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The imperative to question — a multi-media reflection by Brian Coyne and Amanda McKenna...
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Brian Coyne: If you
were a late 21st Century intergallactic explorer and you were allowed
a limited allowance of personal reading or videos to take on your journey
to start a new colony in a new galaxy what would you choose to take with
you? ![]() Amanda had never seen this production. She had often heard me talk about
it. Amanda McKenna: I have been moved deeply by the entire series The Ascent of Man but the last episode in particular – which Dr Bronowski titled "The Long Childhood" – had particular poignancy. It intersected with some of our recent conversations on Catholica in a powerful way for me. Dr Bronowski was drawing attention 37 years ago to the crucial importance of our ability to question. Listen to this... In our discussions on Catholica recently, this question of questioning has been a focus of some attention, particularly since KateD's 28th August reflection: A Journey To Spiritual Maturity, and the follow-up from Peregrinus on 30th August, The value of Questioning in the maturation of faith. I, too, have memories of how things were 'back in the day' when the sisters ran the show. I, too, learned how not to question. If you did things the way sister said, then you'd get top marks … and I was a girl who loved top marks. At the same time, I had parents who encouraged questioning as a way of breaking open and appropriating an issue. I learned from them that the only way to really understand something was to get down to the nitty-gritty to understand why something is, as opposed to simply what. Thankfully, by the time I got into high school, we had sisters who were passionate about their (and by extension, our) faith and were also passionate questioners. When I look around the world today and hear the various attitudes expressed about religion, and the Catholic Church in particular, I am constantly gobsmacked by the attitude of some who seem to think that asking questions – particularly of religious authorities – brands one as some sort of 'traitor to the cause'. We're all supposed to just do as we're told. And I can't help thinking: I wonder where we'd be if they'd said the same thing to Sts. Paul or Augustine? Where would that have left Sts. Francis and Clare? Still, I suppose Sir Thomas More would still have his head, at least. Listen to what Dr Bronowski had to say about More... If these people had not had the freedom to question would it have furthered the mission of Christ? I suspect not. Worse, it would have interfered with the work of the Holy Spirit. And yet, this atrophied attitude is still bandied about by an increasingly vocal minority today. And the more fear-filled the world becomes, the shriller the cries. Questioning itself is branded as some sort of 'failure to trust God' – as if the Church actually were God – and the whole thing is just a vehicle to some quasi-new-age 'anything goes', liberated philosophy. Well, I can't speak for anyone else's motivations, but that certainly hasn't been my experience. I would argue strongly that it is the silencing of questions that actually interferes with the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives. I would go even further and suggest that our call to follow Jesus Christ actually calls us to question. The irony is that the questions 'liberate' us only insofar as they deepen the call to take up our own 'crosses' and follow Christ, the One in whom true Liberation is found, and do our best to live with the questions. Just look at where we have come from. Listen to these words from Dr Bronowski, a man of Jewish faith background, describing his encounter with Jesus... My parents taught me that real truth can not only withstand scrutiny, but it is illuminated by scrutiny — that the life of faith is one of discernment every single day. There is nothing to fear from questions. It is, as Professor Bronowski points out, how we learn and expand our understanding as a human species. Teachers question us because they know it is a way to engage us to explore the subject at hand. Jesus, the Great Questioner asks the ever-pertinent question: "Who do you say I am?" Both Brian and I would urge you to buy or borrow the book or the DVD on Dr Bronowski's The Ascent of Man. Brian argues that it is one of those key reference books any home needs like a Bible, like a good dictionary, like Sir Kenneth Clark's television series, Civilisation, or like Paul Johnson's, A History of Christianity. We would urge you to refresh yourselves on the whole series if you haven't viewed it recently. In particular though the closing Episode, The Long Childhood, is particularly prescient as a commentary, even prophesy, of some important issues we face as individuals, as a Church, and as human civilisation. I think they are particularly poignant words in the light of Cliff Baxter's commentary yesterday. Here are Dr Bronowski's closing words to the series... Brian Coyne: And to
end this reflection I asked Amanda to find a suitable song from her repertoire
that somehow captures the sentiments and ideas we have endeavoured to
elicit through this production. She chose "The Dance of Balance"
a song she wrote in 1995. This version was recorded in 2002 but this is
its first public release. CREDITS: The words and music of the song, The
Dance of Balance, were composed by Amanda McKenna.
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Husband and wife team, Brian Coyne and Amanda McKenna are the publishers of Catholica.

