Where Does Our Sense of the Eternal Come From in a Finite World?
By Msgr. Charles Pope
A common reading at the funeral Mass is this powerful one from the Book of Ecclesiastes:
I have considered the task that God has appointed for the sons of men to be busied about. He has made everything appropriate to its time, and has put the timeless into their hearts, without mans ever discovering, from beginning to end, the work which God has done (Eccl 3:10-11).
Somewhere in our hearts is something that the world cannot, and did not, give us. This passage calls it the timeless. We also refer to it as eternity or even infinity.
But where did this concept come from?The world is finite. Time here is serial. Things have a beginning, a middle, and an end. We do not experience anything of the timeless. Rather, everything is governed by the steady ticking of the clock. Every verb we use is time-based. Everything is rooted in chronological time. Yet somehow we can grasp the timeless. Yes, we do know it.
The experience of forever does not exist in this world, but it is still there our minds and hearts. There is no way to travel through time here in this world. Yet instinctively we know that somehow we can. Science fiction and fantasy novels often feature going back to the past or into the future. The world could not teach us this because we are locked in the present and have never actually travelled in time. Somehow, though, we know that we can do it.
The word eternity comes from the Greek word aeon, which means the fullness of time. It is not just a long time; it is all time: past, present, and future all at once. If you look at a clock youll notice that at the center dot, 10 AM, 2 PM, and 6 PM are all the same, even though 10 AM is in the past, 2 PM is now, and 6 PM is in the future. This is aeon, eternity, the fullness of time; this is timelessness.
From whence did we get such a concept? The world cannot give it, for the world does not have it. Nothing can give what it does not have. The world is finite, limited, and time-boundnot timeless. It cannot, therefore, give what is infinite or timeless. If we have such a notion it must come from outside time or in the fullness of time, something that contains the full sweep of time all at once. But what is outside time?
This article has been reprinted here by permission of the author after original publication at the Archdiocese of Washington D.C. blog- Community In Mission-http://blog.adw.org/2016/09/sense-eternal-come-finite-world/


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