The occasional, often ill-considered thoughts of a Roman Catholic permanent deacon who is ever grateful to God for his existence. Despite the strangeness we encounter in this life, all the suffering we witness and endure, being is good, so good I am sometimes unable to contain my joy. Deo gratias!


Although I am an ordained deacon of the Catholic Church, the opinions expressed in this blog are my personal opinions. In offering these personal opinions I am not acting as a representative of the Church or any Church organization.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Max Picard, Faithful Visionary

It's not unusual to hear someone labeled a "visionary" these days, often simply because they have offered a prediction or two about some aspect of the future. In technology, for example, people like Bill Gates or Steve Jobs are considered visionaries by many because of their ability to drive technological development toward the realization of a future they envisioned at some point in the past. I suppose it's reasonable to call them visionaries, at least in a rather narrow technological sense. But the visionaries who most impress me are those who seem to grasp the totality of human thought and activity and envision where it is leading us. Such people are few and far between; they are also difficult to identify since their status as a true visionary is only evident with the passage of time, often a considerable amount of time. It's quite possible, therefore, that today's visionary might be viewed tomorrow as just another crackpot...and vice versa.

I believe one of today's great visionaries is Pope Benedict XVI, a man with a deep sense of history whose understanding seems to span the human condition. He is a professor, theologian and philosopher who is also a contemplative, and a contemplative who is also a doer, a man who acts. But I suppose only time will tell how great a visionary our Holy Father is.

Like Benedict any true visionary must have a sense of history, since both present and future are products of the past. I suspect, however, that today's professional historians will not prove to be very visionary because of their reliance on theoretical models and deterministic ideologies. They tend to paint themselves into ideological corners from which they cannot easily escape to reality.

Another visionary I have only recently encountered is Max Picard, a German-Swiss Catholic theologian. I had heard of Picard, but never read him until he was recommended to me by a friend.

Born a Jew, in 1888, Picard converted to Catholicism in 1939. Educated as a medical doctor, he left the practice of medicine because he believed doctors were becoming more like mechanics and losing sight of the humanity of their patients. I just finished his book, The Flight from God, in which he describes how, in our modern world, Faith has been replaced by the flight from God. We have entered a time when all truths are relative and only change itself is real. In other words, for Picard, "The man of the Flight has no firm standard against which to measure himself. He has only the possibilities."

The opening words of this short book set the stage for that which follows. I quote some of that first page here:
"In every age man has been in flight from God. What distinguishes the Flight today from every other flight is this: once Faith was the universal, and prior to the individual; there was an objective world of Faith, while the flight was only accomplished subjectively, within the individual man. It came into being through the individual man's separating himself from the world of Faith by an act of decision. A man who wanted to flee had first to make his own flight. The opposite is true today. The objective and eternal world of Faith is no more; it is Faith which has to be remade moment by moment through the individual's act of decision, that is to say, through the individual cutting himself off from the world of the Flight."
It was this first paragraph that hooked me as I glanced through the book in a used bookstore some months ago. And imagine my surprise when I discovered that the book was first published in 1934. He was, in effect, addressing the "dictatorship of relativism" seventy years prior to Pope Benedict's famous homily of April 2005.

But Picard does not despair, as do so many authors who address our collapsing civilization. No, Picard, realizes that God, like Francis Thompson's "Hound of Heaven", is always the Pursuer. Late in the book, he makes this point, almost poetically:
"Whithersoever they may flee, there is God. Wherever they find themselves, once more they flee away, for God is everywhere. Ever more desperately they flee; but God is already in every place, waiting for them to come...Ever more desperately they fling themselves away, but they can only fling themselves so far, because they have torn themselves away from God...Yet God's power is still manifested in man's tearing himself away from God...They are being hunted by God and they can move so swiftly only because he hunts them. Even this is God's love, that he, he and no other, wills to pursue the fleeing, so that he, the swiftest, may always be the nearest to those in flight."
It's a wonderful book by a true visionary. Read it.

Blessings...

6 comments:

  1. I have just finished reading "The World of Silence," by Max Picard. It is without doubt one of the most challenging and illuminating books I have encountered for sometime. One might almost say it has reorientated my life and given me real spiritual food for the journey to the kingdom.

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    1. where did you get it??? I am so desparate to read it but unable to attain it.

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    2. Natalia, check out Amazon.com -- They list several places where the book can be purchased. See the link in the post above.

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    3. As they say, silence is golden. It is an opportunity to experience eternity with God. Thi can bring out the humility and love that man is capable of living.

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  2. PS I'd never heard of Max Picard until I read a short book by Fr Thomas Merton; one of my favourite authors. His "Thoughts in Solitude" is pure joy. God has always haunted my life, but I have had to continually keep my sights on him and fight against my lower nature. Kyrie Eleison. Mary pray for me.

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    1. There is an alternative to the perpetual tug of war with the flesh... It involves simple observation rather than struggle and self-condemnation.

      Romans 8:1 [paraphrased] There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. 2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus [the "I Am" presence] has set you free from the law of sin and of death. 3 For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do: by sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and to deal with sin, he condemned sin in the flesh, 4 so that the just requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not according to the flesh [the egoic mind] but according to the Spirit [the mind of Christ].

      http://jeshua21.wordpress.com/2013/08/25/no-effort-is-necessary/

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