2024/11/18
170. Optimisation
Previously, we discussed "The Body of the Lord", the first theme of Admonitions, attributed to St Francis of Assisi. And we found that he had a particular understanding of the Father's love and the Eucharist from John's Gospel. On the other hand, in the second theme of the same Admonitions, "The Evil of Self-will", he turns his attention to the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in Genesis. That shows that the Book of Revelation strongly influenced him.
The Book of Revelation has a peculiar structure unparalleled in previous apocalyptic literature, clearly declaring from its very beginning that it is "the revelation of Jesus Christ" (Revelation 1:1). It is a book of revelation and prophecy (see diagram below), but also a book of daily training for believers. Its method of training is to create a loop structure of a computer program, so to speak, within the faithful who repeatedly reads aloud the words of the prophecy, hears the voice and keeps in his memory what is written in it, as indicated in Revelation 1:3 (cf. blog №151). This structure supports the daily routine of the faithful from the end of the Mass liturgy with the final blessing and dismissal until the next Mass.
The primary purpose of the Book of Revelation as a training book is for believers in this daily routine first to develop the habit of sensing the "human information" depicted in it, distinguishing it from the work of the Holy Spirit, and retaining it in their memory. Thus, in the Book of Revelation, words for "human information" such as dragon, serpent, devil, Satan and deceiver of all humankind appear repeatedly. As a faithful repeatedly reads aloud and listens to the Book of Revelation, the image of these words eventually recedes, and the "human information" becomes directly perceptible. This perception strongly supports the desire of the faithful who, even living the daily routine in the Mass liturgy, are amidst the "human information" in this world. That is the keen desire to optimise themselves to the "divine reality" in which the Holy Spirit works and to collaborate with the Holy Spirit in all situations they encounter. The Book of Revelation functions as a simulator for this.
Based on the above understanding, when we look back at Genesis 3 with the word "ancient serpent" (Revelation 12:9, 20:2) in the Book of Revelation as a hint, we can see that a suitable level of information had already been developed among creatures of the same species, the wisest of which was the information developed among humans (cf. Genesis 3:1, 3:14). The highly developed "human information", which outstrips that of other creatures, was the result of God's bestowing a will on man to create him after his likeness (cf. 2:7). The whole Bible always appeals to the fact that God, the Father, guarantees the freedom of "his own will"1 of man whom he created after his likeness. When we read Genesis 3 from this viewpoint, we will find in it the Father dealing with the mistakes of his children. At the same time, we will see the overlap between the image of God in that scene and that of Jesus Christ fulfilling the will of the Father.
1. St Francis of Assisi, Admonitions, "The Evil of Self-will", https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/assisi-the-writings-of-saint-francis-of-assisi.
That is the moment when the faithful realise that the image of the Father who "drove out the man; and at the east of the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to guard the way to the tree of life" (Genesis 3:24) and that of Jesus Christ stating, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but by me" (John 14:6), were one. They will then turn their attentions to the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, intending to work on the memory of having eaten from it, which remains in people, to bring this good news to the world.
No specific concept of "information" was in Francis' time. In the writings of Francis, we see a Francis who, in that era, somehow manages to face "human information" with the revelation he had been given. That testifies that he had already developed the habit of distinguishing between the work of the Holy Spirit and "human information". Indeed, this is shown by the fact that even when substituting the words "devils" and "Satan", which he quotes in "The Evil of Self-will" and elsewhere in his writings, for "human information", the meaning still holds. On the other hand, he tried to understand various issues according to the teachings of the Church at the time.
To be continued
Maria K. M.