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The lectio
The first point of lectio divina is the lectio, which consists in an attentive
reading of the text, in order to understand what the text says. This research
means having respect for the Word, having a religious sense of the will of God,
which reaches me through his Word.
It isn’t I who can invent for myself the ways to go to God, but it is God who
reveals to me how I can reach Him. Because idolatry, which consists in serving
an idol, work of my hands and my convictions and conveniences, is always lying
in ambush.
The various religions that are springing up now, or that vague religiosity
which takes the name of new age, and all the other searches for the “divine”,
as also the neo-paganism with pantheistic tones, are all awkward attempts to
create one’s own divinity, made according to one’s own image and likeness or to
plan one’s own way to escape present misery and future threats.
When Jesus stated “I am the true way that leads to the Father”, he didn’t mean
only to state that he was the way. He wanted to reaffirm that it is God who
establishes the way of return to Him.
Accepting the Word as a sure way represents a remedy to the insidious
subjectivism that is rampant and to the perennial temptation to idolatry.
Even among the most fervent Christians there is widespread conviction that each
one can choose her/his own devotions, more or less enlightened, more or less in
conformity with “true devotion” which is that which springs from the
understanding of the priority of God’s demands on us through the Word, in
contrast to our needs and preferences.
We must take note that in the heart of each person there is an irrepressible
tendency toward subjectivism, which pushes us to adjust things so as to create
for oneself a way to go to God that is not too arduous, rather soft, often
self-serving, always egocentric and self-referential.
The daily confrontation with the Word, instead, saves us from this illusion and
puts us in contact with the authentic will of God, which calls me back to the
obedience of faith, the truth of my relationship with God, and the unmasking of
my illusions.
Illusions that can become dangerous; think of the jihad, of the Gott mit uns,
and all the horrible deformations of a will of God, more imagined than
accepted.
This first part, that is the understanding of the text, in its exegetical
component, can also help overcome the deficit of Biblical training for certain
consecrated persons--especially, but not only-- of a more advanced age.
If it is true that one should not stop with the exegetical moment, that does
not mean that it should be neglected.
A good exegesis, of the more strictly philological and theological kind,
contributes to a knowledge of the Bible, when one dedicates time to it. And, in
practice, is favored when this first part is done previously (for some the best
time is the evening before), as a preparatory moment for the following moments.
Today, then, there is no lack of qualified exegetical commentaries, for
different levels of education, which help one enter into the complex,
fascinating, but also distant and sometimes even disconcerting world of the
Bible, a world in which the Word of the Most High still resounds.
Such a previous exegetical approach helps avoid a certain fundamentalism, too,
typical of an ingenuous and immediate approach to a text. The text is to be
read in context and in connection with the whole of Biblical revelation. And
this is a remark of not secondary importance, since the part cannot be detached
from the whole, that the Bible is to be taken in its totality, since the
history of revelation took place along quite a few centuries and in different
cultural contexts and as a response to different religious and ethical
questions.
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