RELIGION NEEDS SCIENCE
SOLEMNITY OF THE ASCENSION
June 02, 2019 10:30 AM
Saint Cecilia Catholic Community
Rev. David Justin Lynch
Acts 1:1-11 | Psalm 47:2-3;6-9
Ephesians 1:17-23 | Luke 24:46-53
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In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, AMEN.
When I was a child, the Space Program of
the United States Government, known as NASA, an acronym for the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, was quite fascinating to me. I can recall that the first time I watched
television in school was the lift-off of Astronaut Alan Shepherd into a
suborbital journey that blasted him to the outer edges space and then
immediately back down to earth several hundred miles down range from the launch
site. I have continued to follow the space program in the news media. It still
fascinates me.
At
the same time that I watched spaceflight in my childhood, I was, of course, an
enthusiastic churchgoer, much preferring my place at the altar or in the
choirstall to all of the usual activities for children and young people. Every
year, I participated in the Mass for the Feast of the Ascension, where, like
today, the Paschal Candle was extinguished at the end of the Gospel to
dramatize the final departure of Jesus from our world forty days after Easter.
Both today’s First Reading and Gospel have Jesus rising from the earth into the
clouds in the sky. So the next logical question is, “did Jesus go somewhere
into outer space?” Did Jesus go somewhere into that world of far-away planets
and stars we see in pictures broadcast for satellites? Where exactly did Jesus
go?
The Church has long struggled to make its
peace with science. Today, virtually every child grows up learning that the
earth orbits the sun. That’s called a “heliocentric solar system.” But centuries
ago, the idea of a heliocentric solar system was so controversial that the
Roman Catholic Church classified it as a heresy, and warned the Italian
astronomer Galileo Galilei to abandon it. When first summoned by the Roman
Inquisition in sixteen-sixteen, Galileo was warned not to espouse
heliocentrism. Also in sixteen-sixteen, the Roman Catholic church banned
Nicholas Copernicus’ book “On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres,”
published in fifteen-forty-three, which contained the theory that the Earth
revolved around the sun. Galileo published his “Dialogue on the Two World
Systems” in sixteen-thirty-two. In sixteen-thirty-seven, Pope Urban the Seventh
ordered an investigation resulting in a charge and conviction of heresy.
Galileo was confined to house arrest for the remainder of his life. Not until nineteen-ninety-two
did the Roman Catholic Church apologize for how it treated Galileo when Pope
John Paul the Second formally acknowledged that the Vatican had gravely erred
when it persecuted Galileo.
The
relationship between religion and science is the subject of continued debate in
philosophy and theology, asking questions like, “to what extent are religion
and science compatible?” and “are religious beliefs sometimes conducive to
science, or do they inevitably pose obstacles to scientific inquiry?”
The story of the Ascension in scripture,
and as celebrated by the Church, when
juxtaposed with the satellite pictures we see of outer space, present a clear
contrast that sharply focuses our attention on whether we should read scripture
literally. Unfortunately, throughout Church history, there have been those who
insist on reading the Bible in a more literal sense than it was intended. They
fail to appreciate instances in which Scripture uses what is called
“phenomenological” language—that is, the language of appearances. Just as we
today speak of the sun rising and setting to cause day and night, rather than
the earth turning, so did the ancients. From an earthbound perspective, the sun
does appear to rise and set, and the earth does appear to
be immobile. When we describe these things according to their appearances, we
are using phenomenological language.
Religion and science fulfill different
purposes. Religion investigates the spiritual world, while science explores the
natural world. Thousands of scientists carry out their research while maintaining
personal spiritual beliefs. One can view
the natural world through an evidence-based, scientific lens and the
supernatural world through a spiritual lens.
Accepting
a scientific worldview doesn’t mean you can’t be religious. Where you have to
be careful is relying on religious doctrine that contradicts scientific facts. Unfortunately, many religious bodies continue
to base their doctrines on facts later repudiated by contemporary science. This
is particularly in the sexuality area, where conventional Christian doctrine
has caused a great deal of misery and suffering. For example, God created some
people with a non-straight sexual orientation. That is a scientific fact. Yet
some religious people continue to proclaim a doctrine that condemns LGBT
persons as sinful and disordered, causing much pain, misery, and distress for
LGBT people, their families, and their friends. Even more egregious, these
ignorant, intolerant people want to pass and enforce laws that license them to
discriminate against and reject others based on sexual orientation.
What
these discriminators fail to understand is that all scientific facts, that is,
the entirety of what we know and will discover about the physical world, arose
from God’s act in creating it. God created
the entire universe. God gave all of it its characteristics down to the nth
detail. When we discover scientific facts, we are discovering what God made.
The Bible,
however, was never intended to be a science text.
