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

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extraordinary happens if they are naughty. The true God is the absolute, sacredmystery to which one can only point in silent adoration 130 .Rahner argues that atheists’ silent experiences <strong>of</strong> unfulfilled metaphysical longing makeit likely they are much closer to God in honesty and reality than ‘Christians’ who babbleabout God in clichés and regard the divine as a question that they have long agorationally settled to their own satisfaction131 .Rahner’s theology <strong>of</strong> mystery teaches that the origin <strong>of</strong> any statement about God must beunderstood as a direct and personal encounter with the silent mystery at the initiative <strong>of</strong>the divine. Christian doctrines are human responses, human attempts to say somethingabout the self-revelation <strong>of</strong> God in human language. As such, they are important: theinitiative <strong>of</strong> God in history can obviously only be learned as people are introduced to thehistory <strong>of</strong> the events and words <strong>of</strong> revelation. Humans cannot invent a saviour to suitthemselves; a saviour has appeared at God’s initiative at a certain time in history. Theimportant issue is that, by grace, people in Jesus’ time recognised Jesus as their saviourand experienced the saving effect <strong>of</strong> his life and work. The historical witness emergesfrom the experiences <strong>of</strong> contemporary witnesses. In Jesus, people encountered in spaceand time the flesh and blood manifestation <strong>of</strong> all their hearts longed <strong>for</strong> and wereontologically conditioned to experience. Today, the words <strong>of</strong> Christian witness ‘to theglory <strong>of</strong> God in the face <strong>of</strong> Christ’ (2 Corinthians 4:6) are expressed truly as emergingfrom silent existential witness; others, enabled by grace, find in Jesus the personification<strong>of</strong> the mystery that they too have always lived with and longed <strong>for</strong>—<strong>of</strong>ten at a levelbelow consciousness and cognition. Nevertheless, proclamation does not define themystery. It is not as if somehow through the human history <strong>of</strong> listening to the selfrevelation<strong>of</strong> God, humans finally arrive at the ultimate definition and mastery <strong>of</strong> thenature <strong>of</strong> divinity. Were <strong>this</strong> so, humans would not belong to God—God would belong tohuman beings! Were <strong>this</strong> so, individuals would no longer need to adopt a listeningposture in their relationship to the divine. Human words about the mystery are at bestincomplete stammerings that point towards the reality <strong>of</strong> eternal love and the wisdom <strong>of</strong>130 Rahner, Content <strong>of</strong> the faith, 227.131 Ibid, 228.115

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