Mere Catholic Miscellany

Devoted to the Traditions of Catholic Christendom, Eastern and Western

11.13.2009 One for the religious blogosphere

For is not this the error, the common and fatal error, of the world, to think itself a judge of Religious Truth without preparation of heart? […] Gross eyes see not; heavy ears hear not. But in the schools of the world the ways towards Truth are considered high roads open to all men, however disposed, at all times. Truth is to be approached without homage. Every one is considered on a level with his neighbour; or rather the powers of the intellect, acuteness, sagacity, subtlety, and depth, are thought the guides into Truth. Men consider that they have as full a right to discuss religious subjects, as if they were themselves religious. They will enter upon the most sacred points of Faith at the moment, at their pleasure,—if it so happen, in a careless frame of mind, in their hours of recreation, over the wine cup. Is it wonderful that they so frequently end in becoming indifferentists, and conclude that Religious Truth is but a name, that all men are right and all wrong, from witnessing externally the multitude of sects and parties, and from the clear consciousness they possess within, that their own inquiries end in darkness?

John Henry Newman, Sermon 10, “Faith and Reason, contrasted as Habits of Mind” (source)