Through the Church Fathers: May 3
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The early Christians lived in a way that exposed the moral contradictions of their world, and in today’s reading from Athenagoras of Athens, we see a bold defense of Christian purity, consistency, and reverence for life—arguing that those accused of immorality were in fact the ones restraining desire, rejecting violence, and grounding their ethics in the resurrection. Then Augustine of Hippo draws a sharp line between philosophy and the gospel, showing that while the Platonists could speak of the eternal Word, they could not comprehend the humility of Christ—the incarnation, the cross, and grace for the undeserving. Finally, Thomas Aquinas dismantles the most common human pursuits—wealth, honor, fame, and power—demonstrating that none of them can bear the weight of true happiness because they are all external, unstable, or ordered toward something greater. Together, these readings press one central question: are we building our lives on what impresses others, or on what actually satisfies the soul?
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