Through the Church Fathers: May 4
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In today’s readings, Tatian opens with a direct and almost confrontational critique of Greek culture, arguing that what the Greeks celebrate as wisdom is largely borrowed and often corrupted, exposing both their intellectual pride and moral inconsistency . Then Augustine of Hippo reflects on his encounter with Platonism, acknowledging that it pointed him toward truth but ultimately failed to grasp the humility of the incarnation, showing that philosophy alone cannot lead to salvation. Finally, Thomas Aquinas takes a more systematic approach, dismantling the idea that happiness can be found in bodily goods, pleasure, the soul’s created goods, or anything finite, concluding that the human heart is ordered toward something beyond creation itself. Together, these readings press a single, unavoidable question: are we trusting in what appears wise, fulfilling, and sufficient—or are we willing to admit that nothing in this world can finally satisfy what we were made for?
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