Thursday, April 14, 2005

Paradiso: Canto XIX -- The Just and Temperate

That the Lord converts us in many various ways (like the Blessed Peter Gonzalez who fell from his ass and onto it) is as unparalleled a truism as the fact that no one, not even the soul itself, knows the human heart as well as does God. Whomsoever God touches, and whomsoever responds to that touch, is saved from the infernal night even if, in life, that person had never professed a belief in the Messiah to come or in the Risen Messiah. What kind of justice is this for he who spent his life in the service of Christ, the priest of half a century might ask upon meeting the Muslim or Hindu in heaven or upon seeing prayers raise up from the shore of Purgatory a soul who should have remained below the gate ten thousand years and more. Perhaps Christ's parable of the wage-earners who worked varying lengths of the day and received the same payment is revelatory, and, as we have seen, is echoed by Gaudium et Spes's 22nd paragraph.



Just as evil has no mean, no excess, and no deficit, neither, too, does the good. It is the end in and of itself and cannot be thought to have a mean without giving it room for defect in either excess or deficit. This does not detract from the idea we already experienced in climbing the mountain of the fact that deficits in virtue were being filled. The fact that there is the presence or absence of good in a soul, and that this presence and absence works to varying ends in the pursuit of a good, is merely nothing more than that, for God wills us to the good but allows us to will ourselves away from it. The presence of the good, then, would make itself known by the fullness of its release onto society, the fullness of its drawing the just back into itself, like this eagle of lights and souls that speaks to Dante as with one voice. Beyond that, only God knows.

S.

11 Comments:

Blogger atskro said...

It is interesting that God's mercy is joined with the temperate and the Just. The answer Dante gets from the Eagle is that those not baptized are better off than most who were baptized. This struggle Dante grappled with through out the comedy. I still don't think he is satisfied with the answer. If he thought of it in terms of Justice with Mercy. He might understand. For those who made here and didn't know God. Shouldn't they get the opportunity to meet him because it was not their fault that they were not able to on earth?

1:29 PM  
Blogger Fr. Earl Meyer said...

This Canto has the second of only two acrostics in the Comedy. The first was OMO in Purgatoria. Verses 115-140 in this Canto begin with triple LUE (pestilence in Italian) to describe the corrupt rulers - those who do not reflect divine justice. In challenging divine justice which denies salvation to pagans, Dante reflects the common fallacy that divine justice is simply human justice purified. But the parables of Christ, as the workers in the vineyard cited by Sebastian, teach that the justice (mercy and love) of God are of a different order, far beyond human justice, love, and mercy.

2:52 PM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

Don't fret the answer to that, atskro. The meaning of the passage is that those who are in limbo (at the uppermost part of hell's cavern) are better off than those who were baptized into the faith and rejected for one reason or another the promise made for them to God. In the next canto, you'll meet two people who did not have the opportunity in life to know God and, in death, are visited with that reality. Remember, of course, what your mentor and thesis advisor believes -- that all souls get to see God, but that some who are not oriented toward that vision will experience it as a burning of their flesh.

There's also the consolation mentioned by Ciardi on page 767 that since Dante has allowed one pagan to ascend to the earthly paradise, then he might allow all of them to do so at their appointed hour.

S.

10:45 PM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

Fr. Earl, this is twice in as many cantos that someone posted before you. How are you feeling these days?

We do know this: divine justice cannot be human justice purified because that would mean that humans have the capacity to know the mind of God (without exploding).

S.

10:48 PM  
Blogger Fr. Earl Meyer said...

Even Homer nods!

9:30 AM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

Amen to that, Fr. Earl.

S.

10:02 PM  
Blogger bheck said...

Of course, we cannot fully understand God's Justice. But just as Dante is curious about it, I imagine we are all curious about it. I question it often, just as Dante does--probably in part to settle the curiosity we have about why God does what He does, and part to come to know God better and draw closer to Him.

9:18 PM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

If medieval scholasticism taught us anything, Bheck, it was that questioning our faith makes us better able to defend it. Keep questioning until you die -- that'll keep your faith, your active response to divine revelation, fresh and relevant amidst changing social realities.

S.

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