We ask you, urgently: don’t scroll past this
Dear readers, Catholic Online was de-platformed by Shopify for our pro-life beliefs. They shut down our Catholic Online, Catholic Online School, Prayer Candles, and Catholic Online Learning Resources—essential faith tools serving over 1.4 million students and millions of families worldwide. Our founders, now in their 70's, just gave their entire life savings to protect this mission. But fewer than 2% of readers donate. If everyone gave just $5, the cost of a coffee, we could rebuild stronger and keep Catholic education free for all. Stand with us in faith. Thank you.Help Now >
Terrorism in Norway: Without Christ, Rebellion Can Become Insanity
FREE Catholic Classes
The heart of man is worn out by the continuous deceptions of a dominant world power that, having eliminated God (or having reduced him to an ideology), has managed to anesthetize man by making him believe that his life depends on power
Highlights
Catholic Online (https://www.catholic.org)
8/2/2011 (1 decade ago)
Published in Europe
Keywords: Oslo, Norway, terrorism, Father Aldo Trento, reason, faith, communion and liberation
P>OSLO,Norway (Catholic Online) - While everyone is on vacation, dreaming of beating the stress of a life that seems increasingly less life-like (such that even desire seems to have shut down), we received from Norway the terrible news of two terrorist attacks with about a hundred fatalities.
What a slap in the face for everyone! Particularly from Norway. From one of the most "perfect" countries in the world - where honesty and social organization are exemplified - comes a fact that has shaken everyone.
The shock is as big as the pain for the victims and their families and yet we can't stop here, we can't abandon the search to understand what got in the way of this "perfect" machine.What got in the way? Man.
The heart of man is increasingly worn out by the continuous deceptions of a dominant world power that, having eliminated God (or having reduced him to an ideology), has managed to anesthetize man by making him believe that his life depends on power itself.
But this undertaking (which Msgr. Luigi Giussani defined as "Chernobyl effect") cannot and will not last long, because there is no power in the world that can suppress man's heart to the point of killing it. Even if, in Norway, as in every part of the world, those who hold power make their followers believe that if they live, it is by their grace - and they should be thankful for it.
Once anesthetized, this maneuver that practically tries to change human DNA, cannot last long, because inside each of us there's an Icarus that can't stand being ensnared in a cage that impedes his flight.?
Man - and man's heart - is made to fly.
Thus, either this demand finds its freedom, or it turns, devolves, into madness. It is impossible to suppress that thirst for happiness, for love, for beauty, for truth, and for justice which make up the very fibers of the human heart. One can curse these heartbeats, but not ignore them.
And if the powers that be forget this truth, no matter how perfect their systems may be, and even if man himself forgets, inevitably the moment of madness arrives whose consequences we saw in Oslo, Norway.
If one hasn't encountered the presence of Christ as a fact that answers totally to the needs of reason and hunger of the human heart, and instead has encountered an idea or inspiration that uses Christ, it is inevitable that reason will be censored, unraveling into violence and fanaticism.
How many atrocities have been committed in the name of Christ, where Christ had nothing to do with it all?
Christianity is an event that is verifiable in its profound reasonableness only inside a reality that is fully lived. Christ needs man in his entirety, and man needs Christ. In front of this tragedy, so that these brothers may not have died in vain, it is critical to take our heart seriously.
It's desires are well expressed in Psalm 63: "O God, you are my God, earnestly I seek you; my soul thirsts for you, my body longs for you, in a dry and weary land where there is no water." Or as Giuseppe Ungaretti reminds us, "Closed among mortal things (even the sky full of stars will end) why do I yearn for God?"
Man is relationship with eternity, relationship with the infinite, and if my heart doesn't find this YOU -for which it is made - there is no social system, as "perfect" as it may be, that will hold back the madness and all of its consequences.
If God doesn't exist or is reduced to an idol, an ideology, anything is possible. But it is the heart itself that tells us of God's existence! It's the heart that cries: 'I want the infinite.'
