They are experiencing Christianity as joy and hope, having thus become lovers of Christ.

Inventio:

Finding Before Creating

In classical rhetoric, inventio was the very first step in preparing a speech. It meant discovering the arguments or proofs already available to support your case. The orator didn’t create truth—he uncovered it, drew it out, and presented it persuasively.

This same spirit carries into the life of faith. We don’t create the truths of God. We don’t design our own reality. Instead, we are called to find what God has already revealed, to discover His grace present in the world, and to allow our lives to bear witness to it.

Think of the way we form relationships. A stranger gradually becomes an acquaintance, a friend, and perhaps even a close companion. We don’t create that person; we discover who they are through time and trust. Faith works in the same way—truth draws closer to us as we seek it, until it becomes intimate and lived.

The modern world often prizes “creativity” in the sense of originality. But for Christians, true creativity begins with discovery. Before we can offer something beautiful, we must first receive what is already there.

Think of an artist painting a landscape. He doesn’t invent the mountains, trees, or sky. He finds them, attends to them, and renders them in a new way. So it is with us—we must first seek and find God’s truth before we can share it with others.

What would happen if we lived our faith this way? Instead of trying to invent our own way to God, we would practice inventio—the humble, attentive discovery of His presence in Scripture, in tradition, in the sacraments, and in the quiet places of our daily lives.

Our task, then, is not to create faith but to uncover it. Not to invent truth but to find it. And once we do, the act of creation follows naturally, as our words, our lives, and our love give new expression to what we have discovered.

Developed with assistance from Gemini AI and ChatGPT-5

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