One
of my library tasks lately has been to check the shelves and add catalogue
records to books that don’t have them, so the Cataloguer can create order in
the collection and computer records can be kept. Fascinating stuff turns up,
some seriously old, some quite quaint, some useful still and some passed on, of
interest mainly to historians.
Conference
papers, acts of meetings, journalistic experiments, dogmatic themes.
Explications of everything. Investigations, determinations, arguments. Some
books with a beat-up appearance call up the passage of time: Science and Faith
in the 21st Century, for example, wakes me to the fact that the 21st century is
already 15 years old. How did that happen?
What strikes me is how current these
ideas seemed at the time. I can remember the themes of 1986, although not the
catechism on papal teachings of 1908. The latest, newest, things, though often
based on the oldest. I give you surrogacy, and Hagar.
So, too, today’s ideas, the good and the bad.
Some ideas, very old, still keep their force. Forgiveness of sins. Reverence
towards creation. Active mercy. Reading the signs of the times. We need to read
the signs of our own times, and that means now.
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