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Perhaps the single most difficult
thing any of us face is seeing ourselves in the reality that others see
us, or as God sees us. Mirrors, cameras, sound recorders can help but
just look at the personalities, pop stars and politicians one sees on
television and do they really see themselves as the rest of us see them?
There are so many things that cloud our own reality
our emotions,
even a mirror presents a reversed image. Andrew
Kania's reflection today explores this intriguing question
and leads to the conclusion that ultimately the entire journey of our
lives is to unmask this "unreality" of ourselves so that we
see ourselves in the perfect way God sees us. It is powerful, short reflection
which readers of Catholica will long value.
Three examples
A man is walking alone, fast-paced, through the Scottish Highlands. The
sunlight is rapidly fading, and before him, all round, lies a shadowy
vista of peaks and valleys. Soon he cannot see more than twenty metres
before him, now ten, now five, now every footstep enters the darkness.
On he must push, it is cold; his hiking journey is now ending in nightmare.
One step, another step, then the ground falls from beneath him, he quickly
turns and grabs in both hands a rock face, and hangs his feet suspended
in mid-air. He tries to pull himself up but he is exhausted. He
just hangs. His fingers begin to ache with a lack of blood running through
them. His face is battered by cold winds. He can hold no more. His hands
slip and he has time to let out a mere start to a cry before his feet
gently touch the earth, unbeknown to him, some fifty centimeters below
the point where his feet had been dangling in despair.
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Shaka
(1787-1828)
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A fierce and shrewd warrior, Shaka
(1787-1828), is famous for being the modern
day founder of the Zulu nation. At one point Shaka
became the ruler of 250,000 people, devising military strategies that
consistently baffled and subdued his enemies. Yet his military and political
exploits aside, history also describes in some detail the love that Shaka
had for his mother, Nandi (1760-1827),
a love that went far beyond filial devotion, but verged on fanaticism.
On seeing Nandi begin to age and become
more and more frail, Shaka requested
the medical assistance of a British physician, in place of the failing
treatment by tribal doctors. Unbeknown to Shaka,
the physician's treatment consisted in nothing more than the provision
of placebo medication, a mirror, and boot polish for Nandi's
hair. Nandi was convinced that her
health was being restored seeing her grey hair magically disappear; her
son was equally grateful for the 'fountain of youth' which had given his
mother immortality. The deception continued, until Nandi's
condition worsened and ultimately became bed-ridden. Only after the physician
fled the Kraal, did Shaka begin to
realize that he had been duped, tricked into believing that quackery was
miracle medicine. The physician had made the great Shaka
appear a simple primitive.
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C.Y.
O'Connor (inset) and workers on his famous pipeline
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In a third case, Charles Yelverton (C.Y.) O'Connor
(1843-1902), an Irish-born engineer, in 1896
began the construction of a pipeline which was to traverse a distance
of 530 kilometres between Mundaring Weir, (on the outskirts of the city
of Perth), and Kalgoorlie, the centre of the Western Australian gold-rush.
Considered by many to be the greatest engineering feat of its time, the
plan consisted not only of assembling the 760 mm in diameter pipe across
unforgiving terrain, but also required the establishment of eight pumping
stations as well as minor townships to facilitate the transfer of water.
Under constant criticism in the Western Australian press, as well as in
the State Parliament, C.Y. O'Connor
the man who had also dredged the harbour of Fremantle to allow the port
to increase its trade potential, took his life on the beach at South Fremantle
less than a year before fresh water 'miraculously' flowed in abundance
across the desert and into the goldfields.
Seeing only part of the reality of our lives
In all three cases described, we see individuals, who although living
lives very real to themselves saw only a part of the reality of
their lives. In the case of the hiker, he believed that he was facing
a life and death struggle, fighting to keep himself out of the jaws of
an almighty chasm; in the case of Shaka
we have a man, trusting in a charlatan, believing that this man is restoring
his mother's health from the grave, unknowingly being duped by his lack
of medical knowledge; in the case of O'Connor
we have a man very well on-track to achieving one of the greatest engineering
feats of his Age, falling into despair, for want of being able to clearly
see the end of his toiling. One can be assured that had each of these
men known the Reality of their lives, the choices which they made would
have been vastly different.
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St
Thomas Aquinas
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St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)
speaks wisely when he teaches in his famous hymn, Adoro
Te Devote
"Seeing, touching, tasting are in thee deceived:
How says trusty hearing? that shall be believed;
What God's Son has told me, take for truth I do;
Truth himself speaks truly or there's nothing true."
In essence all that we see and live in this world are glimpses of a reality
that we partake of, and but part-perceive. Only God has the larger picture,
and thus only God can be trusted upon to speak Truly. As humans we are
capable of speaking 'honestly', by reflecting on our lives or a particular
circumstance and recounting these events or ideas in good conscience.
Yet these reflections are a part fragment of an overall panorama, of which
even the most honest of men or women cannot be required to fully understand.
As such, the reality of our lives is hinted at by our senses, partly understood
by our minds, and fully known by God alone. It is for us to serve our
Creator as best we can, and understand that our responsibility is to do
our consciences well in the short-span of life we have been given. Certainly
we must slake our thirst for coming to understand the Truth, but in essence,
as Aquinas notes, the greatest Truth
we will understand, is that which is spoken out of the mouth of God and
into the human spirit, through the Church. In our lives, success or failure,
does not depend on how we envisage the end-worth of our life's labour,
but rather in how our lives have contributed to the overall design of
a Reality that only our Creator can fathom.
The philosopher George Berkeley (1685-1753)
once wrote in his, The Principles of Human
Knowledge, that it is only the eyes of God perceiving all
that He has created that gives any of us our existence. Moreover, Berkeley
concludes that even the best of us, cannot fully understand the Reality
of our lives:
"We take, for instance, the idea of some one particular
pain into our thoughts, and account it evil; whereas, if we enlarge our
view, so as to comprehend the various ends, connexions, and dependencies
of things, on what occasions and in what proportions we are affected with
pain and pleasure, the nature of human freedom, and the design with which
we are put into the world; we shall be forced to acknowledge that those
particular things which, considered in themselves, appear to be evil,
have the nature of good, when considered as linked with the whole system
of beings." (Berkeley, 1992, pp. 443-444)
Plato also reminds us in Timaeus
about the limited nature of the human intellect in understanding the world,
when he writes that:
"It is god who possesses both the knowledge and
power required to mix a plurality into a unity and, conversely, to dissolve
a unity into a plurality, while no human being could possess either of
these, whether at the present time or at any time in the future".
(Plato: The Complete Works, 1997, p. 1270)
It is for us therefore, in this world, to strive as best we can, with
the talents we have been given by God, and in good conscience, for our
own salvation, (and that of others), so as to come to the end point of
our lives where a vision of God may be granted to us, a point outside
of time, where all things will be made whole, and where we will eventually
move fully from unreality into reality.

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Andrew
Thomas Kania is a visiting scholar at Blackfriars Hall at the
University of Oxford, where he is completing a book on Dag Hammrskjöld.
He has taken 12 months leave of absence from his position as Director
of Spirituality at Aquinas College, Manning in Western Australia
to complete this task. Prior to this appointment at Aquinas Dr.
Kania was a lecturer for the School of Religious Education at the
University of Notre Dame Australia as well as for the Catholic Institute
of Western Australia at Edith Cowan and Curtin Universities. Dr.
Kania belongs to the Ukrainian Church and is interested in ecumenical
issues as well as contemporary problems facing religious educators.
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©2008
Dr Andrew Thomas Kania
[Andrew Kania's Archive]
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