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The Mystery of Individuality
BY Melinda Selmys
March 29-April 4, 2009 Issue |
Posted 3/20/09 at 9:19 AM
It is spring.
A gardener stands looking over her freshly turned up beds, and she looks down
at the little packets of seeds that she has in her basket. She looks at the
tender plants that she has been germinating on her windowsill since late
winter, and a plan emerges in her mind. In an instant, the newly thawed earth
is transformed into the garden that it will be: She knows every plant even
before it has germinated; what it will look like; what it will become; how it
will attract the butterflies and keep the cabbage worms at bay.
She sets to work sowing.
To God, this is something like how
we look. From the berth of eternity, he doesn’t see only the imperfect,
half-finished product that we are at the moment, but the complete whole that we
will be at the Final Judgment. “Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you”
(Jeremiah 1:5). From before conception, he knows each of us in the fullness of
our identity.
For us, living in time, our identity
is a mystery. We know that it comes from God, from our being made “in the image
and likeness.”
What does this mean, though, to be
made in God’s image?
The central mystery of the creation
of the human person is nearly inexhaustible, but one of its properties is that
we are unique. God does not make mass-produced people; there are no soul
factories spitting out identical Toms, Bills and Harrys, with an occasional St.
Thomas Aquinas designer special to liven things up.
Each of us is a distinct conception,
a new idea in the mind of God which has not been seen before and which will
never be realized again.
None of God’s ideas are boring or
humdrum. In the complicated, interwoven narrative of history, there are not
heroes and bit characters. There are no extras mucking up the set to create the
illusion of a complete world. In God’s story, every character — no matter how
minor they appear — is the hero of his own distinct narrative.
We are not only capable of heroism;
we are called to it. Heroic sanctity is not for the few, nor is it merely a
matter of following the rules and attaining moral perfection.
Some atheist thinkers have suggested
that the world would be boring if everyone were a saint, presumably because we
would all be cookie-cutter images of a sentimentalized piety.
This is absurd.
The canon of saints is a varied and
colorful crew — much more varied, in fact, than the secularized masses who have
devoted themselves to the cause of “just be yourself.” The saints thunder on
the mountain tops; they live on pillars in the desert; they lead armies to
victory, conquer dragons, get boiled in oil, and bring dead babies back to
life. This is the stuff of legend, and it is a great deal more interesting than
being a “self-made businessman” or a “nonaligned anarchist lesbian.”
The great and terrible thing is that
all of us are made to be saints.
The gardener does not plant any
tomatoes in the hope that they will become stifled, pathetic little plants with
piddling fruits and yellow-spotted leaves; God does not make nice, normal,
decent folk.
The modern idea that you have to do
something spectacularly evil to be deserving of hellfire is untrue. Hell is not
an eternal dungeon for the abominably depraved; it is a garbage heap where God
throws all of the human beings that got late blight or mildew and didn’t
produce any fruit.
God is an artist who has given his
works the tremendous gift of being able to participate in their own creation.
In his Letter to Artists, John Paul II tells us, “All men and women are
entrusted with the task of crafting their own life: In a certain sense, they are
to make of it a work of art, a masterpiece.”
But becoming a masterpiece is not
easy. It requires courage. The man who gambles his entire life for pennies will
never win big. Or, as Kierkegaard puts it, “To dare is to lose one’s footing
momentarily. Not to dare is to lose oneself.”
Imagine if St. Joan of Arc had
decided that it would be better to just stay in Rouen and be a nice, pious,
good little girl? Or if St. Peter had decided that it was irresponsible to
leave his fishing nets untended? If St. John the Baptist had tried to find a
way of calling Herod to repentance without offending anyone? If St. George had
been too modern and sensible to believe in dragons?
The courage required to become
ourselves is, more often than not, the courage to be taken for a fool. “We are
fools for Christ’s sake” (1 Corinthians 4:10). The respectable Christianity
that is so often mocked and abused by atheist writers deserves every ounce of
venom that it receives; Christ never called anyone to be respectable.
Why? Because heroes are never
respectable.
They are very often respected
(though generally not until after they have completed their quests), but,
nonetheless, they are always a little odd. There is a kind of glamour that
hangs around a Bilbo Baggins after he returns from the Misty Mountains, but the
upright, ordinary folk will continue to warn their children that people who go
in search of treasure are liable to become a dragon’s dinner.
Now, not everyone is called to be a
public hero.
Raskolnikov only ever made the evening
edition for his sins — it is unlikely that his redemption was trumpeted in The
St. Petersburg Times. The interior of man is a broad landscape as
rich and complicated as the whole outer world. All that we perceive, that we
feel, that we imagine, that we apprehend is contained within our souls, and,
for a great many, this is where the journey lies.
It is not an easy task. Material
creation is rarely populated with such fearsome monsters as dwell within, and
the inner quest cannot be comfortably undertaken by cowards.
The soul that risks little cannot
accomplish its own being. Peter Kreeft warns, “We alone can fail to achieve our
nature. Our nature is a task given to us to achieve, not a fact given to us to
receive.” Boethius adds that “when anything falls away from its nature, its
existence too ceases.”
Yet, it is frightening, because we
do not know what we are called to become. Our identity is a mystery, hidden in
the mind of God. It cannot be penetrated by our attempts at knowledge, “for no
science can say who man is, where he comes from or where he is going” (to quote
Benedict XVI’s address to a conference on “The Changing Human Identity”).
It cannot be discovered through
navel-gazing and self-realization workshops. It can only be discovered in the
process of living.
To those who are victorious, God has
promised the eschatological revelation of the fullness of identity: “a white
stone, with a new name written on the stone which no one knows except him who
receives it” (Revelation 2:17). Next week: i-Dentity
Melinda Selmys is a staff writer
at VulgataMagazine.org.
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