So often we hear of apologies being made these  days for past events,  we often forget that the true meaning of apology,  in the Christian  sense of that word, is not "to apologize," as if to say  I’m sorry.  If  you thought this was to be about the art of saying "I’m  sorry," then I  must apologize for letting you down.
        In his first letter to the  Church Peter writes  "always be ready to give a defense to everyone who  asks you a reason for  the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear."   (1 Peter 3:15)
        That defense spoken of is literally called in   Greek, an Apologia, from which we derive the word apology.  It means a   detailed attempt to explain why we believe what we believe.  All too   often, Christians, (Catholics included) have fallen into a pattern of   thinking that it is enough to be good and get our own little soul into   Heaven.  Such a pattern is disastrous for the future of the Church.
      Or  else we may think it enough to win people  without a word through our  good conduct.  Granted, our conduct does need  to be good, but many  other sorts of persons have good conduct.  Do we  convert to their  religions because of their good conduct?  Should we?   The problem with  that is that one can always find good people who  believe all sorts of  things.  No, merely good conduct alone does not win  souls.
      Another  thing people might point to is our peace  and serenity, the work of the  Holy Spirit in our lives to give us that  peace and serenity.  Again,  certainly we should seek all the gifts of  the Spirit to which we have  access, but this still is not enough.
       Still other people are  impressed with signs and  wonders.  If we speak in an unknown tongue or  interpret, or give  prophecies or have visions, many are impressed, but  these things too,  may be faked by the Devil’s believers.
      The best  and strongest conversions come not from  those who like the atmosphere  or the people or the entertainment value  of the preaching, but from  those who come to be convinced that being a  Catholic is the right thing  to do.
    This leads us to the bottom line of why  apologetics is so  important.  Why do we believe what we believe?  Pity  the poor person  who can only say in response, "Well, I was raised that  way.  I’ve  always believed that way."  Don’t get me wrong; one should be  grateful  for having parents or others who raised them in the Faith.   What I am  complaining about is allowing one’s life to pass without once  giving  the matter any thought.
      Apologetics, then, is the art of proving  that  what we believe is the right thing to believe.  We believe because  we  know it to be true; we know it to be true because we have proved it  out  to ourselves.  What does the Bible say?  What does history show?   What  holds up to true logic?
     Looking into such things runs so  counter to  modern trends in religious thought.  One sees more and more a  denial  that there exists any objective religious truth.  Certainly it  does not  help when there are so many people running around pushing all  sorts of  other beliefs.  But every belief except the true one is  necessarily sold  on good feelings, liking the people, or finding room  for one’s own  secret vice.
     This got started when nations, such as  the United  States, began passing laws protecting everyone’s religious  freedom,  which really meant that anyone is free to believe anything  they want in  this country.  That is their constitutional right.  It  sounds so noble,  allowing all to have their religion, whatever it might  be.  The opposite  sounds so barbaric, forbidding the teaching of any  religion other than  that of the Catholic Church.  But is it?
     A  little history might help here.  The reason the  United States passed  such a law was because of the violence which had  torn up Europe over  which religion was true, or so they thought!   Really, if the "fight"  had been about whether Christ’s Church is to be  Protestant or Catholic,  the proper thing for all to have done is to sit  down and discuss the  religious issues rationally and reasonably.   Certainly the conclusions  so arrived at would mean a great deal more  than merely a military  battle in which "might makes right."
It really is in such talking  over the issues that  all the great Councils of the Church solved many  religious questions:   Is Jesus Christ God?  Has He one nature or two?   What about the Holy  Spirit?  Is the use of images good or bad?  All of  these issues and many  more were resolved peacefully in Council because  the proponents of each  side of each issue all sat down at the same  table, brought out their  documents and evidences, and argued out the  case in the sight of all  present.
       An important point is that  there has always been a  clear answer which the evidence supports.  The  modern myth about  religion being about people being free to believe  anything which strikes  their fancy is just that, a myth.  Any honest  and sincere person who  takes the time and effort to study all the  evidence and facts carefully  and who meditates on that with clear and  logical thinking must  necessarily reach the same conclusions about what  we are to believe.
One can see that the founding fathers of this   country did not solve the problem of religious wars.  All they did was   to replace one problem, namely the tendency many had to go to war over   ideas they never bothered to examine objectively, with another problem,   namely the tendency to treat all possible religious affiliations as   being of no importance.  What that really amounts to is a disbelief in   God.  If it really didn’t matter what a person believes about God, does   that not imply that God is only a figment of that person’s imagination?
      We  see now where the moral relativism created by  the founding fathers of  our country (and condemned by John Paul II in  the encyclical Veritatis  Splendor) has led us.  To a point that social  morals have utterly  broken down, religious expression becomes something  forbidden by the  government, and this country is not far removed from  the Atheistic  ideal of Communist Albania.  We are no better off than we  were in the  wars of the Europeans, except that now our millions of dead  are hidden  in the trash cans behind the abortion clinics rather than  strewn all  over the battlefields.
      What was truly called for, and what would  have  put this nation on solid ground would have been a resolve to  discuss the  religious issues peacefully, as at a great Council.   Actually, there  already had been a Council before that time, the  Council of Trent.  The  Protestants were invited to come and plead their  cases, and guaranteed  safe passage in and out, but none came.  I think  it’s because they all  knew deep down that their teachings would not  stand up in the light of  Scripture, reason, and history.
     Had the  founding American fathers agreed to  debate the religious questions  honestly and publicly, it would only have  been a matter of time before  America would have been Catholic, and a  society solidly founded,  because it would be founded on the Rock of  Peter.
Apologetics  then, is really a search for truth.   The missionary who uses  apologetics to teach the true religion learns as  much from those he  teaches.  No, not religious truths, but often it is  the outsider who  asks the questions no one has thought of before.
    The earliest  Christians had not wondered about  many of the questions settled in the  great ecumenical Councils.  Ask St.  Paul or St. Ignatius whether Christ  has one nature or two, and his  response would have been, "I don’t  know!"  The question, having never  been asked before, had not as yet  been answered by the Church.  But  there was an answer, and in the great  Council of Chalcedon, the Church  found it.
      Apologetics is not  just a missionary exercise,  nor is it even just part of the search for  truth, it is the prime source  of the deepening of one’s faith.  As long  as we believe something  without knowing why we should believe it, do  we really believe it?  I  think not.  Apologetics then, is the art of  deepening our own faith.  As  we study the "why’s" and "wherefore’s" of  our belief, we deepen our  belief and strengthen our faith so as to be  able to stand up to the  present evils.  And, no matter how deep we dig,  we only find more and  more reason to believe what the Church teaches.
 
 
Cyril,
ReplyDeleteGod bless sa blog na ito. Nawa e maraming kabataan ang matulungan ninyo sa pamamagitan nitong blog na ito.
Ave Maria!