The Unfathomable
Depths of God
God is everywhere
in his immensity, and everywhere close at hand. As he says of himself: I am a God close at hand, not a God far
off. The God we seek is not one who dwells at a
distance from us, for we have him present with us, if only we are worthy. He
dwells in us as the soul in the body, if only we are sound members of his, if
we are dead to sin. The in very truth he dwells in us, the one who said: I will dwell in them and walk among them. If we are worthy of his presence with us, then in
truth we are made alive by him as his living members. As the Apostle says: In him we live and move and have our being.
Who, I ask, will
search out the Most High in his own being, for he is beyond words or
understanding? Who will penetrate the secrets of God? Who will boast that he
knows the infinite God, who fills all things, yet encompasses all things, who
pervades all things, yet reaches beyond all things, who holds all things in his
hand, yet escapes the grasp of all things? No one has
ever seen him as he is. No one must then
presume to search for the unsearchable things of God: his nature, the manner of
his existence, his selfhood. These are beyond telling, beyond scrutiny, beyond
investigation. With simplicity, but also with fortitude, only believe that this
is how God is and this is how he well be, for God is incapable of change.
Who then is God?
He is Father, Son and Holy Spirit, one God. Do not look for any further answers
concerning God. Those who want to understand the unfathomable depths of God
must first consider the world of nature.
Knowledge of the
Trinity is rightly compared with the depth of the sea. Wisdom asks: Who will find out what is so very deep? As the depths of the sea are invisible to human
sight, so the Godhead of the Trinity is found to be beyond the grasp of human
understanding. If any one, I say, wants to know what he should believe he must
not imagine that he understands better through speech than through belief; the
knowledge of God that he seeks will be all the further off than it was before.
Seek then the
highest wisdom, not by arguments in words but by the perfection of your life,
not by speech but by the faith that comes from simplicity of heart, not from
the learned speculations of the unrighteous. If you search by means of
discussions for the God who cannot be defined in words, he will depart further from you than he was
before. If you search for him by faith, wisdom will stand where wisdom lives, at the gates. Where wisdom is,
wisdom will be seen, at least in part. But wisdom is also to some extent truly
attained when the invisible God is the object of faith, in a way beyond our
understanding, for we must believe in God, invisible as he is, though he is
partially seen by a heart that is pure.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
From an Instruction by Saint Columban, Abbot
Photo taken from MorgueFile Photos
From an Instruction by Saint Columban, Abbot
Photo taken from MorgueFile Photos
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