Unity is not preserved by force, eloquence, or speculation, but by fidelity to Christ Himself—the true center that holds all things together. Today’s readings trace three converging struggles: Ignatius warns a divided church that unity must be lived in obedience and love, not merely confessed; Augustine confesses how pride blinded him to the humility of Scripture and left him vulnerable to impressive lies clothed in Christian language; and Aquinas brings disciplined clarity, showing that God is one not by exclusion of richness, but by perfect simplicity—undivided being itself. Together, these readings expose the danger of fragmentation, whether in church life, intellectual pursuit, or theology itself, and call us back to the one source of truth, life, and unity found in Christ alone.
Readings: Ignatius of Antioch, The Epistle to the Philadelphians, Sections 7–11 Augustine of Hippo, The Confessions, Book 3, Chapters 5–6 (Sections 9–10) Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 11 — On the Unity of God (Articles 1–4 Combined)
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