THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

THE REVELATION IS DIVINE INICIATIVE


* Indication of biography about this matter for personal deepening:

CONSENTINO, Francesco. Immaginare Dio. Assisi: Cittadella Editrice, 2010.
DALLARE, Carlo. Quando dici Dio. Bologna: Centro Editoriale Dehoniano, 2004.
DOS SANTOS BOAVENTURA, Josuel. O Deus único nas distintas formas de revelação. Porto Alegre. Disponível em: http://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/ojs/index.php/teo/article/viewFile/1730/1263. Acesso em 24 de junho de 2017.
FORTE, Bruno. Parola e silenzio nella riflessione teologica. Disponível em:  http://www.nostreradici.it/parola_silenzio.htm. Acesso em 10 de setembro de 2017.
__________.  Per dire Dio ai cercatori di Dio. Disponível em: https://it.zenit.org/articles/arcivescovo-bruno-forte-per-dire-dio-ai-cercatori-di-dio/ Acesso em 11 de setembro de 2017.
__________.  Teologia fra parola di Dio e parola degli uomini. Disponível em: http://www.ceam.chiesacattolica.it/2017/03/17/prolusione-di-bruno-forte-ai-corsi-di-teologia-della-cattolicaragazzi-siate-mendincanti-del-cielo/ Acesso em 11 de setembro de 2017.
GOMES, C. F. A Revelação divina. REB vol. 26, fasc.4, 1966, p. 816 –837.
CONCÍLIO ECUMÊNICO VATICANO II, 1962-1965, Cidade do Vaticano. Gaudium et Spes. In: VIER, Frederico (Coord. Geral). Compêndio do Concílio Vaticano II. 22. ed. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1991, p. 141-256.
__________. Dei Verbum. In: VIER, Frederico (Coord. Geral). Compêndio do Concílio Vaticano II. 22. ed. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1991, p. 119-139.
KASPER, Walter. Der Gott Jesu Christi, Mainz, 1982, trad. Esp., El Dios de Jesucristo, Salamanca, 1985.
LATOURELLE, Renê. Teologia da Revelação. 3. ed. São Paulo: Paulinas, 1985.
LIBANIO, João Batista. Teologia da Revelação a partir da modernidade. São Paulo: Loyola, 1992.
TORRES QUEIRUGA, Andrés. Autocompreensão cristã. São Paulo: Paulinas, 2007.
__________.  Repensar o pluralismo: da inculturação à inreligionação. Concilium, Petrópolis-RJ, n.319, p.110-113, jan. 2007.
__________.  El Dios de Jesús: aproximacion en quatro metáforas., p. 4s. disponivel em http://www.servicioskoinonia.org/biblioteca/teologica/queirugadiosparahoy. Acesso em 06 de junho de 2012.
__________. Repensar a revelação. São Paulo: Paulinas, 2010.
SUSIN, Luiz Carlos. A criação de Deus. 2. ed., São Paulo: Paulinas; Valência, ESP: Siquem, 2010 (Coleção Livros Básicos de Teologia 5).


        We have seen how the sense of the sacred is central to cultures and how, through the religious dimension, the human being finds reason and meaning to live. This is possible because the cultures are “theological place”, that is, where one can recognize that God reveals Himself in generosity and, in His free and unconditional love, wants to give Himself fully. It is from the bosom “of the culture itself, with its concerns and its contributions, with its successes and its suspicions, from where we try to understand this humble and magnificent mystery that we interpret as revelation of God.”[1] According to author Bruno Forte, there are two words that talk about this subject: apokalypsis and re-velatio. One comes from Greek and the other from Latin. When we say Re-veil it means “taking the veil”. But this Latin word is composed of two meanings: one is to draw and the other is to intensify.[2] There is something to talk about, but there are also spaces for silence, for a constant and ever deeper search, because “words are always the beginning, which requires a process of going beyond words in themselves to the depths of God.”[3] We can say that the revelation of God intensified even more the search of the human being for Him.

         Revelation is a dynamic process through which God manifests Himself in the bosom of cultures and religions, impelling the human being to capture His presence. God loves everyone equally, and if He loves, He is revealing himself. It does not rob our turn, but acts with us to make history happen: the more He is present, the more He makes us to be; the more we welcome His action, the more we realize ourselves. He does not annul our being, but leads it to its full affirmation in Jesus Christ, in whom the best of us is accomplished. The God announced by Jesus Christ takes the initiative, both to lead us to the dimension of existing and to assist us in its fulfilment.[4] In the face of this, it is up to all of us to welcome His initiative, that is, to let ourselves existing and saving by Him, accepting His grace and collaborating with His action in us and in all other cultures and religions.

