians,

SEE HERE.

There is an inscription in a cemetery near St.

Sabina’s in Rome that I find personally very moving. It dates from

about the year A.D. 300 and says:

 

Pray for your parents, Matronata Matrona. She

lived one year, fifty-two days.

 

 

The asking of the saints for their intercession implies an awareness on their part of our prayers. How this is accomplished is a matter of theological speculation. The most common theological speculation is that it is God who makes them aware of our requests for their intercession. They are united with him, and he knows everything, so if they could learn of them through no other means, they could learn of them through God.

Scripture, as I point out in under both of the links provided above, also depicts them being aware of our prayers.

Hope this helps!

Zap!

LightningY’know that whole key/kite/lightning experiment thingie that Ben Franklin did to prove that lightning is electrical (something that seems obvious to us today)?

Well, that happened today, June 15, in 1752.

Fortunately, Franklin was insulated at the time.

Others trying Franklin’s proposed experiment weren’t.

Wikipedia notes: "Others, such as Prof. Georg Wilhelm Richmann of St. Petersburg, Russia, were spectacularly electrocuted during the months following Franklin’s experiment."

Ouch!

LEARN MORE.

History Bleg

LondoSee Londo?

See Londo preen?

Preen, Londo, preen.

Now: See the brooch thingie that Lond’s wearing on his jacket?

I wanna know what it is.

Thing is: I’ve see other high men of state in historical pictures and illustrations wearing them, but I’d assumed that they were just pieces of jewelry of some kind.

A piece back I got evidence that they were more than that: I have reason to believe that thingies like this (in Earth history, anyway) are some kind of insignia used by political parties.

I have specific reason to think that such insignia were used by the liberal and conservative parties in England in the 19th century and that ministers of parliament would wear them to signify their party affiliation.

I’ve done some Googling, but I haven’t turned up anything on them–like what they were called.

So: Does anybody know there name or can anybody provide a link to some web info about them?

Much obliged, folks!

What’s This?

Babbagedifferenceengine_2Actually, it’s something called a "difference engine."

A model of one was presented today, June 14, back in 1822 to the Royal Astronomical Society.

In an accompanying paper, the inventer of the difference engine, Charles Babbage, explained how it worked and provided plans.

The Royal Society was impressed and agreed to underwrite Babbage’s attempt to build a genuine difference engine (rather than just a model).

Unfortunately, a variety of problems (including personal ones) hampered Babbage from doing this, and he was never able to complete the project. The one you see above was constructed by his son from parts in his workshop.

Now.

Why am I telling you all this?

Because Babbage’s difference engine was the ancestor of the machine you are using right now: the computer.

The difference engine was designed to automatically compute mathematical and astronomical tables (hence the Royal Astronomical Society’s interest in it). Babbage later revised his plans in an attempt to come up with a more powerful machine he called an "analytical engine" (a.k.a. "Difference Engine No. 2").

Though these machines were nothing compared to the computer you’re using at the moment, they still represented a fundamental technological shift that has changed the course of human civilization.

LEARN MORE ABOUT BABBAGE . . .

. . . AND HIS MARVELOUS CONTRAPTION.

What's This?

Actually, it’s something called a "difference engine."

A model of one was presented today, June 14, back in 1822 to the Royal Astronomical Society.

In an accompanying paper, the inventer of the difference engine, Charles Babbage, explained how it worked and provided plans.

The Royal Society was impressed and agreed to underwrite Babbage’s attempt to build a genuine difference engine (rather than just a model).

Unfortunately, a variety of problems (including personal ones) hampered Babbage from doing this, and he was never able to complete the project. The one you see above was constructed by his son from parts in his workshop.

Now.

Why am I telling you all this?

Because Babbage’s difference engine was the ancestor of the machine you are using right now: the computer.

The difference engine was designed to automatically compute mathematical and astronomical tables (hence the Royal Astronomical Society’s interest in it). Babbage later revised his plans in an attempt to come up with a more powerful machine he called an "analytical engine" (a.k.a. "Difference Engine No. 2").

Though these machines were nothing compared to the computer you’re using at the moment, they still represented a fundamental technological shift that has changed the course of human civilization.

LEARN MORE ABOUT BABBAGE . . .

. . . AND HIS MARVELOUS CONTRAPTION.

Grace Before Christ

A reader writes:

A question about grace and the Jews did they have grace?  As Mary
was full of grace but Paul talks about being in the flesh before his
conversion. I know the Jewish elders were anointed by the Holy Spirit
but why would they need conversion if they already had some grace? I am
sure you can explain this to me. Thank you so much for your time.

The
Jews before the time of Christ clearly had grace. The Old Testament is
filled with declarations of God’s graciousness to his people. This does
not mean that they had all the kinds of grace that Christians do today, however.

We do read about some pre-Christian Jewish individuals
receiving the Holy Spirit, such as the seventy elders or the prophets,
but the Holy Spirit was not given generally to all believers, as is the
case with Christians (John 7:39).

Another grace that was not given at the time–at least in a general
fashion–was the regeneration of the heart that was promised with the
New Covenant (Jeremiah 31:33). This regeneration of the heart,
accomplished in baptism (cf. John 3:3-5), is what makes one a "new
creation" in Paul’s terminology (2 Cor. 5:17), and thus what causes the
Christian to be no longer "in the flesh." Christians are thus given
additional spiritual resources in combatting sin that were not given
generally in the prior age.

This does not mean that there was no general grant of grace to
pre-Christian Jews. There was, as the Old Testament abundantly
demonstrates.

As to why conversion would be needed for one who already had some grace, there are two answers:

1) To obtain the additional graces now being given, and

2) To fulfill God’s requirements. If God gives new public
revelation, men are obligated to accept it. If he thus sends his Son
and reveals him to be the Messiah, men are obligated to accept that
even if they were already right with God. Culpable failure to do so
will result in one losing the grace one has.

