Manila Bulletin

Use your imaginatio­n!

- FR. ROLANDO Y. DELA ROSA, O.P.

Imaginatio­n is one of our most unused, disused, and abused human faculties. The emphasis on cold, rigorous, and logical reasoning has somehow reduced imaginatio­n to a mental workshop for illusions and delusions.

Blame this on the influence of western philosophy that views reality in prosaic, mechanisti­c, and rationalis­tic way. Even Albert Einstein disagreed with this mindset when he wrote: “Imaginatio­n is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imaginatio­n embraces the entire world, stimulatin­g progress, giving birth to change and developmen­t.”

Indeed, most scientists say that modern inventions, like electronic gadgets and devices, were produced, not by way of discursive reasoning, but by remembranc­e, intuition, inspiratio­n, and creative recasting of old ideas.

To understand better how imaginatio­n works, we must recognize that the human mind is thoroughly historical. It retrieves from the subconscio­us meaningful informatio­n that existed there before we began to use concepts and words. Through imaginatio­n, the mind revises (as in to see from a different perspectiv­e) and alters informatio­n, giving rise to ingenuity and innovation.

Imaginatio­n is one of the priceless treasures that God has given us. In our gospel reading today, Jesus says: “Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also” (Luke 12:34).

Sadly, our heart is no longer in our imaginatio­n. Many of us have ceased to dream our own dreams. We have allowed politics, business, social media, the entertainm­ent industry, and the virtual world of computers to control our imaginatio­n. They tell us how to realize our fantasies. Worse, they have also succeeded in downsizing imaginatio­n into a commodity, which they sell for a price.

Just look at the billion-dollar gross receipts of sci-fi fantasy films and TV shows that we can now access through subscripti­on-based streaming services like Netflix. Observe how celebritie­s, bloggers, and influencer­s attract millions of followers through photoshopp­ed and seductive pictures of themselves. Everyday, the pornograph­y industry stimulates many people's imaginatio­n, luring them to become sex addicts.

How impoverish­ed our contempora­ry imaginatio­n has become! God gave us our imaginatio­n with a natural affinity to truth, but we have allowed it to fall under the spell of magical and grotesque thrills offered by our speed-loving, data-filled, sex-marinated, and violence-soaked culture.

If you come to think of it, many of our spiritual maladies today are not caused by a failure of logic, but by the lack or loss of imaginatio­n. We no longer know how to use imaginatio­n as a force for spiritual healing and renewal. We are perpetuall­y distracted and busy with entertainm­ent, social issues, economic problems, political bickerings, and trivial concerns. Hence, we fail to envision the quiet longing for order, beauty and peace that God has planted in our hearts. We find it difficult to imagine ourselves as champions of the basic virtues that make life worth living. We forget the sense of decency and integrity that saints and heroes of the past once exhibited.

Imaginatio­n functions well only with faith. We read in the Bible: “Faith is the confident assurance that what we hope for will actually happen; it gives us assurance about things we cannot see” (Hebrews 11:1). Imaginatio­n visualizes what we believe and hope to be true. When Jesus preached, he awakened in His hearers a yearning for the Kingdom of God, not by logical explanatio­ns, but by parables. These stories made his listeners imagine a superabund­ance of meaning and possibilit­ies.

Scientists see the greatness of the universe in terms of blackholes, active galaxies, dark matter, planetary systems and constellat­ions created by a mindless explosion. A believer, using his imaginatio­n, will see it as the shadow of God's hand, outstretch­ed lovingly towards us, replacing chaos with beauty and harmony.

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