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Even though we live in a society where artificial intelligence and smartphones seem to provide the answer to every question, taking away from man the "effort of thinking" (Wittgenstein), the one who is still capable of stopping and marveling at the Kantian starry sky above him and the moral law within him, realizes to be part of a creation, an ordered uni-verse (unum-versus, towards the One), and thus is driven to seek the ultimate meaning, the foundation of existence: to seek Sophia. In a 7-stage journey of Art of Accompaniment: "Search for Wisdom" series at St. Martha's Parish (in-person and online), Father Tim Boyle has shed light on the abyss of the human heart: how, since his appearance on earth, man has become aware of his unique, special position of being-at-the-limit, at the limit between finite and infinite, and therefore has tried to find his identity by opening himself to the Beyond, following in the footsteps of Sophia, the Greek word for wisdom: first with a collective conscience, then with an individual self-consciousness, passing through the philosophical logos (Socrates, Aristotle, the great medieval Schools...) and the scientific one (Big Bang, evolutionary theories, etc.). Father Tim accompanied us in our search for Sophia with the Revealed Word, showing how the Bible recognizes the mysteriousness of man, who discovers his identity over and over again, opening himself to the very mystery of God. Christian theology thinks of God to think of man, and thinks of man to think of God, because after the incarnation, God and man are intersignifying realities: not only do we know God only through Jesus Christ, but we know ourselves only through Jesus Christ. Yet, despite the emergence of a global consciousness, and probably because of the unprecedented amount of information available, modern man is losing touch with reality. In the current "meaning crisis" where data knowledge does not always translate into mindfulness, Sophia can only be the antidote to the self-deception of separation, division, and disconnection. In conclusion, in the light of the Word stating "God is all in all" and the concept of "person" developed by Christian anthropology of the twentieth century, Father Tim emphasized how the Eucharist is central to the experience of Christians as a new consciousness. "Those who believe in Christ are living in this one reality, in this one body, in this one consciousness; we receive the oneness that we are to become. We receive in order to become Eucharist for the world. Jesus himself is the divine wisdom, is Sophia come into the world. Sophia -as the Word incarnate- has situated herself as a sun at the centre of the universe and at the center of every human person, and she will gradually draw everything, every person, into orbit around herself until Christ becomes all in all. The process will never stop until it is finished." Those who gathered at St. Martha’s or joined online were blessed to encounter a wise guide who introduced them to Sophia. Thank you, Fr. Tim, and all who helped bring the Search for Wisdom series to life at St. Martha’s.
Written by Cristiana Crestani, St. Martha's, Letbhridge. Photos courtesy of St. Martha's Parish.
1 Comment
David McPike
7/14/2025 06:06:59 pm
Lots of interesting ideas to pick and choose from. A real smorgasbord for the curious intellect.
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Catholic Pastoral Centre Staff and Guest Writers Archives
November 2025
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