God is like an Inaccessible Rock
The feelings that come to a man who stands on a high
mountain peak and looks down onto some immense sea are the same feelings that
come to me when I look out from the high mountain peak of the Lord’s words into
the incomprehensible depths of his thoughts.
When you look at mountains that stand next to the sea, you
will often find that they seem to have been cut in half, so that on the side
nearest the sea there is a sheer drop and something dropped from the summit
will fall straight into the depths. Someone who looks down from such a peak
will become dizzy, and so too I become dizzy when I look down from the high
peak of these words of the Lord: Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall
see God.
These words offer the sight of God to those whose hearts
have been purified and purged. But look: St John says No-one has seen God. The
Apostle Paul’s sublime mind goes further still: What no man has seen and no man
can see. This is the slippery and crumbling rock that seems to give the mind no
support in the heights. Even the teaching of Moses declared God to be a rock
that was so inaccessible that our minds could not even approach it: No-one can
see the Lord and live.
To see God is to have eternal life – and yet the pillars of
our faith, John and Paul and Moses, say that God cannot be seen. Can you
understand the dizziness of a soul that contemplates their words? If God is
life, whoever does not see God does not see life. If the prophets and the
Apostle, inspired by the Holy Spirit, attest that God cannot be seen, does this
not wreck all the hopes of man?
It is the Lord who sustains our floundering hope, just as he
sustained Peter when he was floundering in the water, and made the waters firm
beneath his feet. If the hand of the Word stretches out to us as well, and sets
us firm in a new understanding when these speculations have made us lose our
balance, we shall be safe from fear, held safe in the guiding hand of the Word.
Blessed, he says, are those who possess a pure heart, for they shall see God.
A homily on the Beatitudes by St Gregory of Nyssa (Office of Readings)
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Voices is a resource for personal prayer and devotion from a Catholic perspective - especially for those beginning the practice of meditative prayer.
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Sunday, 1 July 2018
Seeing God
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