Sixth Sunday of Easter
“What is truth?” It may not be the best thing to quote Pontius Pilate at the beginning of a homily, but as we hear about the Holy Spirit today in the Gospel, and how He will “‘teach you everything and remind you of all that [Jesus] told you,’” it seems an appropriate question. The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth, the Advocate who pleads our cause against Satan, the father of lies.
While we may have a general internal understanding of what truth is, it may be harder to define. Truth is what is real, what is actual. Truth allows us to interact with the world in a way which allows us to succeed. Truth exerts itself and demands obedience, even if we don’t want to give it. For example, the truth about gravity may be inconvenient, and we may want to ignore it, but if we jump off a cliff, hoping to go up, we will be sorely disappointed (and probably dead!).
But truth isn’t only about physical realities. Truth concerns both what is available to our senses, and what is beyond our senses, we might say both the physical and the metaphysical. Pope St. John Paul II wrote an entire Encyclical about truth called Veritatis splendor, the Splendor of Truth, and writes that truth “enlightens man’s intelligence and shapes his freedom, leading him to know and love the Lord.”
Truth does not change over the centuries, even if our understanding of it does. Truth does not change depending on the type of government, or the political party in charge. Truth is a light in the darkness that helps us walk on safe paths, without which we can often stumble and fall.
But society for the past decades has struggled with truth. Society has questioned if there even is such a thing as truth, has denied that there is truth altogether, and now can often only speak of voicing “your truth,” as if it changes not only for every time, but even for every person. But if truth is different for every person, then communication is altogether impossible, as words presume a set meaning, an expression of a real idea, not simply our own invention of ideas based upon what we want something to be. And this trend of questioning truth has found its way even into the people who profess, week after week, belief in God who is Truth Itself, and who reveals the truth about Himself to us out of love.
It is vogue now, as it often has been in every century of the Church, to question this or that Church teaching, not for the purpose of understanding it more, but for the purpose of rejecting it. Because some truths are hard for a given culture and time. In the fourth and fifth centuries, as we came to understand Jesus Christ more, we discovered that explaining who Christ is could be difficult, but the easier answer didn’t account for who Christ had to be to save us. He is fully God and fully man, unbegotten, consubstantial with the Father. It would have been easier to say, like the heretic Arius, that Jesus was simply a special creature of God, above us, but not God. That would have seemed to have been better to preserve the oneness of God. But then, if He was not God, He could not save us. But then, if He were not one of us, He would not be under the cost of disobedience that we acquired through sin. And so we held to the hard truth, that Jesus Christ is one hundred percent God, but one hundred percent human, and that God, while one, is a Trinity of Three Divine Persons, while still one in substance.
Lies are often easier, and less complicated, at least at first. It’s easier to say, “Yes, I love this food!” that looks more like the charcoal you use in a grill. And yet, even those “white lies” as we call them can lead to hurt and pain when, as most often happens, the truth is discovered (in this case when it’s discovered by your spouse that swallowing has suddenly become quite difficult). And that’s just with small issues. Imagine being told, “I love you,” by a person who is just using you. You think that he or she really cares for you as a person, and you give yourself to him or her, trusting that you will not be betrayed, only to have that hope dashed against the rocks and your heart broken by someone who was not concerned about you, but only about him or herself.
Many times we know what the Church teaches, but we don’t want to accept it, because it was hard. It was likely hard for those first Christians, especially those who were Jewish, who saw their faith as simply the right way to be a good Jew, to accept the truth revealed by the Holy Spirit to the Apostles that being a follower of Jesus didn’t require circumcision or the following of dietary laws that had been given by Moses. It was hard, but it was the truth. And the truth was revealed and preserved by the Holy Spirit, using the cooperation of the Apostles. It wasn’t simply that old men wearing pointy hats decided to go one way, as is so often parroted when the Church holds fast to an unpopular teaching.
But just as gravity forces itself upon the individual, whether he or she likes it or not, the truths of our faith are also as stubborn; they cannot be wished away. So if we wish to have a happy life, which comes from following the truth, not only here on earth but especially if we hope to go to heaven, we are called to subject ourselves to the truth, even when that’s hard. If we wish to call ourselves follows of Christ who is the Truth, then we are called to follow the truth as revealed through the Mystical Body of Christ, the Church, no matter how hard it may be. Ask the Holy Spirit today to help you know the truth, for the truth will set you free to be the person you are made to be, in the world as God made it.