UNLESS YOU BELIEVE YOU WILL NOT UNDERSTAND
That is the title of Chapter Two (nos. 23-36) of the last papal encyclical--Lumen Fidei--which was mostly written by Pope Emeritus Benedict and promulgated by Pope Francis 29 June 2013. After dealing with the problem of the translation, which has been mentioned elsewhere, He gives the following explanation for why faith and truth are inseparable.
"We need knowledge, we need truth, because without these we cannot stand firm, we cannot move forward. Faith without truth does not save, it does not provide a sure footing. It remains a beautiful story, the projection of our deep yearning for happiness, something capable of satisfying us to the extent that we are willing to deceive ourselves...But precisely because of its intrinsic link to truth, faith is instead able to offer a new light, superior to the king's calculations, for it sees further into the distance and takes into account the hand of God, who remains faithful to his covenant and his promises.
"Today more than ever, we need to be reminded of this bond between faith and truth, given the crisis of truth in our age. In contemporary culture, we often tend to consider the only real truth to be that of technology: truth is what we succeed in building and measuring by our scientific-know-how; truth is what works and what makes life easier and more comfortable...[the same kind of truth of the great destructive] totalitarian movements of the last century, a truth that imposed its own worldview in order to crush the actual lives of individuals. In the end, what we are left with is relativism, in which the question of God--is no longer relevant."
The encyclical goes on to show the necessary connection between faith and love and faith and divine revelation.
In his Commentary to the De Trinitate of Boethius, Saint Thomas Aquinas masterfully and systematically treated the same question (using the same scripture quote [at the end of the "response" below]) clearly distinguishing between the truth of faith and mere opinion. Here is the relevant question (Question III, Article 1).
QUESTION III Concerning Those Things That Pertain to the Knowledge Possessed by Faith |
Whether Faith Is Necessary for Mankind
Objections | ||
1. It seems that faith should not be considered necessary for
mankind. As is said in Eccles. 7:1, “Why does a man need to seek
things that are above him?” This is to say, there is no need.
But those things that are believed by faith are above man, as
exceeding his reason; otherwise his reason, which is the cause of
science, would suffice. Therefore it was not necessary for man
that, over and above the truths of reason, he should be taught
those of faith.
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4. Whenever there is acceptance of knowledge without judgment, the road to error is easy; but we have in ourselves no ability by which we are able to judge of the things which we accept by faith, since our natural judgment does not extend to truths of this kind, as they exceed reason; therefore evidently the road to error is an easy one for us, and so it would appear rather harmful than useful for man that he should be directed to God by the way of faith. | ||||||||||||
5. As Dionysius says, it is an evil for man to exist apart from reason; but man in adhering to faith departs from reason, and in this he is even accustomed to despise reason; therefore it seems that such a way is evil for men. | ||||||||||||
Sed contra | ||||||||||||
But on the contrary, it is said in Heb. 11:6, “Without faith it is impossible to please God”; but it is supremely necessary for man that he be pleasing to God, since otherwise he can neither do nor possess any good; therefore faith is most necessary for man. | ||||||||||||
Again, it is most necessary for man to know the truth, since beatitude is joy in knowing the truth, as Augustine says; but faith establishes believers in truth and establishes truth in them, as Dionysius says (De div. nom., chap. 7); therefore faith is most necessary for man. | ||||||||||||
Again, that without which human society cannot be conserved is especially necessary for man, since man is a political animal, as is said in VIII Ethic.; but without faith human society cannot be preserved, since it is requisite that one man believe in the promises of another and in his testimony and the like, for this is necessary if they are to live together; therefore faith is most necessary for mankind. | ||||||||||||
Response. I answer that it must be said that faith has something in common with opinion, and something in common with knowledge and understanding, by reason of which it holds a position midway between opinion and understanding or science, according to Hugh of St. Victor. In common with understanding and knowledge, it possesses certain and fixed assent; and in this it differs from opinion, which accepts one of two opposites, though with fear that the other may be true, and on account of this doubt it fluctuates between two contraries. But, in common with opinion, faith is concerned with things that are not naturally possible to our understanding, and in this respect it differs from science and intellection. | ||||||||||||
That a thing should not be apparent to human understanding can arise for two reasons, as is said in II Metaph.: namely, because of lack of knowability in things themselves, and because of lack of intellectual ability on our part. | ||||||||||||
1. It may be due to lack on the part of things, as in the case of singular and contingent things which are remote from our senses, like the deeds and words and thoughts of men; for these are of such a nature that they may be known to one man, but unknown to others. And since among men dwelling together one man should deal with another as with himself in what he is not self-sufficient, therefore it is needful that he be able to stand with as much certainty on what another knows, but of which he himself is ignorant, as upon the truths which he himself knows. Hence it is that in human society faith is necessary in order that one man give credence to the words of another, and this is the foundation of justice, as Tullius says in his book, De officiis. Hence also it is that no lie is without sin, since every lie derogates from that faith which is so necessary. | ||||||||||||
2. The truth of things may also not be evident because of defect on our part, as in the case of divine and necessary things which, according to their own nature, are most knowable. Wherefore, to understand them, we are not capable of immediate intellection, from the very beginning, since it is in accordance with our nature to attain from things less knowable and posterior in themselves, to knowledge of those that are themselves more knowable and prior. But since from none of those things that we know last do we have any knowledge of those that we know first, it is needful for us even at first to have some notion of those things that are most knowable in themselves; but this cannot be except by believing. And this is evident even in the order of the sciences; since that science which is concerned with highest causes, namely, metaphysics, comes last in human knowledge; yet in sciences that are preambles to it there must be supposed certain truths which only in it are more fully revealed; therefore every science has some suppositions that must be believed in order to carry on the process of learning. | ||||||||||||
Since, therefore, the end of human life is beatitude, which consists in the full cognition of divine truths, it is necessary that human life be directed to this beatitude by an initial possession of divine truths by faith, truths which man can hope to know fully in the ultimate state of human perfection. | ||||||||||||
Certain of these truths that must be known can be attained by reason even in this life: however, although knowledge of them is possible and even possessed by certain men, nevertheless faith is necessary for five reasons, which Rabbi Moses enumerates: | ||||||||||||
1. First, on account of the depth and subtlety of the matter,
by which divine truths are hidden from human understanding.
Therefore, lest any man be without some knowledge of them,
provision is made that through faith, at least, he know divine
truths. Therefore, in Eccles. 7:25 it is said: “It is a great
depth, who shall find it out?”
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