          It is about recognizing that God intervenes in the history, facilitating the access of the human being to Himself. There is an emigration, a leaving of Himself in order to establish a meeting of freedoms, in which it is the human being himself who is benefited because he finds an adequate answer to the question about the meaning of everything especially the meaning of his life. His question is already a talk of God, for revelation is something so intersubjective that it is difficult to understand where one begins and where the other ends.[5] However, it must be borne in mind that God takes initiative in revealing Himself because He is infinite love and freedom. He does everything in His own way and all he does is in the favour of the human being. He does not feel forced to do so, and the human being does not deserves it. It is, therefore, by his intrinsic goodness that revelation happens,[6] as emphasized in the Constitution Dei Verbum of the Second Vatican Council:

In his goodness and wisdom, God chose to reveal himself and to make known the mystery of his will (cf. Eph 1: 9). Through this Revelation, therefore, the invisible God (cf. Cl 1,15; 1Tm 1.15), out of the abundance of his love, speaks to human beings as friends (cf. Ex 33,11, Jn 15, 14-15) and lives among them (Br 3, 38), in order to invite and admit them to participate in his communion (DV 2).

          In the immense universe that surrounds us, we can contemplate the action of a God Creator, who spent efforts in giving beauty contours to everything that exists.[7] Then, the human being can discover a speech of God,[8] because all nature is His revelation. “Insofar as something is, it is being manifestation of God: just as in the physical traits of a face we read directly the presence of the spirit that animates it, so also our ‘senses’ are reading in the created realities the fundante presence of the Creator.”[9] That some call it “natural revelation” or “cosmic manifestation of God”, the creation – even with its limitations - is a theological place, that is, a place where God gives a constant witness of Himself. The Afro-descendants call it “Sanctuary of God.”

           In addition to this aspect of nature, the author Andrés Torres Queiruga affirms that history is also creation of God, because all energy that the human being spend to realize it stems constantly from the love of the Creator. If history has to do with human freedom and it is sustained by the loving action of God,[10] then history becomes the result of a joint action: that of the human being and that of God, who acts in and through human freedom. It is, therefore, in the authentic exercise of this freedom, that God makes Himself transparent as energy that sustains and as love that attracts,[11] in view of the realization of the human being himself. Thus, “divine revelation happens in human fulfilment,”[12] for once it appears in history, revelation also becomes history.[13]

        However, it is necessary to point out that the revelation of God, although it happens in the world, never identifies with it.[14] One cannot limit divine revelation to reality or mere human abstraction so limited. The God we are talking about is not the creation of human reason or a projection of its needs. “The God of revelation is the Other one, who is not reducible to human measure.”[15] Any attempt to demonstrate Him will always be insufficient, for nothing can contain Him and no human representation will be appropriate.[16] The revelation of God to the human being happens continually and “always to the maximum measure that it is ‘possible’ for him; so that the limits of historical revelation are not due to a divine reservation, but rather to a human incapacity: the constitutive incapacity of his finite being.”[17]

          God is infinitely greater than the capacity of human intelligence can grasp, and when the human being can perceive something of His presence, it is because God, from His active and generous love, is ‘always there’, doing all He can to be perceived. And He does it for everyone, in the same measure. Therefore, the total transparency of revelation is impeded by the finitude of reality. However, we discover all reality as manifestation of God. In the midst of obscurity, there is ‘evidence’ of revelation in the real.[18] From this idea, God makes Himself known in its totality, but He cannot be known at all. But there are authors who say that in the revealing process, God does not make Himself fully known. One of these authors is Bruno Forte. To explain this dynamic he uses the expression ‘revealed and hidden God’:

Thus, the advent of God could be thought of as an unreserved display (…) But in the beginning it was not so: being revealed, the Eternal not only pronounced himself, but also, and highly was silent. God revealed and hidden, ‘absconditus in revelatione - revelatus in absconditate’, the God of the advent is the God of promise, Exodus and Kingdom. Therefore, his revelation is not a total vision, but a Word that comes from Silence and opens to it.[19]

     In total or in reserve, the great exodus which God accomplished and accomplishes causes another exodus, making us to recognize that revelation is first and foremost a movement of God to us and only in this way our movement to Him is possible. About this, the author Carlo Dallare states that “one day we may be given the grace to discover that it is not we who have reached God to know Him, but that He has preceded us in the meeting and put us on walking.[20] St. Augustine himself even put these words in the ‘mouth’ of God: “You would not seek me if you had not already met me.”[21] This is the dynamic character that we spoke at the beginning and that the author Andrés Torres Queiruga calls ‘always there’, which indicates the sustaining presence and the radical union between God and man as the root that nourishes and makes possible His arrival ever again, alive and historical. Thus all reality is seen as an active and voluntary gesture of God, through which He constantly manifests and reveals Himself to the human being,[22] ‘pressing’ with love to be welcomed freely by his creature.[23]

The evolution of the world, the process of history, individual growth are radically His manifestation. When one is able to discover in all this the creative action of God that sustains it so that it may be accomplished; when one perceives divine freedom there, which lovingly pushes him/her to authenticity and fullness; when one hears there the word of love that calls him/her, then revelation is happening.[24]

     The human being makes the discovery of God present in his life and reality, because God continually comes to meet him. Revelation is only really authentic when the human being understands that God is the one who takes the initiative and makes this discovery possible. “Then God comes to meet him to enhance and guide him, so that the rest should be completed in this experience, which involves Him as a ‘sacred canopy’, giving its ultimate meaning to the whole project of cultural and social fulfilment.”[25] God is ‘always there’, that is, all the time He stands out in His provident and supportive love, demanding a free response from the human being. The divine presence is transcendent, but at the same time it is there for all. He does not come from outside and does not impose Himself, but simply offers Himself to be discovered and welcomed.

