Patriarch Urges Touching the Word of God

Bartholomew I Explains Use of “Spiritual Senses”

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VATICAN CITY, OCT. 17, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Most Christians have heard the Word of God, but have they seen it in art or nature, or realized they were touching it in the Eucharist?

Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople spoke Saturday afternoon at the celebration of vespers in the Sistine Chapel of using one’s “spiritual senses” to perceive the Word of God.

The event, presided over by Benedict XVI and attended by some 400 cardinals, bishops, religious and laypeople, took place within the context of the world Synod of Bishops on the Word of God, which is under way in the Vatican through Oct. 26.

The first patriarch in history to be invited to address a world Synod of Bishops, Bartholomew I noted that his presence was “an important step toward the restoration of our full communion.”

“We regard this as a manifestation of the work of the Holy Spirit leading our Churches to a closer and deeper relationship with each other,” he said.

Sitting with Michelangelo’s “Final Judgment” behind him, the patriarch discussed the importance of the synod’s theme.

“The Church needs […] to rediscover the Word of God in every generation,” he said, “and make it head with a renewed vigor and persuasion also in our contemporary world, which deep in its heart thirsts for God’s message of peace, hope and charity.”

He continued: “This duty of evangelization would have been, of course, greatly enhanced and strengthened if all Christians were in a position to perform it with one voice and as a fully united Church.

“It is, therefore, most appropriate, that this synod has opened its doors to ecumenical fraternal delegates so that we may all become aware of our common duty of evangelization as well as of the difficulties and problems of its realization in today’s world.”

Scriptural Church

The patriarch, drawing on the Patristic doctrine of the “spiritual senses,” then spoke of three “spiritual ways of perceiving” the Word of God: “listening to God’s Word, beholding God’s Word, and touching God’s Word.”

He reflected first of all “on hearing and speaking the Word of God through the holy Scriptures.”

“The Christian Church is, above all, a scriptural Church,” Bartholomew I said. “Although methods of interpretation may have varied […] Scripture was always received as a living reality and not a dead book.”

“In the context of a living faith,” he added, “Scripture is the living testimony of a lived history about the relationship of a living God with a living people.”

The patriarch said that in this sense that Christians must “provide a unique perspective — beyond the social, political, or economic — on the need to eradicate poverty, to provide balance in a global world, to combat fundamentalism or racism, and to develop religious tolerance in a world of conflict.”

Art and nature

Bartholomew I affirmed that the Word of God can be seen “in nature and above all in the beauty of the icons”: “Nowhere is the invisible rendered more visible than in the beauty of iconography and the wonder of creation.”

“Icons are a visible reminder of our heavenly vocation,” he explained. “They are invitations to rise beyond our trivial concerns and menial reductions of the world. They encourage us to seek the extraordinary in the very ordinary.

“Icons underline the Church’s fundamental mission to recognize that all people and all things are created and called to be ‘good’ and ‘beautiful.'”

Regarding nature, the patriarch affirmed: “All genuine ‘deep ecology’ is, therefore, inextricably linked with deep theology.”

“Even a stone,” Bartholomew I stated, quoting Basil the Great, “bears the mark of God’s Word. This is true of an ant, a bee and a mosquito, the smallest of creatures. For he spread the wide heavens and laid the immense seas; and He created the tiny hollow shaft of the bee’s sting.”

The patriarch added, “Recalling our minuteness in God’s wide and wonderful creation only underlines our central role in God’s plan for the salvation of the whole world.”

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Full text: www.zenit.org/article-23981?l=english

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