Treating the
Bible as establishing scientific facts arises out of biblical literalism. No
matter how hard I try to dissuade them from their nonsense, our literalist
sisters and brothers on Facebook persist in their stupidity, idiocy, and
ignorance.
Their
stupidity blocks them to the glory of God’s transcendence.
Their
idiocy hides them from the compassion inherent in God’s immanence.
Their
ignorance blinds them to the fact that religious doctrine, is, by nature,
spiritual, not scientific.
Unlike
science, religion deals with questions of eternal truths that transcend both
time and specific scientific theories. So what eternal truth do we find in the
Ascension of Jesus that we celebrate today?
The Ascension is the final act of Jesus
for His earthly mission. The Ascension was Jesus leaving earth on His own
terms, not on those of the Sadducees, the priestly caste of the Jerusalem
Temple who thought life ended with physical death. They, along with Roman
executioners of Jesus, thought that the life of Jesus ended when He died on the
cross. But the terms on which Jesus departed from this world were decidedly
different from those who wanted Him dead.
Jesus,
begotten of God the Father, and having risen from the grave, now returns to the
Father under His own power at a time of His choosing.
The
power of the name of Jesus transcends the physical world.
The
power of the name of Jesus arises from His divine nature.
The
power of the name of Jesus has no limits!
The
power of the name of Jesus derives from God the Father.
Throughout
John’s Gospel, we read of the close connection between Jesus and God the
Father. If you’ve seen Jesus, you’ve seen the Father. When you honor Jesus, you
honor the Father. Jesus does His Father’s will and speaks the word given to Him
by the Father. Jesus, as the Great Shepherd, knows his sheep, the same as the
relationship between Jesus and the Father. And in the Father’s house are many
mansions, where Jesus goes to prepare a place for us.
In
the Ascension, Jesus leaves this world to be with His Father.
In
the Ascension, we celebrate the oneness between Jesus and God the Father.
Now,
I realize that to some of you, that all sounds very patriarchal. There’s no
mention of anything feminine. However, God is beyond gender. God is all genders
simultaneously. Gender is simply not part of the discussion, because, in God,
human concepts of gender are irrelevant. You may recall the words of Jesus to
the Sadducees concerning marriage in the resurrection. They told Jesus about a
woman who was widowed seven times. “At the resurrection,” they asked, “whose
wife will she be?” Jesus answered, “When the dead rise, they will neither marry
nor be given in marriage; they will be like the angels in heaven.”
Gender does not matter when we
explore on a really deep level the meaning of the Ascension.
In
celebrating the Ascension, we realize that the Ascension celebrates the
eventual reunion of all of us with God and the exaltation of the dignity of
humanity. The Ascension recognizes the divine nature of our humanness.
The
Ascension symbolizes our communion with God.
The
Ascension raises humanity to a glory of which the immensity and intensity we
have not seen and cannot see in our present existence.
Just
as the Ascension portrays the ultimate destiny of Jesus, it also presents and
explains the ultimate destiny of humanity. We as human persons were created
with a divine spark for the purpose of partaking in the divine nature of God.
We
were, from the beginning, created as good. Ascension is the divine
glorification of humanity. We were all created to be glorified in God’s eyes so
that God can love us completely and unconditionally. Just as Jesus became one
with God the Father in the Ascension, so we shall also become one with God the
Father. Being with God glorifies human nature. That glorification is God’s
statement that we are both primarily, and ultimately, good and perfect, not
inherently depraved and enslaved to sin as our Calvinist sisters and brothers
contend.
The
sin of Adam was nothing more than an unfortunate detour that exposed our mortal
weakness. It is a wound which God sent Jesus to heal and restore us to the
spiritual health of the same closeness we had with God at our creation.
Ultimately,
we are called to be like God and to be with God. That doesn’t mean we are
called to be God, but to live in accordance with God’s characteristics, that
is, full of compassion and mercy, long-suffering, and of great goodness.
Jesus
enabled us to share in those characteristics of the divine nature of God by
what he taught us.
Think
of the Sermon on the Mount.
Think
of the story of the Good Samaritan.
Think
of the dialogue of Jesus with the rich young ruler.
Think
of the story of the widow’s mite.
I could go on
and on, as in story after story, parable after parable, and dialogue after
dialogue, all of which has Jesus revealing what God is.
When
Jesus ascended to the Father, Jesus draws us all to God. Having ascended, Jesus now sits on the divine
throne of God and in the hearts of those who love Jesus. We realize this when
we do as Jesus told us to do:
Love
God with all your heart, mind, and soul.
Love
our neighbors as ourselves.
And
love one others with the same intensity Jesus loves us.
That
is not, however, what I see When I look out at the world around me. In that
world, I see various visions of human existence, not all of them good.
One
such vision is driven by fear. It has people and nations competing against each
other for dominance driven by fear that if one is dominated rather than
dominates, one will perish. This view brings out the worst in everyone, and is
an idea Christians should oppose.
