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Star-gazing and truth-seeking

SAGRADA FAMILIA
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Fr. Patrick Briscoe, OP - published on 01/02/22
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We need these 3 qualities to stop looking down so much, and allow ourselves to begin to look up again.

Gazing up in the night sky—far away from city lights and presuming clear weather—the average person can see about 2,000 stars, by a low estimate. Some 6,000 by a higher estimate.

Those thousands of stars we might see on one such night are just a fraction of the stars of the universe. A very tiny number of stars, in fact.

In the Milky Way galaxy alone, astronomers estimate there are 400 billion stars. That’s right, billion…with a “b.” In the universe today, which consists of 2 trillion galaxies, there are an estimated 200 billion trillion (no, that’s not a typo) stars.

Stargazing and truth-seeking

Wonder at the cosmos has always been an expression of truth-seeking. Human beings gaze up at the stars and we begin to realize our smallness and to ponder the meaning of our lives. Lorenzo Albacete, the priest and physicist says, “The stars are, of course, the symbols of infinity, of the eternal beyond, of the Mystery for which our hearts thirst.”

The Psalms sing of the majesty of the night sky:

The Magi we celebrate today, those keen observers of the heavens, followed the signs of the stars. Following the one star, they travelled to pay the Infant Christ homage. Those who spent their time marveling at the heavens above, bent their knees to worship the God who made the stars, who was born as a baby in Bethlehem.

Looking down

The tragedy of today is that we have failed to be star-gazers. Lost in the lights of the city, the flashing of screens, and the clouds of doubt, people today feel more and more trapped. Worse still, those who once pointed so clearly to the skies - parents, friends, teachers and clergy - have often failed to direct our eyes to the heavens. We look down.

And the greatest tragedy is: it is no easier to understand our innermost selves than it is the cosmos. St. Augustine of Hippo writes,

What a wonder it is that we should be at all! And how much more marvelous that our hearts be created for such noble things as knowledge and love!

Beginning to look up

To begin to look up again, we must, like the wisemen of old, be brave. We must be willing to set out. We must move beyond that which is comfortable, in search of what is glorious. 

We must be willing to suffer, like travellers and pilgrims. The poet T.S. Eliot imagines one of the kings describing the trip to Bethlehem saying,

We must embrace the difficulty and hardship of Christian life as wayfarers, moving closer and closer to our journey’s end. 

Finally, like the magi, we must be generous. We must put all that we have at the feet of Christ. We must offer him the gifts of our time spent in prayer and our money, given to the Church and to the poor. Pope Benedict XVI encourages us in this sacrificial way of living, saying,

The cosmos come to us

G.K. Chesterton, attacking the vague forms that transcendentalists love to identify as God defends the Christian teaching of the Incarnation saying,

Courage. Suffering. Generosity. These are the glories of the heart of humankind. Only human beings can be brave, can suffer heroically, can give so completely of themselves and find such purpose and joy,

God is not ethereal, as if lost in the stars above. As if he were far from us. Indeed he has come very near. This is the truth the Magi have learned, the great conclusion of their search. May every soul that raises her eyes to heaven, find the maker of the stars in the manger in Bethlehem.

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