
Originally Posted by
Benjamin Burch
Of course i believe that the Word "really" became flesh, that the Word "really" was crucified in the flesh and that - in some sense of the term - Christ "really" rose from the dead in a way that assures us resurrection from the dead.
But ontology is not positivist history.
Ontology is the way that the world is. What is really "real."
Ontology doesn't mean I can assure you something happened in the past. Ontology means the world really is a certain way now.
In the midst of the evil, the pain, the suffering, the reality of it all is that Christ has already won, through his incarnation, death, and resurrection. In the midst of nations clamoring for power and control, the reality is that Christ is Lord, and already conquered all.
This is why the proof of our faith is not in historicity, but in the Liturgy. Instead of talking about what "really happened" (which again, we believe, but it is such a small thing), the Liturgy shows us what "really is." In the Eucharist, as well as the spoken Word, we encounter the Word made flesh who truly is still very much alive. Every time we encounter the Word through the elements and through the sermon, we are reminded that death has no sting, powers of war and oppression have no victory, and that there are no battles left to be fought - there is simply a revelation to be made by God.
Again, when we think this way, and we realize what is "really real," we realize we are called to be faithful to this reality - not to succumb to the competing narratives being told around us. And when we realize that this is reality, we realize we have no need of protection, for we are already alive eternally, and the grave has no sting.
What is more, when the whole Church realized this was true, there would be no more need to think of protecting each other as some form of "love". Instead, it would be the opposite of love, because it would be denying the reality to which they have become a part, and begun to accept as true.