Paradiso: The Fifth Sphere -- Cacciaguida's Dialogue
Just as Cacciaguida is the root of Dante's family tree, he argues that the dilution of the bloodlines of Florence through the arrival of new families was sufficient to begin the city's fall into degeneracy. Fr. Earl had a good point in his last comment -- Dante continues in heaven the same condemnation of Florence as he began in hell and pursued through purgatory. Rather than detracting from the glories of heaven, the pursuit of this theme reinforces the structure of the Comedy, for it is only natural that what is happening on earth be a concern of heaven if prayers from earth to heaven are to be at all efficacious. If heaven helps those who cry for God's mercy and justice, then it's also natural that God would hear these cries and respond to them. Even Christ responded to his feeling of natural indignation at discovering the money lenders in the Temple. No less, then, can those souls who sit in heaven's light also feel just cause against the inhumanities of mankind.


In our orientation to God, all of us feel pleasure at the good and pain at the bad, and those not oriented to God may be disoriented in their understanding of pain and pleasure, both of which are derived from not only virtue but also community interaction. Aristotle writes, "the whole concern both of virtue and of political science is with pleasures and pains; for the man who uses these well will be good, he who uses them badly bad;" indeed, it is a philosophy of action still heralded by the Church (especially here in St. Louis) that argues all Catholics have a political responsibility to work for the good. We can take two models for this -- one being our saint of the day, St. Stanislaus, who as bishop of Krakow, was highly outspoken against corruption in high offices and denounced "the unjust wars and immoral acts" of King Boleslaus II so fervently that the king killed him with his own hands -- the other being his successor, to the episcopacy of Krakow, Karol Wojtila.
S.


In our orientation to God, all of us feel pleasure at the good and pain at the bad, and those not oriented to God may be disoriented in their understanding of pain and pleasure, both of which are derived from not only virtue but also community interaction. Aristotle writes, "the whole concern both of virtue and of political science is with pleasures and pains; for the man who uses these well will be good, he who uses them badly bad;" indeed, it is a philosophy of action still heralded by the Church (especially here in St. Louis) that argues all Catholics have a political responsibility to work for the good. We can take two models for this -- one being our saint of the day, St. Stanislaus, who as bishop of Krakow, was highly outspoken against corruption in high offices and denounced "the unjust wars and immoral acts" of King Boleslaus II so fervently that the king killed him with his own hands -- the other being his successor, to the episcopacy of Krakow, Karol Wojtila.
S.


9 Comments:
I was getting frustrated with Dante's continual analysis of the political life of Florence, but Sebastian's commentary today was helpful and very timely, i.e. St. Stanislaus and Pope John Paul II. The hand of God in the political struggle for justice is, I concede, truly a fitting topic for Dante, even in Paradiso.
I've just likened it in video form to Gandalf's insistence that the evil in Middle Earth must be destroyed for good to prevail.
I'll try to get a clip or two out of our own Fr. Michael Butler, a military chaplain who comes and goes from the Iraqi front, concerning crusades, Muslims, and just wars.
S.
Paradise Canto 16
To be in Paradise must mean to be invited to the biggest family reunion ever. Dante thrills with pleasure. While I thought the verses in this canto were dry and boring and colorless, compared with previous highly creative verses, I understand what Dante is doing he is asking the questions of his heart, essentially where/whom did I come from. Heritage is important and so is legacy. Dante has a better grip on this than we do today. Today, we work at establishing our own identity and our heritage is often looked upon as something that holds us back. We aren’t concerned with legacy because we spend too much time thinking about self; we think nothing will matter when we are dead. Clearly, heritage, legacy, origin, and history are included in the delights of Paradise. Who we hang out with is also important in the end. My mother always taught me that the company he keeps makes one’s reputation. Dante looked on with pleasure learning about his ancestors and their elevations. His pleasure comes when he discovers that what mattered in life matters in the afterlife.
I don't know why having pride in your ancestry is not sinful. Is that giving the conotation that his family is better than someone else's. I think you can be proud of an individual for his accomplishment of the good but typically not all in the family are sinless. I don't recall. Is any one related to Dante in Hell? If so he must then be proud of those of his family who made it. Otherwise he is just guilty of nepotism.
Heritage, Marioneteer, also serves another purpose, as you'll find in the Pentateuch with all those begats -- it ties us to the autochthonous creation of Man in the image and likeness of God. It also reinforces the idea of our lives as miracles -- listen to your family history and wonder why at every corner in the 10,000 years since your progenitor walked the earth your very existence wasn't smote by one mishap or another occurring in a whole 500 generations. One of my great ancestors in Levantine Syria, for instance, was hanged after having relocated some sheep. Fortunately for me, the deed was done after his wife was pregnant, and not before. God knew I'd be along when he spared the Phoenician girl's life who 2,300 years ago was raped by Alexander's army and left to die -- pregnant, and with a will to live.
S.
I think pride in your heritage is laudable, as long as it doesn't become self serving, or a "god" itself. To be ignorant of the past is to be blind to the future, and so it is with our lives.
We are products of our entire history...not just the history of our nurturing, but also the entire history of our family.
-Ed
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