We collect books in libraries great and small thinking that we are preserving them. In reality, they are preserving us. They keep alive in us the wisdom of our fathers and grant to us light to pass own into the darkness of an unknown future. They rescue our humanity from utilitarian ideals in which less is more, beauty is optional, and a small vocabulary suffices. They breath wind into our sails and chart our courses to places we will never visit in person but have been there through the windows provided by authors of long ago and yesterday. They move us along when distraction, disappointment, and disillusionment would leave us frozen in our fears or bitterness. They coax from us emotions kept lock up deep inside and fill our dry eyes with tears when none have flowed for too long. They guard us from the tyranny of our feelings by reminding us of godly wisdom and truth built upon fact and truth. We think we are doing the books a great service by keeping them but they keep us from the worst inside of us and often, though not often enough, urge from us the good we did not know we could.
I write this as one who lives in a faith formed by the Word acting through the Spirit -- an embodied Word which lives on pages because it lived in flesh, died in suffering, and rose never to die again. I write this as one who lives in a faith in which this Word engages not simply the corners of my mind but the concrete of water that has become my second womb giving me new life and in bread and wine that tastes of heaven and of Christ's flesh and blood unseen but there for faith to discern. I write this as one whose life has been spent in the vocation of words not for pleasure or enjoyment but as sermon, catechesis, and the care of the soul. Not every book is worth the time to read and not every read rewards the investment you have made in it but so many times we do not know the value until the words jump off the page and into us. So it is with the Divine Word. We embrace the Scriptures not to find hidden knowledge or wisdom but because the Spirit has moved us to open its pages with the promise that in it the Good Shepherd speaks. The liturgical words of worship are profound not because they are literary but because they connect us to the Divine, to the mystery of Him who is made flesh for us and our salvation and to serve us with gifts we could not earn or merit.
We do not waste our money on libraries but invest in them for our sake, for the sake of those who have gone before, for the sake of those to time, and for the sake of Him who comes to us as the Word made flesh. Movies are remade with new actors and new scripts over and over again. The story is often different and the faces are not the only things changed. Books are reprinted but with the same words, the same stories, and the same power. AI cannot replicate this. Like a monkey mimics the things of a man yet is not a man, so AI gives but a small echo of what God has placed in us and is dependent upon us to teach it to be our shadows. I was so wrong to think that I am the rescuer of books for the truth is they rescue me -- the stacks of those not yet read, the dusty jackets of those consulted but never really consumed, and the familiar whose words have been read so often they live inside of me. It should be of no surprise that when printing came to the West, the Scriptures would be the book the technology would serve. It is no secret now that Bibles continue to dominate book sales. I take some comfort in that. I also enjoy that there are books waiting for me and that some of them will never get read before I close my eyes in death. Someone else will pick up where I left off as I meet the Word made flesh, crucified and risen, face to face.