The situation is somewhat analogous to what happens if the pope
defines a dogma. Dogmas are not new public revelation, but the
situation is analogous. If a person is a faithful, grace-filled
Catholic prior to the defintion and then the pope defines a dogma,
acceptance of the dogma becomes obligatory, and if one culpably refuses
to accept it then one rejects the virtue of faith and sins mortally.
One thus loses the grace one had.

Bottom line: In order to be in a state of grace, one must be willing
to accept the authoritative teachings of God. If a prophet gives a new
teaching as public revelation, one must accept it to remain aright with
God. If the pope clarifies a teaching through a dogmatic definition,
one must also accept it to remain aright with God. Being right with God
is not a permanent state that nothing can alter. One must be willing to
accept the progressive unfolding or deepinging of God’s teaching to
remain in a state of grace, for otherwise one is rejecting God’s
authority as a teacher and the means by which he has chosen to teach
(be they prophet or pope).

Least In The Kingdom Of Heaven?

A reader writes:

What does it mean when in Matthew 5:19, it says, those who do away with the least of my commandments and teaches others to do so will be least in the Kingdom of heaven?  I would think they wouldn’t even get into the Kingdom of heaven.

Your perplexity on this point is understandable. Let’s look at the passage:

17: "Think not that I have  come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to  abolish them but to fulfil them.
18:
For truly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, not an iota,
not a dot, will pass from the law until all is accomplished.
19:
Whoever then relaxes one of the least of these commandments and teaches
men so, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but he who does
them and teaches them shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.
20:
For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes
and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.

This is one of the harder passages in the Sermon on the Mount. At the most general level, Jesus is giving an assurance that he has not simply come to overturn the Law of Moses. If we took verse 17 in isolation, it would sound as if he’s reaffirming the binding authority of the Law of Moses and that’s all there is to it. But then he seems to soften the statement in verse 18, allusing to the idea that the Law (or some of it) may pass away once "all is accomplished." The question is: What needs to be accomplished or fulfilled for this passing away to take place?

One possibility is the whole course of God’s plan of the ages. This would mean that the Law of Moses would be binding on the Jewish people (it was never binding on Gentiles) until the end of the world. While this would be a plausible interpretation of the verse taken by itself, the interpretation runs into difficulties once we hit the book of Acts, where God clearly suspends some of the dietary aspects of the Mosaic Law by abolishing the distinction between clean and unclean animals (see Acts 9). In St. Paul’s epistles, he indicates further that the Law of Moses is no longer binding on Jewish individuals and even says he himself is not under the Law of Moses but the Law of Christ.

This suggests that we are to look for something on a nearer-term time horizon as the fulfillment Jesus spoke of that allows the Law of Moses to be modified. If you look at p. 162 of Good Pope Benedict’s most excellent book

GOD AND THE WORLD

you’ll see him suggest what is the standard interpretation of the passage:

Christ does not comes as a lawbreaker. He does not come in order to declare the Law invalid or meaningless. . . . Christ comes in order to complete it. But that also means, in order to lift the Law up onto a higher level. He fulfills the Law in his suffering, in his life, in his message. And now what happens is that the whole Law finds its meaning in him. Everything that was intended by it, everything it aimed for, is truly realized in his perosn.

That is why we no longer need to fulfill the Law according to the letter, in the way its prescriptions regulate eveything down to the last detail. Our fellowship with Christ means that we are in the sphere where the Law is fulfilled; where it has found its true place; where it is quite literally "lifted up" to a higher level, that is, both preserved and at the same time transformed.

What the pope–then a cardinal–articulated in this passage is not dogmatically defined teaching, but it is the standard way of interpreting what Jesus says: Through his teaching, life, and death and resurrection, Christ provided the fulfillment needed for a modification in the Law of Moses to take place, meaning that even Jewish individuals today are not bound by it.

This provides important background for verses 19 and 20. In verse 19 he gives what is a rather soft-edged statement that makes it sound as if a person could relax the precepts of the Law and still remain "in the kingdom of heaven" (i.e., be saved).

He may indeed mean this. It is possible for people, in innocent ignorance or even with partial culpability, to water down the requirements of God’s law and yet not lose their salvation. In modern terminology, they would sin venially by doing so, but only venially.

In verse 20, though, Jesus makes a harder-edged statement, speaking of the need for our righteousness to exceed that of the Pharisees or we won’t get into the kingdom of heaven at all (i.e., not be saved). This may also be what he means. It may be that being called "least in the kingdom of heaven" means "not saved," but this is not clear and is not the natural interpretation of the phrase.

My suspicion is that Jesus meant the former interpretation, not the latter: That one can relax the lesser commandments of the Law and diminish one’s standing in the kingdom through venial sin. The example of the Pharisees is still salutory, though, because Jesus viewed them as also watering down the commandment of God, only they were watering down very important ones, like the duty of honoring one’s father and mother. He specifically criticized them for this in Matthew 15.

Now, you’ll note that in the last couple of paragraphs, I’ve been speaking in a rather loose manner as if we today would be relaxing commandments of the Law. In reality, the Law he was talking about was still the Law of Moses, and he was addressing the situation of people living in his own day. If they prematurely relaxed what the Law of Moses required then they would suffer the consequences he mentions.

Since nobody today is bound by the Law of Moses, that doesn’t apply to us directly, but the principles involved still do: God still has a law, called the Law of Christ in the New Testament and "the New Law" in theology, and if we water down its precepts in a way that constitutes venial sin then we will have our standing in the kingdom diminished thereby. If we utterly abograte them in a way that constitutes mortal sin, we will not make it into the kingdom any more than the Pharisees Jesus spoke of did.