We who live in the twentieth-first century, enamored as we are of the seeming infinitude of human achievement and possibility, largely bent on maximizing our existence, on living life to the absolute fullest, yet oftentimes rejecting any notion that a personal God could have any genuine connection to our lives, may forget that, at one point in history, one glorious moment, human possibility and divine order came very close to reconciling and coinciding, to wondrous effect.
I speak of the Renaissance, the grand "rebirth" of civilization that surfaced at the close of the Middle Ages in the West. The Renaissance was marked by a powerful belief in human possibility and destiny, that humanity was a special and anointed creation of God and therefore fully capable of doing anything it wanted. Its future was limitless. Simultaneously, however, the people of the Renaissance (for the most part) never stopped believing in God and his guiding light and presence in the world. Though they firmly believed in unlimited human potential, they also believed, with equal fervor, in the fact of God, in the reality of the one who, as Nicholas of Cusa put it, "is the center of the universe, namely God, whose name is blessed . . . the infinite circumference of all things." The people of the Renaissance demonstrated that we can believe in human greatness and magnificence while acknowledging and submitting to the presence of a living and personal God and, in so doing,underscored the truth of Ecclesiastes 7:18 that, "It is good to grasp one thing and not let go of the other, for the one who trusts God will come forth with both of them." The Renaissance confirmed that if we properly manage and understand our boundaries and possibilities, we really can have it all.
God has made humanity infinitely special, and so we are: infinitely capable of astonishing and amazing things, yet infinitely bound to acknowledge from whom we have come.
Would that we always strive for both.
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ReplyDeleteThat is true but we also have to take into consideration about how the people during the Renaissance would follow the rules of the church, willing and fearfully abiding to what they would say. Even the government was almost fully run by the church. The church believed that any mathematics and science, which test the human ability, was against God law. Of course the people would willingly believe. It would take, over a long period of time, a while for the church and its congregation to allow the idea of math, science,and knowledge.
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