Through the Church Fathers: April 21
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About this listen
Truth is never owned—it is recognized. Today’s readings press us into a humbling but powerful realization: fragments of truth have always existed, but only in Christ do they come together whole. Justin Martyr argues that the “seed of the Word” has been scattered among all people, which explains why even pagan philosophers sometimes glimpse reality—yet those glimpses remain incomplete and often self-contradictory. Augustine of Hippo then pulls us inward, exposing how easily the human mind—even a sincere one—reduces God to something measurable, extended, and controllable, showing that error is not just intellectual but deeply rooted in imagination and habit. Finally, Thomas Aquinas lifts our eyes to the full scope of divine action: God is not distant but actively sustaining, moving, and even surpassing the natural order without destroying it, working both through creation and beyond it in what we call miracles. Together, these readings confront both pride and confusion—truth is present in fragments, distorted in the mind, but perfected only in the living Word who heals, governs, and reveals all things (John 1:9; Acts 17:28; Hebrews 1:3).
Readings:
Justin Martyr — The Second Apology, Chapters 13–15
Augustine — The Confessions, Book 7, Chapter 1 (Sections 1–2)
Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 105 (Articles 1–8 Combined)
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