The Unchangeable God and Prayer

Aside

The Unchangeable God and Prayer

“There is no way on earth that Dad is going to change his mind and allow you to attend that school,” the sister authoritatively advised her brother. However, her brother still retained hope that his father would consent to allowing him to attend the high school of his choice, rather than the one to which his father had enrolled him. “Dad is not that unchangeable; he is flexible on some things,” the brother unconvincingly challenged his sister’s opinion. She just rolled her eyes and firmly advised, “You will never change his mind on education issues. He is a fanatic on having us attend the best academic school, not the best school for sports.” His sister evaluation of the issue was correct. When he approached his father about attending the more sports oriented school, the son was turned down quickly and with finality. Accompanying that rejection was his father’s time tested lecture on the importance of education for the son’s future. Dejected, the son tried a second time to change his father’s mind, but to no avail….and with a warning not to approach the subject again.  No petitions or pleadings would solicit the response the son so desperately desired. His dad’s mind was firm; it was unchangeable.

In many of life’s circumstances, occasions arise in which individuals change their minds. Yes, even Moms and Dads occasionally change their minds and accede to previously rejected requests from their children.  A woman may, at first, rebuff a suitor’s request for marriage and then change her mind and gladly accept the marriage offer. Employers change their plans as business circumstances change. It is a fact that change is part of the very fabric of life.

Yet there is one instance where change is not a given; this is in the basic nature of God. While throughout Catholic literature and history, man has been advised to pray frequently, even constantly, for God’s favorable intervention in life, such as for a sick relative or for success in marriage, the most notable thinkers in the history of Catholicism have described God as being unchangeable, all knowing, and eternal. From the earliest church fathers through Augustine, Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas, Robert Bellarmine, and others, the Catholic Church has firmly accepted that God is the perfect, singular, unchangeable reality. Even the early leaders of Protestantism, including Luther, Calvin, John Wesley, and many others, were firm in their doctrine of the unchangeable nature of God.

St. Augustine clearly stated God’s unchanging nature, “God’s mind does not pass from one thought to another. His vision is utterly unchangeable. Thus, He comprehends all that takes place in time-the not-yet existing future, the existing present and the no-longer-existing past in an immutable and eternal present . . . [Neither] is there any then, now, and afterwards in His knowledge, for, unlike ours, it suffers no change with triple time present, past, and future. With Him, there is no change, nor shadow of alteration.” God is unchangeable.

During the First Vatican Council (1868-1870) the Church authoritatively declared, “The holy, Catholic, apostolic Roman Church believes and professes that there is one true and living God, the Creator and Lord of heaven and earth. He is almighty, eternal, beyond measure, incomprehensible, and infinite in intellect, will and in every perfection. Since he is one unique spiritual substance, entirely simple and unchangeable, he must be declared really and essentially distinct from the world, perfectly happy in himself and by his very nature, and inexpressibly exalted over all things that exist or can be conceived other than himself.” The council thus emphatically declared the unchangeable nature of God.

Assuming the unchangeable nature of God, then why should we pray as we are encouraged to do so by the prophets, Jesus Christ, the saints, and the Church? What effect will our prayers have on an unchangeable, all-knowing, perfect God? The answer is that prayers do have a significant effect. Thus keep praying. God knows from all eternity whether we will sufficiently and persistently pray for a good, which will benefit His plan for us and creation and He factors those prayers into his plan from eternity. St. Thomas Aquinas comments thusly, “For we pray not that we may change the Divine disposition, but that we may impetrate that which God has disposed to be fulfilled by our prayers in other words “that by asking, men may deserve to receive what Almighty God from eternity has disposed to give.” In other words, God has foreseen our prayers from eternity and thus included them in his plan for the universe, to give us (and others) what he knew we would ask for. In fact, there is no higher use we can make of our liberty than to freely choose to pray.

Pray always and trust in God!

Suggested Reading

The Summa Theologica of St. Thomas Aquinas – Section 2, Part 2, Question 83, 2nd issue on Prayer.

 The Catholic Catechism, P. One, Section 2, Profession of the Christian Faith, Ch 1, Article 1.

“The Catholic Catechism” by John Hardon, published by Doubleday. Section II, The Living God.

St. Augustine’s “City of God”

Excellence or Nothing

Aside

Excellence or Nothing

The 18 year old joyfully shrieked to her mother as she read the letter from a prestigious university, “I made it. They have accepted my application.” “Yippee and Yippee some more,” she happily shouted. “I am so elated that I can’t put my feelings into words,” she gushed with great joy. He mother was also enjoying her daughter’s jubilation in being accepted by one of the most prestigious universities, but she added a note of caution as she submitted a motherly warning to her daughter, “It will take a lot of discipline and hard work to reach your goal of graduation. You will be entering one of the most demanding educational institutions in the country. It will not accept anything less than your best effort and success.” The daughter acknowledged her mother’s caution with a nod and a shrug which seemed to say, “I get it Mom, but I do not want to think of the hard work and mighty challenges in my future. I just want to celebrate for now.”

Reaching any really worthwhile goal takes dedication, commitment, and much hard work. Taking a less arduous path does not lead to great success and rewarding achievement; often it leads to nothing but mediocrity or less. In order for a student to achieve academic excellence or for an athlete to succeed in an athletic endeavor, the student or athlete must faithfully follow a code of conduct, which will include discipline, a mental outlook that overcomes disappointment and temporary setbacks, and an unwavering commitment to the ideal one wants to realize. No halfway, lukewarm thrusts will “make it happen.” There are no shortcuts to success when attempting to succeed in the most worthy and challenging endeavors. Also changing the rules to suit a less arduous effort does not work; the real goal will not be embraced.

As it is in the realization of academic success at a demanding educational institution or in an athletic event, when one seeks eternal happiness with one’s Creator, God, the need for discipline and a total commitment to the goal, union with God, are intensely demanding. No excuses will be accepted. The student or athlete who will not accept the direction and tools that will lead to achievement drifts into failure. The same holds true for the individual who says union with God is his goal, but refuses to follow the direction and admonishments of the Church founded by Jesus. One cannot cast aside the commands of God and His Church because they are inconvenient or do not match the cultural trends of the day. As demanding and challenging as are the roads to academic and athletic success, the road to heaven and happiness is even more demanding. There are no shortcuts to Heaven…none….none.

G.K. Chesterton succinctly stated, “”The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried.” Are you going to be the Christian who leaves it untried and fails to achieve the ultimate success, happiness with God? As it is true for the student and the athlete, there are no shortcuts or rule changes on the road to heaven. The consequences of the failure to follow the direction of Christ’s Church are the failure to attain eternal happiness with God and the experiencing of the worst failure…. nothingness…the ultimate nothingness, forever.

Suggested Reading:

“What’s Wrong with the World”, G.K. Chesterton, Ignatius Press  Chapter five