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From
Monsignor Charles Pope:
In all of these texts we are reminded that there are some
things—even many things (seven is a number indicating fullness)—that are
not for us to know. This is a warning against sinful curiosity and a solemn reminder that not all of God’s purposes or plans are revealed to us.
Several reasons come to mind for this silence and for the command to seal up the revelation of the seven thunders:
- It is an instruction against arrogance and sinful curiosity. Especially
today, people seem to think that they have right to know just about
anything. The press speaks of the people’s “right to know.” And while
this may be true about the affairs of government, it is not true about
people’s private lives, and it is surely not true about all the
mysteries of God. There are just some things that we have no right to
know, that are none of our business. Much of our prying is a mere
pretext for gossip and for the opportunity to see others’ failures and
faults. It is probably not an exaggeration to say that more than half of
what we talk about all day long is none of our business.
- It is a rebuke of our misuse of knowledge. Sadly,
especially in the “information age,” we speak of knowledge as power. We
seek to know in order to control, rather than to repent and conform to
the truth. We think that we should be able to do anything that we know
how to do. Even more reason, then, that God should withhold from us the
knowledge of many things; we’ve confused knowledge with wisdom and have
used our knowledge as an excuse to abuse power, to kill with nuclear
might, and to pervert the glory of human life with “reproductive
technology.” Knowledge abused in this way is not wisdom; it is
foolishness and is a path to grave evils.
- It is to spare us from the effects of knowing things that we cannot handle.
The very fact that the Revelation text above describes this knowledge
as “seven thunders” indicates that these hidden utterances are of
fearful weightiness. Seven is a number that refers to the fullness of
something, so these are loud and devastating thunders. God, in His mercy
to us, does not reveal all the fearsome terrors that will come upon
this sinful world, which cannot endure the glorious and fiery presence
of His justice. Too much for this world are the arrows of His quiver,
which are never exhausted. Besides the terrors already foretold in
Scripture, the seven thunders may well conceal others that are
unutterable and too horrifying for the world to endure. Ours is a world
that is incapable of enduring His holiness or of standing when He shall
appear.
What, then, is to be our stance in light of the many things too great for us to know and that God mercifully conceals from us? We should have the humility of a child, who knows what he does not know but is content that his father knows. (Read more.)
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