Author: Josuel dos Santos Boaventura PSDP - Fr Ndega
Theological review: ThD Fr Luis Carlos Susin
English review: EdM Mary Kung'u




[1] TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação. p. 19s.
[2] Cf. FORTE B. Parola e silenzio nella riflessione teologica. p. 9. This author says in another article that “The revelation of the God who comes to take away the veil that hides, but is also a stronger hiding, it is communication of himself that inseparably offers him as a ‘cover’ again” (Id. Teologia fra parola di Dio… p. 5).
[3] Id. Per dire Dio ai cercatori di Dio. p. 2.
[4] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. El Dios de Jesús. p. 4s.
[5] Cf. PIAZZA, W. O. Teologia fundamental para leigos. p. 139 apud DOS SANTOS BOAVENTURA, J. Op. cit. p. 385.
[6] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação. p. 447.
[7]Even if there is a modern tendency to conceive the creation as a human process, historical and creative, which leads to belief only in the ‘progress’. Nature is, in this sense, considered an object of manipulation, exploitation and domination. In the name of progress, a very utilitarian relationship is established, in which one is subject and another is object. (cf. SUSIN, L. C. Op. cit., p. 11-13).
[8]“For without the Creator the creature does not subsist. In addition, all believers of any religion have always known to hear his voice and manifestation in the language of creatures”(GS 36).
[9] TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação, p. 449. “Not being moved by need and lack, God creates solely by love: He creates men and women, as sons and daughters, not ‘for his own glory and service’, but for them to attain the maximum achievement possible. Therefore, his decisive interest is to manifest himself to them and to help them, to reveal himself to them and to save them. Is there a decent father or mother who does not seek the same for their children? A human mother could forget them, but God never do so (Is 49, 95)” (Id. Repensar o pluralismo, p. 111).
[10]This is what happens, for example, with the biblical story, whose intention is to “evidence the action of God in the very history of human action” (ibid., 188). "(...) it is even when he is not aware of it, as being led by the hand of God, who sustains all things and makes them to be what they are”(GS 36).
[11] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação, p. 186.
[12]Ibid., p. 163.
[13] Cf. Ibid., p. 190.
[14] Cf. Ibid., p. 181. The author Fernando Consentino agree with this idea when says, “(…) a God who reveals himself in the fragments of history, without never transforming himself in a pure scientific and objective knowledge (CONSENTINO, F. Op. cit. p. 14).”
[15] FORTE, B. A teologiafra parole di Dio e parole degliuomini. p. 6.
[16] CONSENTINO, F. Op. cit. p. 13s. See here the complete idea of this author: “Christianity itself in its essence, therefore, has its fervour where the human being understands his life as a movement of constant overcoming to the encounter of a God that appears and will always appear as unknown and strange and who can never be reduced neither to the satisfaction of one’s own needs nor human representation.”
[17] TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação, p. 445. In this regard, he also writes in his book Autocompreensão cristã, p. 20. This idea is reinforced by Walter Kasper who says: “The divine mystery manifests itself within our world. We can find it in nature, which as God’s creation sends us back to the Creator; in the mystery revealed in man himself; and in the history, who lives from a hope that means something more than history” (KASPER, Walter. apud TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação, p. 173).
[18] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação, p. 449. “The original of Karl Rahner was to emphasize the implication of transcendental subjectivity in the process of revelation. According to him, every human being - and the entire human being - is impregnated by the presence of revelation. It is constitutive of man’s vocation to be a ‘hearer of the Word’; the very movement of his existence, while seeking to fulfil itself in its decisive truth, is already ‘transcendental revelation’. The history of religions and, above all, the biblical history as definitively determined by Christ are its reflexive and concrete expression: they are the revelation itself, the ‘categorical revelation (Ibid., p. 95).’”
[19] FORTE, B. Teologia fra parola di Dio e parola degli uomini. p. 5
[20] DALLARE, C. Op. cit., p. 13
[21] HIPONA, St. A. apud DALLARE, C. Op. cit. p. 13.
[22] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação. p. 210.
[23] Cf. Id. Autocompreensão cristã, p. 75.
[24] Id. Repensar a revelação, p. 210.
[25]Ibid., p. 231.

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