What does faithful leadership look like when truth must be guarded, suffering endured, and God Himself rightly known? In today’s readings, Ignatius urges Polycarp to shepherd the Church with courage, gentleness, and unwavering unity, calling him to lead as an athlete of God amid persecution and disorder. Augustine reflects on his former confusion about evil and God’s nature, confessing how he once mistook material images for reality until he learned that evil is a privation of good and that God is Spirit, wholly present everywhere. Aquinas then brings careful clarity to the question of whether God’s essence can be seen, arguing that no created intellect can attain this vision by nature alone, but only through grace that elevates the mind beyond its limits. Together, these readings press us to consider how truth is guarded, how God is known, and how the Christian life is sustained by grace rather than human strength.
Readings: Ignatius of Antioch, Epistle to Polycarp, Chapters 1–8
Augustine, The Confessions, Book 7, Chapter 7 (Section 12)
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 12 (Articles 1–5 Combined)
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