THE FORENSICS
OF FOOTPRINTS
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily is, “The Forensics of Footprints.”
Today is the feast of St. Bonaventure [c.1217-1274] – a Franciscan
and a theologian – a doctor of the church.
Every year when I come to his feast day – July 15 - I
celebrate that I grabbed and got one of his big messages – a footprint - vestigium in Latin - realizing there is so much I
don’t get.
No problem. I’m just happy that something of his has
rubbed off on me.
So I get his message about footprints.
FOOTPRINTS
We all know the story of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
– published in April of 1719. We all remember the moment he spotted footprints on the sand of the beach
– where he was all alone.
He was no longer alone. Uh oh! What now? What’s next?
Read the book.
We’ve all had the experience in our life of spotting
footprints in the sand or in the snow. There was someone going down or up this
path or beach before me.
I am not alone.
BONAVENTURE ON
FOOTPRINTS
We don’t know much about Bonaventure’s personality – but
we know a lot about his thought – he wrote a lot - as well as the external
facts of his life.
He was a great thinker and theologian – and I think he would have
written a lot more if he had more time. Who knows what else he would have come up with – if he
was not moved into executive tasks in both his order the Franciscans – as well
as Church business – being consulted by Rome as well as being made the cardinal-bishop of Albano.
So I like one of his most basic messages: footprints. They
mean someone with feet was here.
Well, Bonaventure argues for God – by saying God’s
footprints are everywhere.
The stuff around us tells us there was a stuff maker –
God the Creator.
I’ve had said out loud to dozens of people asking me
about God – that if there is a chair, there is a chair maker. What the chair
maker’s personality is like – now that’s another story – but we know there is a
chair maker.
We got to the Moon. Our human footprints are now on it. Human
footprints on the moon tells us there was someone there.
It also tells us that there are humans with minds who
figured out the mathematics and the mechanics of getting there.
It also tells us that there was a moon maker – as well as
the vast universe we live in? Our God is a creator, a universe maker – and
after we die, hopefully, we’ll know God
and how God is.
The title of my homily is, “The Forensics of Footprints.”
FORENSICS
Forensics – basically - means arguing – trying to prove
things in the public forum.
And that’s what Bonaventure did – as teacher and priest
and bishop and then cardinal of our church.
He would say: check out the footprints. He was an
optimist – someone said more than Thomas Aquinas – who also often made
deductions from what is.
Bonaventure also tells us that the human mind – tells us
so much more than the footprints. Bonaventure tells us to use science.
Science, learning, getting the facts for the forensics –
helps us in arguing for God.
TODAY’S
READINGS
Today’s first reading and gospel, tells us there are
cities – and in those cities there are kings and subjects – and by thinking
about each other – how we are as people – pluses and minuses – creations and
destructions – good and evil - we can learn even more about God and each other.
That’s step 2 by Bonaventure – moving from creation to
creative persons on the earth.
Step 3 – following these steps – these footprints – we can get even closer to
the third step – moving to this God of ours – to God as Trinity – another big
message of Bonaventure.
We all know about the poem “Footprints” about there is a
God – who carries us – but that is the faith step.
Our last Pope, Benedict wrote his second dissertation on
Bonaventure – and Revelation in Bonaventure - and came up with one of his big
messages of hope from him. Bonaventure
said we can learn a lot from everyone – even those we’re not walking with – so some
wish Pope Benedict did a little more of that – but I leave those footprints and
that kind of figuring and dialogue to others.
CONCLUSION
The title of my homily was, “The Forensics of
Footprints.”
Bonaventure tells us to see the footprints all around us.
He said read the book of creation – read the minds of
others – and you’ll arrive by foot at God – and others will learn from our
footprints. Amen