Modern power arises excluding God, it arises claiming to be God, to be that which the heart needs, and thus it is inevitable that these tsunamis arrive, making us tremble.
Values aren't enough to live, less so the pretense of being honest, as we've been telling ourselves (even in the Church) for decades.
We need an additional step; we need an encounter with someone for whom the heart is made - to take hold of our life again. What happened to John, Andrew, Zaccheus, and Magdalene needs to happen to each of us now, a real encounter with God that answers our hearts' deepest desires.
We need it to happen now, in the middle of summer, while everyone is laying down, like featherless chickens on the beach, or climbing mountains like deer. We need an encounter with that gaze of the Mystery made flesh, the Mystery that our heart is made of. We need Christ's gaze to meet ours. That gaze that renders us conscious of the fact that before madness, there is forgiveness, there's mercy.
This is precisely what happened to me when the illusion of power, in its ideological expression, was consuming my mind, convincing me that Christ wasn't enough to liberate man from his folly. And what continues to happen to me fills me with joy every morning. The tragedy in Norway urges us to assume the responsibility we have as Christians in the world.
Is our experience of Christ like what happened to John and Andrew, or is it just a mixture of values and morals, incapable of resisting the challenges of the modern world? Are those who looks at us these days, observing our faces, fascinated by the beauty of a gaze in which Christ's tenderness is evident in our eyes?
We can respond to religious fanaticism only by showing the reasonableness of our faith in our daily life. There's nothing more blasphemous than to define Christianity as a left wing idea or a right wing idea. Christianity is simply Christ, that is, the One who is the fullness and offers the true perfection of man. "The truth is that only in the mystery of the incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light..." (GS #22)
Being Christian is not adding an adjective to the word "man" but it's the very name of man, as Giussani would say, of that level in nature in which man becomes conscious of himself.
-----
Padre Aldo Trento is a missionary in Paraguay
---
'Help Give every Student and Teacher FREE resources for a world-class Moral Catholic Education'
Copyright 2021 - Distributed by Catholic Online
Join the Movement
When you sign up below, you don't just join an email list - you're joining an entire movement for Free world class Catholic education.
-
Mysteries of the Rosary
-
St. Faustina Kowalska
-
Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Saint of the Day for Wednesday, Oct 4th, 2023
-
Popular Saints
-
St. Francis of Assisi
-
Bible
-
Female / Women Saints
-
7 Morning Prayers you need to get your day started with God
-
Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Introducing "Journey with the Messiah" - A Revolutionary Way to Experience the Bible
-
Pope Francis Calls Young Cancer Patients "Witnesses of Hope" During Audience at the Vatican
-
Senate to Vote on Protecting Babies Who Survive Abortions
-
Mel Gibson Prepares to Bring The Resurrection of the Christ to the Big Screen in 2025
-
Catholic Response to Devastating Los Angeles Wildfires
Daily Catholic
- Daily Readings for Sunday, January 12, 2025
- St. Marguerite Bourgeoys: Saint of the Day for Sunday, January 12, 2025
- Prayer for a Blessing on the New Year: Prayer of the Day for Tuesday, December 31, 2024
- Daily Readings for Saturday, January 11, 2025
- St. Theodosius the Cenobiarch: Saint of the Day for Saturday, January 11, 2025
- St. Theresa of the Child Jesus: Prayer of the Day for Monday, December 30, 2024
Copyright 2024 Catholic Online. All materials contained on this site, whether written, audible or visual are the exclusive property of Catholic Online and are protected under U.S. and International copyright laws, © Copyright 2024 Catholic Online. Any unauthorized use, without prior written consent of Catholic Online is strictly forbidden and prohibited.
Catholic Online is a Project of Your Catholic Voice Foundation, a Not-for-Profit Corporation. Your Catholic Voice Foundation has been granted a recognition of tax exemption under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Federal Tax Identification Number: 81-0596847. Your gift is tax-deductible as allowed by law.