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Introductory notes for readers of this thesis - Theses - Flinders ...

Introductory notes for readers of this thesis - Theses - Flinders ...

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Because God created human beings specifically <strong>for</strong> the purpose <strong>of</strong> freely <strong>of</strong>fering himselfin personal love 61 , it logically follows that human beings must always be able to receive<strong>this</strong> love. For Rahner, <strong>this</strong> is the logical conclusion <strong>of</strong> 2 Peter 3:9: that God desires that allpeople experience salvation 62 . Our capacity <strong>for</strong> orientation towards the mystery is a‘natural’ spiritual component <strong>of</strong> being human. The human capacity to receive therevelation <strong>of</strong> the mystery, to experience the proximity <strong>of</strong> the mystery as love and asthere<strong>for</strong>e holy, is a supernatural ‘potency’. It is in fact ‘absolutely’ the ‘centre and root’<strong>of</strong> being human 63 . This potency to receive the word <strong>of</strong> the holy mystery and to enter intothe depths <strong>of</strong> God is supernatural because human beings, as God’s real partners, receiveGod’s love as a free gift, not as something they are owed 64 .Furthermore, <strong>this</strong> supernatural potency is given to every human person and not justChristians. It is not a ‘created grace’. It is not a ‘gift from’ God but the <strong>of</strong>fer andpossibility <strong>of</strong> receiving the ‘gift <strong>of</strong>’ God.For, without destroying the fact that grace is God himself in self-communication,grace is not a ‘thing’ but—as communicated grace—a conditioning <strong>of</strong> the spiritualand intellectual subject as such to a direct relationship with God. The mostobjective reality <strong>of</strong> salvation is at the same time necessarily the most subjective:the direct relationship <strong>of</strong> the subject with God through God himself 65 .This potency is the core component <strong>of</strong> the human person. It is present, silently andalways, as an invitation and <strong>of</strong>fer to participate in the divine life <strong>of</strong> the holy mystery. Thisgrace, God as a free gift, is not what Christians traditionally have understood as ‘saving’grace. Rahner argues that the experience <strong>of</strong> salvation is simply the actualisation <strong>of</strong> truehuman existence through accepting God’s personal, self-giving and revealing love . Godis an abiding presence to every human being, and in God’s life, human beings find theirown true centre <strong>of</strong> being. God’s abiding presence is invitational not invasive: God’spresence as the true centre <strong>of</strong> each human being does not mean that each human person is6661 K. Rahner, ‘God is love’ (from Theological investigations, Vol.1,117-125.) in The content <strong>of</strong> faith, 255-256.62 J.P. Galpin, ‘Be<strong>for</strong>e the holy mystery: Karl Rahner’s thought on God’, Toronto Journal <strong>of</strong> Theology 9 (2)(1993): 233.63 Rahner, Theological investigations Vol. 1, 311.64 Ibid., 312-313.65 Ibid,28.66 Ibid., 314 - 315.97

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