These
fear-mongers with a domination agenda see life as black or white, ideas as good
or bad, and human endeavors as winning and losing. What that’s called is
dualism, the primitive idea that there are only two opposite ideas or solutions
to every situation, and that only one must win. That’s called the win-lose view
of life.
What
does that look like? You have all heard from politicians, who say:
They say the
United States must dominate the world.
They say the
United States must win and others lose.
They
say other countries are important only to the extent that they serve the
interests of the United States.
They
say the United States must win and others must lose for the United States to
survive.
Such
a view does not proclaim the dignity of all humanity, but rather the idea that
some people are entitled to more dignity than others. That is the polar
opposite of a God who loves all humanity equally. Christians cannot accept a
world where, according to the latest statistics, the United States is less than
five percent of the world’s population but holds forty one percent of the
world’s wealth.
A
more enlightened view of humanity has people not so hung up on who is in
charge, but whether the environment in which they live meets everyone’s needs.
In
that kind of environment, people cooperate with one another to make life better
for everyone.
In that kind of
environment, people realize that life is an experience all humanity shares.
In
that kind of environment, people recognize that no one life, or group of lives,
is more valuable than another.
In
that kind of environment, people see the world’s property as resource as belonging
to all of us.
In
that kind of environment, people accept that human survival is a shared
responsibility.
This
enlightened view of the world says that no person, enterprise or nation has a
right to pollute the air, water, and soil to maintain an industrial system that
enriches the polluters and an economic system that benefits the few at the
expense of the many.
The
win-lose, survival of the fittest mentality of the unenlightened viewpoint has
produced a world where all too many are hungry, sick, naked and homeless so
that the very few get richer and richer. This imbalance of wealth and resources is the
fruit of a godless world.
Those people
live in a world where people do not go to church.
Those
people live in a world where Sunday morning is just another workday, or a day
to sleep in and go to brunch.
Those
people live in a world of godless weddings and funerals.
Altogether,
those people live in a world where God is totally absent, where people worship
themselves instead of God, like the landlord in Los Angeles who is evicting a
woman who is one hundred two years of age, so his daughter can move into the
property. While he may have a legal right to do it does not matter. His
stone-cold heart communicates an absence of God in his life. That kind of
person is not one who will celebrate the glory of the Kingdom of God in the
Ascension, but only celebrates what he wants for himself.
The
kind of behavior we see in that landlord is not what God wants from us. Rather,
it illustrates why humankind should strive to be more like God and less like
what we see in the world today. When we are brought close to God and become
like God, we become loving people, the antidote to the rather inferior form of
human existence where people compete against each other for survival instead of
help each other survive.
Celebrating
the Ascension is celebrating the exact opposite of what has become an everyday
life where God is absent, where we glorify the mundane instead of looking
upward to Jesus at God’s right hand enthroned in a glory that should inspire
all of to be better than what we are, where we are inspired to see our purpose
in life as improving the lives of others rather than just focusing on our own
existence.
The
absence of God’s glory from human existence has produced a world where
everything is reduced to the lowest common denominator to facilitate
materialism and instant gratification. The Ascension inspires us to look upward
to aspire to what could be, not downward in satisfaction of “what is.”
The
Ascension invites us to scientific exploration, to worlds unknown, to improve
human existence. In living that way, with an upward gaze to the ascended Jesus,
we enhance human life and human dignity.
Just
like the human Jesus did, we, throughout our lives, experience transitions, from the womb to life
outside it, from singlehood to marriage, and from the working world to
retirement. The Ascension was such a transition, where Jesus finished His work
on earth and left the Apostles to carry on what He started in building the
Kingdom of God by doing what we will sing in the next hymn this morning. Jesus came to break oppression, to set the
captive free, with succor speedy to those who suffer wrong, to help the poor
and needy, to help the poor and needy, to take away transgressions, and to rule
in equity.
Jesus,
though gone from earth, lives in our collective memories as we carry on His work. Inspired by
the ascended Jesus enthroned in glory, our task as the Church going forward is
to keep doing what Jesus started, and science is very much a part of making
that happen. The Church is a loser when it continues to orders its affairs
according to doctrines that contradict scientific facts.
Science
does not hinder or threaten the Church. The Church must embrace science, not see
science as a threat to its power. The core value of Catholicism is the dignity
of the human person. Science serves the Church. Science improves human
existence and thereby enhances human dignity.
Think
of agricultural science increasing crop yields per acre to feed hungry human
persons.
Think
of medical science increasing human life expectancy.
Think
of telephones, television and the Internet facilitating human communication.
Think
of environmental science cleaning our air, water, and soil.
The
examples are endless to show that to carry out its mission, science can, and
must, become the handmaiden of the Church to build up the Kingdom of God by
making us good stewards of creation and improving human existence. AMEN.
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